Yourish.com

Cutting straight to the point

Congress did something right

Posted on August 12th, 2008 at 10:21 pm by Meryl Yourish.

Filed under: Israel, Life

I’ll be damned. Congress actually passed a law that is going to benefit me. After all these years of being unable to take advantage of, well, almost every tax credit, the Housing and Economic Recovery Act is actually going to give me a break. I get the equivalent of an interest-free loan that I can pay back over 15 years, starting in 2011.

As a first-time home buyer, I will be able to claim a tax credit of $7500 on my 2008 taxes. And it’s dollar-for-dollar, so if my tax burden is $10,000 after all the deductions and taxes are figured, and I’ve already paid $5000, I’ll still get a $2500 refund.

Except I’m also going to be able to deduct four months’ mortgage, property taxes, and other deductions for the year. So I should be getting the biggest refund ever, and boy, is it going to come in handy after tapping out my funds to buy the condo.

Watch Meryl get her taxes prepared faster than ever before. The second I get those W-2s, I’m going to have them done.

Such good friends

Posted on August 12th, 2008 at 11:00 am by Soccerdad.

Filed under: Iran, Israel, Israel Derangement Syndrome, Jew Cooties

Without a trace of irony the NYT reports:

An Iranian vice president said in rare comments that Iran was a friend of Israeli people, newspapers reported on Monday. “I say for a thousandth time that we are a friend of all people in the world, even Israelis and Americans,” the daily newspaper Etemad quoted Esfandiar Rahim Mashai, the vice president for tourism, as saying.

So why didn’t the Iranian swimmer compete against the Israeli?

However, IOC spokeswoman Giselle Davies said the IOC was satisfied that Alirezaei withdrew because of an illness.

“The athlete withdraw because of a sickness,” she said.

“He confirmed this in writing to the swimming federation. We also spoke to (Iranian association). And they have underlined to us that all athletes competing here are in the right spirit to compete against athletes of any nationalities.

“We take both the athletes and the NOC had their words on this.”

“Sickness?” My guess is cooties. Remember an Iranian had contact with an Israeli national at the games already.

I’m assuming that Mohammed Nikkhah came down with cooties after shaking David Blatt’s hand. Afterwards it couldn’t be assumed that it was safe for Iranians to be in close proximity to their good friends, the Israelis.

Just a hunch, of course.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Comics stars get serious

Posted on August 12th, 2008 at 9:00 am by Soccerdad.

Filed under: Holocaust, Pop Culture

Comic giants, Stan Lee, Joe Kubert and Neal Addams have turned their attention to getting a woman’s paintings back from the Auschwitz museum.

As all-star comic-book team-ups go, this one beats the first meeting of Superman and Spider-Man. Three of the elder statesmen of comic books — Neal Adams, Joe Kubert and Stan Lee — have joined forces to combat what they see as a real-world injustice.

The men are lending their talents to tell the tale of Dina Gottliebova Babbitt, who survived two years at the Auschwitz concentration camp by painting watercolor portraits for the infamous Nazi Dr. Josef Mengele. Some of the artwork also survived, but it is in the possession of the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum in Poland. Now 85 and living in California, Mrs. Babbitt wants the artwork back, but the museum has steadfastly refused to return it.

This is what they’ve done:

Now Mrs. Babbitt’s story has been captured in a six-page comic-book story illustrated by Mr. Adams, who helped take Batman back to his dark roots after the ’60s television show made him seem campy; inked partly by Mr. Kubert, whose comics career stretches back to the 1940s and who has drawn everyone from Hawkman to Sergeant Rock; and featuring an introduction by Mr. Lee, a co-creator of the Fantastic Four, the X-Men and many other Marvel heroes.

The text was written by Rafael Medoff, director of the David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies, which has championed Mrs. Babbitt’s cause. Mr. Medoff and Mr. Adams have offered the story to DC Comics and Marvel Entertainment in the hopes of getting it published, but no deal is yet in place.

I can’t say that I’m totally unsympathetic to the museum’s point of view:

Auschwitz museum officials, in a statement issued in 2001, indicated that they had bought six of Mrs. Babbitt’s watercolors in 1963 from an Auschwitz survivor and acquired a seventh in 1977. In 1973 the museum asked her to verify her work but did not offer to return the items. The museum has argued that the artwork is important evidence of the Nazi genocide and part of the cultural heritage of the world. (The museum did not respond to telephone calls and an e-mail message requesting comment.)

However Mrs. Babbitt did paint the pictures in question. And, more remarkably, her artistry saved her life and the life of her mother.

Surely the Auschwitz museum could work out a deal to return the artwork to Mrs. Babbitt for some time and then seek to get on loan after a specified period of time. Perhaps the museum could even display replicas and allow Mrs. Babbitt to have control of the art that she created under inhuman conditions.

The Times has made Mrs. Babbitt’s story available. (pdf)

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Howard Rotberg’s affair

Posted on August 12th, 2008 at 7:00 am by SnoopyTheGoon.

Filed under: Israel Derangement Syndrome

The story of Howard Rotberg’s unfortunate encounter with two or three pro-Palestinian provocateurs, followed by boycott of his book The Second Catastrophe
by the biggest Canadian bookstore chain Chapters Indigo, was eerily reminiscent of an episode in life of a professor, the protagonist of The Human Stain by Phillip Roth, probably one of the greatest books written in US in the last century. For people who haven’t read the book yet (but should): the professor had a misfortune to use the word “spook” in his lecture. It so happens that quite a lot of years before this imaginary lecture took place, the word “spook” was used to indicate African Americans. And one of the students, needless to say - an African American with a grudge against our professor (Jewish to boot - well, he appears to hide his real origins, which are African-American, but it’s too much of a story for a post) causes his academic demise by accusing him as a racist.

To make it even more eerie, The Second Catastrophe describes a similar misfortune caused by a careless expression in it’s protagonist’s lecture. Which doesn’t matter a lot, since the real life mishap that changed Rotberg’s life is even weirder.

A young man came in and sat in the second row. He picked up a copy of my book from the table, took a perfunctory look at it, and started interrupting me.

“You think all Muslims are terrorists,” he asserted.

“I do not,” I replied, as categorically as possible.

“Well, that’s what your book says,” he retorted.

And it gets better:

“He has no right to lecture if he is going to say things in support of Israel,” said the Palestinian.

It appears that some Canadian Palestinians have an interesting point of view on freedom of speech. And how is this for a coda?

Then the Iraqi started in. Again someone pleaded with him to be quiet so I could lecture. Then came the words that still ring in my ears: “He’s a f****ng Jew.”

Well, and who gets punished for all this? Believe it or not, it’s the “f****ng Jew” himself. First of all, Chapters Indigo hastily issued a press release, where they blamed both sides of the incident:

Indigo spokesperson Sorya Gaulin said that while an author who’ll draw a big crowd warrants security guards, “You wouldn’t expect this behaviour at a discussion of a novel. The author’s behaviour was inappropriate — we were seeing (that) on both sides.”

But this was only an opening shot by Chapters Indigo. The next one was to remove the book in question from their shelves. Believe it or not, it was done indeed - I am quite far from Canada, so I am using Chapters Indigo site that says that the book is unavailable. Someone else will have to re-check the stores, if that someone disbelieves the author’s word.

The punitive steps mentioned above were executed in spite of the easily available evidence by witnesses that there was nothing racist in Rotberg’s lecture and subsequent behavior, even after he has been provoked. See this affidavit. The Chapters representative that issued the press release had the affidavit available in time to prevent its hasty wording. But no, in their zeal to clean themselves of any possible accusation, they have preferred to blame both sides.

Even assuming, for the sake of the argument only, that Howard Rotberg (an experienced lawyer who definitely knows very well the high price of hot-headed speech) has indeed uttered something damaging in the heat of the altercation with the provocateurs - how could this act have caused the withdrawal of the book from the Chapter Indigo stores?

Here I have come upon another interesting detail. I am told that the owners of this esteemed book vendor are Jewish. No, I wasn’t expecting a preferential treatment of Howard Rotberg by Chapter Indigo. Still, the last thing I would expect of Jewish owners was their shabby treatment of their fellow Jew. Especially such an easy acceptance of the trumped up charges of racism.

But there is another angle I have (almost inadvertently, believe it or not) discovered. The esteemed book vendor, so sensitive to a merest whiff of politically incorrect behavior, doesn’t see anything fishy (smell-wise) in displaying a book by Hitler (yes, the Adolph), an exotic edition of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion or the infamous Holocaust Industry by Finkelstein. Yeah… but of course, these books don’t clash with the new wave of “progressive thinking” as understood by some people in Canada.

All in all, a classic case of the racism card being played to its utmost by dirty manipulators. And not very clever manipulators, as it becomes clear from this funny chapter in the whole sad story. Still, they have succeeded (meanwhile) in suppressing one voice that wasn’t toeing the “progressive” line.

I hope that “meanwhile” is going to end soon. Howard Rotberg is suing Chapters for financial losses caused by Chapters’ actions. He has chosen to bring it in Small Claims Court (maximum jurisdiction is $10,000) to simplify the matter and show it is not about money but the principle of what was done. Chapters should pay, albeit symbolically, for not protecting the right of Mr Rotberg to free speech, for unjustly accusing him in racism and for their bureaucratic zeal in persecuting Mr Rotberg by withdrawing his book from the shelves.

I hope some heads in the Chapters’ empire will roll* and deservedly so. I don’t tend to ascribe to malice what could be explained by stupidity. But stupidity needs to be punished as well.

Meanwhile you all can vote for Howard Rotberg by ordering his book here. And by downloading and reading his new book, which includes the story briefly touched upon in this post.

More info here and here and here. An interview with Rotberg here. And follow the (hopefully good) news on Howard Rotberg’s new blog.

(*) Potential beheaders accidentally reading this sentence asked not to get overexcited. It is a figger of speech.

Cross-posted on SimplyJews.