Hamas War

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Public "Pat Down" in Phoenix

I usually write of my "adventures" on me-ander, but this one is more news-worthy than my usual daily ramblings and mutterings.

As many of my regular readers know, I've been traveling around quite  a bit, even flying, no not that sort of flying.  I'm amazed at the different security checks.  Some places shoes and sweaters stay on, and other airports demand stripping removal.  Why?  I don't know. 

Israeli security checks include an element I've seen no place else.  Israeli security agents interview every traveller.  I consider that the most important thing to do.  And yes, it's related to "profiling."  Some people are inspected (and that includes their baggage) more thoroughly than others.

I'm a middle-aged grandmother who already receives some senior discounts.  I'm also a Torah-observant Jew who follows the more stringent laws of Tzniyut, modesty.  I don't wear slacks, meaning that I wear a skirt or dress longer than my knees.  This didn't bother  Israeli security in Ben-Gurion Airport, nor did it cause any alarm to the security in JFK Airport.  So I was rather surprised when the Phoenix, AZ security told me to stand and wait for a "pat down."  The guy shouted something like "lady pat-down," and within  a few minutes a woman wearing heavy rubber gloves appeared.  She told me that she had to do it since my skirt was hiding my legs.  I had to open them while standing while she checked front and back.  Granted that she was polite, but this was in public view.  Actually, considering that my possessions were unprotected and I even know someone whose computer had been stolen, I felt safer with my eys on my bags.

Now I wonder what type of security I'll experience tomorrow...

Monday, July 11, 2011

Why Jews should be uncomfortable with Glenn Beck

Posted by Jewish Israel

Israelis are about to get overwhelmed with a summer of Glenn Beck. Mr. Beck has big plans for the Jewish state. He is currently in Israel laying the groundwork for a mass pro-Israel happening entitled,"Restoring Courage" which is to take place at the Southern Wall Excavation Site of Jerusalem’s Temple Mount on August 24th. There is something about Glenn Beck that unsettles many Torah observant and secular Zionists, causing them to appropriately shift into a "respect and suspect" mode. Jewish Israel takes an honest look at the man and his plan…more

Rabbi Riskin OK’s Jews to Enter Churches and Learn
A recently featured question addressed to Rabbi Riskin on the Ohr Torah Stone homepage was, "Are Jews allowed to enter churches?" Rabbi Riskin's answer, especially the absolute sanction of evangelical churches, left Jewish Israel with a lot of questions. We explored a number of angles in our search for clarification and have received a letter in response from the Chief Rabbinate… more

It Won't Help To Throw Us in Shiloh to The Sharks

Israel's Left, well entrenched in Tel Aviv, Haifa and their suburbs keep trying to pacify the Arabs with promises of Shiloh, Migron, Ofra and other Jewish communities in Judea, Samaria etc.   But the Arabs aren't interested.  They want Tel Aviv, Ramat Aviv, Haifa and the other Leftist areas.  That's where they had once lived, not in Shiloh!

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Like the Jews who claim they're safe but are afraid to wear kippot in public...

I got a kick out of the article about the United States Ambassador to Syria claiming a "warm" welcome but fearful of flying the American flag

  • What's a friend?
  • What's an ally?
In  all honesty, I have never really considered the United States a true friend and ally of Israel.  The American people may admire, trust Israel, but the State Department has never shown any enthusiasm for the State of Israel, its security etc.  American Jews lie to themselves to make themselves feel better, and Israeli policy is based on a fantasy.

Friday, July 8, 2011

Hidden Jews in America

I know a few illegal Jews hiding from the authorities in America.  That does make them "hidden Jews." Doesn't it? They don't have valid visas.  Recently I discovered that a friend of ours had spent decades in the states, even was married to a United States citizen for over ten years but for whatever reason, he never did the citizenship procedure. 

Other people I know of are young, trying to build lives and careers, but they're missing that valuable ingredient, visa, papers and citizenship.

I just can't imagine living in that constant "fear."  I guess that they block it out for the most part.  But one of the things that must be most difficult is that basic services and health insurance are only for the legal.  This Foward article about the illegal Jews in America mentions a woman who had to get charity for serious, expensive medical care.  We have American friends who spent a few years in Israel, became Israeli citizens, then went back to the states. They return to Israel for good, reasonably priced medical care.

Illegals can't do that.  If they leave the states they'll never be able to return; at least that's their fear.  Getting visas isn't easy.

Our grandchildren are now all American citizens.  There's a procedure that allows grandchildren of first class U.S. Citizens to pass citizenship to their grandchildren, so our daughter had done it for the kids in husband's name.  A lot of our friends' kids have done it with their kids.  It's not cheap, and you have to fill out a lot of forms and travel with the children to the United States and have an appointment with a special citizenship office.  But at least the kids will never need visas to visit or work if they wish to do so.  Of course I would prefer that all my kids and grandkids stay forever in Israel, but it's not under my control.

Audacity of Dopes by Latma

Here's the latest from Latma, Audacity of Dopes.






Give your thanks to Caroline Glick.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Which Type of Israeli Youth Want Combat in the IDF

Hat tip: IMRA

There's an article on the IDF site stating that 80% of IDF draftees want to be in combat units.  I just wonder if that's a cross-section of Israeli society or a disproportionate amount of "dati leumi," national religious, traditional and Right wing.

Many of the secular Left avoid combat and even draft.  Of course the media concentrates on the chareidi religious, who aren't drafted if they are studying full-time in yeshivot.

Does anyone have more information?

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Visiting the States, Subjects to Avoid

Considering that I'm the "family rebel" of my large Jewish family, I have to be careful about what I say to my various, all wonderful, relatives.  Oh, why am I known as the "rebel?"  That's easy. I became religious, strictly Orthodox, Torah observant when others were rapidly deleting Jewish Laws and restrictions from their lives.  Many of my relatives and my husband's are very Jewish minded, whatever that means, and make efforts to be part of their local Jewish communities, generously contributing in many ways.  But when it comes to Shabbat and kosher food, it's a different story.

Of course, my moving to Israel has set me apart, too.  And we do see things differently when it comes to politics.  Some relatives can see through the Obama marketing-hardsell, while others are among the majority of American Jews who worship him, like their parents, grandparents and great-grandparents worshipped FDR. Of course all that was for very different reasons.

The next stage of my visit to the states will be among the Obama fans, so I'm going to have to zip my lips beyond my usual.

As I've blogged before, I have no doubt that if Barack Hussein Obama had inherited his mother's skin he never would have been elected.  The novelty of his color was the chief marketing "gimmick."  Many times I've asked people:
"What was his track record, experience to qualify him to be the United States President?"
They counter with:
"What did he do wrong?"
The fact that it takes experience to be a good president seems lost to them.  It reminds me of what I've seen election after election here in Shiloh. The candidates who are the least known win.  No doubt that they hadn't yet made enemies, so people are willing to risk putting unknowns in positions of power.

Good luck world.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Latma to the Rescue, Gilad Shalit

There's nothing like Caroline Glick's Latma.  This week they give an expose` on the campaign to free Gilad Shalit.

Friday, July 1, 2011

In the Wake of the Altalena by Elliot Jager

In the Wake of the Altalena
By Elliot Jager

The Altalena on fire.
Ships and their comings and goings have lately been a fixation over at Haaretz, Israel's chief left-wing newspaper. One of the paper's advocacy journalists, Amira Hass, has been writing enthusiastically about joining up with a pro-Palestinian flotilla that intends to smash Israel's naval blockade of the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip.

Master and Commander Motti Golani, Haaretz. Did Ben-Gurion order the attack on the Irgun ship primarily as a warning to two militarized left-wing factions not to cross him? SAVE

Remember the Altalena Jerold S. Auerbach, Jerusalem Post. The Altalena precedent hovers over the Jewish state as a perennial reminder of the tragic possibility of internecine violence. SAVE

Altalena Footage YouTube. Footage of the ship on fire, including interviews with key participants. (Video; Hebrew with English subtitles) SAVE
No less earnestly, the paper's front pages have been devoted to defending the Left's narrative about how the arms ship Altalena came to be sunk—perfectly legitimately, in its opinion—off the coast of Tel Aviv sixty-three years ago this month (June 21, 1948), on orders from David Ben-Gurion. Haaretz has been particularly incensed by an Israel Defense Ministry reference to those members of the Zionist paramilitary group Irgun who were killed on board as having been "murdered."

Now, historian Jerold S. Auerbach has come forward to undermine leftist orthodoxy with Brothers At War, a succinct, emotive, and yet levelheaded summation of the Altalena tragedy.

Auerbach frames his Altalena account as just one chapter in the continuing struggle for the identity of the state of Israel—"Jewish state, secular state, democratic state, democratic Jewish state, state of the Jewish people"—and explores how such a struggle can call the legitimacy of government decisions into question.

The conundrum, in Auerbach's view, has ancient origins traceable to Josephus, whose remarks on the "seditious temper" of the Jewish people have framed (accurately or otherwise) our understanding of Rome's victory over the Jews for the past two thousand years. In modern times, Auerbach argues, we've seen the repercussions of this struggle for legitimate authority many times in the history of the state of Israel: with the Altalena in 1948; in the 1952 Knesset clash over whether to accept German government reparations for the Holocaust; in the 1993 controversy over the Oslo Accords, and the assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in 1995. It persists still in discussions over how the IDF should treat conscientious objectors, from the Left or Right. Put another way: Is the bigger threat to the Jewish commonwealth zealous Jews who reject governmental authority on divisive issues, or the chronic failure of successive Israeli governments to foster consensus positions?

Where to begin the telling of the Altalena calamity? Auerbach reasonably starts by differentiating two Zionist camps. One, led by Ben-Gurion, was the dominant power in Zionist officialdom and was inspired by a Jewish national renewal rooted in notions of socialist utopia. The other, motivated by Ze'ev Jabotinsky and carried forth by his disciple, Menachem Begin, envisioned a self-assertively nationalist society rooted in a strong entrepreneurial middle class. Long before the Altalena, Auerbach points out, there was a record of bad blood between the two camps exacerbated by the mysterious murder of a Labor-Zionist leader, Chaim Arlosoroff, bitter disputes over whether and how to confront the British policy barring Jewish immigration to Palestine before and during the Holocaust, and over how best to respond to Arab brutality against Palestinian Jewry in the years before Israel's independence.

The Altalena (named after Jabotinsky's literary pseudonym) was purchased in America by Irgun operatives and loaded at Marseilles, France with desperately needed weapons and munitions along with a "melting pot" of 940 recruits for the nascent Hebrew fighting force in Palestine. As far as its American Jewish captain knew, his mission had the "acquiescence of the Israeli government," led by Ben-Gurion.

Begin, who oversaw the operation, had indeed been negotiating directly with Ben-Gurion's man, Israel Galili, over how to disburse the ships weapons and troops. But the Altalena's secrecy was compromised early on: the mission was tracked from the start by various intelligence agencies and blatantly exposed in a BBC news broadcast. A series of disastrous miscommunications, logistical blunders, and lack of internal Irgun discipline led to the ship's ill-fated arrival while the Begin-Galili talks were still in progress. In fact, Auerbach writes, Galili informed Begin on June 16: "We [i.e. he and Ben-Gurion] agree to the arrival of the vessel. As quickly as possible." It was Ben-Gurion himself who ordered the ship to land at Kfar Vitkin (near the town of Netanya) to avoid UN aerial surveillance.

As the Begin-Galili talks proceeded, some of the weapons and almost all of the personnel on board were unloaded near Netanya. But by then, Ben-Gurion had allowed himself to be convinced that Begin was planning a putsch against his authority—even as the Irgun leader felt certain, perhaps naively so, that the weapons negotiations would still succeed. But there was no time. Ben-Gurion balked, edgily ordering Haganah (now IDF) troops to start shooting on the vessel. Six Irgun men and two soldiers were killed before the ship fled Netanya southward and ran aground off the Tel Aviv coast—not far from the headquarters of the Haganah's elite unit, Palmach.

Ben-Gurion insisted on unconditional surrender or else, and Palmach commander Yigal Yadin appointed a 26-year-old Yitzhak Rabin on the spot to command the beach fighting. When the Altalena crew hesitated to surrender, perhaps because of poor communications with Irgun headquarters, Palmach commanders ordered an all-out attack on the ship. Even when the crew raised a white flag, Rabin's snipers continued to pick off targets bobbing in the waters. Begin, who had earlier boarded the ship expecting a deal with Galili, barely escaped with his life. The ship went down along with 300 Bren guns, 500 anti-tank guns, 1,000 grenades and millions of bullets that could have been used during Israel's War of Independence.

Auerbach's conclusion, citing historian Ehud Sprinzak, is that there had been no "mutiny on the right," no intention on the part of Begin and his men to defy the legitimate authority of the land, and certainly no intention of staging a coup. Begin had only wanted enough men and guns earmarked to carry on the fight for Jerusalem's Old City (which Ben-Gurion had abandoned) and thought he had Galili's tacit approval. Begin himself abhorred the idea of a Jewish civil war, and had famously restrained his men from action against the Haganah even when it was actively turning them over to the British in 1944. Here, too, he ultimately swallowed his pride and ordered his Irgun men into the IDF on September 20, 1948, signaling the end of the Irgun as an independently functioning force. Instead, it was Ben-Gurion's "quasi-totalitarian" personality that led the socialist leader to what Begin later plausibly called "a reprehensible abuse of state power."

Auerbach's sensitive re-telling of this calamitous chapter in Israel's early history concludes with the unhappy assessment that Israel's clashes over legitimate authoritative power remain unresolved, perhaps irremediably so.

Yet surely there are enough tools nowadays at the disposal of decision makers with the wisdom to use them—new elections, referenda, supermajority Knesset votes, or some combination thereof—so that even wrenching decisions of monumental consequence cannot be legitimately challenged with violence. After all, with Zionist sovereignty comes governmental responsibility.

"Act of G-d?"


There's just nothing like Dry Bones to explain in the most exact of ways.

The best things about the Iranian computer viruses, the fact that those helping the Iranians have been in unfortunate accidents etc.  (Please add your addtional inexplicable acts in comments) is that nothing can be proven.