Friday, March 31, 2006

Not much posting lately - I was at a business conference in Miami for a few days. Don't be jealous though, I spent most of my time in a windowless, freezing ballroom. Then this morning I took the NASD Series 24 exam which I passed, thank G-d. Now I am formally licensed to spy on other people's e-mails. As, I've told zarq, blame it on Eliot Spitzer.

Does the accidental rise of a Jewish deputy mayor to the mayoralty of Buenos Aires make Argentina a paradise for Jews? The Jewish Journal of Los Angeles seems to think so.

Situation Improves for Argentine Jews



Cynthia McKinney has a boulder, not a chip, on her shoulder.





A lawyer for Rep. Cynthia McKinney, the Georgia congresswoman who had an altercation with a Capitol Police officer, says she was "just a victim of being in Congress while black."

"Unfortunately, the Police Officer did not recognize me as a Member of Congress and a confrontation ensued," the statement read.

I understand that as an African-American, Ms. McKinney gets unfairly "profiled" and that has to be a terrible exeperience when you're out and about. But when you are in your workplace, and that workplace is supposed to be one of the most guarded places in the world, there's no reason to beat on a policeman if he stops you for not having proper identification.


Don't forget to "spring ahead" this Sun AM.


It used to be that the Left used the number of U.S. military deaths to show that the we were losing the war in Iraq and that the war is unwinnable. Now that March 2006 had the second lowest death rate of the 37 months of the war (slightly fewer than 1 per day), and the last quarter was the least deadly in two years, are we winning? Have we made a turnaround? Nope. Does anyone have any idea of how many insurgents/soldiers/terrorists we have killed? I thought not. Condaleeza Rice admitted to "thousands" of tactical mistakes having been made during the course of the war. I'm sure some people will take this to mean that this war is much different than any other extended war, but I'm not really sure that's the case.

In WWII, on D-Day, the Allies landed around 156,000 troops in Normandy. That's about the number of soldiers that are in Iraq now. On that same day, 2,500 allied soldiers were estimated to have been killed. That's more losses in one day than in the entire Iraq campaign of over three years. And our population was half of what it is now. Oh, and our soliders are still in Europe 60 years later. A little perspective people before we start declaring military disaster.

Wednesday, March 29, 2006

A proposed condominium and hotel tower that would be the tallest building in North America won approval from the Chicago City Council today, clearing the way for construction to start later this year.

The council approved a measure that raises the height limit on structures at the site to accommodate the 2,000-foot tower. The building, named the Fordham Spire, would top Chicago's Sears Tower and the planned Freedom Tower in New York as the tallest in North America....

The $550 million, 124-story building to be developed by the Fordham Co. will have about 300 condominiums, 250,000 square feet of hotel space, retail stores and restaurants. It will overlook the Chicago River where it meets Lake Michigan.

Fordham has said construction will begin around the end of the year, and the building should be completed by 2010.

Saturday, March 25, 2006

U.S. report details what Iraq was doing as war neared

In 2001 the Iraq General Security Directorate told Saddam that the Pokemon cartoon character in Hebrew meant "I am Jewish" and "represented a subterfuge by international Zionism to undermine Iraq's security," according to the report.



Bwahaha! The whole world shall soon know the truth!
The dealer where I bring my car for service has several PCs with high-speed internet access in the customer waiting area - how cool is that?

NEW HAVEN, March 23 — An Israeli athlete who survived the attacks at the Munich Olympics in 1972 spoke about his ordeal for the first time in the United States on Thursday night at Yale, warning that reprisal killings of terrorists only lead to "bloodshed and more bloodshed."

For me, this is the most fascinating thing about the article:

Mr. Alon was staying with members of the shooting team, who had guns. After a short discussion, however, the athletes decided not to shoot their attackers because they did not know how many had entered the complex or whether they would retaliate by killing the hostages.

I certainly can't blame them - even today they'd probably be put on trial for murder of the terrorists.

Which makes me wonder...let's say that the people on Flight 93 were able to land the plane after attacking the hijackers, killing them in the process. The passengers who killed the hijackers would have to be tried for murder, wouldn't they? I mean, it is pre-meditated and you can't REALLY know they're going to crash the plane until it actually happens, right? Things that make you go hmmmm....

Thursday, March 23, 2006

10:31AM ET today.....

MONTEGO BAY, Jamaica (AP) — Fire broke out on a cruise ship in the Caribbean early Thursday, killing one person and injuring 11 others before the crew extinguished the flames, company officials said.

The Star Princess was en route from Grand Cayman to Jamaica when the blaze started in a cabin and spread to others nearby, according to a statement from Princess Cruises, which is owned by Miami-based Carnival Corp.


12:44PM ET today

MIAMI (AP) -- Carnival Corp., the world's largest cruise operator, reported Thursday its first-quarter profit fell 19 percent.

(Yes, I know the two are not related.)

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Tomorrow, March 24, is the 30th Anniversary of the beginning of the military dictatorship that ruled Argentina for seven terrible years from 1976-1983. Much has changed in Argentina since then, and the current President, Nestor Kirchner actually fought against the dictatorship when it was in place.

When I ask my wife and my in-laws how life was different for them, they just kind of shrug and say the streets were never so safe. They tell me about how someone once told them about the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo who were protesting the disappearances of their children in the center of town. They say they knew nothing about it - if the government controlled press didn´t mention something, it didn´t exist.

As I mentioned, the government is at least paying lip service to wanting to bring the old ¨militares¨to justice. A formal holiday was passed to remember the anniversary of the coup and to reflect on past injustices. The other night, there was a government ad on TV that made me cry - I´m sorry I don´t have a link to it. Keep in mind that not only were young radicals thrown out of airplanes into the Rio de la Plata, but babies were taken from young women and given to military families. It is known that many of these people, now in their 20´s, still do not know who their real parents are.

The ad starts with a young boy on a crowded beach looking lost. A concerned woman stands next to the boy and begins clapping her hands. (I was told that this is what people do here when they find a lost child in order for the parents to locate them more easily.) Soon a man also stands next to the woman and begins clapping...soon the whole beach is clapping as everyone despearately tries to locate the boy´s parents. The scene then fades out and fades back in to a single middle-aged woman clapping her hands in a darkened space. As the camera pulls back, an entire riser full of middle aged people are clapping there hands and they tell the viewers without saying a word - we are all looking for our children, The Disappeared.

There´s plenty more horror to go around, but just wanted to let my readers know that this is a really big deal down here.
This story actually hit the top of The Drudge Report this morning.

Wal-Mart Targeting Upscale Shoppers


PLANO, Texas (AP) -- Wal-Mart Stores Inc. has overcome its rural roots and downscale image to attract affluent shoppers, but executives admit that many of those well-heeled consumers come only for cheap groceries and steer clear of the other merchandise.


In its boldest effort yet to target upscale shoppers, the nation's largest retailer is opening a new store this week with an expanded selection of high-end electronics, more fine jewelry, hundreds of types of wine ranging up to $500 a bottle, and even a sushi bar.


Wal-Mart says it won't duplicate this format anywhere else. But if plasma TVs, microbrewery beer and fancy balsamic vinegar sell in Plano, those items could be added to stores in other affluent communities.

I´ll probably check out the store this weekend - it´s just a few minutes from my house. We´ll have a lot to stock up after coming back from vacation, although I doubt that sushi or a high-def TV will be in our shopping cart.

More local reporting here and here.


Tuesday, March 21, 2006

Talk about poor planning - 352,000 crackers and no Cheese Whiz.

Inside the Brooklyn Bridge, a Whiff of the Cold War

For decades it waited in secret inside the masonry foundations of the Brooklyn Bridge, in a damp, dirty and darkened vault near the East River shoreline of Lower Manhattan: a stockpile of provisions that would allow for basic survival if New York City were devastated by a nuclear attack.

City workers were conducting a regular structural inspection of the bridge last Wednesday when they came across the cold-war-era hoard of water drums, medical supplies, paper blankets, drugs and calorie-packed crackers — an estimated 352,000 of them, sealed in dozens of watertight metal canisters and, it seems, still edible.


I am now convinced that the Mayor of London isn´t really anti-semitic, it´s just his mouth works a little bit faster than his brain.

Mayor in fresh Jewish controversy


Ken Livingstone attacked David and Simon Reuben for their role in an ongoing dispute about the Stratford City development in east London.


He suggested the brothers "go back (to their own country) and see if they can do better under the ayatollahs"....


Conservative members of the London Assembly said the brothers were not Iranian, but had been born in India of Iraqi Jewish parents.

If Israelis Arabs are disheartened, Americans must be manically depressed.

Though they make up one-fifth of Israel's population, Israeli Arabs head into next week's elections feeling their votes count for little and disappointed that Arab parties haven't banded together to get them a better deal.

As a result, turnout among Israel's 600,000 eligible Arab voters could be thin. In the 2003 elections, 62 percent cast ballots.

The U.S. hasn´t seen that kind of electoral turnout since about 1908.

Monday, March 20, 2006

I haven´t yet seen Capote, however it did inspire me to read Capote´s book, In Cold Blood.

I never really picked it up because murder stories never held my interest and in any case one can easily figure out how this story ends.  That being said, the book was fantastic - of the I couldn´t put it down variety.  It is beautifully written and you absolutely get inside each person´s head, from those that were murdered to those that were simply passing acquaintances of the killers. 

I am usually someone who gets terribly confused if there´s more than half a dozen main characters in a story.  Here, Capote presents several dozen people and I feel like I could pick each one out of a crowd without ever having seen a photo of any one of them.

I was also lucky enough to get a hardcover copy of the original book from my local library.  There´s something about the smell of the old book, the thicker paper that was used and the font that really made me feel like I was sitting in my grandmother´s old parlor, living and breathing middle America circa 1960. (I wonder when we stopped using the word parlor?)

Now, I am dying to see Capote.  I´m sorry I didn´t appreciate his work while he was alive.
I just wanted to post the last few paragrpahs of the LA Times editorial from the other day regarding the third anniversary of the War in Iraq.

Most opponents of the war are hardly in a position to gloat about American difficulties in Iraq. Russia, France and Germany all cynically manipulated the run-up to the war for their own purposes, and they comforted Hussein by allowing him to believe that the international community would never take concerted action against him. And much of the mocking by Bush critics about the supposed absurdity of the administration's claims about weapons of mass destruction is revisionist nonsense. As the New York Times reported last Sunday, Hussein's own top military commanders were stunned to learn three months before the start of the war that they had no WMD at their disposal. There is a Shakespearean quality to the tale of the dictator bluffing his way to his own demise, and it's hard for those of us who opposed the war to bemoan his removal.

As it enters its fourth year, the war in Iraq defies simplistic characterizations from both ends of the political spectrum. The heroism of U.S. forces and of ordinary Iraqis going about their daily lives is inspiring. But the future of Iraq remains shrouded in gray uncertainty.


True, the piece also contains much valid criticism of the war and of the President, but I thought this section was unusually candid for this particular newspaper. The last paragraph also sums up the current situation in as concise and complete a form as I have seen to date.

Sunday, March 19, 2006

There may come a day when I become ambivalent about the war in Iraq, but I will never become anti-war. the reason? The only group that could convince me to turn against the war are the media, but I know that they are willing to put falsehoods on the front page if a negative story ¨feels¨ right and we consistently hear feedback from soldiers that the media is totally failing to give us details on the victories and advances, both on a military and personal level.

The following is from the Washington Post, which conducted in depth interviews with 100 veterans of the war.

But it was not bad in the ways they see covered in the media -- the majority also agreed on this. What they experienced was more complex than the war they saw on television and in print. It was dangerous and confused, yes, but most of the vets also recalled enemies routed, buildings built and children befriended, against long odds in a poor and demoralized country. "We feel like we're doing something, and then we look at the news and you feel like you're getting bashed." "It seems to me the media had a predetermined script." The vibe of the coverage is just "so, so, so negative."

It may very well be that the thousands of little positives do not compensate at all for the one or two big daily negatives that the media reports on daily.  Since I´ll never believe that I really understand what´s going on, I will therefore choose to believe that the average U.S. soldier is a good person, that the average U.S. politican wants to do the right thing and is not just looking to kill people for profit, and the majority of Iraqis prefer freedom, democracy and Islam over tyranny and Islam.

Saturday, March 18, 2006

There´s a Harvard (Kennedy School of Government) working paper which was just issued which is causing a lot of hand-wringing, anger and I-told-you-so´s on the internet.  The basic poremise is that supporting Israel goes against U.S. interests and that it´s the Israel Lobby´s snake-in-Eden like way of sweet-talking Americans into making policy that is ultimately harmful.

As a strong supporter of Israel and a financial supporter of AIPAC - the Israel lobby - I look forward to the responses from both that group and other similar organizations.

You can download the report, "The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy" here.  I hope to read it during the course of the week. I´m no Harvard professor, so I´ll be interested in seeing if there´s really any valuable insights.  I´ll try to keep an open mind. 
OK, this sounds like kind of a stretch, but you gotta have faith - right?

Local Soldier In Iraq Saved By Metal Cross

"It was devastating to hear your son has been shot and was in an explosion," said Chris Green, Kyle's mother. She was first to hear about his ordeal when he stumbled upon what he thought was a cell phone on patrol in Baghdad last week.

"He said when he tossed it, it exploded and threw him back 20 feet and 10 feet in the air. When he was airborne that is when he was shot in the left leg," Chris said.

But when the bullet ripped through his fatigues, it suddenly stopped: deflected away by a metal cross Kyle had with him. "He tied it to his dog tags, which were tied to the belt loop in his pocket," Chris said.

Had that location been any different, the member of the 101st Airborne's Screaming Eagles likely would be dead.

"Where it was in his pocket, it was right around the main artery."

Friday, March 17, 2006

What's the matter with liberals?


SPECIAL TO THE AMERICAN-STATESMAN
Sunday, March 19, 2006

Michael Lerner is the editor and founder of Tikkun, a magazine dedicated to a progressive Jewish critique of culture and politics. He is also a rabbi at Beyt Tikkun synagogue in San Francisco, a congregation that blends "spiritual and social justice concerns." In the mid-'90s, Lerner achieved brief notoriety as "Hillary's brain" when the Clintons invited him to the White House as a spiritual adviser. Hillary Rodham Clinton in particular latched on to Lerner's idea that the Democrats needed a "politics of meaning," as opposed to a series of policies. She might have dropped the phrase, but Lerner is resuscitating it in his new book, "The Left Hand of God: Taking Back Our Country from the Religious Right."

We spoke to him by phone a couple of weeks ago.

Austin American-Statesman: One of the most striking claims you make in your book is that there's "a real spiritual crisis in America." This isn't the kind of thing we're used to hearing from liberals. What exactly is this spiritual crisis?

Michael Lerner: I interviewed 10,000 middle-income working-class people who are moving to the right politically. What I learned is that there's a deep spiritual crisis in their lives. One of the things that was astounding was to find out that so many of these people want to have a life of higher meaning and purpose — not just money and power. They want a purpose-driven life.

We found that the spiritual crisis consisted of two elements: On the one hand, working people are surrounded by selfishness and materialism that encourages them to only look out for the bottom line. On the other hand, they live in a world where there is little opportunity to actualize their desire for higher meaning and purpose. And it's the right that has articulated this crisis in politics; they've gained a tremendous amount of credibility for doing so.

You talk about a purpose-driven life. That brings to mind some of the voices in the evangelical community like Rick Warren who speak directly to the idea that there's something lacking in secular society.

This crisis wasn't created by the right. This is what the Democrats have failed to understand: Most Americans aren't hurting from material deprivation. That's not the only thing they care about. They're deprived of a life of meaning.

That sounds like a direct critique of Thomas Frank's argument in "What's the Matter with Kansas." Frank argues that people are deluded into voting for Republicans because they aren't looking out for their economic self-interest. Am I sensing that correctly?

Yes. I'm critical of all those in the liberal, intellectual and academic worlds who think that the only needs that people have are material needs, and that people who express spiritual needs are totally crazy. The only people who are articulating spiritual needs are politicians on the right because the left — the Democratic Party — only has categories that talk about economic entitlements and political rights.

At the beginning of the 20th century, there was a populist progressive movement in the heartland. Somehow this has disappeared. Why is it so hard for the left to articulate its values to rural America?

Well, there's a religio-phobia on the part of the left. The left won't acknowledge that the point when it was at its strongest — in the 1960s — it was being led by Martin Luther King and a lot of its rhetoric came straight out of the churches. The irony is that a lot of people on the left have a spiritual life but they're afraid to talk about it because they're afraid that they'll be treated like second-class citizens. There is a disdain for religion in the mainstream liberal culture — in political organizations, in academia, in the media.

So how do you communicate this message in red states like Texas?

You have to be sincere about what you believe. Another thing I respect about the conservative movement is that they were willing to lose elections around what they really believe in. Democrats aren't willing to lose elections. Instead, they pretend they believe in something they don't believe in.

But it seems like liberalism is an anathema to the rural white voter.

That's because liberals are liberal about their liberalism. They have no backbone. They're wimps. No one can figure out what they believe in. Why did liberals support Kerry when he supported the war? Because they hoped the Republicans were right — that he was a flip-flopper and if he got elected he would flip and turn against the war.

But that begs the question: If liberals were to stand up and say what they believe in, there's a chance that rural white voters would say, "Fine, I really do disagree with you."

Well, they're not winning anyway.

Democrats are starting to talk religion. Hillary Clinton called abortion "a tragic choice." Do you think this is a good idea?

It's a baby step, but it won't be solved by having candidates quoting the Bible. There has to be a recognition that there's a deep problem in people's lives. Someone who heard me talk about this came up to me and told me a story that relates to this. This guy had been invited to do something on a Sunday morning, and he declined because he said he had to go to church. The other person said, "Church? You can't go to church — you're a Democrat!" There has to be a change in that culture.

When the left starts to adopt this rhetoric, commentators on the right accuse them of pandering.

Of course, because the right wants to own this issue. They understand that a spiritual left would be disastrous for them. So they do everything they can to put down people on the left that have a spiritual vision. They either say its manipulation — which, up to this point, it is — or they say it's flakey new age baloney. In that way they capture the mentality of a lot of liberals who say, "You're right, it is flakey new age baloney, but we figured we'd get some votes this way."

Are there people out there reinvigorating liberalism and remaking the Democratic Party?

Well, The Washington Post once called me the "guru of the White House" and you know how that turned out. That experience taught me that whispering in the ears of powerful people is not the way to social change. If you want to change society, you've got to build a movement. Major change only happens when you build from below.


I don´t know if this will make the papers back home in the U.S., but down here in Argentina this is the top story. Terrible. :-(







Scene of accident
The accident happened in front of thousands of children



A runaway train killed seven people and injured at least 11, severing some of their limbs, during the filming of a TV show in Uruguay, police said.

The accident occurred during a "test of strength" challenge to raise money for a hospital in Young, 380km (235 miles) west of the capital, Montevideo.

Contestants were pushing and pulling a train and two carriages when the vehicle gained speed and ran them over.

Local authorities have declared three days of mourning.
From today´s Opinion Journal...

The Bend of History

President Bush sketched an expansive vision last night of what he expects to accomplish by a war in Iraq. Instead of focusing on eliminating weapons of mass destruction, or reducing the threat of terror to the United States, Mr. Bush talked about establishing a 'free and peaceful Iraq' that would serve as a 'dramatic and inspiring example' to the entire Arab and Muslim world, provide a stabilizing influence in the Middle East and even help end the Arab-Israeli conflict."--editorial, New York Times, Feb. 27, 2003

One prominent neoconservative, Francis Fukuyama, asserts in a new book that the administration embraced democracy as a cornerstone of its policy only after the failure to find unconventional weapons in Iraq. The issue was seized upon to justify the war in retrospect, and then expanded for other countries, he says."--New York Times, March 17, 2006

Thursday, March 16, 2006

This story is a few days old, but I thought that National Geographic had a somewhat more in-depth analysis than the general media.

Underground Tunnels Found in Israel Used In Ancient Jewish Revolt


Oh, sure, now that it's impossible to get, we can have it. (via zarq)

Irish Jews can now wear chainmail and leather armor


Physically or intellectually?

"I've always been attracted to Jews" - Sharon Stone while in Israel this week


I am personally going to foil his plans, starting tomorrow at lunch. Hey, after an 11 hour flight I should be able to eat whatever I want.

Argentina's president says "Eat less beef"

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Just a piece of informatrion that's useless to anybody else, but at least it will become part of Officially Recorded Human History.

Beware the Ides of March....

My father's mother, may she rest in peace, was born on March 15th sometime in the earlier part of the 20th century. She taught English (among other subjects) in a Brooklyn yeshiva for girls and always reminded me that she was born on the Ides of March in a reference to Shakespeare's Julius Caesar.

Miss you grandma.  And Happy Birthday.

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

It's this kind of thing that makes me proud to be an American. It may be hard for some people to reconcile the Abu Ghraib military from the humanitarian service military, but there it is. It's not all one or the other. And I like to believe it's more "other", we just never rarely read about it unless it's a major event like the Asian tsunami or Katrina. Surely this act of saving Iranian lives was worth a page A32 story in a major newspaper.

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. Navy warship helped rescue the six crewmen of an Iranian commercial boat in the Gulf after the small craft had been adrift without power for 10 days, the Navy said on Wednesday.....

"Patrolling warships are sometimes called on for humanitarian interventions," said Cmdr. Robert Randall, the U.S. ship's commanding officer. "It felt good to assist."

A boarding party from the Gonzalez gave the Iranian crew food and water, the Navy said. The U.S. sailors also inspected the dhow's cargo and engineering plant and determined the engine was beyond repair, the Navy said.

The vessel contacted Iranian officials, who picked up the crew of the craft, the Navy said.

How come there's no "proud" face in my list of mood icons? I guess I'll settle for hopeful.
So, Hamas declares that they are planning to relaease Ahmed Saadat, a senior PFLP terrorist who is repsonsible for killing an Israeli cabinet minister several years ago.  (Granted the minister did not like Arabs very much, but he was a senior government official nonetheless.)

Israel pulled their "f*** you" move today, storming the jail and looking to take Saadat, dead or alive.

In the AP recounting of the history of this particular case, there's an awful lot of finger pointing going on.

On March 7, Abbas said he was willing to free him but would not take responsibility for any action Israel would take against him later.

Abbas accused the Americans and British of withdrawing the monitors without telling him, violating the 2002 agreement. He said he would hold them responsible if anything happens to the prisoners.

Saadat told Al-Jazeera, which broadcast the raid throughout the Arab world, that he held Abbas partly responsible, saying he should have gotten him out of prison sooner.


Angry at the Israeli move, Palestinians are randomly attacking any non-Israeli civilians they can find, most of whom are most likely available for the taking only because they sympathize somewhat with the Palestinians themselves.

US teacher abducted after West Bank raid
(reports say he has been freed)

Red Cross delegate kidnapped in Gaza

Two Australians kidnapped in Gaza

As the Plot Thickens, No One Is Safe

This season of "24" began with Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland) returning from the dead after he had to disappear in the finale last May. The actual death of Jack is where Mr. Gordon said he would like the series to end, whenever that may be. "He's a tragic character, and tragedy ends in death," he said.

I really, really, don't want this to happen. I mean, every day I try to live my life by asking myself, WWJD? (What would Jack do?)

Monday, March 13, 2006

So you're a Spanish performance artist and you're afraid that interest in the Holocaust is waning. What do you do about it?

Pump an old German synagogue full of carbon monoxide and ask people walk through it with gas masks on, of course!

Artist Turns Synagogue Into Gas Chamber




I think I can honestly say the thought never would have occurred to me.
Argentina Pens In Sales of Iconic Food

In an extraordinary decision, the government this week announced a six-month ban on most beef exports from the world's third-largest purveyor of the meat.

The government hopes that meat targeted for overseas sale will now stay at home. Increased supplies will reduce domestic prices, which skyrocketed 20% last year, surpassing the worrisome inflation rate of more than 12%.

"It doesn't interest us to export at the cost of hunger for the people," Kirchner declared.

The president's edict took effect Friday. Delighted shoppers rushed to butcher shops to inquire whether prices had dropped yet from the $2 or so a pound for the prime cuts that can go for 10 times as much in the United States and Europe.


I'll be going down to Buenos Aires on Thursday night for a week and am looking forward to packing on some pleasantly priced protein poundage.  Or kilos of carne as they might say there.

I'll be spending most of my time here at La Tranquera restaurant.  You can see my in-law's apartment complex in the background of the "Playa de Estacionamiento" picture. Clasica Victoria on the same block (M. Sucre 664) is where I'll be having coffee and pastries most mornings.  Starbucks is a poor substitute for the cafe culture of Europe (and countries pretrending to be in Europe).

Sunday, March 12, 2006

David Warren wonders aloud (in print) whether Islam and modernity are compatible - something he always assumed but now is unsure about.

Mr Bush was staking his bet on the assumption that the Islamists were not speaking for Islam; that the world’s Muslims long for modernity; that they are themselves repelled by the violence of the terrorists; that, most significantly, Islam is in its nature a religion that can be “internalized”, like the world’s other great religions, and that the traditional Islamic aspiration to conjoin worldly political with otherworldly spiritual authority had somehow gone away. It didn’t help that Mr Bush took for his advisers on the nature of Islam, the paid operatives of Washington’s Council on American-Islamic Relations, the happyface pseudo-scholar Karen Armstrong, or the profoundly learned but terminally vain Bernard Lewis. Each, in a different way, assured him that Islam and modernity were potentially compatible.

The question, “But what if they are not?” was never seriously raised, because it could not be raised behind the mud curtain of political correctness that has descended over the Western academy and intelligentsia. The idea that others see the world in a way that is not only incompatible with, but utterly opposed to, the way we see it, is the thorn ever-present in the rose bushes of multiculturalism. “Ideas have consequences”, and the idea that Islam imagines itself in a fundamental, physical conflict with everything outside of itself, is an idea with which people in the contemporary West are morally and intellectually incapable of coming to terms. Hence our continuing surprise at everything from bar-bombings in Bali, to riots in France, to the Danish cartoon apoplexy.

My own views on the issue have been aloof. More precisely, they have been infected with cowardice. I am so “post-modern” myself that I, too, find it almost impossible to think through the corollaries from our world’s hardest fact. And that fact is: the post-Christian West is out of its depth with Islam.

I believe in my heart that Muslims can be peaceful democrats (small "d").  However, my heart is not my brain and even if I persoannly knew every Muslim in America (which I like to believe are democrats if they chose to live here), they are most likely not reflective of the Islamic world at large.  And that is a world which we American infidels will never understand no matter how many scholarly articles we read.

So we go on hoping becuase to believe the opposite is too terrible to imagine.
The rabbi bangs his stick on the ice.

At 6-foot-2, 205 pounds, Glazer stands out as one of the largest players on the ice. He isn't modest about using his size or falling back on his hockey upbringing.

"It would be fair to say that rabbi thinks hockey is a contact sport," said one teammate, David Lever, 42, of Katonah.
This comment in no way reflects my position on gay marriage which I am generally for if only because I think denying it causes more pain than accepting it.  Proponents of gay marriage however, are going to have to take some interesting legal positions to show that marriage is important to them as a "buddy system" and not just a vehicle to publicly sanction their form of sexual congress .

But gay rights organizations have long refuted claims that acceptance of same-sex unions is a slippery slope toward marital anarchy.

“The right wing would love nothing more than for us to spend all of our airtime discussing distractions such as polygamy, bestiality and other — from their point of view — doomsday scenarios rather than engage the public about committed same-sex couples being discriminated against,” says Evan Wolfson, executive director of Freedom to Marry, which advocates marriage rights for gay and lesbian couples. - The Washington Blade 2/24/06

Polygamists, Unite!
  They used to live quietly, but now they're making noise. - Newsweek 3/13/06

Most notably, Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania told the Associated Press in 2003 that legalizing gay sex would pave the way for legalized bigamy, polygamy and incest. This "slippery slope" argument angers some gay-rights activists who see the issues as being completely separate. "I frankly would not love to see an article [about polygamy advocacy] in NEWSWEEK because this is the connection that our opponents make, and we feel it's a specious one," says Carisa Cunningham, director of public affairs for Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders.

Someone at Newsweek must really hate Carisa Cunningham.

Saturday, March 11, 2006

It seems like weeks since the last time I've posted - I've been spending my time recupertaing from a mild bout of the flu, studying for my Series 24 Exam, and preparing for the family trip to Buenos Aires to see my in-laws. In the meantime, I have been able to read some books - Aliya by Liel Leibovitz (very interesting and very pro-Israel) and Straight Into Darkness by Faye Kellerman (I love her stuff) and watch some movies - Trembling Before G-d (not great film, but very emotional), Les Choristes (standard teacher turns class around story, but I liked it). I also watched a DVD of a David Chapelle show which I honestly thought was not funny. And his voice is incredibly grating.

Now onto the news:

Donald Trump is planning to build a skyscraper in the town my uncle grew up in outside of Tel Aviv.

Jimmy Carter will not be happy until the Israelis give up everything for a promise of peace from people who've never been peaceful and demand Israel's destruction.

"For more than a quarter century, Israeli policy has been in conflict with that of the United States and the international community...." As opposed to the Palestinian policy which has been to delibarately target and murde civilians (including schollchildren) and teaching their people to hate Jews.

Strong job growth and low unemployment (despite having a major city and a region the size of England destroyed), tame inflation (despite huge increases in gas prices), rising wages, four years of consistent growth in the GDP. It's not to hard to find some people who think the nation's economy is in bad shape. I guess you can't please all of the people all of the time. Would someone please point me to another industrialized country that's doing so much better that we should be looking to them as an example?

As Jews around the world prepare for the celebration of Purim Monday night, the Toronto Star reminds us that history is repeating itself in Persia/Iran.

Haman: "If it please the king, let a law be written that they (the Jews) be destroyed" (Esther 3:9).
Ahmadnejad: "As the Imam (Ayat Allah Khomeini) said, Israel must be wiped off the map" (Oct. 26, 2005).

Coalition casualties in Iraq for the last three months have been slightly below average for the last three months, and so far March is shaping up to be a good month (fingers crossed).

The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) calls Daniel Pipes names. Pipes responds with a distrubing report. Meanwhile, Americans have an increasingly negative view of Islam - worse than after 9/11. Could this be the result of the Media's inability to show us any Muslims excpet for those who burn, threaten and kill in their effort to show us how horrible the war in Iraq is? You have to go to right-wing blogs to find information about Muslims in general and Iraqis in particular who are defenders of freedom and "Western" values. It took the New York Times two weekslonger than the blogs to spread the word about Wafa Sultan, a brave woman if ever there was one.