Monday, November 27, 2023

There Is No Free Speech....It's all expensive.

Bruce Nestor
As I was finishing off tonight's episode, I had the news on in the background. On KARE-11's BREAKING THE NEWS, there was a story about the Edina school district being sued over how they handled participants in a pro-Palestinian demonstration that took place on school grounds during school. The issue was not the demonstration itself, it was the chant: From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.

Okay. That stopped me. And the blog. 

Two Somali students were suspended over the chant. At a press conference Monday afternoon,  Attorney Bruce Nestor said:
Edina High School authorities and school authorities accused them of being antisemitic, on the basis of using the chant during the walkout of "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free." That is a slogan that is used by elected representatives here in the United States, it is used by hundreds of thousands of demonstrators in support of the aspirations of the Palestinian people for freedom
There is no evidence of an attempt to harm, or discriminate, or be anti semitic. There is nothing objectively true about this statement being characterized as anti semitic.
In their statement to the news station KARE-11, the school district stated:
The District would like to affirm its unwavering support for students’ First Amendment right to free expression and to peacefully advocate for causes that are important to them. Similarly, the District has strong policies prohibiting any type of discrimination against students based on their religion or any other basis protected under the Minnesota Human Rights Act. 
The District cannot comment on any particular students or allegations as that information would be considered private data protected by the Minnesota Government Data Practices Act (MGDPA) and the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA). However, students do not have unfettered First Amendment rights while on school property and students do not have a right under the First Amendment to engage in speech that is substantially disruptive or that violates District policies. 
Our core beliefs in Edina Public Schools are grounded in the inherent dignity of all people. We value and appreciate the diversity of all of our students. Edina Public Schools deeply condemns islamophobia and antisemitism. We will not tolerate hateful or inappropriate comments or behaviors and will work diligently to provide a safe and inclusive environment for our students and staff.
The Anti-Defamation League had already issued a statement about the chant:

“From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” is an antisemitic slogan commonly featured in anti-Israel campaigns and chanted at demonstrations. 

This rallying cry has long been used by anti-Israel voices, including supporters of terrorist organizations such as Hamas and the PFLP, which seek Israel’s destruction through violent means. It is fundamentally a call for a Palestinian state extending from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea, territory that includes the State of Israel, which would mean the dismantling of the Jewish state. It is an antisemitic charge denying the Jewish right to self-determination, including through the removal of Jews from their ancestral homeland. 

Usage of this phrase has the effect of making members of the Jewish and pro-Israel community feel unsafe and ostracized. It is important to note that demanding justice for Palestinians, or calling for a Palestinian state, should not mean, as this hateful phrase posits, denying the right of the State of Israel to exist. 

Is it anti-semitism? Is it an expression of belief? Is it all protected speech....or is it hate speech meant to sanction/encourage violence against Jewish students?

All of the above brings the basic foundations of this country back into the forefront of the nanosecond American news cycle. Clearly, verbal and physical assaults continue to be directed at Jews and Muslims in these here United States. Yes, demonstrations can turn violent, but not all do. We cannot muzzle that which we don't like, or we'll ultimately get muzzled right back. 

Issues surrounding free speech are endlessly muddied by people who have absolutely no understanding of law and/or the Constitution. It's too easy to be sucked into the vortex of batshit news and bullshit reporting when the people producing these videos have no credentials, no expertise, no understanding, and have never been to the place on which they're pontificating. But batshit and bullshit aside, there is a very fine line between free speech and elective truth-telling that has to be marked, if not respected. So how do you get there?

I'm not totally sure there is a definitive answer,  but Ilya Shapiro's essay on free speech as it appeared in THE FREE PRESS needs to be read by every American citizen, wanna be citizen, or alien...legal or illegal...because it impacts us all. Shapiro, director of constitutional studies at the Manhattan Institute, knows what he's writing about, and makes a whole lotta sense. I've left his links in because many of them are worth following. 

Where Free Speech Ends and Lawbreaking Begin

Ilya Shapiro 

November 27, 2023 

Even antisemites have the right to free speech, as Nadine Strossen and Pamela Paresky correctly wrote in The Free Press. Since the Hamas massacre of October 7, they have been taking full advantage of that right. Especially on college campuses.
Pro-Palestinian groups have harassed and even assaulted Jewish students; protesters have interrupted courses and taken over buildings; Ivy League professors have called Hamas’s attack “exhilarating” and “awesome”; students have torn down posters of missing Israeli children; others have chanted—and even projected onto university buildings—slogans, like “from the river to the sea,” “globalize the intifada,” and “glory to our martyrs.”
In response to such activities, universities have suspended or banned student groups like Students for Justice in Palestine. Alumni have pulled their donations and publicly stated that they won’t hire students who signed letters blaming Israel for the massacre. Republican lawmakers have suggested revoking the student visas of those participating in anti-Israel protests.
Those who care deeply about free speech are asking themselves many questions at this urgent moment: What should we make of the calls to punish Hamas apologists on campus? After all, this is America, where you have the right to say even the vilest things. Yes, many of the same students who on October 6 called for harsh punishment for “microaggressions” are now chanting for the elimination of the world’s only Jewish state. But Americans are entitled to be hypocrites. 
Don’t these students have the same right to chant Hamas slogans as the neo-Nazis did to march in 1977 in Skokie, Illinois—a town then inhabited by many Holocaust survivors?
I would put my free speech bona fides up against anyone. I’m also a lawyer and sometime law professor who recognizes that not all speech-related questions can be resolved by invoking the words First Amendment
Much of what we’ve witnessed on campuses over the past few weeks is not, in fact, speech, but conduct designed specifically to harass, intimidate, and terrorize Jews. Other examples involve disruptive speech that can properly be regulated by school rules. Opposing or taking action against such behavior in no way violates the core constitutional principle that the government can’t punish you for expressing your beliefs.
The question, as always, is where to draw the line, and who’s doing the line-drawing. 
Here are some of the most pressing questions those who care about civil liberties and protecting the rights of Jewish students are asking.
What are some examples of protest activities that are rightly considered conduct rather than speech? 
In drawing the line between speech and conduct, some cases are easy. 
Beating someone up, as has happened at Columbia and Tulane, is assault. Crowding around someone in a threatening manner, like a group of Harvard students—including an editor of the Harvard Law Review—did to an Israeli student who filmed their protest, is commonly known as the crime of “menacing.” A pattern of actions designed to frighten and harass someone, like forcing Jewish students into the Cooper Union library while pounding on the doors and windows, is stalking. Defacing someone’s property by spray-painting swastikas and slogans, as happened at American University, is vandalism. So is tearing down posters—at least on private property and in most campus settings. And masking at a protest, also a hallmark of events sponsored by the Students for Justice in Palestine organization, is illegal in many states—a remnant of the battle against KKK intimidation.
The proper response to such behavior, regardless of how “expressive” someone may claim it to be, is the same response we’d have to instances of assault, stalking, intimidation, and other crimes in any other context: identify, arrest, and prosecute the perpetrators. And in the campus setting, expel them. 
Are genocidal slogans like “globalize the intifada” or “from the river to the sea” protected by the First Amendment? 
It depends on the context.
First, a clear-cut case: the Cornell student who posted death threats online to Jewish students was rightly arrested, because, as the Supreme Court held, the Constitution doesn’t protect “those statements where the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular individual or group of individuals.” 
In addition to such “true threats” (and not simply political hyperbole), the First Amendment does not protect the incitement of violence, which the Supreme Court has defined as speech that is “directed at inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely to incite or produce such action.” The courts have set a high bar on meeting this standard—but it’s surely been reached in some recent cases both on and off-campus.
Take, for example, the pro-Palestine rally in Los Angeles, where, in the course of the event, a 69-year-old man holding an Israeli flag was struck and killed. Assuming eliminationist or other violent slogans were chanted there, it would be hard to imagine a more direct connection between those chants and actual violence. 
But a group of students marching through campus cheering for Hamas is no different than a group of students celebrating the killing of innocent black people. Though we can imagine how different the campus response to the latter would be, from a First Amendment perspective, both are protected.
Wait, but isn’t shouting antisemitic epithets hate speech?
Offensive or “hate” speech is constitutionally protected—including burning a flag or giving a racially charged speech to a restless crowd.
But even undeniably protected speech can be off-limits in certain contexts. If I come to your neighborhood in the middle of the night and use a bullhorn to tell you what I really think of Joe Biden or Donald Trump, I can be arrested for disturbing the peace. The same thing goes for breaching the terms of a parade permit, or not getting a permit at all and blocking traffic.
So for any particular incident, you have to drill down on the specific facts. Engaging in what someone—even most people—would consider “hate speech” won’t get you in trouble. But doing so outside Jewish students’ dorms at midnight, or following Israeli students around to yell at them, will land you in hot water.
What about the interruption of classes and speakers by protesters? Isn’t this just more speech that’s protected by the First Amendment?
In the campus context, we’ve learned in the last couple of years—some of us quite personally—that there’s a difference between protest and disruption. Student handbooks typically spell out that it’s generally fine to hold signs, wear t-shirts, give out pamphlets, organize counter-events, and otherwise show displeasure with a speaker. But students aren’t allowed to shut down events, disrupt classes, or otherwise interfere with university programs. 
The week before Thanksgiving, Josh Hammer’s speech at the University of Michigan was disrupted by anti-Israel protesters (Hammer is Jewish). Meantime, a student at MIT commandeered a math lecture to protest what he called the “ongoing genocide of Gaza.”
It’s in no way a free speech violation to prohibit students from shouting down professors and speakers. To allow such disruption would be to empower a “heckler’s veto,” which is merely another form of censorship. But because of either ideological affinity or administrative weakness—and maybe even a misunderstanding of free speech principles—university officials have been hesitant to discipline students for this sort of behavior. Which is why it continues. 
As Yascha Mounk, a liberal fed up with campus illiberalism, explained in a pithy X thread, “part of protecting free speech is to punish students who violate the rules that make free speech possible for everyone else. This includes punishing those who violently disrupt talks—and it also includes punishing those who tear down fliers depicting children kidnapped by Hamas. The answer to this moment isn’t to give up on a culture of free speech on campus. It’s to enforce the rules that sustain it in an impartial manner.”
Relatedly, students at Columbia, Harvard, Northwestern, and other schools have taken over buildings, threatening to stay until their oft-nebulous demands are met. This conduct, again, is not protected by the First Amendment. The students should be removed and disciplined—up to and including arrest for trespassing—not fed burritos, as they were at Harvard.
There have been reports at many campuses of professors celebrating Hamas’s massacre. Is this acceptable speech?
Professors have the same free speech rights as anyone else, but HR manuals correctly admonish faculty and administrators not to create hostile educational environments
So the Stanford lecturer who asked Jewish students to leave their belongings and go to the back of the room was rightfully removed from teaching while the school looked into this incident. But Columbia professor Joseph Massad can write, as he did on October 8, that Hamas’s actions were “awesome.” The question of whether someone like that should be hired in the first place, or granted tenure, is different—but he can’t be punished for such “extramural” speech. 
Many of the students who participated in the protests at MIT and elsewhere are foreign nationals. What are their free speech rights as noncitizens? 
Although foreigners can’t be punished for speech any more than citizens, there can be repercussions for affiliating with certain groups or calling for violence. The Immigration and Nationality Act allows the denial or revocation of a visa of “any alien who. . . endorses or espouses terrorist activity or persuades others to endorse or espouse terrorist activity or support a terrorist organization.” 
Although the Biden administration is surely loath to deport foreign students, it’s hard to argue against the idea that at least some of those rallying around hang glider logos to show support for Hamas meet that visa-revocation standard. Indeed, the State Department confirmed to Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) that it can revoke the visas of Hamas supporters.
But MIT declined to take action against demonstrators who prevented Jewish students from attending class, despite warnings that they were violating university policies, precisely because officials knew that many of the harassers were foreign students subject to deportation. The school’s refusal to do so effectively gives foreigners—but not Americans—the right to harass, intimidate, and vandalize. Such appeasement of antisemitism opens the university to claims under the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which brings us to the next question. 
What if an institution knows that Jewish students are being threatened and does nothing, or creates impotent task forces without addressing immediate threats? Or what if officials take ideological sides (like an administrator at the University of Chicago who marched with SJP protesters) or egg on a mob shouting down a speaker (like Stanford Law’s DEI dean at Judge Kyle Duncan’s event in March)? 
This is where Title VI of the Civil Rights Act comes in.
Title VI prohibits any entity that receives federal money (including student loans) from discriminating on the basis of race, color, or national origin, which the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) understands to include “actual or perceived” ancestry, ethnicity, and religion. 
As part of the launch last May of the Biden administration’s national strategy on antisemitism, OCR issued guidance to remind K–12 and higher-ed schools of their legal obligation under Title VI to address complaints of discrimination, including harassment, based on Jewish ancestry. “The Department’s most important tool to fight against antisemitism,” Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona reiterated this month, “is Title VI.”
So the legal landscape is ripe for both administrative complaints and lawsuits alleging that all these hand-wringing academic grandees have failed to address the very real threats to the physical safety of Jewish students. At Cooper Union, a staffer locked Jewish students in the library for their own protection in the face of demonstrators shouting, “Free, free Palestine.” I’m not sure offering Jews a chance to hide in the attic satisfies Title VI.
Apparently the Department of Education feels similarly: it recently announced Title VI investigations into Cooper Union and six other schools, including Columbia, Cornell, and Penn. 
Jewish students are also planning lawsuits: three NYU juniors have already sued their university, asserting a variety of federal and state claims, including Title VI and breach of contract (not enforcing NYU’s own discrimination and student-conduct policies). 
Is it legal to ban or suspend Students for Justice in Palestine from campus? 
SJP is the most prominent anti-Israel—many would say anti-Jewish—organization on college campuses, with hundreds of chapters across the United States and Canada. Immediately following the October 7 attack, its national organization exulted in the atrocities as a “historic win for the Palestinian resistance,” and created a toolkit for its chapters to use on their individual campuses. Since then, SJP has organized countless events at which its members and supporters have celebrated Hamas and called for the elimination of Israel.
Some schools have had enough. 
Earlier this month, Brandeis University withdrew recognition of SJP as a student organization. In an op-ed in The Boston Globe, Ronald Liebowitz, president of Brandeis, wrote: “Specifically, chants and social media posts calling for violence against Jews or the annihilation of the state of Israel must not be tolerated.” 
Such speech is SJP’s specialty. Notwithstanding Brandeis’s robust free speech policy, Liebowitz explained that the school was exercising its right to “restrict expression. . . that constitutes a genuine threat or harassment” or that “is otherwise directly incompatible with the functioning of the university.” Other private universities followed suit: Columbia and George Washington University both suspended their SJP chapters for violating basic school rules. 
Notably, the Florida public university system also initially ordered the deactivation of SJP chapters, at the behest of Governor Ron DeSantis. (Full disclosure: DeSantis recently appointed me to the board of trustees of Florida Polytechnic University, where there’s no SJP chapter.)
The system’s chancellor, Ray Rodrigues, citing the National SJP’s alleged ties to Hamas, wrote to university presidents, “It is a felony under Florida law to ‘knowingly provide material support. . . to a designated foreign terrorist organization.’ ” 
He recently walked back the decision to ban the chapters, at least temporarily, after two schools raised concerns about potential personal liability for officials who executed the orders. Rodrigues further announced that he’d be seeking assurances from the chapters that “they reject violence. That they reject they are a part of the Hamas movement. And that they will follow the law.”
Those conditions are key to the legality of any action by a public university against SJP. Although government actors can’t force student groups to renounce a particular ideology or otherwise express views they don’t actually hold, the phrase “material support for terrorism” reflects both state and federal criminal codes and may provide an avenue for other schools to curtail SJP activities. The question comes down to the nature of the ties among Hamas, the national SJP group, and its chapters. 
The Supreme Court has ruled that the government may prohibit even nonviolent “material support” for terrorism, including “advocacy performed in coordination with, or at the direction of, a foreign terrorist organization.” So if a state can establish that SJP is in effect acting as Hamas’s PR agency on campuses, governors would be in the clear to stop taxpayer support. As with cases of “true threats” and “incitement,” the devil is in the details, so it’s heartening that public officials like Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares are launching investigations of assorted nonprofit organizations with potential terrorist ties.
Some prominent alumni have suggested that businesses not hire students who have joined statements in favor of Hamas. Isn’t that participating in cancel culture?
A dozen CEOs pledged not to hire the Harvard students who signed an open letter blaming Israel for the attack on itself. Independent journalists have taken to publicizing the names of students who engage in antisemitic speech and behavior. Law firm Winston & Strawn rescinded its offer to NYU Law’s student body president, who sent a campus-wide anti-Israel statement—and then later was caught on camera tearing down posters of kidnapped Israelis.
I don’t think that any of this qualifies as cancel culture, at least if one defines that term as (1) forming a mob (2) to seek to get someone fired or disproportionately punished (3) for statements within the societally permissible range of policy views. 
Perhaps some people think it’s permissible—even understandable—to support Hamas. But I can hardly blame a law firm or Fortune 500 company for not wanting to associate with someone who celebrates gang-rape, mutilation, kidnapping, and live incineration, any more than I can blame them for not wanting to hire someone who yells at a federal judge “We hope your daughters get raped,” as Stanford law students did.     
“I am a 70-year-old Jewish man, but never in my life have I seen or felt the antisemitism of the last few weeks.” That’s how Erwin Chemersinky, the dean of UC Berkeley School of Law, described recent events on campus. Some of us were less surprised given the anti-Israel, anti-American, and generally anti-Western ideology that has taken root in higher education. Still, the extent and breadth of it has alarmed even the most pessimistic among us.
We shouldn’t weaken speech protections, which have made America not only the freest country in the world, but the most tolerant. But sometimes “speech” isn’t speech. Sometimes it rises to the level of conduct that prevents others from being able to live their lives. Right now we need people to discern the difference. 
Kids have a right and a need to exercise their freedoms. We protested against Vietnam and for the rights of Russian Refusniks. It's how we learned what's worth fighting for...besides ice cream in the food service line. If kids want to support the Palestinian cause, they have a right to do so, but it's incumbent upon them to know and understand what they're supporting. It's pretty clear lots of people don't understand that from the river to the sea is to establish a Jew-free zone,  one where homosexuality is illegal and punishable by death, where the government that is sharia run and will limit the rights of women. They don't get the big picture because they're only seeing what the Palestinian propaganda machine wants them to see. 

How do you teach them to go a step further in learning about the cause they support? How do you get them to examine the issues? 

Teach critical thinking and comprehension skills. Kids have to be taught how to read and research, how not to take anything at face value, that there are always two sides whether we like it or not. 

If we as parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, educators, and community leaders don't lead by example, understand you're not failing just the kids. You're failing this country. If we cannot produce leaders who are compassionate, considerate, and committed to the good of the many, we won't have a country to complain about. 

Is that what you really want?

The Wifely Person's Tip o'the Week
Looking for fun things to do?
Visit the American Swedish Institute in Minneapolis
and do have lunch at Fika. 
The museum is delightful and the food, spectacular. 

Sunday, November 19, 2023

How Do I Feel.......

A dear friend sent me a truly delightful mug and my favorite tea (I am a well known Tazo Zen junkie) because she was concerned about how I was faring with "all the craziness going on in the world, especially in Israel." Obviously, she's a blog regular, but more than that, she instinctively knows how to do the right thing to cheer me up. Had I not been laughing at the mug, I would've cried. Until that moment, I did not realize how smacked about I felt, how sad and how terrified. And how much I wanted to crawl through the hole into that library.
Terrified is as close as I can come to describing what I am feeling. 

I know for a fact I've not been sleeping well, that I awaken in the night rigid with fear from a bad dream, and I don't ever remember my dreams. But I wake up terrified, listening for a noise or a clue or a hint of something outside. 

My Russian grandmother once told me how they hid in the fruit cellar from the Cossacks, and how they could tell what noises they made when the came and what noises they made when they left. She talked about being scared. I could not relate, nor could I imagine what I would do in a fruit cellar.

People keep asking me how it feels to be Jewish in America right now. 

I avoid thinking about this because every time it encroaches on the consciousness, I want to throw up, cry, and crawl into a hole, none of which are effective mechanisms for dealing with the tangled mass I have squirming inside me.

Mom was still alive the first time I brought up the possibility of the wheels coming off. Feckless was in the middle of primaries and picking up steam. Everyone mocked me, told me I was alarmist, shook their collective heads, and sighed. Well, guess what. 

Colleges and universities are supporting Hamas. Do they even know what Hamas stands for, believes, and does? Well, maybe it doesn't much matter because they only go after Jews and homosexuals. I guess that makes it okay.

So the short answer to the question about how I feel about being a Jew in America right now? 

I feel terrified. 

I am afraid for my grandchildren. When I see the faces of the hostage children, I look to see how many of them look like my grandkids. Because those could all be my grandkids. Every single one of those faces belongs to parents, grandparents, friends, and a country that cares deeply for the lives of all children, not just Jewish kids.  But my kids are here, Jewish kids are being bullied and threatened on social media and in the halls of public schools. It's open season on our kids.

Feckless Loser has called for detention centers for immigrants. How far behind are detention centers for Jews? 

Jewish homes and businesses are being defaced in more than a few cities. How much longer before that hate becomes the norm and a second Krystallnacht happens?

Hamas's propaganda machine is unparalleled. We saw it ramped up and fully charged with the bombing of al-Ahli Hospital not by Israel, but by Islamic Jihad. Every major news source not only blamed Israel,  but published as fact the inflated casualty numbers as provided by Hamas. 

The BBC in particular, rushes to judgment,  blames Israel, then is slow to retract, giving the Hamas supporters ample time to come crashing into Jewish lives. 

Campuses are full of "safe spaces," but none of those spaces are safe for Jewish kids who now hide their Magen David necklaces and trade the kippot for baseball caps and beanies. I am terrified for those kids whose world is being turned upside down and stomped into glass shards. 

We cannot trust the Left Wing, the same side of the political coin we marched with, demonstrated with, supported, and believed in their version of social justice was real. It's not real for us, any more than the MAGA and Right Wing screaming Jews will not replace us as they march through the streets. If my Grandma Bessie was alive, she would be outfitting the basement with emergency supplies. 

I feel betrayed. 

We were your allies. We demonstrated, we marched, we sat-in, and we even died for the causes so important to our country, yet now, none of you stand with us. You seem not to give a damn that homosexuality is illegal in Gaza, as it is in most Muslim countries. How does the LGBTQ+ community feel about solidarity with a movement that wants them dead? Well, I guess it's okay because Jews rank above them on the to be exterminated list.

I feel disgusted.

Whatever happened to the American I was told I was part of?  All those alliances we thought we were part of....have evaporated. People I once considered friends tell me we're evil because we won't just let Hamas attack our cities, towns, and villages as they promise over and over on television. October 7th will be repeated again and again. 

But know this: When they finish with us, they will come after you. 

The Wifely Person's Tip o'the Week
Do not be silent in the face of evil.
That serves no purpose.


Monday, November 13, 2023

Living In a Post Factual Society

The blog I originally drafted for today cannot be published. It's a total screed.

Mousa Abu Marouk
I am not without compassion for the people of Gaza. They are victims;  victimized by their own leadership who park their sorry-ass butts in some posh hotel in Qatar while thousands of the people they supposedly represent die because they are used as human shields, sitting atop tunnels filled with Hamas rockets, bombs, and supplies. 

Many people are asking: Since you have built 500 kilometers of tunnels, why haven't you built bomb shelters, where civilians can hide during bombardment? 
Mousa Abu Marzouk: We have built the tunnels because we have no other way of protecting ourselves from being targeted and killed. These tunnels are meant to protect us from the airplanes. We are fighting from inside the tunnels. Everybody knows that 75% of the people in the Gaza Strip are refugees, and it is the responsibility of the United Nations to protect them. According to the Geneva Convention, it is the responsibility of the occupation to provide them with all the services as long as they are under occupation.

In other words, it's not their job to protect their citizens.

Then whose job is it?

Did Hamas really think Israel would not retaliate for the massacre of October 7th? Did their leadership not give a single thought to what would happen when Israel struck back? 

Or are they playing a very long game, using the blood of their own civilians cast into harm's way as a new blood libel for Jew hatred?

Yeah, I think they were. 

They were depending on 2000 years of anti-Jewish sentiment lying right beneath the surface to bring out the wide swath of haters who would prefer to see Jews back in the gas chambers. 

From the river to the sea is absolutely their plan from the get-go, making sure the blood sacrifice of their own people would be the newest blood libel used to kill Jews, thereby attaining their Jew-free goal. 

Baked babies, beheaded babies, raped mothers, tortured grandparents...none of that mattered because, after all, they were just Jews. Dead Palestinian babies, mutilated Muslim children, some live ones used to pose as dead kids...only to get up again for repositioning...hospitals bombed by Islamic Jihad, but blamed on Israel, anything they could stage to make sure all Jews...not necessarily Israelis...take the fall to become the enemy worthy of extermination.

And if that's not gruesome enough, the Hamas 07 October invaders filmed themselves performing atrocities, using victims' cell phones to upload these videos to social media so that families got to watch their loved ones' last moments. Yet, when that same footage is shown in public places , supporters of Hamas, the very people who committed these atrocities, protest and, as at the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles, brawls ensued outside the venue. I should think those supporters should have been cheering to see their acts of depravity shown to the world. 

Silly me. 

Those same people talk about ethnic cleansing. Wanna know what's ethnic cleansing? That's when people of one culture/religion/color are forced to leave the place where they've lived for 2500 years. Maybe that question should be directed at the countries that make up the Arab world. 

Photo © J. Tocker 

In 2019, the Eretz Israel Museum in Tel Aviv captured that exodus in an exhibit: Leaving, Never To Return. That slogan was written on the side of the one suitcase each person was allowed to carry out: رحلة بدون رجعة  which is Arabic for Trip with no return. Hundreds of thousands of Jews with just the clothes on their backs and their single valises had no place to go, so they went home...to Israel where their journeys began in the first place. Where after three thousand years the same language was spoken, the same alphabet was used, and the walls of the cities their ancestors built still stood.

From the Scottish Council of Jewish Communities
Apartheid? Let's talk about that for a moment. Currently, the majority of Israelis would be, at least in this country, considered persons of color. All different colors. Jews are Jews; that's all that matters...not the color of skin, eyes, hair, or shoes. None of that is a barrier to citizenship.

At the same time, Israeli Arabs are fully Israeli citizens, serving in the IDF, in the police force, as members of Knesset, as doctors, heads of hospitals, lawyers, supreme court justices, voting in elections, establishing political blocs government, getting health care, education, power, water, and passports just like any other Israeli citizen..Jew, Christian, Muslim, Druze, Bahá’í , whatever.  Oh, and Gay Pride is a really big deal in Tel Aviv...and no one even gets thrown off a rooftop for being gay. 

For the record, Israel is a democracy. It is the only functional democracy in the Middle East.

According to Hamas's charter, Jews are not permitted to live in Palestine and most of the other Arab states. Israelis can visit, but they cannot establish residency. That more closely resembles apartheid.

For the umpteenth time...the only group occupying Gaza is Hamas. If the Palestinians would like to stop being human shields, then they have to get rid of Hamas. Israel is happy to help, as are many other nations, but the Palestinians have to start that process. They must begin to take back their own country. Plenty of nations will step up with economic and humanitarian aid when the funds stop being diverted to rocket launchers, missiles, and terror tunnels.

Keep this in mind: if you want to support Palestinian rights, don't condone the wholesale murder of kids at a music festival. Don't cheer for missiles being lobbed nonstop on schoolyards. You don't want Israelis to cheer when you get bombed, so why would you think Israelis are gonna sit back and let you bomb them without a response?  

Not realistic thinking on their part.

Exactly how many ceasefires and suicide bombers do you think it would take for your government to respond appropriately? Unless, of course, you're okay with your children and grandchildren being beheaded, kidnapped, and tortured? If that's okay with you, you should be offering up your family as human shield sacrifices for your staunch belief in the righteousness of Hamas.

I am damn tired of living in a post factual society, a place where fantasy passes for reality, and people who should know better don't do their homework. Where universities allow departments to spread utter garbage under their logo like the University of Minnesota's Department of Gender Women and Sexuality Studies faculty has done with their statement on Palestine. Clearly, the writers of that statement drank Hamas Kool-Aid before they put it out instead of doing their homework. 

Maybe they should send a delegation of feminists and LGBTQ+ folks to negotiate with Hamas. I'm sure Mousa Abu Marouk would welcome them all with a great rooftop party....if he happens to be in Gaza.


The Wifely Person's Tip o'the Day
If you're not a fan of Jews, I would strongly urge you to boycott 
products invented/developed by Jews.
That means no instant messaging since IMs, DMs, WhatsApp 
are all derived from ICQ, an Israeli invention.
No USB Flash drives....Israeli invention.
No Epilday hair removers.
No Rummikub or Mastermind games.
No pressure bandages.
No mobile or camera phone.
No polio vaccine.
No Google. 

One should always be consistent 
about not benefitting
from those you hate. 

Monday, November 6, 2023

HAMOUSE IN THE HOUSE

Mouse-o-Ramp
Last week, I participated in an event for Washington County where I was a panel member for a middle school kinda job fair...which means I got to talk about being an author. I met lots of seriously interesting kids, learned most middle school boys intend to play for the NBA, while many girls but certainly not all, still leaned toward service fields like nursing and social work. I sat next to a guy who was a rhythmic/music therapist, and he was way more interesting than I was. I drove home in a blinding, unseasonably heavy rainfall and when I walked into the basement, I heard what sounded like water hitting the bucket I keep on the shelf. It wasn't water....it was a mouse trying to escape, but I didn't know that so when I reached up to grab the bucket, the mouse jumped up. I screamed (startled not scared of mice) and dropped the bucket. The bugger ran behind the furnace. "Moron!" I yelled. "Had you stayed in the damn bucket I woulda taken you outside and let you go! Now, I must employ the Death by Peanut Butter Mouse-o-Ramp!" 

Needless to say, the offending mouse was in the bucket the next morning. Things were quiet for a couple of days, but knowing how mice work in Minnesota, the bucket remained. Then Saturday, I found mouse evidence on the baker's rack in the kitchen, but no mouse upstairs. Sunday morning, there was a mouse in the bucket. This morning, there were 3 in the bucket: mom, dad, and a little guy. It was time to call Dr. Mouselin, my mechuten who knows about these things. We checked the foundation, the basement, and the garage for possible entry points. We found one...and stuffed it with steel wool. We'll see what the next couple of days bring. 

Mice are a fact of life in suburban and rural Minnesota. Yes, they are cute, no I don't like drowning them, and would prefer to release them back into the wild when possible. HOWEVER, mice are rodents and I would prefer not to share living quarters with guys who spread a variety of diseases. But that does not prevent me from feeling bad about killing them. 

They are terrorists in cute, little, furry packets; quiet, sneaky, operating in the dark, with no remorse about destroying/contaminating your food supply. So tonight, as I was checking Mouse-o-Ramp before heading off to write tonight's episode, I caught myself saying, "There you go, you little terrorists. Mess with me, will you? You will not win!'  And then I thought about the movie MOUSEHUNT with Nathan Lane. And then I thought about me calling them terrorists. 

I know there are all sorts of metaphors and similes used in the propaganda war surrounding Israel and Hamas, and I do not make light of what's happening there. Not in the least. But the similarities made me think long and hard about my own world view. 

Obviously, there is no equivalency here. There just isn't. Or maybe it's my imagination running rampant as I plot the death and destruction of the mouse in the house. Truth is I really don't want to kill mice. Even the thought kinda creeps me out. But the bottom line is that they cannot live in this house. There is no way for me to communicate with them, to convince them to go back outside to be free. They're just lookin' for a warm nest and free food. BUT...and this is an important point....this is my house, and if I take away the bucket prematurely, they will invite all their friends in and this will escalate to something really, really ugly. 

And that's the reason there can be no cease-fire with Gaza. Even a humanitarian pause is risky, but less risky than a ceasefire. Gaza has always been the one to break the ceasefire agreements, there is no reason to believe a new one would do anything more than allow them to rearm and regroup...much the same way removing the Mouse-o-Ramp will allow mice to return to their friends to invite them in. 

Am I a terrible person for not wanting mice in the house? No. Nor am I a terrible person for not wanting to give Hamas any room to rearm. An idiotic, simplistic comparison to be sure, but for reasons I cannot adequately explain, it made me think about my positions, and arrive at the conclusion that a ceasefire is non-negotiable at this time. 

UPDATE: A little terrorist just ran past me and dashed under the fridge! Not to worry, a second Mouse-o-Ramp has been deployed. This has got to stop! But now, I may have a clue as to where they're coming from.....

The other thing that needs discussion is the wide ranging support for Hamas on college campuses and across the 18-28 age group. I think they're called GEN Z, but who knows and who cares? These are the members of the safe-space generation, the ones who think critical thinking is unnecessary for people who support extreme positions, because, quite frankly, thinking isn't one of their strong suits. Whatever. I just want to share this video asking people to sign petitions in support of Hamas.

Please watch this video. 

A lot of people will complain this is cherry-picking, or manipulating interviews, but they are missing the point. When you see people cheering for Hamas on campuses and in urban demonstrations, when you see LGBTQ folks protesting to free Palestine, they are completely unaware of what Hamas is, what Hamas does, and how Hamas kills its own citizens. When confronted with what they are supporting, not everyone chooses to believe facts on the ground, or admit, at the very least, that they are uninformed. The clip just shows it up close and personal. 

Do you think Germans went around saying "Gas the Jews" back in 1932? Probably not. 

It is the refusal of an entire generation of Americans to do their own research or homework to understand the positions they are taking. That puts us Jews in the crosshairs on both the extreme Left and the extreme Right wing of each party. And now that it's out in the open, it's apparently okay to talk about it. Take this guy Klingenberg running for the school board in Roseville, MN. Did you know that the Nazis were really trying to save Jews? I didn't either.  But this guys and his followers make it a point to spread this information as though it was true. 

On an interesting note, I do want to comment about Dean Phillips' run against President Biden: do not dismiss this guy out of hand. He is the only one who is playing the long hand. I hope by next week Feckless is sitting is a jail cell, but we can't count on that. Nor can we be so sure that Joe Biden's health will not be impacted by the incredible stress he is under. Oh, yeah, there may be other Dems playing the what if game, but Phillips is the only one currently putting it out there. I think he's cagier than the rest of us....and I'm not convinced he actually wants to be POTUS. Still....

The GOP is bound and determined to run a criminal with signs of dementia for president. What does that say about this country?

Frankly, I'm afraid to ask.

The Wifely Person's Tip o'the Week
I'm writing this on Monday
Election Day is tomorrow.
Whatever races you have going, GO VOTE.
Especially in school board elections. 
They are way more important than you might think.