Monday, October 2, 2023

Sitting In A Sukkah While Thinking About Stuff.

Rabbi Held
In the past, I've written quite a bit about Sukkot when hanging out in these little huts covered in vegetation materials like corn stalks and branches. This year, it's 90°F. It was so hot yesterday, that they cancelled the Twin Cities Marathon due to excessive heat. Last year, it snowed. Go figure. But whatever the weather, our shul has a long standing tradition of eating breakfast in the sukkah after minyan...Even when it's been snowing. (Thank you Neal and Sandy!)

This year, our new education rabbi's first, Rabbi Held held forth with passage of the Bavli Talmud about Sukkah requirements as taken from arguments about its height in the Talmud. See, Queen Helena of Lod's sukkah was more than 20 cubits high; according to some of the rabbis, this made it "unfit." I won't go into the arguments that went along with that, but Rabbi Held had us all in the palm of his hand. After leading us through the labyrinth of issues with the height and size of her sukkah, he shares the conclusion:
Now that the Tosefta can be explained according to all the statements cited by the amora’im in the name of Rav, no proof can be cited with regard to the essence of the dispute between Rabbi Yehuda and the Rabbis with regard to a small sukka more than twenty cubits high.
Before you go asking that age old question, "What's a cubit?" I'll tell you what it is: it's a unit of measure, an ancient measure of length, approximately equal to the length of a forearm... about 18 inches or 44 cm. I'm guessing that's Noah's forearm they're talking about...but who knows?

But wait! There's more! 

If you want a real experience in Talmudic minutia, read the whole argument about the size of the queen's sukkah (the William Davidson Edition Talmud in English.) It's the most confusing, confounding debate about the size...mostly height of a sukkah. And in the case of Queen Helena, the sages seem to decide not to mention the sukkah may not be exactly to their specification. Is it because she's a queen? Or a woman? Or she needs fresh air? Or had a bunch of sons who may or may not be minors living with mom? Whatever the reason, they left her alone to do her thing with her kids. I kinda liked that ending. 

Maybe I like it because it's in complete contrast to our own government? I kept thinking about the bull-hockey going on with passing a budget to keep the federal government from shutting down. Lost in all the absurd, devious, mean-spirited, destructive behavior from the right wing cabal, The Freedom Caucus, the notion that these jackasses were elected by the people to run the government for the benefit of We, the People is inconceivable. 

Probably because they weren't elected by even a lot of the people. This is problematic. 

General Milley
Outgoing Chairman of the Joints Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Milley, gave an impassioned speech at his farewell ceremony on September 29th. Milley was Chairman of the Joints during the most tumultuous period of our recent history... when feckless loser attempted to overturn the 2020 election. Heather Cox Richardson explained:
Milley had been at Trump’s side at the start of the former president’s march across Lafayette Square on June 1, 2020, to threaten Black Lives Matter protesters, although Milley peeled off when he recognized what was happening and later said he thought they were going to review National Guard troops. Since then, Milley has spoken out against strongman rule and vocally defended the U.S. Constitution. 
The day after the debacle, Milley wrote a message to the joint force reminding every member that they swore an oath to the Constitution. “This document is founded on the essential principle that all men and women are born free and equal, and should be treated with respect and dignity. It also gives Americans the right to freedom of speech and peaceful assembly…. As members of the Joint Force—comprised of all races, colors, and creeds—you embody the ideals of our Constitution,” he wrote. “We all committed our lives to the idea that is America,” he wrote by hand on the memo. “We will stay true to that oath and the American people.”
But Milley's speech this weekend went a step further. He said, 
“You see, we in uniform are unique among the world's armies. We are unique among the world’s militaries. We don’t take an oath to a country. We don’t take an oath to a tribe. We don’t take an oath to a religion. We don’t take an oath to a king or a queen or to a tyrant or a dictator. And we don’t take an oath to a wannabe dictator. We don’t take an oath to an individual.
 
“We take an oath to the Constitution, and we take an oath to the idea that is America, and we’re willing to die to protect it.…
 
“Those who sacrificed themselves on the altar of freedom in the last two and a half centuries of this country must not have done so in vain. The millions wounded in our nation’s wars did not sacrifice their limbs and shed their blood to see this great experiment in democracy perish from this earth. No. We, the United States military, will always be true to those that came before us. We will never, under any circumstances, turn our back on our duty."
What a concept! The duty of any official in the service of the United States government... from a private enlistee to the president...takes an oath of office swearing to protect the Constitution of the United. States:
“I, _________, do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter. So help me God.”
And the Constitution has some pretty definitive stuff in it like separation of church and state, equal rights under the law for all citizens, freedom of assembly, speech, and even to bear arms, although what is meant by the Second Amendment is woefully unclear. Congress and We, the People, have ratified amendments to the Constitution, beginning with the Bill of Rights. But once an amendment is passed, repeal is not at the will of a president, congress, or even SCOTUS. From the ACLU:
But the president cannot repeal part of the Constitution by executive order. And Congress cannot repeal it by simply passing a new bill. Amending the Constitution would require a two-thirds vote in both the House and Senate, and also ratification by three-quarters of the states.
Yet, a cabal has arisen in Congress that seeks to undo that which We, the People, have held sacred for over 200 years: democracy. The Freedom Caucus seeks to hogtie the government in such a way that no laws or actions can occur without their express permission. They are not the Republican Party, nor do they represent most Republicans. However....

They have the GOP in such a state of terror that they are afraid of them. Tonight, Matt Gaetz filed a motion to remove the Speaker of the House, Kevin McCarthy because McCarthy, who is, quite frankly, no prize, worked across the aisle to get a stop-gap bill passed to keep the government running. Interestingly enough, these clowns wanted to shut down the government, leaving the military, the air controllers, and the TSA working without pay...yet congress would not forego their own paychecks. 

Congressman Jeff Jackson (who I follow devotedly because the guy is a plain speaking human) wrote the following:
The fundamental issue is that we’ve got about 20 members of the majority party - the hardcore members of the right-flank - who want to shut down the government. Pulling a stunt like that comes with a media bonanza, and that’s what they’re after.
That's exactly what they're after. A while ago, Congressman Jackson pointed out those who make the most noise do the least amount of work. Aggrandizement, self or otherwise, is part of the show, the circus, not about governance. So when you listen to the bulloney tossers like Matt Gaetz, Lauren Boebert, know you are listening to an extreme minority with very loud voices. For the record, there are. 45 known members of the Freedom Caucus, but there are 222 Republicans in the House our of 430 Congressional seats. 

45. 
45 Congressclowns hold the entire country hostage. 
45 Congressclowns that supported the overturning of the presidential election. 
45 Congressclowns that pretty much supported the January 6th insurrection. 
45 Congressclowns who swore to uphold the Constitution of the United States...and did not. 

I guess if lining your pockets is your paramount concern, Congress is a good place to do that. These guys are about power and pocketbooks, not about the good and welfare of We, the People....especially if Some of Us People are not white, Christian, misogynistic, haters-of-others.

That's not supposed to be who We, the People are, but I am afraid that is exactly what We, the People, are becoming. Too many Americans are closing their living room curtains to ignore what is happening around us. Good Germans all. 

The Wifely Person's Tip o'the Week
I am less scared of feckless loser winning the 2024 election
than I am of his getting the GOP nomination and losing. 

2 comments:

  1. It almost sounds like you're getting behind McCarthy. I hope I'm reading that wrong!

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    1. Definitely not behind McCarthy. What I am against is the hostage taking of the House. Considering how long it took them to get a speaker last time, if he is removed, they will freeze all HoR actions for who knows how long. No votes can be taken without a speaker, so be careful what you wish for.

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