Monday, March 13, 2006

Purim miracles

WorldNetDaily.com: Fatah Purim attack foiled.

It is written that Purim will be from the only holidays which will be observed when Moshiach comes. The reason is that the Purim story shows the Jewish people at its best: with the odds against us, with the world planning our destruction, we did not recoil in fear, we did not put our hopes in false gods of world globalism, tolerance and appeasement, we did not just despair. We simply returned to our true path: our commitment to G-d's mission. We renewed our fulfillment of G-d commandments, and we prayed until the miracle happened. And happen it did.

May the entire Jewish people, most especially our brethren in Israel, enjoy a safe, secure and joyous Purim. And as in days gone by, may the plots of those who choose the path of Haman be returned upon their own heads.

Sunday, March 12, 2006

Quite a ride

telegraph.co.uk: The accelerator has jammed, the brakes have burned out and I'm trapped in my BMW doing 130mph.

Sometimes, the same thing happens to us, spiritually speaking. We're in too much of a rush to understand where we're going, and what for. If we don't hit the brakes in time, take a step back, and take stock of ourselves, we're lucky to come out with only minor injuries.

Strange currents

"No man is worthy of me who cares more for father or mother than for me."
-J.C., Mathew 10:37

First Gay 'Marriage' Legalized, Now Spain Bans Terms 'Mother' and 'Father'
-LifeSite.net

I guess that the Christian and gay communities aren't as far apart as they seem...

Thursday, March 09, 2006

Glasnost in Congress

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Hirhurei Teshuvah


Better one good deed than a thousand blog posts.

Monday, March 06, 2006

Brachos from $99!

My family and I have been rolling from laughter by Kupat HaIr's brochures for a while. I never got around to putting my feelings on paper. Then Haaretz, Ph.D. came and said it all.

Friday, March 03, 2006

Going the wrong way

I decided to give Google ads a spin. (By the way, I am prohibited by our contract from either clicking the ads myself or asking others to do so; I will therefore refrain from doing so. But neither will I ask you not to patronize our advertisers).

As everyone knows, Google is supposed to be smart enough to deliver context-sensitive ads, which in simple language means that it will scan ("crawl") through the site and offer ads deemed to be of interest to the reader.

I am therefore shocked and surprised not as much because this blog now carries ads for Islamic schools, liberal think tanks and initiatives for impeaching our President. The fact that it is my site that attracts these, er, flies, is unsettling.

Well, who's crazy, me or Google? You vote!

Thursday, March 02, 2006

The infallibility curse



"To err is human, to forgive divine." - Alexander Pope

An incredible phrase, and an incredible concept. Whether it be the one apologizing, or the one forgiving, the ability to backtrack and to deal with a new situation, an unexpected situation; to know that one needs to take stock of one's situation and if need be, to acknowledge one's own fallibility, to acknowledge a mistake; all this is part of the same unique ability. It is a gift with which G-d has endowed only humans, created in His own image. The advantage Man has over the animal, or machines.

By contrast, not knowing how to check oneself, is arguably the greatest impairment to creativity, initiative and leadership. One who cannot acknowledge his mistakes, he who does not know when to stop and say "Hold it! Things are not as they should be!", this is someone who's many talents will all have been for naught.

And it seems to be the problem plaguing our president.

Whether it be his row with McCain over torture, the ports deal, his Iraq statements, or anything else, one thing has struck me every time I have seen, heard, or read any of his statements. It is his self-assuredness, bordering on borderless arrogance. It is not the assuredness of one who has experienced doubt. It is the quintessential "Just trust me".

This is a quality that looks pretty good at a presidential job. "He's the president, he should know" is a pretty normal response for the average citizen. It takes a while to realize that one can conceivably say "Trust me" on just about anything and everything.

Nowhere did this reach a head more than in the latest Katrina tapes. Warnings were given that the levees might be breached. Nothing was being done. Brown warned about it, Chertoff warned about it, every person who knew anything warned about it.

The President? "We are fully prepared".

If that's not self-assured, conceited garbage, what is?

This is also the challenge facing myriad Jewish institutions, notably the religious groups. The courage to see that things are not as they ought to be; and the courage to go ahead and change them. Lubavitch, certainly since 1994, is no exception. The Rebbe was certainly one who knew and understood the horrors of stagnance and complacency, and fought it tooth and nail. It is the role of his followers to perpetuate that trend. So far, they're being pretty rotten at it.

Come to think of it, this is probably the challenge facing you and me. Chassidut elaborates at length how the holiday of Purim symbolizes the refusal to make peace with any kind of limitations or boundraries. Time to get going.

Drive-thru weddings

MSN Video: Ohio couple marries in McDonalds.

The event is obviously a Christian one. Who on earth is the Lubavitcher escorting the bride down the aisle?

With this kind of an attitude to marriage and life in general, no wonder so many marriages end up going the way of the fries basket.

Sunday, February 26, 2006

Arab "tolerance": More hypocrisy

The Zionist Conspiracy - Joe Schick: King Abdullah's Facade.

In general, the very idea of a "tolerance award" is rather dubious. Since when do I have to thank you for "tolerating" me? Only my agreeing, expressly or implicitly, that I am in truth a scum not worth being tolerated, can I thank someone for going "beyond the call of duty". With this kind of a "Galut outlook", it is but natural that bigots and racist countries ala Jordan should also be considered "tolerant".

This is what Alan Dershowitz is good for. Alan, make your voice heard!

Friday, February 24, 2006

Democrats are winning on National Security

Add to the jokes about the best golfer being black and the best rapper being white, this beautiful snippet from Rasmussen Reports:
For the first time ever, Americans have a slight preference for Democrats in Congress over the President on national security issues. Forty-three percent (43%) say they trust the Democrats more on this issue today while 41% prefer the President.
The preference for the opposition party is small, but the fact that Democrats are even competitive on the national security front is startling.

Just in case you thought that there was a natural way to get through this world...

Dershowitz is doing something good?

Jewish World Review: All praise Professor Alan Dershowitz.

Tony Blankley reviews Preemption, Alan Dershowitz's new book on the realities of civil liberties in a post-9/11 world:

Next week a vastly important book will be published: "Preemption, A Knife That Cuts Both Ways" by Alan Dershowitz. Yes, that Alan Dershowitz: the very liberal civil libertarian, anti-capital punishment Harvard Law School professor. And but for my lack of his legal scholarship, there is nary a sentence in the book that I — a very conservative editor of the Washington Times, and former press secretary to Newt Gingrich — couldn't have written.

Innovative Punishment

NWITimes.com: Teen's now 'poster boy' for better conduct

A boy who had used vulgar language was made to stand outside for a day on a street corner picketing against his own behaviour.

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

You can judge a book by its cover

Try and contrast the visual image projected by Hamas's Arabic homepage and its' English one.

Talk about hypocrisy

New York Post: A securiy guard at the UN busted drawing swastikas on a log sheet "was issued a letter of reprimand and asked to attend sensitivity training". His name and nationality were not released.

A far cry from the UN's reactions to the cartoons, wouldn't you say?

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

"Rastalubab" - Oxymoron?

Melody Maker: The true story of a White Plains boy who found both God and reggae.

(via 770EasternParkway.com)

"There are actually a number of similarities between Rastafarianism and the Lubavitch, including strict adherence to the Old Testament, dietary laws that shun pork and shellfish, a proscription that women keep their head covered, and a fervent Messianic belief—for the Rastas in Haile Selassie, who claimed to be a direct descendant of King David; for some Lubavitch, in Menachem Schneerson. One Rasta sect considers itself the Lost Tribe of Israel, and another early Rasta proselytizer wrote that 'A Rastafarian is a Jew by nature, being a righteous one of principles, dignity and love for God.'"

Never Forget

Monday, February 20, 2006

Chilul Hashem.com

Via Vos Is Naies:

Being a judge for anyone unlucky enough to have presided over the recent court wrangles between two rival factions of Satmar Hasidim has probably never felt more like contemplating a new career.

When our warmongers said "To ---- with the Rabbonim, let's go to court", we thought that was bad. (And it is. Very, very bad. In fact, on one of the sides - which clearly has a rabbinical council to which all who suscribe to that side agree - two of Lubavitch's head honchos have gone to court against each other too).

But, as it turns out, not entrusting right and wrong to Rabbonim isn't the end of it.
Hashem Yishmreinu.

Freedom takes some hard work




Washington Post: Glasnost hitting China.

And on mentalblog.com: Likkutei Maysim and Rudderless.

I was just enlightened as to the meaning of red pill and blue pill. A profound concept, and enjoyable reading.

Sunday, February 19, 2006

Hamas beginning facelift

JPost.com: Hamas working on "new charter".

A charter is supposed to be the guiding document of a movement. Under normal circumstances, if a charter needs to be changed, it means one of two things: 1) Something has fundamentally changed in the surrounding world. 2) Something has been acknowledged to have been very wrong until now.

But I'm trying to approach the Arabs logically again. Silly me.

Thursday, February 16, 2006

Late Post: Yud Shvat

I have been mulling this post for a while, namely whether it should at all be posted. There are sites that have been set up to bash Lubavitch, and some others that consider it their business to express their disappointment with the movement. So technically, there's no real need to add my two cents.

But if I am calling attention to relatively meaningless, obscure bits of nothing, then surely I ought to focus some of my attention to what I feel is not just an isolated occurence, but a disturbing trend.

Without going into history, it has been awhile since I last set foot in the "Rosa Hall" on one of the major days on the Lubavitcher calendar. I came this past Yud Shvat hoping, if nothing else, to hear some inspiring words. Whether it was to be called a Farbrengen or "conference", the dais was filled with scholars and Chassidim of no ordinary caliber, and regardless of whether or not I agree with their general approaches or even what they would be saying tonight, it promised to be interesting.

I came away sorely disappointed.

The makeover of Lubavitch into Lubavitch, Inc, is complete. The tone and atmosphere at the event was reminiscent of a corporate dinner bash more than an evening which would conceivably be the Rebbe's most emotional day of the year. From the tone and rhetoric being pushed by the emcee, to the reports given by "Netzigei HaYeshivos" (anyone remember anything remotely similar in pre-'94 days?) about Yud Shvat preparations around the world, which without exception made at least as big a point of the amount of money raised as the preparations themselves, and which culminated in a public degradation of Torah study, to the rambunctious applause thereafter; this was an evening simply not worth having happened.

To be sure, there were other speakers who spoke sincerely and eloquently about the theme of the hour and our connection to the Rebbe. There was even one who hinted at protest of some of the foregoing. But that any of this should be possible on Yud Shvat of all days, on an evening when the Rebbe would address the world, nauseated me. I wanted to puke; I am sure that the Rebbe would want to, as well.

ומסיימים בטוב.

And I thought Russians don't have spine

From NY Post - Weird but True:

Seventeen inmates at a Russian prison took drastic action when they were told they could no longer watch their favorite TV show because it was moved to a later time slot.

They slashed their wrists in protest.

But their bloody actions didn't do any good — all are fine and "The Zone" — a prison-based drama — is no longer seen at Prison Camp 2 in Yekaterinburg.

Cartoon News III



(From the ADL website)

And a jewel from the AP write-up:
"The tension has noticeably increased anti-western dialogue in the Muslim world"...

Monday, February 13, 2006

The Wicked Son

Treppenwitz: The Wicked Son
(via mentalblog.com).

Finally, someone who managed to spell out clearly that which for a while I have been unable to: that the delegitimization and isolation of the right justifies their taking drastic measures.

More on the cartoons

A brilliant perspective about the cartoons by Michelle Malkin.

And on the author's blog, the cartoons themselves.

Not all lawyers are liars

I had to speak to a traffic lawyer in Binghamton. He was a wonderful person who told me everything that had to be done, and how to do it myself. All on the phone.

If anyone in the Binghamton area needs any kind of regular law work, check out his website: http://www.binghamtonlawfirm.com.

Thursday, February 02, 2006

Fight fire with fire

Ask anybody which European countries are the most sympathetic to Islam and Muslims in general and the Palestinian cause in particular, and you will be told France and Denmark. It is therefore very, very enjoyable to see what is happening now.

And these are the countries whose citizens Fatah gunmen are aiming at, because of one stupid cartoon. Beggars can't be choosers; these people have built everything you have.

But will the French and the Danish acknowledge that these people are lowlives, that is another matter...

Saturday, January 28, 2006

Back to normal




Yahoo News:
Hamas Suggests Using Militants in Army.

Things are slowly beginning to return to normal:

Mashaal says that Hamas will abide by existing agreements with the country "as long as it is in the interest of our people"; an interesting definition for "abiding by an agreement".

Israelis are demanding that Hamas "look for peaceful solutions" to the conflict.

Hamas, not an organization known for wasting time, is openly starting to build an army. And the finale...

President Clinton is suggesting talks with Hamas. Why not, they are after all, duly elected representatives of the Palestinian people, moreover they "abide by their agreements"...

Reverse McCarthyism

Thursday, January 26, 2006

Marvin Schick

At the risk of dragging on with a point that has been belabored ad nauseam mamash, I will add my two kilobytes to the ruckus.

The omnipresent shallowness behind the response to Schick's article betrays one of the problems confronting us today. It is not only the profound am haaratzut, simple ignorance that characterizes our religious youth across the board; it is the institutionalization of this ignorance. Asking hard questions these days is more uncommon for a yeshiva bochur today than it ever was before. Things have come to the point that stagnation is formally encouraged. The form depends on the sect; the responses to intellectual deviance range from bookbanning to excommunication to cries of "Maskil!" (תרתי משמע), "Nifrad!". The concept of emunah lema'ala misechel, as explained in Chassidut, has nothing in common whatsoever with what I am writing about: nowhere was this doctrine used to abolish Talmudic debate, works of the caliber of the Kuzari, and so on. Any attempt to connect the one with the other, is lack of depth at best; at worst, it is willful falsification and distortion. The Lubavitcher Rebbe did not produce 200 volumes of brilliant discourse just to have it parroted blindly the world over.

I just read Marvin's two articles again: whether I agree with him or not, his article was well-written and expressed genuine admiration tempered with real concern with real problems. The tone reminded me of Pat Robertson's reaction to Ariel Sharon's condition; the reactions to both bore a striking resemblance.

Manis Friedman's response is not new; he has been espousing this idea for a while. There is certainly some merit to it. That said, King Solomon said many thousands of years ago (Proverbs 21:30): אין חכמה ואין תבונה ואין עצה נגד ה.

Let us hope that we will wisen soon. More than we imagine depends on it...

Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Hamas: Didan Notzach!

Plenty of people are watching the Palestinian elections with an awful lot of trepidation, among them the governments of Israel, the United States and Europe.

In classic Jewish style, Olmert was virtually on his knees pleading with the Palestinians to elect someone good for Israel rather than someone who would expose the naked Emperor. Hamas may be, and probably indeed is, great for the Palestinians, but not very good for the Jews. The trouble is that the Palestinians, not the Jews, are the ones voting, so count on them to vote for who is good for them, not us.

No longer can anyone say that the problem lay in Arafat, or anybody else for that matter. No longer can anyone babble about "waiting for a better partner"; if Abu Mazen must educate us, then so be it. Let us listen to him: "We are partners with the Israelis. They don't have the right to choose their partner".

The results so far show that almost less than half of the Palestinians have chosen a party that sanctions terror under the carpet; the majority are not interested in beating around the bush, and have voted H-A-M-A-S. Once the democratic process is underway, it must be respected: The Arabs are talking here, listen to what they are saying. It is perhaps the first time in history that a nation made an informed choice, in the most free and democratic of ways, to formally embrace terror as a way of life.

So everyone is nervously trying to figure out what to do, now that Hamas has shocked the world by getting twice the votes anyone dared forecast. Fatah managed to hide its involvement in terror, at least to the satisfaction of those who were willing to go to any length to not see it. Hamas makes no pretense whatsoever as to its intentions. In the most polite and blunt way, they have stated: Recognition of Israel, "negotiating" with Israel, ending terrorism, is "not on the agenda". This puts everyone into a quandary: Even Israel cannot be expected to negotiate with someone who openly, officially calls for its destruction. Bush has said the same up till now: "Not until you renounce your desire to destroy Israel will we deal with you". But nobody seems to be asking: why negotiate? What for? If Hamas will now "recognize" Israel, he will deal with it? These people are bloody terrorists!

Anyone with an ounce of sense, be it Israel or the Bush Administration, would gladly seize on the opportunity to realize that the Emperor is naked, and that we have not only no real or true partner for peace, but no partner at all. It is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to return to the status quo, and make some true peace in the Middle East, Afghanistan/Iraq-style.

But dont count on anyone currently holding the cards to capitalize on it. The Jews will behave themselves nicely and properly to the end. G-d Almighty, have mercy on us...

Thursday, January 19, 2006

The wolf shall dwell with the lamb

BlueEyes Magazine

Chabad: A Photo Essay.
(via mentalblog.com comments)

Blue Eyes Magazine is one of the most stunning modern photo collections I have ever seen. The coverage of 9/11, Chabad, Haiti and more are simply astounding.