Author Archives: Rabbi

Senseless

      The alternating dazed and demonic looks of the Colorado killer illustrate the senselessness of the murders. And “senseless” is the operative and literal definition: it makes no sense, and it will make no sense, however hard inquiring minds seek a rational motive. While James Holmes might not be legally insane – that requires an inability to distinguish between right and wrong, as in ‘he thought he was blowing bubbles when he was firing his weapons’ – clearly he has several screws loose. The planning, the preparation and the execution all point to a calculating but disturbed mind that rests somewhere inside a red-colored head. How can society guarantee safety from such monsters?

     The sad and troubling news is that, ultimately, it can’t. There is no perfect, foolproof system that can protect against massacres of the innocent unarmed by the determined heavily-armed. Suicide bombings cannot be prevented, but bombers (or their dispatchers) can be halted before the mission begins. But at the time? It is usually too late. One who wants to kill, and does not mind being killed, has a distinct advantage over the sane and the decent.

     Nonetheless, these horrors are always accompanied by demands of pandering politicians for new gun control laws, to be added to the existing gun control laws. The reality is that gun control laws only inhibit the law-abiding citizen from acquiring a self-defense weapon. Criminals can always acquire weapons. Indeed, in my part of the world, it is much easier to purchase an illegal gun that it is to purchase a gun legally, after licensing and waiting periods. It is also cheaper; this I recall from my days practicing law. The plethora of illegal guns on Bronx streets – and the dearth of legal weapons – was shocking, and itself encouraged lawlessness.

    This is an aspect of the gun control fantasy that advocates refuse to recognize but that has been demonstrated conclusively by the research of John Lott, among others. An abundance of guns in the hands of decent, civilized people decreases street crime rather than increases it. The statistics do not support the argument that normal people who possess weapons routinely become enraged and start settling disputes with their weapons. That simply does not happen in a statistically significant manner.

    Gun possession is legal in Colorado, but – not surprisingly – the Aurora theater banned patrons from entering with concealed weapons. Surely, if a moviegoer that night – or several – had been armed with their privately-owned and licensed defensive weapons, the massacre would have been halted in its tracks (if it even would have taken place at all). Gun “control,” in that theater on that night, aided the criminal and hampered the victims.

That didn’t stop liberal Senator (and gun control fanatic) Dianne Feinstein from opining that those who might have had concealed weapons on that night would have caused a “bloodbath” and many people would have been shot in the “crossfire.” Huh? It was a bloodbath because only the killer was armed, and dozens were killed and wounded because there was no “crossfire.” But, as often happens in politics, ideology trumps common sense.

Gun control advocates are fighting a losing battle because the American ethos will not support it, because over 100,000,000 Americans already own more than 300,000,000 firearms, and because there should be a palpable fear when only government and naturally, the criminal, are in possession of weapons. The initial objective of every dictatorship is to remove the means of self-defense from the average citizen; that is why the Second Amendment was so cherished by the Founders and defended vigorously ever since. One need not speculate too deeply about how differently the Holocaust would have unfolded had Jews been armed and able to defend themselves. Yet, liberal Jewish groups are in the forefront of the gun control lobby, as sensible and Jewish-oriented as everything else they do.

Some people just hate guns, and they should fight for their right not to bear arms. But others see firearms as essential to defense of person, home and property, and therefore oppose even the incremental restrictions that are frequently proffered. Certainly, reasonable people support background checks to weed out the insane, but adjudication of insanity is difficult to obtain. If James Holmes had announced his intention to kill people a week before he did, I am not sure what could have been done to stop him. The police don’t arrest for prospective crimes (assuming he did not reveal any overt steps taken to perpetrate his massacre) and liberals ensure almost 30 years ago that nuts could not be institutionalized against their will, greatly exacerbating the homeless problem as well. If James Holmes could not be arrested or institutionalized, then how could he be stopped? Trailed every day the moment he left his home? Not likely.

The suggestion that semi-automatic weapons or clips that allow rapid fire be banned also falls short on the sensibility spectrum. And it is not because I seek to allow hunters freedom to kill their prey as simply as possible, hunting being anathema to any Jew and strikes me personally as barbaric. It is rather for the reason outlined above: a ban on any personal hand-held weapon just drives the market underground. The criminals will always have it, and the police never have to fight the honest citizen – so the only group ever affected by these restrictions is the group of peaceable citizens.

Paradoxically, we probably could use more guns on the street and in the places we deem worthy of protection rather than fewer. Cities with very, very restrictive gun laws – think Chicago – have the highest rates of homicide and violence in the country. The average person cannot protect himself against criminal assaults. The old bumper sticker – “when guns are outlawed, only outlaws will have guns” – still rings true. And societies with high rates of legal possession – think Israel or Switzerland – actually have very low rates of gun violence.

As frustrating as it sometimes might sound, the price we pay for having a free society in which an individual has the right and the capacity to protect himself or herself against hostile attacks is the occasional eruption of senseless violence. It is a tradeoff that we make, much like we do in our mass use of the automobile wherein reckless drivers kill many more people during the course of a year than do guns, and with all the licensing and testing that legal driving requires.

Rabbi Eliezer (Shabbat 63a) wanted to permit men to carry their swords in the public domain on Shabbat, deeming them “ornaments.” The majority disagreed, saying that such weapons reflect poorly on man and the sad necessity of war, and of course carrying weapons are only permissible for security reasons. Nevertheless, we can appreciate Chazal’s characterization of weapons as a “gnai” while understanding – as they did – their indispensability before the Messianic Era dawns upon us,

To imagine that we live in a world more moral than it actually is simply courts danger unnecessarily and leaves us ill-prepared to defend ourselves when appropriate. That fantasy directly negates fundamental Jewish values.

Until Messiah comes, let us fight for the right to defend ourselves and our homes, in conjunction with the police. In the meantime, let the maniacal miscreant be tried, convicted, and, if there is true justice, executed for his crimes. But let him not be used as a pretext to tamper with our vital freedoms.

Fallen Idols

The Penn State debacle – crime, punishment and overreaction – displays much of what is wrong with American life today. To be sure, the innocent victims have been vindicated and the guilty punished. Sandusky, the longstanding pervert, will never see the light of freedom again, although true justice would demand his execution. Paterno, the venerable legendary coach, is dead, and other administrators have resigned. Did Paterno place the primacy of football above every other concern – moral and personal? Certainly. Was he also of a generation that was uncomfortable with such deviance and untrained in the modern protocols? Again, certainly.

     Indeed, the modern protocol is to lash out at peripheral people and institutions, and recklessly attack all those in the penumbra of the truly guilty. That is why the NCAA punishment strikes me as overwrought and overkill. It suggests the conclusion that engendering new innocent victims is less important than punishing the old guilty ones. (Full disclosure: I have zero interest in college football. Growing up, it was exclusively a Shabbat sport, so I have never followed the teams, the players, the bowls, etc.)

    What did the NCAA decree?

    Penn State must pay a fine of $60,000,000, the equivalent (apparently) of one year’s revenue from their football program. That is a lot of money – both for the program to generate, as well as for the university to spend. Thus, it is quite a loss of revenue, which ostensibly was utilized not only for football, but for the presumed purposes of a university – the education of its underclassmen. So, how exactly will Penn State compensate for this loss of revenue? Its faculty suffers, its research institutions and infrastructure suffer, and its current students, guiltless in this spectacle, suffer the most, because they will likely be hit with increased tuition, reduced services, an inferior education, or all three. Where’s the justice in that – punishing the innocent to get back at the guilty?

     Penn State is on NCAA probation, forfeits dozens of scholarships, and is barred from bowl games for four years. The NCAA president offered this pearl of wisdom: “Football will never be put ahead of educating, protecting and nurturing young people.” Who is he kidding?  A program that generates annual revenue of $60M will take precedence over anything else on campus, because nothing else on that campus produces such revenue. Arguably, the NCAA presides over an amateur sports behemoth that is tangentially attached to college campuses. The essence is the football (or basketball, hockey, etc.) while the education is clearly secondary. College sports are teams that are associated with schools, not schools that also have teams. That is why the coach is paid an astronomically-greater salary than any faculty member, and that is why student-athletes are awarded scholarships, even when they are more athletic than scholarly.

    How else to explain another sanction: Any entering or returning player is free to transfer without restriction (waiving the normal requirement that a transfer student has to sit out one year before playing at his new school). That presupposes that “students” are in college primarily to play football, and will transfer schools not to engage in a course of study unavailable at the first college, or to learn from more distinguished faculty at another, but simply to play ball. Is that what college is? For many people, yes. Hence, the contention that “Football will never be put ahead of educating, protecting and nurturing young people” is risible. It already is, and will be as long as there is an NCAA.

     Joe Paterno’s wins from 1998-2011 are vacated (and the university on its own initiative took down the Paterno statue that graced its campus). The mere fact that a statue was erected to honor a football coach – rather than a clergyman, a professor, a scientist, a moral beacon, etc. – already shows the priorities of the university, but is it fair to judge a person’s life based on one act, and an act of omission at that?

The fallen idol is weird but understandable, but the removal of the wins from the record book is downright stupid, a pathetic joke and a classic overreaction. It is not like the use of an ineligible player that voids that player’s contributions to the game and thereby the game itself. Here, did Paterno not coach from 1998-2011? Did the players not play? Were the players injured in those games suddenly healed? Were the games not won? Did what happen never happen? Is Bill Clinton still president? Did the Arabs not terrorize the US on September 11, 2001? How can one abide this blatant falsification of history, and not burst out laughing?

Ty Cobb is reputed to have been a racist, one of today’s cardinal sins. Should he have 1000 hits removed from his batting records as penance? Indeed, there was once talk of removing Cobb from the Baseball Hall of Fame for his sins, talk that emanated from ridiculous circles similar to the one that just erased Paterno’s wins from the record book. Forget steroids; perhaps we should review the moral record of all athletes and adjust the box scores accordingly. The Mets seem like a nice group of guys – let’s give them some wins. They could surely use them now.

There is one other troubling factor about this repulsive matter that is swept under the rug in the haste to blame the obvious guilty parties. There is one group that is overlooked, that attracts only sympathy and understanding, but who were instrumental in prolonging the problem: the victims.

In today’s culture, it is in poor taste ever to blame the victims, but often the victims are responsible –not for their own victimization but for their failure to prevent the victimization of others. I don’t want to know what Paterno did or didn’t do, or any college official. Crimes were committed against children! Did any of those children ever go to the police? Did any of their parents go to the police? Not soon enough.

This is a recurring problem today that anguishes me constantly. Over a decade ago, in response to a similar situation in our community, I announced publicly that if children are abused, or report abuse to their parents, don’t come to me. Go right to the police. Don’t think, don’t make calculations, don’t ask questions. If the testimony is credible, then prosecute. Let the police and the District Attorney sort out the details. For medical problems, see the doctor. For criminal problems, see the police.

But it almost never happens until it is too late, until the children become adults and wake up to the abuse. The default reaction of parents is to get angry – and then do nothing, so as not to affect the shidduch, or not make their child more uncomfortable, or to avoid a public spectacle. And predators thereby enjoy temporary immunity, and usually long careers. This I have learned through personal and painful experience in the rabbinate.

For all the talk of rabbis who tell congregants to cover up, my experience has been that the rabbis in those cases, deplorable as it is, are simply confirming what the person wants to hear anyway. Too many people do not want to put themselves out, too many victims want to disappear back into their lives and not think about their trauma. That is understandable, but no one chooses to be a victim; victimhood is thrust upon them unwillingly. It is a test of their character, too. So we need a code of ethics for the victim that reads in part: Go to the police. Don’t cover up. Prosecute. You owe it to yourself but you owe it even more to the potential, future victims.

Pikuach nefesh (the saving of lives) takes precedence over all but three cardinal sins. Just as we breach the laws of Shabbat for Pikuach nefesh, so too we breach even the laws of informing on another Jew for pikuach nefesh. And it is pikuach nefesh – the predator destroys young lives and healthy souls, as assuredly as if he took a gun to their heads. One who fails to prosecute a predator either because he would rather not make waves or because he is afraid of the consequences is literally standing idly while his brother’s blood is being shed.  A normal society does not require a panel of rabbis to adjudicate the seriousness of the allegations, any more than a person in cardiac arrest needs to consult a panel of rabbis before seeking medical attention. But this is unfortunately not the norm in Jewish life, and it is why predators are sometimes bounced from school to school, and why timely prosecutions are rare.

I have too often encountered an unwillingness to prosecute, and conversely a desire to “work it out” between the parties, and a desire not to harm the pervert’s family, and a desire not to make waves. And the abuser goes merrily on with his life, going to shul and attending parties, appearing in public places where children proliferate – and the community is none the wiser. I have personally been told by the police that if a predator is not prosecuted, and I reveal his name to the public, then I can be arrested and charged with harassment. No prosecution, no evidence, no crime – it is as if it never happened. And when the victim does come forward 10-20 years later, he is invariably coddled, lionized and compensated for what he endured – but never castigated for what he indirectly inflicted on others.

That has to change. It is a shame that the public focus remains on what Paterno did or didn’t do –and his wins and idols – but not on what the victims could have, and should have, done.  Too many people are obsessed with the viability of Penn State’s football program, surely not an indispensable part of a college education. Let Sandusky rot in prison since he can’t be executed – but the overriding lesson for me is the moral obligation of victims to come forward, make accusations, prosecute the guilty – and defend their peers, the innocents of the future whose lives are literally in their hands.

Unintended Consequences

     Typical of the intrusive government intervention that has descended on America with a fury in the last two decades (if not more), a heavy hand that provokes unintended but harmful consequences, is the federal financial loan program to aspiring college students.

     It sounds magnificent on the surface: the children of the poor are enabled by taxpayer dollars to attend college, better themselves, triumph over their origins and bring prosperity to themselves and their posterity. As President Obama said not long ago, “College education cannot be a luxury. It’s an economic imperative that every family must be able to afford.” Really?

    What sounds inspiring on the surface is most problematic in practice, and college loans have become primarily a tool for the wealthy (who receive a disproportionate share of Pell Grant money) and an albatross for most recipients, whose college education today prepares for little that is productive in the job market and saddles them with tens of thousands of dollars of debt that can take a decade or more to repay. And as colleges have become addicted to this government money, any decrease in revenue will harm the poor as colleges will favor wealthy full-tuition payers over scholarship cases even more than is customary today.

   Richard Vedder, a professor of economics who recently addressed this matter in a speech at Hillsdale College (published in Imprimis, and available at Hillsdale.edu), exposed the flaws of both the program and its implementation, as well-meaning as it sounds on the surface. It is a classic politician’s program, with immediate and visible benefits and hidden, distant and high costs.

    The program is a loser for several reasons: first, it has caused a tremendous escalation in the cost of college tuition, far in excess of the rate of inflation. My college tuition, for example, at an Ivy League college in the 1970s, was likely 10% of what tuition is today. The availability of easy money increases the tendency of borrowers to borrow and of merchants to increase the price of what they are selling, especially when the money is coming from a third party, not being repaid quickly, and with waivers that delay repayments for years.   How does third party payment disrupt the marketplace? Look at how health care and coverage costs have been jacked up over the last thirty years – again, far in excess of the rate of inflation – and we have a hint. College education in elite schools now cost more than $50,000 per year, for an education that frequently consists of absolutely useless courses in bizarre and wacky fields that will never be converted to market use, and with regular partying thrown in as a bonus (and of course, all tabs paid much, much later).

Second, the program forces government to regulate the interest rates on these loans, rather than allow the market to set the rate. With interest rates artificially low, students wind up borrowing more money than would be needed and further induces colleges to raise their tuitions. And the government – unlike a regular institution – does not distinguish between borrowers who are likely to repay and those who don’t have a prayer of repaying. Since the government has monopolized the college loan market, it too faces no consequences in case of student default, as the US government is already borrowing the money (probably at a higher cost) that it is then lending out to these students. And colleges get the money up front, and face no consequences if students default, or, for that matter, if they drop out.

Which is the third major problem: probably 40% of Pell Grant recipients receive college degrees within six years, meaning that most of the people who do not graduate also do not have the ostensible benefit of a college degree but they do have the enormous debt as constant reminders of their failure. It is similar, in that sense, to another oft-obscured statistic: the percentage of affirmative action admissions to elite schools that drop out within a year or two, a percentage that would be even higher if not for the grade inflation that marks college education today. (The numbers crunch out at a roughly 25% dropout rate but exceed 40% in some schools.) Thus, blacks who would excel in other schools are forced into failure to accommodate white social-engineering.

Some of the college dropouts even use their student loan money just to support themselves, or just to live “free.” Well, sort-of free, because they have no expectation of repayment, and vote-seeking politicians are the first to grant extension after extension, and then (as Obama did not long ago) even suggest that the loans be forgiven to those can’t repay – effectively making those who did repay highly-educated fools.

The easy money has led to a sharp increase in the number of college graduates ill-prepared for jobs in their preferred fields, with many of them ill-equipped for any jobs. Thus, Vedder notes that there are in the US today 107,000 janitors and 16,000 parking lot attendants with bachelor degrees. This is not only a function of the poor job market, but also a recognition of the reality that many are simply not educated enough to succeed in the professional jobs that were once the province of the college graduate. Many graduates lack the reading and writing abilities, and critical thinking skills, that are usually indispensable for material success.

The current aggregate debt of college attendees is approximately one trillion dollars, 40% of which is held by people in their 40s and older! It doesn’t seem like much, for a government that now accumulates more than a trillion dollar debt annually. (In numbers, that’s >$1,000,000,000,000!) But it adds to the discontent of the young, the feeling of hopelessness and powerlessness that leaves them vulnerable to the smooth talk of politicians who promise them the world at someone else’s expense.

Add that to the decadent and debauched lifestyles on campus today (to be addressed another time), and one wonders why anyone goes to college. The answer seems to be: they’re handing out free money, so why not? The Talmud (Tamid 32a) states: Who is wise? He who foresees consequences. And little more wisdom in government and on college campuses would be most welcome.

Peres and Kissinger

    Israel’s President Shimon Peres has had a legendary career spanning most of the State’s history. He has had major successes (the development of the Dimona nuclear reactor, for one) and spectacular and enduring failures, most notably the Oslo “peace” process and the lethal chimera of the two-state solution from which Israel still suffers. Surely, penitence would be in order for the latter, if only regret – the prerequisite for repentance – preceded it. Alas, like most of his fellow Oslo-ites, Peres has doubled down on the debacle and shows no sign of either restraint or re-evaluation.

    Long a self-promoter and sound-bite master, Peres as president has initiated the “Presidential Award of Distinction,” which he bestows on his fellow travelers and the cultural elites of Israel. The most recent recipient was Henry Kissinger, who flew in for several hours, picked up his award and quickly flew out – not even spending the night in Israel. And his Presidential Award of Distinction? For Kissinger’s “significant contribution to the State of Israel and to humanity.” What?!

     Personally, it pains me when an intermarried Jew is honored by the Jewish people for anything, as their real legacy is their non-Jewish children, and an abrupt end to their connection to the Jewish people. For that reason alone, it is unworthy for Kissinger to be feted by the President of Israel.

     But there are other reasons as well. What exactly were Kissinger’s contributions to the State of Israel? It was Kissinger as US National Security advisor who reportedly told President Nixon not to airlift weapons to a beleaguered Israel during the darkest time of the 1973 Yom Kippur War, imploring him to “let Israel bleed a little” as that would incline them to greater concessions after the war. Indeed, Nixon overruled Kissinger, and when Kissinger posed practical obstacles to the airlift, Nixon dealt directly with James Schlesinger, the Secretary of Defense, and ordered him to begin airlift over Kissinger’s objections. That’s a contribution to the State of Israel?

    And after Israel’s victory in the war, which found the IDF on the Egyptian side of the Suez Canal and in possession of a significant swath of Egyptian territory – with the Egyptian Third Army trapped and surrounded on the eastern side of the Canal – Kissinger orchestrated Israel’s diplomatic defeat that followed the war. In due course, Israel was forced to free the Third Army, withdraw from Egypt, pull back from the Canal, surrender the Abu Rodeis oil fields and part of Sinai, as well as a substantial part of the Golan Heights (Israel was barely 20 miles from Damascus when the smoke on that front cleared) in exchange for, basically, nothing. Of course, Israel (in the guise of then PM Yitzchak Rabin in his first tenure) could have said “no” – and Rabin at first did, which prompted the infamous 1975 “reassessment” of US-Israel relations by President Ford and Secretary of State Kissinger. In short order, Rabin caved. Israel went from a position of strength to a position of weakness. That’s a contribution to the State of Israel?

    More recently, it came to light that Kissinger was a sharp antagonist of the right to freedom of emigration for Soviet Jews and indeed for human rights generally. The Nixon Library in 2010 released this gem of a (taped) conversation from 1970 between the President and his “Jewish” National Security Advisor: “The emigration of Jews from the Soviet Union is not an objective of American foreign policy,” Mr. Kissinger said. “And if they put Jews into gas chambers in the Soviet Union, it is not an American concern. Maybe a humanitarian concern.”
“I know,” Nixon responded. “We can’t blow up the world because of it.”

Maybe a humanitarian concern? Give that man as award for his “significant contributions to… humanity!” Indeed, later administrations, guided by more moral and more sagacious leaders (i.e., Ronald Reagan and his team) realized that the emigration of Soviet Jews was a major objective of American foreign policy, and the role of the human rights campaign in weakening and finally dissolving the USSR cannot be understated. That Kissinger should so cavalierly dismiss the extermination of Jews, bizarre because it was not then an objective of Soviet policy, can only call to mind the internal demon of Jewish identity that Kissinger lives with, is plagued by, and that he has been trying to escape since his youth. Nonetheless, Kissinger was honoredfor being a statesman with foresight, creativity and vision.”

Well, none of the “foresight, creativity and vision” has ever been manifest in Kissinger’s dealings with the State of Israel, and one is hard-pressed to see where it existed elsewhere (outside the US opening to China). Kissinger’s policy of détente with the Soviets was an ultimate failure; it is as if he decided that the Soviet Union was an eternal power that could not be confronted and overcome. But Reagan proved him and his entire diplomatic model wrong.

It is fascinating that Kissinger and Peres are both winners of the Nobel Prize for Peace – and in both cases, the peace treaties for which they were honored and glorified collapsed in a wave of violence and mass murder. Neither peace treaty survived more than a few years. In both cases, their adversaries eventually prevailed, exposing the Nobel laureates as dupes and simpletons. In Vietnam, the North overran the South less than two years after the treaty was signed, leaving the US to flee ignominiously as its erstwhile ally crumbled under the assault from the North. And the Oslo process spawned a catastrophic wave of terror, brushed off by Peres as inevitable “sacrifices for peace,” or, I suppose, “saps” for short, and brought the enemy into Israel’s heartland with weapons provided them by the Israelis.

That the presenter has yet to account for his calamitous, cataclysmic failures is appalling, and a poor commentary on the Israeli public that demands no accounting from disastrous leaders. But perhaps then it is fitting that this presidential award was bestowed on another supremely intelligent but hapless politico, another elder statesman for whom awards and accolades furnish a veneer that seeks to mask his fiascos and his contempt for Israel and the Jewish people.

In the end, truth prevails even over revisionist history, and certainly over the mutual back-slapping that is the very premise of this award.