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November 17, 2019

Jordan Got Land, We Got a Lesson

Last week, a small piece of land was transferred from Israel to Jordan. To be accurate, it was two pieces of land that Israel had control over under a lease that was signed twenty-five years ago, when the two countries signed a peace treaty. Israel agreed that the land is Jordan’s to have. Jordan agreed that Israel would keep it and farm it for the time being.

The assumption in Israel was that the temporary would become permanent. That is to say, that the countries would extend the lease for another quarter of a century. Seeing as Jordan doesn’t have any urgent need for these areas, which are anyways tended by Israeli farmers, why not keep this arrangement as a sign of goodwill between neighbors?

This is what Israel would have preferred, but Jordan decided to discontinue the arrangement—and make a show of taking back its land. On Sunday, King Abdullah of Jordan said in a speech that his country would put an end to the “annexation of the two areas,” and that Jordan will now impose its “full sovereignty” over “every inch” of the land.

Israeli farmers were understandably upset. They were worried about losing their land, even though the Jordanians are agreeing to let them continue farming there for the time being. But worries or not, Israel must accept this reality without complaint. It signed an agreement, albeit a foolish and shortsighted one, and reneging would an unwise move for an unworthy goal.

As Prime Minister Netanyahu said, referring to the anniversary of Israel’s peace agreement with Jordan: “The importance of stability in Jordan…the stability of peace agreements…[and] the non-takeover by Islamist elements, is in our clear interest.”

In other words, we understand that the King has certain political constraints. We choose not to have a crisis because of his decision. We have more important interests than these two pieces of land.

While Jordan may not gain much from getting the land back, Israel doesn’t lose much either. In fact, it could be argued that Israel has something to gain from the dissolution of the arrangement.

Sometimes, a lesson can only be learned from experience. And Israel just learned two important lessons from this experience. First – it learned that goodwill is a fickle thing. Second – it learned that 25 years isn’t as long as it sounds.

These two lessons will not get Israel back its once-leased land. This land goes back to Jordan. But these lessons will help Israel when ideas for other temporary arrangements are put on the table, as they almost certainly will be.

Temporary arrangements have been suggested as a solution for situations as diverse as the Golan Heights, the West Bank, and the Iranian nuclear program. For the Golan Heights and the West Bank, long-term leases were suggested. In the former proposal, the Golan Heights would be returned to Syria at the end of the lease period. In the latter, control of the Jordan Valley would be transferred to a Palestinian entity at the end of the lease. The temporary arrangement proposed for the Iranian nuclear program was of a different nature and consisted of a nuclear agreement that forces the Iranians to pause their nuclear program for fifteen years, after which they can do whatever they want to do.

Thanks to Jordan, we can see that such temporary arrangements are not solutions at all. At best, they are deferrals. At worse, they make things harder and more complex.

Imagine: Israel gets a lease on the Golan Heights for ninety-nine years, builds houses, develops infrastructure, settles communities, and invests resources in the area under the assumption that Syria will surely agree to extend the lease when the lease expires. Then Syria says no.

Imagine: Israel keeps a tight border in the Jordan Valley for twenty years. Then, it has to hand it to a Palestinian security force.

Imagine: Israel keeps its lips tight when Obama signs an agreement with Iran, and fifteen years later – sounds like a long time, but not to Iranian ears – Iran moves forward with its nuclear program, as agreed in advance.

Of course, there’s a great difference between these imaginary scenarios and the Jordan situation. Jordan is small change. Hence, the gain: It was disheartening to see Israel forced to abandon a piece of land. It was disheartening to listen to the farmers who now worry that they’ll no longer be able to work their fields. The bright side is that Israel learned a lesson by paying in small change—by getting a useful reminder that time flies.

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How Politics Impeaches Happiness

I may have to rethink my decision to put on CNN in my office all day long. As much as I love keeping up with the news, what I’ve gained from the experience is a distaste for the news business itself.

For one thing, if I had to count on CNN to know what’s going on in the world, I would think our planet of 7 billion revolves around one orange-haired man and a few square blocks of Washington, D.C.

At least we can give CNN chief Jeff Zucker credit for honesty. In an interview last year with Vanity Fair, he admitted that his network spends much of the day reporting on President Trump’s day-to-day activities, and he explained why. 

“We’ve seen that anytime you break away from the Trump story and cover other events in this era, the audience goes away,” he said. “So we know that, right now, Donald Trump dominates.”

In other words, it’s our fault.

If CNN won’t break away from Trump’s latest tweets to enlighten us about a crisis in the Middle East, a cholera outbreak in Africa, the changing face of Europe or the enormous challenges of the new global economy, that’s because Zucker is simply giving us what we want—and we want to munch on Trump. I guess Doritos taste better than broccoli.

The Trump-munching is now at peak levels with the impeachment hearings. We rationalize this addiction by breathlessly reminding ourselves that the future of the country is at stake.

The Trump-munching is now at peak levels with the impeachment hearings. We rationalize this addiction by breathlessly reminding ourselves that the future of the country is at stake. After all, the hearings could influence who enters the White House in 2020. Some think a House impeachment could hurt Trump’s chances, while others think it could backfire on the Democrats, especially if the Senate lets him off the hook.

Either way, whichever side you’re on, it makes for riveting drama. Who’d want to miss it?

It is now so accepted that politics has become a form of dramatic entertainment that the venerable NBC News tweeted this “analysis” after the first day of the hearings:

“The first two witnesses called Wednesday testified to President Trump’s scheme, but lacked the pizzazz necessary to capture public attention.”

Talk about betraying one’s motives. A president may be impeached for only the third time in U.S. history, and a major news outlet complains about the lack of “pizzazz” necessary to “capture” our attention. 

This is our new reality: We’re here to be captured. As we allow the profit-hungry media to kidnap our attention, we can be sure it will continue to bait us with “pizzazz” to keep us addicted. Every talking head expressing outrage, every bit of faux news acting as “breaking news,” is part of that pizzazz.

And while the media quietly rakes in the profits, we donate our eyeballs to shiny objects that leave us feeling dirty and empty, convincing ourselves that we must tune in because the stakes are so high. 

Whether we realize it or not, we are connecting our happiness and well-being to the world of politics. If only our team wins, we tell ourselves, everything will be better. It’s as if we made this huge bet on a four-year-long basketball game and now we’re so hooked on the outcome that we can’t look away. 

We know, of course, that none of this political junk-munching satisfies us. If anything, the more we consume the ugliness of these Trumpian times, the more it brings out our anger and bitterness.

Deep down, we know what satisfies us. It’s not the Doritos of consumption but the broccoli of action. We know that if our goal is to “save our country” by making sure our team wins, watching and complaining won’t help.

Deep down, we know what satisfies us. It’s not the Doritos of consumption but the broccoli of action. We know that if our goal is to “save our country” by making sure our team wins, watching and complaining won’t help. We have to take action—we have to go out there and mobilize. At the very least, we have to vote.

This applies to our lives, as well. We must take action to make things better. Politicians, even those we love, can’t enter our bedrooms to cure our loneliness; or make us take that hike by a river; or initiate a project that will fight for the needy and disadvantaged; or reconnect us with old friends who make us laugh and nourish our souls.

You’ll never hear this on CNN or any network: Politics is a gladiator sport that feeds the lifestyle of an elitist media ecosystem. Giving this ecosystem our eyeballs on the cheap feeds the beast while improving neither our country nor our lives.

No matter how horrible or crazy or ideological the times get, our deepest satisfaction will always come from us, from our ability to act for ourselves, for our families, for our communities and for the many who aren’t so fortunate.

Even if we have to learn to love broccoli.

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U of Toronto Student Union Won’t Support Kosher Food on Campus Due to BDS

(JTA) — A University Toronto student union refused to support a campaign by the school’s Hillel to make kosher food available on campus since it is “pro-Israel.”

The Graduate Student Union told a Jewish student representing Hillel in requesting support for its “Kosher Forward” campaign in an email that supporting the kosher food campaign would go against the “will of the membership,” Hillel said in a statement alleging discrimination on the part of the student union.

The Graduate Student Union voted in 2012 to support the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions, or BDS movement against Israel.

“Hillel strongly condemns this type of rhetoric, which associates support of the state of Israel with a campaign to make campus more accessible for Jewish students,” the statement said.

“This inability to separate Jewish individuals from the Israeli government’s actions is, indeed, a form of anti-Semitism,” the statement also said.

The Graduate Student Union at University of Toronto is the only student union in Canada with a committee dedicated to promoting the BDS movement, according to B’nai Brith of Canada. A complaint against this BDS committee has been pending before the university’s Complaint and Resolution Council for Student Societies for over six months.

On Sunday, B’nai Brith of Canada wrote to officials at the university, asking them to swiftly condemn the Graduate Student Union’s stance on the kosher food initiative, ensure that the complaint against the GSU BDS Committee is expedited, and work to make kosher food more accessible on campus.

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Denver Talk Radio Host Fired Mid-Show by Conservative Radio Station after Criticizing Trump

(JTA) — A Denver talk radio host said he was fired mid-show by the conservative radio station that hosts it after he criticized Donald Trump on air.

Craig Silverman, who is a former chief deputy district attorney and who is Jewish, told the Denver Post that he was in the middle of talking about former Trump personal attorney Roy Cohn on his show on 710 KNUS radio when he was interrupted by network news.

KNUS program director Kelly Michaels came in to the studio and told Silverman “You’re done,” he told the newspaper.

Silverman tweeted in response to his apparent firing: “I cannot and will not toe strict Trump party line. I call things as I see them. I see corruption and blatant dishonesty by President and his cronies. I also see bullying/smearing of American heroes w/courage to take oath and tell truth. Their bravery inspires me.”

Silverman has told his radio audience that he voted for Trump in 2016, and for Mitt Romney in 2012.

His show has been on KNUS for the last five years. He co-hosted a political talk show on Clear Channel for the 10 years before that, the Washington Post reported.

During his recent shows Silverman has indicated that it is valid for Congress to hold an impeachment inquiry, and has questioned Trump’s alleged actions in his dealings with Ukraine.

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Soros Moves his University from Budapest to New Campus in Vienna

(JTA) — A private university founded by philanthropist George Soros opened a new campus in Vienna.

The Central European University had to leave Budapest last year after the government of Prime Minister Viktor Orban passed legislation last year that made it impossible for the university to remain in Hungary. The law passed in April 2017 made it impossible for the university to issue American-accredited degrees.

Soros said Friday during the official opening that his charitable foundation will commit $830 million to the university.

Founded by Soros in 1991 and chartered in the US state of New York, the liberal university that has attracted students from some 100 countries around the world was a threat to Orban, who is a nationalist.

Orban routinely decries the Hungarian-born Soros, a Jewish billionaire philanthropist, as a sinister interloper in terms some have described as anti-Semitic.

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Prince Andrew Regrets not Cutting Ties with Jeffrey Epstein Earlier

(JTA) — Britain’s Prince Andrew denied having sex with an underage girl trafficked by Jeffrey Epstein and said he regrets not cutting ties with Epstein after the millionaire financier’s 2008 legal trouble for soliciting a minor.

Prince Andrew discussed his relationship with Epstein and addressed the accusations of Virginia Giuffre in a BBC interview on Saturday.

Giuffre claims she was forced by Epstein to have sex with the prince three times, in London, New York and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The prince provided an alibi for one of the encounters and poked holes in her memories of the other two.

The prince saw Epstein following his release from custody in Florida and stayed at his New York mansion for several days. It was then that he said he ended his friendship with Epstein. They had no further contact.

“It was the wrong decision to go and see him in 2010,” Andrew said. “I kick myself for (it) on a daily basis because it was not something that was becoming of a member of the royal family.”

Prince Andrew acknowledged he had stayed on Epstein’s private island, visited his home in Palm Beach, Florida, and traveled on his private plane.

Epstein was found dead in early on Aug. 10 at the Metropolitan Correction Center in Manhattan while awaiting trial for sex trafficking charges for allegedly abusing dozens of minor girls. His death was ruled a suicide.

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Former Nanny Found Guilty of Sexually Abusing Utah Chabad Rabbi from Age 8

(JTA) — A jury in Utah has convicted the former nanny of a Chabad emissary in Salt Lake City of sexually abusing him for about 10 years beginning at age 8.

Alavina Florreich, 70, on Friday was found guilty of five counts of aggravated sexual abuse of a child and two counts of forcible sex abuse, the Deseret News reported. She will be sentenced on Jan. 13, and faces up to life in prison. Her attorney said she will appeal.

Rabbi Avrohom Zippel, 28, and father of two, first came forward in an article in February in the Deseret News. The newspaper said he may be the first Orthodox rabbi to come forward during the #MeToo movement as a survivor of sexual abuse.

The rabbi, who works as a Chabad emissary in Salt Lake City, where he grew up, said the #MeToo movement inspired him to come forward. He also cited as an inspiration Jewish Olympic gymnast Aly Raisman, who testified in court alongside 156 other women against former USA Gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar, who was convicted of sexually abusing them.

Elizabeth Smart, who was kidnapped from her home in Salt Lake City in 2002 at 14 and was sexually abused during her nine months being held captive, was in the courtroom for the verdict. She has advised Rabbi Zippel throughout the case.

Rabbi Peretz Chein, the co-founder of the Chabad House at Brandeis University in Massachusetts, also was in the courtroom. He came forward earlier this year as a sexual abuse survivor, the newspaper reported.

Florreich, a native of Tonga, a kingdom in the South Pacific, was arrested in March 2018 on suspicion of 131 counts of child abuse.

Zippel’s parents were Utah’s first Chabad emissaries.

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Iran’s Khamenei Says He Does Not Have a Problem with Jews, Just with the Jewish State

(JTA) — Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said that he does not have a problem with Jews, just with the Jewish state.

“The disappearance of Israel does not mean the disappearance of the Jewish people, because we have nothing against them,” Khamenei said, in Tehran at the 33rd International Islamic Unity Conference, the AFP reported citing Khamenei’s official website.

Iran generally refers to Israel as the “Zionist regime” and does not officially recognize the county.

Khamenei said that all “Palestinian people,” including Muslims, Christians and Jews, should decide the future of the land. He added that they should be able to “choose their own government and oust thugs like (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu.”

“We are not anti-Semitic. Jews are living in utmost safety in our country. We only support the people of Palestine and their independence,” he also said.

About 20,000 Jews live in Iran today.

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Parnas and Fruman Met with Trump during White House Hanukkah Party, CNN Reports

(JTA) — Soviet-born businessmen Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman met with President Donald Trump during The White House’s annual Hanukkah party last year, CNN is reporting.

The two men, associates of Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani, are alleged to have been instrumental in pressuring the president of Ukraine to give Trump damaging information on political rival Joe Biden’s son, Hunter.

A photo from last year’s event shows Fruman and Parnas smiling in a photo with Trump, Giuliani and Vice President Mike Pence.

During the party, the two men had a private meeting with Trump and Giuliani, CNN reported, citing two unnamed acquaintances in whom Parnas confided right after the meeting.

Trump has publicly stated that he does not know Fruman and Parnas.

Parnas said that during the meeting Trump talked about tasking him and Fruman with what Parnas described as “a secret mission” to pressure the Ukrainian government to the Bidens.

Giuliani, through his lawyer, Robert Costello, denied to CNN that any private meeting took place that night at the White House, saying it was a mere handshake and photo opportunity. The White House would not comment to CNN inquiries.

Joseph A. Bondy, a lawyer for Parnas, told CNN, “Mr. Parnas at all times believed that he was acting only on behalf of the President, as directed by his personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani, and never on behalf of any Ukrainian officials.”

Fruman’s attorney did not comment.

CNN has recently reported that since 2014 there are eight documented times when Parnas and Trump were together, including taking pictures together at campaign events and attending high-dollar fundraisers.

Parnas and Fruman were arrested last month and charged with criminal campaign finance violations. They have pleaded not guilty.

Parnas last week said he will cooperate with congressional impeachment investigators.

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IDF Retaliates against Hamas after 2 Rockets Fired on Beersheba

JERUSALEM (JTA) — The Israel Defense Forces launched airstrikes on Hamas terror targets after two rockets were fired at the southern Israeli city of Beersheba.

The rockets were fired early on Saturday morning, and were intercepted by the Iron Dome missile defense system.

The IDF responded with attacks on Hamas targets shortly after, including a naval compound, a terror tunnel and a military camp.

The rockets came less than two days after Israel and Gaza terror groups agreed to a cease fire.

For two days last week, some 450 rockets were fired by terror groups in Gaza on civilians in central and southern Israel. Israel responded by striking Islamic Jihad targets. Hamas controls Gaza, but had sat out of last week’s rocket attacks.

“The Hamas terror organization is responsible for everything in the Gaza Strip and will bear the consequences of terror acts carried out against Israeli citizens,” the IDF said.

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