UN Security Council’s Political Meddling

The UN Security Council is currently attempting to pass a resolution condemning all Israeli settlement activity as “illegal.”  This non-binding, Chapter VI resolution is contradictory to its previous resolution 242, which the peace process has been based on, and will only serve to complicate the already complicated political negotiations.  The only chance to defeat this resolution is for the US to exercise its veto. 

In his editorial in the Wall Street Journal, Alan Dershowitz gives his position condemning the resolution:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704698004576104043350034886.html?mod=WSJ_Opinion_LEFTTopOpinion

Egypt’s True Colors

“When the only diagnosis Egyptians can offer for their various predicaments—ranging from sectarian terrorism to a recent spate of freak shark attacks at a Sinai beach resort—is that it’s all a Zionist plot, you know that the country is in very deep trouble.”

A good Wall Street Journal editorial by Bret Stephens

For the whole editorial:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704735304576058382591955692.html#articleTabs%3Darticle

A Moment of Memorial for One of the Victims of the Northern Forest Fire

Rabbi who survived Hizbullah fire among dead on bus

By RHONDA SPIVAK 
12/06/2010 02:58

Uriel Malka, former Winnipeg school principal and Denver emissary, 32, was working as a chaplain in the Prisons Service.

 

Rabbi Uriel Malka, 32, who fought in the IDF against Hizbullah in hand-to-hand combat in the Second Lebanon War, was among those killed on the Prisons Service bus that was engulfed by flames in the Carmel forest fire on Thursday.

Malka, from Karnei Shomron, who was training to be a chaplain in the prison system, was with Prisons Service cadets en route to Damun Prison to evacuate prisoners from the paths of the flames.

Uriel Malka, Middle with helmet

For the rest of the article please go to http://www.jpost.com/NationalNews/Article.aspx?id=198174

A Warrior is Held up to the American People as an Example to his Fellows

The Newest Medal of Honor

The man who has earned it is the first from this war to live to see it.

  • By WILLIAM MCGURN

Army Staff Sgt. Salvatore Giunta Receives the Medal of Honor Today at the White House

At one o’clock today in the East Room of the White House, an Iowa-born soldier will receive the nation’s highest decoration for valor in combat. In our nine-year war in Afghanistan and Iraq, this is only the eighth Medal of Honor. Even more rare, the man who has earned it is the first from this war to live to see the president place it around his neck.

The soldier is Army Staff Sgt. Salvatore Giunta. On Oct. 25, 2007, then-Specialist Giunta and his team were on a mountain ridge in Afghanistan’s violent Korengal Valley when they were ambushed by the Taliban. He took a bullet stopped by a protective vest as he helped pull one soldier to safety.

Then he went forward to help the sergeant, Joshua Brennan, who had been walking point. Two Taliban were carrying Sgt. Brennan away. Spec. Giunta shot the Taliban and brought Sgt. Brennan back.

For the rest of the article in the Wall Street Journal: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703326204575616572168606014.html?mod=WSJ_Opinion_carousel_2

Inspiration from a Jewish Astronaut

Where (almost) no Jew has gone before

 

By GIL SHEFLER 
11/08/2010 11:00

Astronaut Garret Reiseman charms audience at Jewish Federation of North America’s General Assembly with stories of space mezuzahs.

NEW ORLEANS – Garret Reiseman is a Jewish pioneer. No, he doesn’t grow cucumbers on a kibbutz in the Negev. His frontier is space and his mission is to boldly go where no Jew has gone before, or at least relatively few.

“I’m the first Jew to have been on the international space station,” Reiseman said at the Jewish Federation of North America’s General Assembly on Monday where he was a guest of Limmud FSU, an organization dedicated to promoting Jewish education among Russian-speakers. “It’s very hard to break records in space today. Yuri Gagarin first man in space, it’s been done. First man on the moon Neil Armstrong, been done. The first Jew in space, that’s been done long ago. So all I have is this: the first Jewish crew member on the international space station, and I brought with me a mezuzah.” 

For the rest of the article: http://www.jpost.com/JewishWorld/JewishNews/Article.aspx?id=194447

A Great Initiative to Improve the False Image of the Israeli Soldier

Some friends of mine from the army have started this project called “Friend a Soldier” with the intention of giving people around the world the chance to meet and converse with actual young people in the IDF.  This initiative has the chance to allow people who are not directly involved with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to form their own opinions based on personal connections rather than mass media.  They have recently been written about in this article in the Israeli news Ynet.com.  Now you too can friend an Israeli soldier….like me. 

http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3970722,00.html

Tel Aviv Gets World Recognition

 
Print Edition

Photo by: Marc Israel Sellem
Tel Aviv ranked world’s 3rd hottest city for 2011
By JPOST.COM STAFF
01/11/2010
 
Lonely Planet’s Top Cities list describes Israel’s most international city as hedonistic, tolerant, cultured, and a truly diverse 21st-century hub.
 
Travel guide company Lonely Planet released their Top 10 Cities for 2011 on Sunday. After “scouring the globe for next year’s hottest cities,” the editors at Lonely Planet decided to place what it called a “modern Sin City” – Tel Aviv – at number three.

Coming in behind New York City and Tangier, Tel Aviv is described as being unified by the religion of hedonism, yet tolerant, cultured and a truly diverse 21st-century hub. Touching on the city’s well known night life, it observes that: “There are more bars than synagogues, God is a DJ and everyone’s body is a temple.”

However, the guide also notes some of the lesser known characteristics that attracted them to the Mediterranean metropolis. Calling Tel Aviv the most international city in Israel, Lonely Planet points out that the city is home to a large gay community, calling it “a kind of San Francisco in the Middle East.” On a cultural note, they credit the city’s university and museums with making it “the greenhouse for Israel’s growing art, film and music scenes.”

Lonely Planet recommends strolling down the pleasant tree-lined streets that spill into the Mediterranean Sea, and finding out why Tel Aviv’s residents call it the greatest city on earth.

Other cities that made the list were: Valencia, the Peruvian Amazon city of Iquitos, Delhi, Newcastle, and the city it describes as the spiritual heir to Bob Dylan, Chiang Mai.

The other list put out by Lonely Planet on Sunday, was their Top 10 Countries for 2011. While Israel did not make the 2011 list, one of its neighbors did – Syria. Coming in at number nine, the guide lauds Syria’s slowly-liberalizing economy and the new-found freedom of no longer having the “noose of the ‘Axis of Evil’ tag hanging around its neck” as some of the reasons for Syria making this year’s list. They recommend the old cities of Aleppo and Damascus, exploring the open countryside, “strewn with the abandoned playgrounds of fallen empires. Albania and Brazil topped the list at numbers one and two, respectively.

http://www.jpost.com/Travel/TravelNews/Article.aspx?id=193541

Blatant Anti-Semitism, Not Connected to Middle-East Politics

Islamic terrorists usually try to justify attacks on Jews as anti-Israeli or because of Israeli-Palestinian issues… targeting US synagogues once again reveals the Arab cause for what it is: Modern Anti-Semitism.

This is just one of countless examples of cowardly acts displayed by the modern Jihad terrorist movement.  They target the softest targets in the world and then pour into the streets to claim that Israel is the perpetrator of “war crimes.” If the Jews played by the Arab Jihadis’ rules there would be no mosques left.  One must assume that they attempt to perpetrate such attacks knowing that the Jews would never stoop to tactics as low as their own. 

 

U.S. Jews on alert after parcel bomb addressed to synagogue

Rabbi of Or Chadash, congregation that was apparently targeted, says his community is ‘unduly frightened’; N.Y. Assemblyman Hikind: Synagogues will have to find ways to protect themselves.

For the rest of the story:

http://www.haaretz.com/jewish-world/u-s-jews-on-alert-after-parcel-bomb-addressed-to-synagogue-1.322189

An Important Initiative as Illegal-Drug-Trade Related Crime Soars Out of Control

The Wall Street Journal

Why I Support Legal Marijuana

We should invest in effective education rather than ineffective arrest and incarceration.

Our marijuana laws are clearly doing more harm than good. The criminalization of marijuana did not prevent marijuana from becoming the most widely used illegal substance in the United States and many other countries. But it did result in extensive costs and negative consequences.

Law enforcement agencies today spend many billions of taxpayer dollars annually trying to enforce this unenforceable prohibition. The roughly 750,000 arrests they make each year for possession of small amounts of marijuana represent more than 40% of all drug arrests.

Regulating and taxing marijuana would simultaneously save taxpayers billions of dollars in enforcement and incarceration costs, while providing many billions of dollars in revenue annually. It also would reduce the crime, violence and corruption associated with drug markets, and the violations of civil liberties and human rights that occur when large numbers of otherwise law-abiding citizens are subject to arrest. Police could focus on serious crime instead.

The racial inequities that are part and parcel of marijuana enforcement policies cannot be ignored. African-Americans are no more likely than other Americans to use marijuana but they are three, five or even 10 times more likely—depending on the city—to be arrested for possessing marijuana. I agree with Alice Huffman, president of the California NAACP, when she says that being caught up in the criminal justice system does more harm to young people than marijuana itself. Giving millions of young Americans a permanent drug arrest record that may follow them for life serves no one’s interests.

CALPOT

Racial prejudice also helps explain the origins of marijuana prohibition. When California and other U.S. states first decided (between 1915 and 1933) to criminalize marijuana, the principal motivations were not grounded in science or public health but rather in prejudice and discrimination against immigrants from Mexico who reputedly smoked the “killer weed.”

Who most benefits from keeping marijuana illegal? The greatest beneficiaries are the major criminal organizations in Mexico and elsewhere that earn billions of dollars annually from this illicit trade—and who would rapidly lose their competitive advantage if marijuana were a legal commodity. Some claim that they would only move into other illicit enterprises, but they are more likely to be weakened by being deprived of the easy profits they can earn with marijuana.

This was just one reason the Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy—chaired by three distinguished former presidents, Fernando Henrique Cardoso of Brazil, César Gaviria of Colombia and Ernesto Zedillo of Mexico—included marijuana decriminalization among their recommendations for reforming drug policies in the Americas.

Like many parents and grandparents, I am worried about young people getting into trouble with marijuana and other drugs. The best solution, however, is honest and effective drug education. One survey after another indicates that teenagers have better access than most adults to marijuana—and often other drugs as well—and find it easier to buy marijuana than alcohol. Legalizing marijuana may make it easier for adults to buy marijuana, but it can hardly make it any more accessible to young people. I’d much rather invest in effective education than ineffective arrest and incarceration.

California’s Proposition 19, which would legalize the recreational use and small-scale cultivation of marijuana, wouldn’t solve all the problems connected with the drug. But it would represent a major step forward, and its deficiencies can be corrected on the basis of experience. Just as the process of repealing national alcohol prohibition began with individual states repealing their own prohibition laws, so individual states must now take the initiative with respect to repealing marijuana prohibition laws. And just as California provided national leadership in 1996 by becoming the first state to legalize the medical use of marijuana, so it has an opportunity once again to lead the nation.

In many respects, of course, Proposition 19 already is a winner no matter what happens on Election Day. The mere fact of its being on the ballot has elevated and legitimized public discourse about marijuana and marijuana policy in ways I could not have imagined a year ago.

These are the reasons I have decided to support Proposition 19 and invite others to do so.

Mr. Soros is chairman of Soros Fund Management and founder of the Open Society Foundations.

The Dawn of Modern Hebrew

The story of the revival of ancient Hebrew and the creation of modern Hebrew is one that fascinates me. A little over 100 years ago, one man made it his unofficial mission to provide a common language for the Zionist Jews returning to their ancient homeland.  It is truly nothing short of a miracle that this effort and movement was able to succeed, and that today Hebrew is a language used in science, art, politics, street slang, literature, and truly every other aspect of modern life in Israel. 

Eliezer Ben Yehuda made it his personal mission to revive a common bond for the Jewish People.

This week in history: Revival of the Hebrew language

By DANIEL BENSADOUN
15/10/2010
 
The process began on October 13th 1881, as Eliezer Ben-Yehuda and his friends agreed to exclusively speak Hebrew in their conversations.The process of the Hebrew language revival began on October 13th 1881, as Eliezer Ben-Yehuda and his friends agreed to exclusively speak Hebrew in their conversations. As a result, the language, which had not been spoken as a mother tongue since the second century CE, once again became the national language of Israel.

Some three thousand years earlier, when the Jewish people first arrived in Israel with Joshua, Hebrew was established as the national language and lasted for more than a millennium, until the Bar Kohba war in 135 CE. From that point on, Hebrew was exclusively used for literature and prayer, until late in the 19th century with the first aliya and Ben-Yehuda.
For the rest of the article:  http://www.jpost.com/JewishWorld/JewishNews/Article.aspx?id=191505

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