Rick Jacob’s Speech to the Religious Action Center

Both the video and the text of Rabbi Rick Jacobs speech to the Religious Action Center’s Consultation on Conscience are available by permission on the We Are For Israel Blog. Rick is the designated successor to Rabbi Eric Yoffie as head of the Reform movement. Rabbi Jacobs chose to offer his views on Israel at the program.

While I would encourage you to view it or read it in its entirety, here are some of the highlights:

Daniel Pipes, an academic known for his hard-line Middle East views, had it right when he said recently “that anyone concerned about the security and welfare of Israel is in the pro-Israel camp.”…

Attempting to delegitimize Israel, on too many college campuses and throughout much of Europe, critics try to portray Israel as though it is some apartheid-like state. It is an absurd assertion. Anyone who knows what apartheid was, and who knows Israel today, is well aware of that.

Critics cite assessments like the Goldstone Report to justify such contentions. When it was first issued I publicly challenged its fatal flaws. The Goldstone Report states that Israeli armed forces “carried out direct intentional strikes against civilians,” a contention, as you know, that Goldstone has now retracted. But the damage has been done, and we’re going to spend years trying to undo that damage. When Rabbi Eric Yoffie excoriated Richard Goldstone and his biased report at the first J Street Conference, some booed him. Rabbi Yoffie was unfazed and went on to say “Anyone who supports a peaceful two-state solution must consider the role of Hamas in destroying such a prospect-and yet, quite astonishingly, nothing of this is discussed in the Goldstone Report.” I applaud Rabbi Yoffie’s independent and clear voice in this and other crucial issues….

And just weeks ago David Saperstein had my full support when he gave his constructively critical keynote address to the second J Street Conference. I agree wholeheartedly with Rabbi Saperstein’s decision to speak at the conference, to assert again how vital movement towards a peace process is to Israel’s security and America’s interests, to offer thoughtful criticism of J Street’s policy making, but also to offer a strong critique of J Street’s stand opposing the recent US veto of the UN resolution condemning Israeli settlements.

Like my colleagues Eric and David, I am unafraid to challenge misguided views regardless of the source….

I also believe that Israel’s security and well-being require that Israel must become a more tolerant and pluralistic society. I have spent over 20 years working to strengthen the Israel envisioned in Israel’s Declaration of Independence:

“THE STATE OF ISRAEL will be based on freedom, justice and peace as envisaged by the prophets of Israel; it will ensure complete equality of social and political rights to all its inhabitants irrespective of religion, race or sex; it will guarantee freedom of religion, conscience, language, education and culture…”

This week our congregation, like many of yours, will hold many events to celebrate Yom Ha’atzmaut. On Erev Shabbat, as we have for the past years, we will host five IDF officers who will share their diverse backgrounds and service in defense of Israel. Last year, our teens were privileged to host 25 elite IDF commanders. Following Operation Cast Lead, it is critically important for these remarkable young soldiers to know that we in America are with them. I know first hand as a senior rabbinic fellow of the Shalom Hartman Institute the kind of ethics training these officers receive because they are taught by many of the same scholars with whom I study.

As I stand with the IDF soldiers this Friday night, I will let them know that my congregation stands in solidarity with them. We admire their courage; we support their abiding efforts to make Israel secure. I am confident that the IDF always aspires to conduct itself according to the highest ethical standards. There will always be lapses and errors in judgment especially in the new unprecedented ways of war confronting Israel, but I believe no other fighting force has more ethical rigor than the Israel Defense Forces….

Despite the expanding sanctions and the undermining of Iran’s technical abilities that U.S. and Israeli joint efforts have achieved, Iran remains determined to move its nuclear weapons program along as expeditiously as possible endangering Israel’s literal existence and U.S. interests throughout the region.

In the UN and around the world, Israel’s enemies have launched an offensive of economic attacks aimed at weakening and delegitimizing Israel that is taking hold in anti-Israel strongholds on and off campuses in Europe and North America. These Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions tactics are destructive and we must do everything in our power to combat these attacks through education, legislative advocacy and good, old-fashioned community organizing. The RAC and ARZA have played a key role in these efforts. But all of us, we’ve got to do our part. I know we can count on each other to get it done….

A very important part of my leadership as the URJ president will be to help all of our congregations become ohavei Tzion-lovers of Israel….

I will never back down from my commitment to a secure Israel.

I will never stop fighting for an Israel that grants all of its citizens, Arabs and Jews, fundamental human rights.

I will never stop working for an Israel that grants equal rights to Jews no matter their spiritual practice or belief.

I will never stop advocating for the US to remain Israel’s staunch ally.

I will not back away from my commitment to a two-state solution living side-by-side in peace and security.

As the leader of the largest Movement in Jewish life, I intend to work every single day to build up the ranks of those who share my Zionist passion. And I call upon everyone in the pro-Israel community to join me in this critical work.

When Israel gets into our hearts, then I know that we will never stop fighting for an Israel that is secure, religiously free, guided by justice and dwelling in peace.

Our hope is not lost-
The hope of two thousand years:
To be a free people in our land,
The land of Zion and Jerusalem.

Ken yehi ratzon.

 

 

Posted in Israel | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

I wonder how much money I’ve really saved

Today marks thirteen years of non-smoking. I had a carton-a-week habit. Cartons were about $35-40 in NJ when I quit (I think). Even using the $40/week baseline, I’ve saved a ton of money not smoking.

Posted in Life | 1 Comment

Roger Cohen: a man who rarely misses an opportunity to miss a point

A person is rarely a master of his associative thinking. At least I am not in control of my own wild and willful one.

Why is that each time I see the picture of Roger Cohen, the venerable columnist of the New York Times, I am always thinking about this image*:

After some soul searching, I think that I may have traced an answer: just like the illustrious garden gnome, Roger Cohen pops up all over the globe. With one difference, though: unlike our gnome, Mr Cohen doesn’t just observe the locals and quietly move to another location. He analyses the surrounding reality and doesn’t hide his opinions and his predictions – both are published and distributed using one of the more formidable platforms of free and unfettered progressive journalism. The problem is that, again unlike the gnome (who is always choosing silence and has never been wrong yet), Mr Cohen is too frequently and too publicly missing the point.

Wherever there is turmoil, wherever the world waits for the outcome of the struggle, you can be assured that Mr Cohen will appear, report, rejoice, analyze and at the end come out with a succinct article (or five) that will glorify the strife, hail its progress and come to a totally wrong conclusion. Turkey (Islam is the youngest of the world’s major religions. Its accommodation to modernity is a virulent [sic!] work in progress.)… Iran (“flawed but vibrant democracy“)… Egypt (“Islamic parties can run thriving economies and democracies like Turkey’s” – brilliant, seeing the slow but sure descent of Turkey into Islamism and watching the almost assured ascension of Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt)… these are only the relatively recent** examples of the man’s willful blindness. The problem is that blindness, when it gets an exposure and support like Cohen’s does, stops being his private business and becomes an ongoing deceit of the readers.

Recently Roger Cohen provided another proof of his consistent blindness in his missive titled The Goldstone Chronicles. In this one he doesn’t hide his displeasure by Goldstone’s timid attempt to recover some of his tarnished image by retreating from a libelous charge of deliberate/intentional killing of civilians during Cast Lead operation. Cohen’s tone is amazing. Even knowing that his references to his own Jewish roots usually serve as a prelude to another anti-Israeli rant, his unhappiness with demise of this libel is mind boggling. For a single moment Cohen doesn’t allow that Goldstone may have spoken the truth as he sees it. The following quote is a typical part of the whole:

In short there is a mystery here. Goldstone has moved but the evidence has not, really. That raises the issue of whether the jurist buckled under pressure so unrelenting it almost got him barred from his grandson’s bar mitzvah in South Africa. Is this more a matter of judicial cojones than coherence?

Of course, calling Golstone partial about-face “a mystery” is easier than to change one’s mind. And Mr Cohen’s mind on Israel was set a long time ago and quite firmly. Of course, there is no need to rehash the fact that there never was any evidence of intentional targeting of civilians to start with. Of course, it would be typical of Mr Cohen to state (ostensibly as a hypothesis, apparently under advise of NYT legal dept) that Goldstone buckled under pressure and to mention the famous bar mitzvah, only to add later “I don’t know. I asked Goldstone.”

As for judicial cojones: I have to give it to Mr Cohen: his own cojones must be huge. A man that makes all the wrong points so tirelessly, so consistently, for so long and so publicly must carry the said cojones in a wheelbarrow, to be sure.

And, to finish this post: I intended to make up a fake title or a fake quote from a future imaginary article Mr Cohen will write on Bin Laden demise. No need, the real article with a real quote is thoughtfully provided:

Osama Bin Laden is dead — and so is an old Middle East. That they died together is fortuitous and apt. Bin Laden lived to propel history backward to the reestablishment of a Muslim caliphate. He died a marginal figure to the transformation fast-forwarding the Arab world toward pluralism and self-expression.

What can I say?

FFS…

(*) The image is of a garden gnome, of course, from the superb French movie Le Fabuleux Destin d’Amélie Poulain (Amélie outside of France, I believe) with the delicious Audrey Tautou. If you haven’t seen it yet, stop reading this post, for crying out loud, and go rent it!

(**) Many more by Soccer Dad here.

Cross-posted on SimplyJews

Posted in Israel Derangement Syndrome, Israeli Double Standard Time | Comments Off on Roger Cohen: a man who rarely misses an opportunity to miss a point

The getting back to normal briefs

Actions have consequences: The Palestinians are hurting without the tax monies Israel is withholding. And while I don’t deny that Fayyad is right, those are Palestinan monies, well, perhaps you should have stopped to think before getting in bed with Hamas.

Awesomeness on top of awesomeness: The White House watched the bin Laden execution in real time images.

Not in my credit card’s name: All I can say is: I’m really glad I never joined the Playstation network or any other online game. Geez. Hacking Sony to pieces, they are.

Next on the list: Zawahiri.
The Seals picked up a treasure trove of data on bin Laden’s computers. The hits just keep on coming. Oh, and read this for a play-by-play.

Posted in Israel, palestinian politics, Terrorism | Comments Off on The getting back to normal briefs

The DDOS is over and bin Laden is dead briefs

Burial at sea? That was much too good for him: Leave it to the AP to bring on the downer news in its main story about bin Laden’s death. Look, we know his death isn’t going to have a huge effect on the current operations of al Qaeda. But boy, did it eff up al Qaeda’s morale. Ha! Your so-called invulnerable boss, who swore he would have his own men “martyr” him before being captured or killed by the U.S., was killed by a bullet to his head. Which was way too quick a way to die.

They won’t miss him in Kenya: They remember bin Laden in Kenya. With curses. And in Somalia with threats. Hokay. Next on the list, dudes. On the other hand, Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood is lying through its teeth again. He says there’s “no connection between Islam in violence.” In the previous breath, he predicted terrorist groups would take revenge for bin Laden’s death. But hey, no connection there. None at all.

Awesome way to make friends in America, dude: Ismail Haniyeh, leader of Hamas—that same Hamas that kept getting those op-eds in major American newspapers touting its moderation and its insistence that deep down, Hamas wanted what Americans wanted—is condemning America for killing bin Laden. Yeah, they’ve totally moderated since they had to deal with taxes and garbage collection in Gaza. Not.

Seriously? Oil is cheaper because bin Laden is dead? Now that’s the second-best news about his death. And stock futures are up. Heh.

Headline roundup: WaPo. The Times. The Cable (timeline). The NY Post. The NY Daily News. Celebrations at Ground Zero and Jersey City. (Don’t forget, hundreds of New Jerseyans were murdered that day as well.) World leader reactions. Behind-the-scenes of the attack. What bin Laden’s death means to al Qaeda.

P.S.: My server is the subject of a DDOS. I have no idea who’s the target, as hundreds of websites share the server. I doubt it’s little old me.

Posted in Hamas, Terrorism | Tagged , | Comments Off on The DDOS is over and bin Laden is dead briefs

One more bin Laden comment before bed

From Toby Keith, via Jonathan M.

Posted in Music, Terrorism | 1 Comment

Dead bin Laden haiku

We’ve had haiku contests before. Time to have another. Winner gets—uh, mentioned.

Great news happened here
Osama bin Laden dead
Tuna for kitties

Osama is dead
We’re cheering in USA
Eff you, al Qaeda

Your turn, people.

Posted in Terrorism | 9 Comments

A poem, on the death of Osama bin Laden

Roses are red
Violets are blue
Osama is dead
Boo hoo.

No, that’s not right.

Roses are red
Violets are blue
Osama is dead
Woo hoo!

Posted in Terrorism | 2 Comments

Osama bin Laden is an ex-terrorist

Fantastic news! Osama bin Laden’s been killed!

Tuna for terrorists!

There’s DNA evidence. It’s for real; he was killed last week.

Wonderful news!

Posted in Terrorism | 1 Comment

Israel’s relevance on Holocaust Remembrance Day

From Shimon Peres’ speech:

“We, members of the Jewish people, were victims of racism, persecution and discrimination but we never abandoned the obligation to honor every person, we were not blinded by darkness. Even in a dark world, we have aspired and continue to aspire to be a light unto the nations.

“We were alone, with no state of our own. The allied forces’ bomber planes that flew over Auschwitz did not drop a single bomb on the mass murder facilities,” he said.

“The Holocaust determined there is no replacement for a home of our own. There is no replacement for the Israel Defense Forces. Today we have an excellent army which the world has learned to respect. We have a democratic regime which knows how to defend itself and spread peace. That is our answer to the enemy, to any enemy.”

Peres added: “Even after the Holocaust there remains a regime whose leaders are public Holocaust deniers and inciters. This should arouse horror with any person and shock any conscience.

“Iran’s fanatic high echelon is a danger to the entire world, not just a threat on Israel. It poses a real danger to the fate of mankind. The world’s nations have declared they will not tolerate a nuclear Iran. They are now being tested.”

Not that the world will ever learn. But as Netanyahu said:

“We must not bury our heads in the sand and dismiss the threat with words of mockery,” he said. “Has the world learned its lesson? I doubt it. Have we? I believe we have.”

Addressing Israel’s enemies, Netanyahu said: “The world should know that when the people of Israel and the Israel Defense Forces say never again – we mean every word.”

Posted in Holocaust, Israel | 2 Comments

Hamas making peace with Israel: Yes, in Bizarro World

Only a day or two after Hamas leaders said they’re never going to make peace with or recognize Israel, and that the PA should rescind its recognition of Israel, the man who is evidently behind the unity agreement says Hamas is interested in peace with Israel. I’m sorry, but there are only two responses to that: Hysterical laughter and calling bullshit.

Hamas Prime Minister in Gaza Ismail Haniyeh urged the PLO Friday to rescind its recognition of Israel in response to the Jewish state’s objection to the Palestinian unity agreement.

Haniyeh said that there was no justification for recognizing the “Israeli entity” in wake of Israel’s objection to Palestinian rights and unity.

“Their presence on our land is illegal and cannot be recognized,” the Hamas leader said.

You cannot possibly square that quote with these claims:

“During conversations I had with Khaled Mashal and Mousa Abu Marzook, they said that they want to establish a strong government that can achieve a comprehensive peace based on 1967 border,” said al-Masri, who has been named as a candidate to head the new government.

Somebody is lying. Maybe all of them are lying. But there will be no deal with Hamas, because Hamas does not want peace with Israel. They want the end of Israel. They said it only two days ago.

Understand what they get out of the unity deal: Egypt is opening the Rafah border, which will allow weapons to pass through without having to be taken apart and moved through tunnels. Unlimited amounts of cash from Iran will also be going legally across the border. Egypt will now be participating in the arming of Hamas for the next war, and the next war won’t be far away—especially since most Egyptian candidates for president have already said they’d come down on the Palestinian side and even help them if Israel fights back after being attacked with rockets. And the Muslim Brotherhood? That famously “secular” organization? They’re planning on running for half the seats in Parliament. Oh, and they’ve picked up on what the world needs to hear, and are now insisting they’re not a religious organization. Of course I’m calling bullshit on that too. Just what the world needs, another Islamist state, to join the fun group of Pakistan, Turkey, Iran, Sudan—never mind, the list is getting too long to name.

“This is not a religious party, not a theocratic party,” its newly named leader, Mahmoud Mosri, told reporters Saturday. He described the platform of his Freedom and Justice party as civil but with an Islamic background that adheres to the constitution.

Another pack of lies. But all of this pales in comparison to what the UN will give the PA for the unity government: Unilateral recognition of statehood by the General Assembly. And even though legally, that means nothing, the entire world will recognize “Palestine” as a state and vilify Israel even more for not allowing the newly-minted state to arm itself and continue on its quest to destroy the Jewish state. Of course, it won’t be that open. The world will decry Israel’s lack of trust, inability to make peace, and go full-tilt on the “apartheid” nonsense. They can do nothing in the Security Council about recognizing a Palestinian state without the U.S., and while I detest Obama, I don’t think he will allow that to happen. At least, not in his first term. (I am hoping he does not get a second.)

In the meantime, Israel is canceling tax transfers to the Palestinians. Watch for the Obama administration to muscle Israel into contributing to its own demise by funding the now openly terrorist partners, the Palestinian Authority. If Pakistan were openly paired with al Qaeda, do you think Obama would urge Congress to send Pakistan our annual aid anyway? Of course not. It’s the same concept. But I don’t think Obama knows that.

The Arabs won’t step up if Israel and the U.S. suspend payments to the PA. They’re too busy dealing with their own issues, and, well, they never have stepped up. The biggest donors to the PA are Europe and America. There’s no way Europe will stop its handouts. But we can. Thankfully, Congress has the power of the purse strings, not Obama.

Any way you look at it, this unity deal is terrible for Israel. I’m hoping that they can’t stick with it until September.

Posted in Hamas, Israel, palestinian politics, Terrorism, The One | Comments Off on Hamas making peace with Israel: Yes, in Bizarro World

Lazy Saturday open thread

I’ve actually accomplished quite a lot, but none of it entailed writing posts.

Posted in Life | Comments Off on Lazy Saturday open thread

Tornadoes and the Jewish Community

There is a lot going on in the Jewish world these days. There is more to talk about concerning Israel and the Middle East than I have time to write about. Tomorrow is Yom HaShoah, a day when we remember martyrs and heroes, a day when we may also think of why there is suffering, of why bad things happen in our world, perhaps to us or to those about whom we care.

Today, there are many suffering in the American South, suffering from a spate of tornadoes that has killed well over 300 people and decimated communities. Some of the worst damage is in Alabama and my thoughts are with all who are suffering and mourning there.

Rabbi Jonathan Miller of Birmingham, Alabama offered a prayer to those in his congregation which he has graciously allowed me to share with you, because it reflects what I believe as well:

As your rabbi, I cannot promise you that prayer will keep tornados away.  But I can promise you that prayer will help you endure the uncertainty with the knowledge that no one is alone, not now and not ever.  That people suffer in life is a given.  This seems to be our turn.  That our lives are filled with the prayers of others and with a caring God; this is an axiom of faith that gives us meaning and comfort.  Though we walk through the valley of the shadow of death, God is with us.  And we are with each other.

To read Rabbi Miller’s moving account of the events in Alabama, please visit this link.

In the meantime, our thoughts and prayers are with the suffering and those who mourn. May they be consoled.

Posted in Jews, Religion | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Tornadoes and the Jewish Community

Best Barry Rubin quote ever

EVER.

If Sarah Palin says something stupid, a hundred sources will ridicule her and she won’t make the same mistake again. If Barack Obama says something stupid he won’t learn anything because of the silence of the fans.

Posted in The One | Comments Off on Best Barry Rubin quote ever

Syria and the El Baradai coverup

Mohammed El Baradei is a well-respected man in international circles. He’s the former head of the IAEA, the organization that is responsible for making sure signatories of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (one of which is Iran and, contrary to popular belief, Israel never signed it) keep their promises. He spent years telling us that Iran’s nuclear program is peaceful. Three years ago, he told us that Syria wasn’t capable of carrying out a nuclear program, in spite of evidence to the contrary from the bombed site. In fact, three and a half years ago, I wrote about the Syrian attempt to hide evidence that the buildings were for nuclear weapons:

Of course, they could FedEx them to Mohammed El Baradei, and he still would be unable to find any evidence of Syrian nukes, but that’s a different post altogether.

This is what El Baradei said a year after the plant was bombed:

“We have no evidence that Syria has the human resources that would allow it to carry out a large nuclear program. We do not see Syria having nuclear fuel,” International Atomic Energy Agency Director General Mohamad ElBaradei told Al Arabiya television.

He said, on more than one occasion, that Syria was not building nuclear weapons.

He was wrong. Really, really wrong.

Now El Baradei is running for president of Egypt. He is being hailed by the west as a moderate, in spite of calling for war with Israel in the event of another Gaza conflagration.

The masks are falling off. He is being revealed for the liar that he always was—the man who covered for Iranians as they get closer and closer to nuclear weapons. But here’s the kicker: Watch for the media to ignore this proof of lies, just as they ignored his call for war against Israel.

Posted in Middle East, Syria | Comments Off on Syria and the El Baradai coverup