A sweet New Year (5772) to all!
And Snoopy has a cool video proving even Yeshiva boys in Jerusalem can do the most athletic version of modern dance.
A sweet New Year (5772) to all!
And Snoopy has a cool video proving even Yeshiva boys in Jerusalem can do the most athletic version of modern dance.
Comments Off on Shana tova ve metuka
Posted in Blogosphere, Israel, Scribbles, Texana
Tagged Rosh Hashana, Shana Tova
I gotta like the Israeli PM for having the guts to stand up in the Dictator’s Club and tell them all what they really are and where they really do their supercilious thing: In the “house of many lies.” Too true. What a pity the dream of a peacekeeping body has so degenerated in such a short time, and that more than a quarter of its spendthrift ways come from our taxes. Bah.
Comments Off on House of Lies
Posted in Blogosphere, Israel, Scribbles
Tagged Israeli PM Netanyahu, UN House of Lies
Gov. Rick Perry is getting the credit in Israel for a new Texas law prohibiting property owner association restrictions of religious displays that don’t otherwise violate the law.
But all that Perry did was perform a governor’s option by signing the bill into law in June. Houston state rep Garnet Coleman actually wrote the bill and got his colleagues to pass it—spurred by a Houston couple’s complaint that a condominium association had prevented them from attaching a Mezuzah (jocularly known as the Jewish lightning rod) to their unit’s front doorpost.
Comments Off on The Texas Mezuzah law
Posted in Israel, Scribbles, Texana
Tagged Gov. Rick Perry, Houston State Rep. Garnet Coleman, Jewish Lightning Rod, Mezuzah, Texas Mezuzah Law
“Back in the 1930′s, it made some sense for Bruce Wayne, scion of one of Gotham’s finest families, to be a WASP. But look around NYC and see whose names are on the hospital, university and theater buildings. Don’t get us wrong…Batman has to be named Bruce Wayne. But who’s to say he wasn’t named after his great-grandfather, Baruch Wien?”
Humor by Heeb.
Comments Off on Batman at the bema
Posted in Blogosphere, Israel, Library, Scribbles
Tagged Bat Mitzvah, Batman, Heeb, Will This Knight Be Different From All Other Knights
What’s changed since that awful morning?
Well, nothing on the Islamic war against the West. It continues. Our all-volunteer military, while benefiting from a new generation of volunteers, remains stressed with two major campaigns and a host of smaller ones. For the first time, the National Guard and Reserves have become continuously- active parts of the active-duty force.
But the war is not (officially) called the War on Terror anymore (which, though clumsy and avoiding the main [Muslim] issue, was, at least, descriptive)—thanks to the Dumbocrats and their academic, Hollywood and media surrogates, who’ve impeded it every step of the way.
They’ve always been more concerned with nomenclature than reality. Green energy, anyone?
The war itself is still pretty much of a loser. Caroline Glick says it’s because Bush Jr.’s toughest words never got translated into action, the USA still refuses to admit it’s fighting radical Islam, and appeasement of Muslim countries in the Middle East remains the order of the day. Sigh.
Airline travel has become (if possible) even more onerous. We take off our shoes now, in order to get aboard, in honor of would-be terrorist Richard Reid (serving a life sentence in Britain, which means he’ll probably be out soon). Also no bottles of liquid allowed unless they’re purchased within the gate area, in honor of someone I forget, there have been so many of them.
For a long time afterward most previously-open military installations were closed to the public. Austin’s Camp Mabry recently reopened, making its good military history museum accessible once more. Fort Hood, after enduring its own terrorist shoot-em-up by a Muslim major, still is closed—probably for good.
One thing that hasn’t changed: Israel’s perpetual 9/11, a suicide bomber here, a suicide bomber there, and, as always, few media elsewhere pay any attention—except to write pitying profile stories about the Muslim bombers, only rarely about their Jewish victims.
UPDATE: The Third Jihad, a film still worth watching, for a reminder of the war that likely will still be with our children’s children.
Comments Off on 9/11 ten years later
Posted in Afghanistan, Iraq, Israel, Texana, The War, Troops
Tagged 9/11 ten years later, Israel's 9/11, Muslim war on the West
I’ve often wondered why it was necessary to kill Osama. American military strategist Edward Luttwak, in a fascinating new interview in Tablet Magazine, has an excellent answer:
“They killed him because of the fact that if we captured Bin Laden, every Jihadist in the world would have been duty-bound to kidnap any American citizen anywhere and exchange him for Bin Laden.”
Luttwak also thinks constant conflict with the Arabs actually is good for Israel because it has produced an internal cohesion that might not otherwise exist. Read the whole interview here.
Comments Off on Luttwak talks Bin Laden and Israel
Posted in Israel, Library, Obamalot, The War, Troops
Tagged Edward Luttwak, Israel, military strategy, Putin
Except, of course, of Jerusalem.
Very funny video about how Obamalot has united New York Republicans, Democrats and Independents seeking the Jewish vote by condemning his Israel policy.