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thesobsister · 2 months
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"The West Has Forgotten Why Collateral Damage Is Morally Justified"
Well, that's certainly a provocative title. Let's see what this article says...
"Underlying these various critiques of Israel is the belief that despite its just cause, Israel cannot justify its continued warfare because there are simply 'too many' civilian casualties. Such criticism suggests that the Western world has forgotten the moral justification for killing in warfare in general and collateral damage in particular. The deaths of noncombatants are regrettable and tragic, but they are not immoral. If the West has a chance to defeat terrorist groups that fight by no rules, it needs to quickly relearn the necessary moral calibrations that justify death in warfare."
Hmm...well, that's…certainly a viewpoint. Let's see what else it says...
"Children should not be punished for the sins of their fathers…Yet human nature ensures that children do suffer (or benefit) from the decisions of their parents, just as any political order guarantees that citizens face the repercussions of their leaders’ decisions…
None of this means that one should target enemy noncombatants. The realities and obligations of our shared collective fate, however, dictate that one prioritize one’s own soldiers and citizens while worrying less about those who share another people’s destiny."
Okay...
"These two primary factors—our obligation to protect our own citizens and our filial duties to our brethren—come together when addressing the dilemma of involuntary human shields. If, at the end of the day, an army won’t attack certain legitimate targets because of collateral damage, then the terrorist group will use human shields to prevent their defeat. It’s hard to achieve a decisive victory when you cannot—or will not allow yourself—to destroy the enemy. Yes, guided missiles and other advanced technologies allow for greater precise targeting. Nonetheless, in the fog of war, it is impossible to achieve 'immaculate warfare,' especially when the defenders are daring you to kill their human shields.
Ultimately, the defeat of these terrorist groups is the primary ethical imperative. This will benefit not only Israel but also the Gazan civilians who suffer longer under their terrorist leaders and the continuous warfare that they breed. There is a moral cost to not acting decisively, and a strategic cost to forgetting the moral justification for killing in war."
Hmm…so…Palestinians, who are being killed, abused, tortured and starved by the thousands are actually better off for the hell they're enduring. And I haven't gotten into the contradictions and self-serving arguments posited throughout this article. Wow, what kind of a POS would write an article justifying the killing of civilian noncombatants, including children, in...
"Rabbi Dr. Shlomo Brody is the executive director of Ematai and a columnist for the Jerusalem Post."
'nuff said. Fuck you.
If you want to subject yourself to this douchebag's "reasoning," it's online at Public Discourse, a website magazine published by a conservative think tank, whose editorial staff comprises 12 white people who don't think same-sex marriage and reproductive rights are useful for them or, by extension, anyone else.
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scotianostra · 11 months
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Burns Monument, Regent Road, Edinburgh.
Did you know there are around 20 memorials to Burns in Scotland, and many more about the world.
Rabbie spent two years of his life in Edinburgh, fathered a few children while here, and certainly made his mark on the capital.
In 1786 Burns was persuaded by a blind poet, Thomas Blacklock, to hold off on emigrating to the West Indies and instead taking residence in Baxter’s Close. The pub near to to The Pear Tree is named in Blackstock's honour, by the way.
The lodgings where he stayed are long gone, Deacon Brodies pub on The Law market.
The foundation stone for the structure was built in 1831, designed by Thomas Hamilton who had already designed the monument to the poet at Alloway.
The building originally housed a white marble statue of the poet - that's now in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery. Edinburgh and District Burns Clubs Association still meet here regularly. You may have seen pics of the statue on previous posts I have made.
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pargolettasworld · 1 year
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A_Ul_wdaqYg
Abraham Saqui was the first Choirmaster of the Princes Road Synagogue in Liverpool.  He was born in London around 1824, and died in 1893, of what his obituary in the Liverpool Mercury called “paralysis of the brain.” Although much of his music is not terribly well known today, he was considered a major synagogue musician in his lifetime, and in fact turned down an offer of a position at the West London Synagogue just because he liked Liverpool so much.
I think he would be somewhat puzzled by the reason that his music has fallen by the wayside a bit.  When he was composing, the idea of mixed-voice (SATB, with women singing the soprano and alto lines) choirs was still brand-new in the UK -- the West London Synagogue had a mixed choir, because Charles Garland Verrinder thought that adult women were easier to work with than prepubescent boys and convinced the synagogue to let him mix the choir.  But WLS was Reform, and certainly no Orthodox choirs were mixed . . . until right around the time that Saqui died.
In the early twentieth century, it turns out, quite a few Orthodox synagogues in the UK had mixed choirs, and one of those synagogues was the Princes Road synagogue.  In fact, they liked their mixed choir so much that, when Chief Rabbis Brodie, Jakobovits, and Sacks in turn made it clear that you could either be a member of the (Orthodox) United Synagogue OR have a mixed choir, but not both, Princes Road was the only Orthodox synagogue to choose the choir over United Synagogue membership.  To this day, they have a mixed choir, and they are very happy with it, and they sing the music of their beloved former choirmaster, Abraham Saqui.  Unfortunately, because they aren’t United Synagogue members, and because they let women sing in the choir, a lot of other synagogues won’t have much to do with them, or sing much of Saqui’s music, which is ironic, because Saqui composed for male-voice choir.
But there are some people who love Saqui’s music, and there are some pieces that he wrote that have escaped out into the wild.  Cantor Netanel Hershtik of the Hampton Synagogue is a great fan of Saqui’s setting of Yigdal, and so is the Shabbaton Choir.  With good reason, too -- as you can hear, it’s a wonderful piece of music.  A bit more complex than LEONI, but worth the listen.
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deadlinecom · 1 year
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ramascreen · 1 year
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Adam Brody Joins Kristen Bell in New Comedy Series from Erin Foster
Netflix has announced that Adam Brody is joining their new Kristen Bell comedy series from creator Erin Foster and executive producer Steven Levitan. Logline: A comedy centered on the unlikely relationship between an outspoken, agnostic woman (Bell) and an unconventional rabbi (Brody).  Adam Brody will play Noah, a  charming rabbi who is stuck in his ways and used to playing things safe. He…
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itamarbdor · 5 years
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Nobody can receive a downpour of gifts unless they have a place to store them… You’d better get ready, because they are coming! Ready to get the gifts?
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gliklofhameln · 3 years
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The Son of the Miracle-Working Rabbi of Belz, Isidor Kaufmann (1853-1921), Hungarian.
signed Isidor Kaufmann (centre left) and inscribed Sohn der Wunderrabbi von Belz (upper left)
oil on panel
15.5 x 19.6 cm
This magnificent painting of the young son of the Belzer Rebbe has become an icon of the work of Isidor Kaufmann, who is justly considered the greatest Jewish painter of the 19th Century. As much as he is beloved for his portraits of elderly Jewish sages, which exude dignity and stature, so too is he revered for his ability to portray young children, upon whose shoulders rest the hopes and dreams of their parents and the entire Jewish community. This  articular child is one of the youngest ever portrayed by Kaufmann, and his innocence and radiance are without parallel.
Kaufmann’s practice as an artist entailed arduous summer travel through the small towns of Galicia and Eastern Russia, the land he called his “Promised Land”. While visiting the small shtetels and synagogues of towns such as Holleschau, Jablonow and Brody, he made numerous studies on site which he later worked up into highly detailed and refined paintings in his studio during the winter months in Vienna. His painstaking technique resulted in paintings that stand at the pinnacle of 19th century portraiture.
During his travels, Kaufmann encountered itinerant “miracle-working” Rabbis whom he described in a vivid letter written from Jablonow on June 20, 1897:
“I had the opportunity to spend a Sabbath Evening in the company of a travelling rabbi. It was incredible! You know what a travelling rabbi is? This is a man who has so and so many famous ancestors, who is endowed with a naïve but terrible impertinence, a lot of Talmudic knowledge, great, honest piety (rhetorical in the presence of listeners) and an open (taking) hand. This is what is called a travelling rabbi!”
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alexlacquemanne · 3 years
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Octobre MMXXI
Films
007 Spectre (Spectre) (2015) de Sam Mendes avec Daniel Craig, Christoph Waltz, Léa Seydoux, Monica Bellucci et Ralph Fiennes
Un condé (1970) de Yves Boisset avec Michel Bouquet, Françoise Fabian, Michel Constantin, Henri Garcin, Bernard Fresson et Rufus
Everything or Nothing : l'histoire secrète de James Bond (2012) de Stevan Riley avec Ken Adam, Maud Adams, Albert R. Broccoli, Barbara Broccoli, Pierce Brosnan, Daniel Craig et Timothy Dalton
Mourir peut attendre (No Time to Die) (2021) de Cary Joji Fukunaga avec Daniel Craig, Rami Malek, Léa Seydoux, Lashana Lynch et Ana de Armas
Tuer n'est pas jouer (The Living Daylights) (1987) de John Glen avec Timothy Dalton, Maryam d'Abo, Jeroen Krabbé, Joe Don Baker et Art Malik
Ne nous fâchons pas (1966) de Georges Lautner avec Lino Ventura, Jean Lefebvre, Mireille Darc et Michel Constantin
C'est pas parce qu'on a rien à dire qu'il faut fermer sa gueule... (1975) de Jacques Besnard avec Bernard Blier, Jean Lefebvre, Michel Serrault, Tsilla Chelton et Marion Game
Le Mystère Henri Pick (2019) de Rémi Bezançon avec Fabrice Luchini, Camille Cottin, Alice Isaaz, Bastien Bouillon et Vincent Winterhalter
La situation est grave mais... pas désespérée ! (1976) de Jacques Besnard avec Jean Lefebvre, Michel Serrault, Maria Pacôme, Daniel Prévost et Cécile Vassort
Les Barbouzes (1954) de Georges Lautner avec Lino Ventura, Bernard Blier, Francis Blanche et Mireille Darc
Les Aventures de Rabbi Jacob (1973) de Gérard Oury avec Louis de Funès, Claude Giraud, Miou-Miou, Suzy Delair, Renzo Montagnani et Henri Guybet
Séries
Kaamelott Livre IV
L'ascension du lion - Les émancipés - La révoquée - La baliste II - Les bonnes - Les refoulés - Les tuteurs II - Le grand départ - La clandestine - L'auberge rouge - Les envahisseurs - Les curieux première partie - Les curieux deuxième partie - Les tacticiens première partie - Les tacticiens deuxième partie - La réponse - Anges et Démons - La rémanence - La potion de vivacité II - Vox populi III - La sonde - La relève - Le jeu du Pélican - La permission - Le dragon gris - Le discours - Le paladin - Le choix de Gauvain - La dame et le lac - Beaucoup de bruit pour rien - Le Oud II - La face-à-face première partie - Le face-à-face deuxième partie - Les endettés
Le Coffre à Catch
#45 : Santino Marella est arrivé !! - #46 : CM Punk est un sacré filou ! - #47 : Vince McMahon CHAMPION DU MONDE DU CATCH !!! - #48 : Vince, Shane et UUUUUUMAGA dominent le monde !
Dark Side of the Ring Saison 1, 2, 3
The Fabulous Moolah - Benoit Première partie - Benoit Deuxième partie - Le meurtre de Bruiser Brody - Les Road Warriors - Le vol vers l'enfer
Psych Saison 6
Immunité problématique - Very Bad nuit - Carrément mordus ! - Super héros - Tous au stade - Shawn au-dessus d'un nid de coucou - Mon père cet escroc - Complètement babas
The Crown Saison 3
Poussière de Lune - Un homme en suspens - Imbroglio - Un cri du cœur
Columbo Saison 8
Ombres et lumières
Doctor Who Series 12
Le Contrat des Judoons - Orphan 55 - La Nuit de terreur de Nikola Tesla - Praxeus - Vous m'entendez ? - Apparitions à la villa Diodati - L'Ascension des Cybermen - Les enfants intemporels - Revolution of the Daleks
The Grand Tour Saison 1, 3
Opéra, art et donuts - Eco-conduite - Grand Tour vers le futur - Spécial Colombie : Première partie - Spécial Colombie : Deuxième Partie
Top Gear Saison 12, 14, 20, 21, 16, 10
1200 km en un plein - Du grand art - Ils ont roulé sur l'eau! - Destination Thaïlande - Un pont sur la rivière Kwaï - Surfin' USA - La traversée de la Manche
Chapeau melon et bottes de cuir Saison 5
Meurtres à épisodes - La Dynamo vivante
Nestor Burma Saison 5
Drôle d'épreuve pour Nestor Burma
Spectacles
Espèces menacées (2021) de Ray Cooney avec Laurent Ournac, Arnaud Gidoin, Thierry Heckendorn, Yannik Mazzilli, Gaëlle Gauthier, Zoé Bruneau, Sébastien Pierre et Serge Da Silva
Supertramp Live in Paris '79
Les Dégourdis de la 11ème (1986) de André Mouëzy-Éon et Georges Daveillans avec Robert Hirsch, Darry Cowl, Pierre Tornade, Marcel Philippot, Jean-Marie Juan, François Morel, Frédéric Saurel, Annick Alane et Virginie Pradal
La Taupe (1987) de Robert Lamoureux avec Robert Lamoureux, Pierre Maguelon, Patrick Abrial, Magali de Vendeuil, Marie Saint-Laurent et Francis Deschamps
Le Tombeur (1986) de Robert Lamoureux avec Michel Leeb, Guy Lecluyse, Julia Duchaussoy, Pascale Louange, Chick Ortega, Camille Solal, Coralie Audret, Laurence Porteil et Xavier Goulard
Livres
Lucky Luke Tome 53 : Le Daily Star de Jean Léturgie, Xavier Fauche et Morris
Une vraie panthère de Jean Bruce
Bonjour tristesse de Françoise Sagan
Astérix Tome 39 : Astérix et le Griffon de Jean-Yves Ferri et Didier Conrad
L'Île mystérieuse de Jules Verne
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eretzyisrael · 3 years
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People ask what a “New Year for Trees” is all about.
The Torah says that “man is a tree in the field.” We, the People of Israel, are certainly like a tree.
In the Holocaust, we lost 6,000,000 leaves and were left with bare branches. According to the Iranians and their proxies Hizbulla and Hamas who are at this moment aiming 200,000 missiles at us, we’re dying altogether, and - in their words - it’s a matter of pushing the button and a mere 9 minutes for them to finish us off. Utzu eitza v'tufar…
If that’s not enough, we have an enemy within us that fails to recognize our connection to our own roots. With nothing to anchor them, they’ll soon disappear, blowing in the wind like chaff from a wheat stalk.
What our enemies in every generation fail to understand is that our roots are deep and mighty. Our 3,800 year-old spiritual taproot cuts through the boulders of time and reaches Moses, then back to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Just as our enemies can’t see our roots, they can never uproot us.
On Tu B'Shvat, the trees look dead. But don’t be mistaken - soon they shall flower in all their glory.
Maybe we look dead now with all the threats from the outside and all of our unity-and-tolerance problems from within. But don’t lose heart. When we lease expect it, Hashem will redeem us and send Moshiach, and the Jewish people - like an almond tree in Shvat - will blossom and rejuvenate in all our glory, in our newly rebuilt Holy Temple in Jerusalem, soon, amen! Happy Tu B'Shvat! by: Rabbi Lazer Brody
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swartzmark · 4 years
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20 Favorite Sentences from The Complete Isaac Babel
1.     “The ancient icons wrapped my cheerful heart in the chill of their deathly passions, and I barely managed to escape them and their sepulchral saints.” --“The End of St. Hypatius”
2.     “The purple eye of the sunset, rummaging over the earth, stumbled upon Grach in the evening, snoring under his cart.” --“The Father”
3.     “The vagrant moon trailed through the town and I tagged along, nurturing within me unfulfillable dreams and dissonant songs.” --“Pan Apolek”
4.     “Sidorov, the dejected murderer, tore the pink cotton wool of my imagination to shreds and dragged me into the halls of his judicious insanity.” --“Italian Sun”
5.     “The sky changes color—tender blood pouring from an overturned bottle—and a gentle aroma of decay envelops me.” --“Gedali”
6.     “The moon hung over the yard like a cheap earring.” --“My First Goose”
7.     “The mummies of your trampled passions have breathed their irresistible poison upon me.” --“The Road to Brody”
8.     “The movements of the Galician and Volhynian Jew are abrupt, brusque, and offensive to good taste, but the power of their grief is filled with dark grandeur, and their secret contempt for the Polish masters is boundless.” --“The Tachanka Theory”
9.     “The clerks, sodden with sleeplessness, wrote orders to the division, ate pickles, and sneezed.” --“At Saint Valentine’s”
10. “Night, pierced by the flashes of the cannonade, is stooping over the dying man.” --“The Widow”
11. “The damp sunrise poured down on us like waves of chloroform.” --“Zamosc”
12. “The village floated and bulged, crimson clay oozing from its gloomy wounds.” --After the Battle”
13. “And I, who can barely harness the storms of fantasy raging through my ancient body, I received my brother’s last breath.” --“The Rabbi’s Son”
14. “No one in the world has a stronger response to new things than children.” --“The Story of My Dovecote”
15.  “The hydrophobia of my ancestors, the Spanish rabbis and Frankfurt money changers, dragged me to the bottom.” --“The Awakening”
16. “I loved him as only a boy afflicted with hysteria and headaches can love an athlete.” --“The Awakening”
17. “She danced with loose hair among the ruins, in the din and dust of the crumbling wattle and the flying splinters of the breaking planks.” --“Gapa Guzhva”
18. “To me, the blood flowing through our veins had the taste and color of raspberry jam.” --“The Ivan and Maria”
19. “The glass sun of Petersburg reclined on the uneven, faded carpet.” --“Guy de Maupassant”
20. “In the room next door, the butcher and his wife, in the grip of love, thrashed about like two large fish trapped in a jar.” --“My First Fee”
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kittyoverlord · 3 years
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Hi! I saw your addition to the conversion post and went "wait, is that Rabbi Brody?" and then "Wait, is that Oliver who sometimes shows up to minyan when he hasn't gone to sleep yet???" So, uh, hi from Ithaca from your fellow rainbow-haired queer convert member of TBE!
Hi!!!
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yidquotes · 5 years
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Let us first establish the principles that guide Jewish law on violence and self-defense.  The Torah states, “Take utmost care and watch yourself scrupulously,” (Deuteronomy 4:9) and commands a homeowner to build a railing around his roof “lest you bring bloodguilt on your house if anyone should fall from it.” (22:8)  From these verses, the Sages derived the rules that a person should not keep wild dogs, shoddy ladders, or other dangerous objects in his home lest they cause bloodshed (Bava Kamma 15b) and should not sell weapons to anyone who he fears will use them inappropriately (Avodah Zarah 15b). Thus, if a careless gun salesman unintentionally contributes to illicit violence, he is guilty of “placing a stumbling block before the blind.” (Choshen Mishpat 427:7)  While it may be true that “guns don't kill; people do,” the responsible “people” under Jewish law are not only individuals who handle weapons badly but also individuals who provide them with those weapons.
Rabbi Shlomo M. Brody
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midnightrabbi · 4 years
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Unity Inspires Booking – Artists, Creatives & Speakers - Updated!
Unity Inspires Booking – Artists, Creatives & Speakers – Updated!
via Unity Inspires Booking – Artists, Creatives & Speakers – Updated!
All Events & Bookings have moved to the #online #Unity Focus! Please email us your #inspired content [email protected]!
The Corona Virus 1- Daily Halachic Corner – 94 – Rav Dayan Elgrod! Our weekly #EmunaClass live feed by @eligoldsmith_inspired coming Monday 2pm approx Israel time! Click, Subscribe, Follow…
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pargolettasworld · 2 years
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youtube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-VLFpLLmdQA
This majestic Yigdal comes to us from the Victorian British composer Abraham Saqui (1824 - 1893).  Saqui was born in London but moved to Liverpool as a young man.  He started out in Liverpool as choirmaster at a synagogue in Seele Street and in or around 1858, he became choirmaster for the Liverpool Old Hebrew Congregation on Princes Road. 
The Princes Road congregation is still there, and it is the only Orthodox synagogue in the UK that has a mixed-voice (SATB) choir.  Between about 1945 and 1986, a succession of Chief Rabbis (Brodie, Jakobovits, and Sacks) gradually tightened restrictions on women singers in United Synagogue member congregations in the UK, essentially forcing them to choose between retaining United Synagogue membership or keeping women in their choirs.  Hampton Synagogue was the last one to give up its mixed-voice choir.  And Princes Road was the only one to choose its choir over United Synagogue membership.  So they have the mixed choir, and they still sing a lot of Saqui’s music.  Saqui himself might not necessarily have approved of this, since he doesn’t seem to have been a fan of mixed-voice choirs, but there you go.
He was a fan of Mozart, as well as a contemporary of Sulzer, Lewandowski, and Naumbourg.  He published a collection of his own compositions for male-voice choir in 1878, and he has at least one piece (his “Ma Tovu”) printed in the Blue Book.  I think that his music is more popular in Orthodox synagogues than in Reform synagogues, but it is still sung in the UK, both in concerts like this and in actual services.
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fire-storm02 · 2 years
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Top 10 coolest things said by a giant robot.
10:"Jergens lotion leaves my hands silky smooth."
9:"Do you have these khakis in a size 114?"
8:"My perfect night involves s pint of häagen-daz and season three of sex and the city."
7:"Man, do I love me some 'taters."
6:"It was so hot in Central Park today, I saw a squirrel rubbing sunblock on his nuts.:
5:"You seemed a little pitchy, dawg."
4:"Brody jenner has added you as a friend on Facebook."
3:"Live from New York... it's Saturday night!"
2:"My parents wanted me to be a rabbi."
1:"All the slammin' shorties in the house say 'Yeah!"
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qofawamaso · 2 years
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