July 3, 2009

Why Marc B. Shapiro Won’t Be Giving Any Classes On The Rebbe, The Rav, And Aharon Kotler

In his first class on Rabbi Jehiel Jacob Weinberg for Torah in Motion, Professor Marc B. Shapiro says:

Let me tell you about who we won’t be discussing — the three most important figures in post-war North American Orthodoxy — the Rav, the Rebbe and Aharon Kotler.

There is so much being done about Rav Soloveitchik that I don’t think that I would have much to add. The Rav has now entered the realm of hagiography and it’s become very difficult to do real biography of Rabbi Soloveitchik because you risk running into some of the accepted truths and discussing some things that in certain circles will be controversial.

I’m not so much interested in the Rav per se but his students.

The whole notion of kiruv (outreach), which is so important today, is something started by Chabad. Today the yeshiva world — Aish HaTorah, Ohr Somayach, and the rest — dominate kiruv, but 50 years ago, the yeshiva world was against kiruv. They didn’t want these baalei teshuva coming into their community and truth be told, they never really accepted it. If you know what it is like in the chareidi world for baalai teshuva getting shiduchim (marriage), etc.

It would take five years to just get a hold of the Chabad cannon. I was asked to write a book on the Lubavitcher Rebbe. It is not for me.

Aharon Kotler kept American yeshivas to the Right. Without Aharon Kotler, the influence of Rav Soloveitchik and Yeshiva University would’ve been much greater. Think about Chaim Berlin and Torah V’Das, the two oldest yeshivas in America, between 1950 and today. To a large extent, this is due to Lakewood.

It was difficult for any yeshiva to stand up against him. Only one did — Ner Israel, which set up a yeshiva-college program.

The classical example? In 1946, Rabbi Hutner of Chaim Berlin and Shreiva-Feivel Mendelwitz of Torah V’Das organized the American Hebrew Theological University. They submitted all the papers to the state of New York. It was post-yeshiva university. It was going to give credits in Psychology, Chemistry, Math. No humanities. A Lander College. It would’ve awarded a PhD in Theology, an MA in communal service and a Masters of Science in educational administration.

Why did they want to do this? All their students were going to Brooklyn College at night. Just think about the waste of time in the travel and the mixing with non-Orthodox Jews.

They were granted a charter by the state of New York but it was never created. Why? Because Aharon Kotler insisted that all yeshivas shun secular studies.

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Dennis Prager talks to John Goodman, president and CEO of the National Center for Policy Analysis and an expert on health care reform

Thursday, hour one of Prager’s radio show:

On Obama’s town hall on health care reform, a woman with metastizing breast cancer says she and her husband have $50,000 in medical-related debts even though they both have health insurance and are employed.

John Goodman: In a country like Britian, once cancer has metastasized, the government is reluctant to do anything for you. They would argue that anti-cancer drugs are very expensive and are only going to prolong your life a few months. That is the big argument in health care — whether people’s lives are worth the money that is going to be spent. If you want to survive cancer, if you want to live longer, the United States is the best place in the world to be.

Tom Daschle, the president’s lead thinker on this issue, pointed to Britain and pointed to other countries as examples of other countries that don’t wastefully spend money on people who are going to die anyway. The United States has the best survival rates for all kinds of cancer in the world and the kind of reform we are about to get could reverse that.

We’re careless in [spending our health dollars] because most of us have perverse incentives. Most of us have insurance so we’re not careful about what we buy.

When patients control the money, things are going well. On laser surgery and cosmetic surgery, prices are going down. Because there isn’t any insurance. When patients control the money, doctors compete on price and quality.

Over the last decade, there has been a huge increase in procedures done. We’ve had all kinds of technological change of the kind we’re told increases costs, but in this field, it reduces costs.

Medicare for seniors is a lousy plan compared to what the rest of America has. Most seniors have to buy two more plans to fill the gaps in Medicare.

When Medicare competes with the private sector, it has unfair advantages. It uses the force of law to push down doctor fees to below market levels. When it writes a contract, it makes it a matter of criminal law when it doesn’t like the way the doctor behaves. Everyone else has to go to civil courts. It is not fair to have a government plan with all the advantages of government competing against private companies.

Obama thinks the best system is a single-payer system where the government pays all the bills. He thinks the government is more efficient when we all know that the government is not more efficient. The Post Office is not more efficient than Federal Express. There isn’t anything that government does that is more efficient than the private sector.

Dennis: We’re told that Medicare’s operating costs are around 3-4% while the private insurance sector spends 30% on operating costs.

John: They count the cost of insurers collecting premiums and selling their policies while they do not count the cost of government collecting taxes. The social costs of taxation are high, about 25c on the dollar. They are also ignoring a lot of costs that Medicare pushes off on to doctors and hospitals. Doctors have to do an enormous amount of work to comply with Medicare’s rules.

Medicare costs more.

We’re way too restrictive [about who can practice medicine]. The medics who served in Iraq, when they come back to the United States, we won’t let them treat low-income people.

Let nurses and paramedics do more things. These clinics in shopping malls are run by nurses and they do a good job.

John Goodman testified to Congress:

To confront America’s health care crisis, we do not need more spending, more regulations or more bureaucracy. We do need people, however, including every doctor and every patient. Every American must be free to use their intelligence, their creativity and their innovative ability to make the changes needed to create access to low-cost, high-quality health care.
I. Free the Doctor
Doctors today are forced to practice medicine under an outmoded, wasteful payment system designed for a different century. They should instead be given access to payment systems available to other professionals.
Problem: Typically, doctors receive no financial reward for talking to patients by telephone, communicating by e-mail, teaching patients how to manage their own care or helping them be better consumers in the market for drugs. In fact, doctors who help patients in these ways will end up with less take-home pay. To make matters worse, as third-party payers suppress reimbursement fees, doctors are increasingly unable to perform any task that is not reimbursed.
Solution: Let Doctors Be Doctors. In Medicare and Medicaid, it should be as easy as possible for providers to get paid in better ways. We should be willing to reward doctors who raise quality and lower costs — including improving patient access to care, improving communication and teaching patients how to be better managers of their own care. What is needed is not pay-for-performance, but performance for pay — with ideas and proposals coming from the supply side of the market (which is more knowledgeable about potential improvements than the demand side).
Any doctor should be able to propose and obtain a different reimbursement arrangement, provided that (1) the total cost to government does not increase, (2) patient quality of care does not decrease and (3) the doctor proposes a method of measuring and assuring that (1) and (2) have been satisfied.
Example: The idea of a concierge doctor appears to have started in California, where wealthy patients paid high fees for special attention and services. Yet today, concierge, or direct-pay, doctors can be found all over the country providing services for very modest fees. Since these doctors have opted out of third-party insurance, they are free to package and price their services in different ways. Most of them talk to patients by telephone and e-mail. They typically maintain electronic medical records and prescribe electronically. They help their patients negotiate the rest of the health care system — securing low rates for tests and specialist services, for example. These doctors are typically paid a fixed monthly fee or they charge an hourly rate. Medicare could encourage this type of practice by paying its share of the fees. Since the doctors are almost
certainly lowering health care costs, even as they raise the quality of care, the taxpayers as well as the patients would be getting a bargain.
Example: In the Handbook on State Health Care Reform, for example, the NCPA proposed a radically different way to pay for chronic care, with the state paying a flat monthly fee to cover “fixed costs” (e.g., coordination of care, maintenance of electronic medical records) and patients paying, say, from Health Savings Accounts, for the “variable costs,” including paying doctors for their time (e.g., face-to-face, e-mail and telephone consultations). Practitioners will no doubt think of many variations and improvements on this idea.
Problem: All too often providers face perverse incentives. When they make changes that raise quality and lower costs, their income goes down, not up.
Example: Geisinger Health System in central Pennsylvania gives heart patients a “warranty” on their surgeries. Patients who have to be readmitted because of complications pay nothing for the second admission. Yet in providing higher quality and lowering patient costs, Geisinger loses money. That’s why other hospitals do not follow its example.
Example: Studies show that if every patient went to the Mayo Clinic for health care, we could lower the national health care bill by one-fourth — and quality would improve. If everyone went for care to the Intermountain Hospital System in Salt Lake City, we could lower our health care costs by one-third — while improving quality. Why don’t other hospitals copy these exemplars of low-cost, high-quality care? Because they would be severely penalized financially under the current system.
Solution: Let Hospitals Be Hospitals. Facilities that figure out how to lower patient costs, raise quality and offer warranties and other guaranties should be rewarded for doing so — just as they would in any other market. Accordingly, the same three reimbursement rules proposed for doctors above should also apply to hospitals.
Problem: Entrepreneurs are creating new products to meet needs not being met by traditional health insurance. For example, people can pay with their own money for telephone and e-mail consultations. They can purchase blood tests via the Internet and get results in 24 hours. They can get low-cost care with very little waiting at walk-in clinics in shopping malls. Yet all too often these services are hampered by outmoded, unnecessary government regulations. Amazingly, doctors are prohibited from owning and operating walk-in clinics that refer patients to their regular practices!
Solution: Let Entrepreneurs Be Entrepreneurs. We should welcome and encourage new ways of meeting patient needs, rather than stifle these efforts with unnecessary, outmoded laws and regulations. As with providers and facilities, promising innovations should be expedited and approved quickly. For example, walk-in clinics that charge half as much and match the quality of
traditional care, with electronic medical records and electronic prescriptions to boot, should be approved outright.
II. Free the Patient
Patients also suffer when payments to doctors and hospitals are based on outmoded formulas. Whereas suppliers compete to meet customer needs in almost every other market, this happens all too rarely in health care.
Problem: Many patients have difficulty seeing primary care physicians. All too often they turn to hospital emergency rooms where there may be long waits and where the cost of care is much higher. When they do see doctors, all too often patients get inadequate information. The problem is made worse by the inability to communicate by telephone or e-mail.
Solution: Patient Power. We need to explore new ways to empower patients — especially the chronically ill, allowing them to manage more of their own care and more of their own health care dollars. Also, patients should be able to purchase services that are not paid for by traditional health insurance, including telephone and e-mail consultations and patient education services.
Example: Studies show that diabetics, asthmatics and other chronic patients can manage their own care as well as or better than conventional physician care and at lower costs. Yet to do this patients need training, easier access to information and the ability to purchase and use in-house monitors.
Example: More than half the states have “Cash and Counsel” programs for homebound, disabled Medicaid patients — allowing them to manage their own health care dollars and hire and fire the people who provide them services, instead of having these decisions made by an impersonal bureaucracy. Patient satisfaction in these programs is almost 100 percent.
III. Free the Employee
Our health insurance system evolved at a time when many workers expected to work for the same employer for their entire work lives. Clearly, that assumption is no longer valid.
Problem: When employees switch jobs, they are usually forced to switch insurance plans. This often means a switch of doctors, which means no continuity of care. Also, their new insurance may not have the same benefits as the original. To make matters worse, many employees are trapped in jobs they cannot leave because they cannot afford to lose their health insurance.
Solution: Personal and Portable Health Insurance. We should move to a system in which employees can take their health insurance with them when they travel from job to job. Transition to a new system may take many years. A good place to start is with baby boomers who retire early.
Problem: People who do not get health insurance from an employer must pay for it with after-tax dollars, making insurance as much as 50 percent more expensive.
Solution: Tax Fairness. People who obtain health insurance should enjoy the same tax relief, regardless of how the insurance is purchased.
IV. Free the Employer
Employers are also trapped in a system designed for a different age.
Problem: In ways that are sometimes subtle and sometimes not so subtle, too many employers are trying to avoid hiring employees (and employee dependents) with high health care costs, much like a game of musical chairs.
Problem: By default, employers have been put in the position of having to manage their employees’ health care costs — an activity for which most have no experience or expertise. While some large employers do an adequate job, small employers are incapable of doing it well.
Solution: Personal and Portable Insurance. Portable insurance would be a boon to employers as well as employees. Employers could make a defined contribution to each employee’s health insurance; yet the insurance would be owned by the employees and travel with them on their journey through the labor market. In an ideal world, employers should be able to hire employees based solely on their ability to produce, irrespective of expected medical costs.
Example: The United Mine Workers, NFL football players and many other workers have better arrangements. Although employers pay all or most of the health insurance premiums, the health plan is largely independent of any particular employer and coverage is fully portable — traveling with employees whenever they switch jobs.
V. Free the Workplace
Most of our labor law, tax law and employee benefits law was enacted years ago and was based on the assumption that employees would be full-time workers, typically with a homemaker telecommuting. Today, one-third of the workforce consists of part-time workers and independent contractors. Many are telecommuting from their own homes. These changes are partly the result of the most important economic and sociological change of the past half-century: the movement of women into the labor market.
Problem: Two-earner couples are common in the labor market. They need employee benefits, including health insurance, but they don’t need duplicate benefits. An employee covered by a spouse’s health plan should be able to choose higher wages rather than an unnecessary second health plan. Yet today employers cannot give her that option.

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The Jewish Week In Review

Steven I. Weiss reports:

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July 2, 2009

The Crisis

I sat around tonight with a friend and did writing exercises.

Here’s mine:

Was there an unexpected event that forced you into a crisis?

In February of 1988, I woke up one morning to the biggest crisis of my life.

I felt like I had a bad flu, so I stayed in bed for a couple of days as it rolled through me, and then on the third day, I felt a little better, and I went back to Sierra Community College where I was carrying 24 units.

I staggered around to my classes and then returned to bed in the afternoon.

The next day, I returned to school and then resumed my gardening work in the afternoon.

Over the next few days, however, not only did I not get better, I relapsed.

I went back to bed for a couple of days, regained some of my strength, and then returned to school and work.

I did not feel right.

To shake things out, I went for a three mile run one Sunday afternoon.

Near the end of my jog, my muscles turned to jelly. I walked home the last half-mile, showered and went to bed. Over the next couple of days, another relapse rolled over me.

I knew then that something was seriously wrong with me. I knew that physical exertion made me sick. I knew that I was living my life in a vice.

Twenty one years later, I still have not escaped the vice of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.

The biggest crises of my life in order:

  • CFS
  • Death threats in the porn industry
  • Shul ejections
  • Poverty in 1996-1997, and again in 2008-2009 with no end in sight
  • Online flame wars 1997-1999
  • When my father was kicked out of the SDA church in 1980 and I had to start life anew in Auburn, CA
  • Losing my relationship (having her sleep with an ex while I still lived with her) in 1993 with T., the only person I knew well in Orlando, FL, and having to start anew in a strange town with few resources

D. emails: Crises…of a bloody ponce! Listen good, Sunny Jim! The majority of these "crises" you list were brought on by your own ridiculous behavior. You’re not a victim or a martyr. You’re just a smarmy fraud who, one day, is going to receive the beating of his life from his dear old dad. Then you can add that to your bloody list. But not before I shove a burst cane toad down your hatch. You’re a fair-dinkum disappointment to your family.

Shira emails: Luke life hands us. Some are not fair at all. The trick is to turn them into life lessons and see what can you benefit from the experience. I know it’s not fun to have an illness. Mine is heart. In spite of 3 heart surgeries, I am determent to live a full life. The little game I play with fate: not too many people know and no one can tell. I pass myself as totally healthy. Why? Not enough that I am sick and take so many medications, I’ll also look it? No way! I have the last word. The biggest lesson that I have learned: don’t expect sympathy from people they will turn on you. Not fair, nor nice but true. Take care. you are great.

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Author Matthew Randazzo

He emails:

To everyone interested in my career,

I have been waiting a very long time to announce this new book deal. I have just been signed along with Mafia icon and Howard Stern regular Johnny Fratto for the debut release from Igniter, the new HarperCollins imprint founded by #1 New York Times bestselling authors Neil Strauss and Anthony Bozza. The provisionally titled Godfather Knows Best: How To Live Like a Wiseguy Without Ever Breaking the Law is slated for international March 2010 release and will tell the story of how Johnny Fratto grew up a Mafia prince as the son of legendary Mafia godfather Luigi Fratto, only to remake himself as an adult as a Beverly Hills PR guru and beloved regular on the Howard Stern Show.

I cannot exaggerate the importance of this gig for me professionally. HarperCollins, which is part of the Fox entertainment empire, is the world’s most cutting-edge and commercially inspired publishing company. To work for HarperCollins under the umbrella of two literary superstars like Strauss and Bozza is as good as it gets for a writer.

Also, I had my highest profile publication ever earlier this month when an article I co-wrote with ex-gangster Bill Cutolo Jr. appeared in The New York Daily News for an audience of over 600,000 daily readers. You can read the article here: http://www.breakshotblog.com/nydncropped.jpg

Finally, we’re only one month away from the hardcover release of my next book, Breakshot: A Life in the 21st Century American Mafia, co-written with legendary Japanese-American gangster Kenny "Kenji" Gallo. In a whirlwind criminal career that began as a teenage drug smuggler for Pablo Escobar, Gallo became the most controversial gangster in modern American Mafia history as the playboy Asian-American criminal mastermind who outwitted some of the most dangerous criminals in New York history as an undercover FBI operative. For those who didn’t see it, I have attached the first of very many magazine and newspaper stories on Gallo from the May issue of Giant Robot Magazine.

You may find out more about Breakshot and my other books at MRVBooks.com, and pre-order autographed copies of Breakshot (signed both by Gallo and I) by e-mailing Sales@MatthewRandazzo.com.

Friend me at www.facebook.com/mrvbooks.

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July 1, 2009

Lukeland

Bob emails: "I’m watching this Michael Jackson will fiasco and I’m hoping your will is in order. I would hate to see your various lovers and family members squabbling over your fortune when you pass."

Fred emails: I’m afraid that Luke’s father and siblings will be battling over possession of the serial killer van, hundreds of unsold copies of his self-published books, his porn collection, the teffilin and the original letters banning Luke from various orthodox LA shuls (a collector’s item destined to be sold at Southeby’s, considered by some to have the same value as original copies of the Magna Carta). Luke’s dad will file a lawsuit in Superior Court seeking a restraining order to keep other family members away from these valuable heirlooms.

Meanwhile, thousands of Luke’s fans will gather outside the hovel to pay homage to this ground-breaking cultural icon.

Then there will be the problem of forged wills by charlatans claiming to be Luke’s true successor. Doubtless, members of the advisory group will be called upon to testify as to the authenticity of various documents.

I worry about this scenario. Luke privately confided in me that he thinks that Amalek will deny him three times to the authorities. It’s not going to be pretty.

Khunrum emails: “.I can picture the scene outside the Hovel. Candles, flowers, tears, boom boxes blasting Air Supply ditties. I’m going to cut some of my gray hair and sell it as a lock of Luke’s beard.”

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A Pilgrimage of Passion: The Life of Wilfrid Scawen Blunt

I’m reading an essay by the author Elizabeth Longford about her writing up the life of poet Wilfrid Scawen Blunt.

She was all hot and bothered by Blunt’s voracious sexuality.

She writes:

…But I have to admit to a moment about halfway through when I felt he was prostituting his poetry to an unworthy mode of life. He felt it too; which was one reason why my loyalty and affection returned to him long before the end.

"All this I am afraid is very fin de siecle and immoral," he wrote in 1891 when he found himself sending copies of precisely the same passionate verses to three different ladies on the same day. "But what can one do?" he continued. "Love is no respecter of time and place." (One might reply, what did he mean by this kind of "Love"?) With a final burst of ingenuousness, he concluded this unattractive passage by asserting the odious Victorian "double-standard" in sex with apparent sincerity. He expected no trouble, he wrote, from the three recipients of his love-verse even if they found out. "Women are not jealous in this way as men are," he assured his Victorian self, "for it is in the order of nature that a man’s love should be divided."

I admit I have done this same thing — sending multiple versions of the same poem to various women telling each it was for her. Hence, I have more sympathy for our cocksman.

Elizabeth Longford writes:

The total number of his "loves", from the year 1862 to about 1920 when he was no longer "capable" amounted to 38…

…No, the problem was to prevent the beauty of Blunt’s best poetry, the virility of his prose, and the courage and effectiveness of his political career from being damaged by the monotony of his lusts.

Elizabeth Longford might find Blunt’s lusts monotonous, but that’s her opinion. I doubt most men would find a cataloguing of Blunt’s lusts boring. I don’t. The beauty of his poetry and the virility of his prose is not diminished for me because Blunt screwed around.

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June 30, 2009

‘Drilling On Mother Earth Is Like Stabbing Your Mother’

Dennis Prager on his radio show Monday: "That’s how the Left feels about it and the Left is ruled by their feelings."

Prager was in Dallas Sunday night to give a talk to Jews and Christians who’ve raised money for a hospital in Israel.

At an exclusive reception before the speech, Dennis told a man that he liked his tie.

After his speech, the man gave Prager his tie.

Now Prager fears complimenting anyone on their tie again. What if Prager told a guy he liked his pants?

On Tuesday’s show, Dennis noted that the Obama administration has cut missile defense by 40% at a time that North Korea is threatening Hawaii with a long distance missile.

Dennis can’t think of anything the Obama administration is doing that is making America better.

"If there’s a simple explanation that makes sense, it’s probably the one," says Dennis. "Barak Obama is the first man of the ideological New Left to take over as President of the United States of America. The proof is…the so-called coup in Honduras, where the leader Manuel Zevaya was becoming an essential dictator."

"It took five days for the president to use tough language about the crackdown in Iran…but he reacted immediately to what happened in Honduras."

"It was not a coup. It was a completely legal act ordered by the Supreme Court of Honduras. The man Zelaya was subverting the constitution of the country on his own, preparing to become an elected dictator. His own party spoke out against him. The military was told by the Supreme Court that you have to take this man out and put in his number two from his own party. Did you ever hear of a coup where they put in power the next guy from the same party? Zelaya had fired the head of the country’s armed forces when he refused to use his troops to provide logistical support for a referendum designed to help Zelaya escape the country’s one-term limit for presidents. Members of Zelaya’s own party voted last week that he was not fit for office."

"I’m embarrassed that my country did not support for the forces of liberty in Iran and did not support the forces of liberty in Honduras. I’m pro-democracy, but my biggest fight is for liberty. The United States of America is on the side of the non-liberty forces in Honduras. What a shame on us."

"There have been two good things about the Obama presidency. It’s put to rest the notion that America is a racist country… The charge is made less frequently. I’ve always wanted there to be a black president. I’ve wanted a black president I agreed with.

"The other [good thing] is that it is clarifying. Everything that people like myself have said about the Left is now confirmed. You now know what they want to do… Their task is to make the state the dominant factor in people’s lives. That is what the Left has wanted to do since Marx. There is no change.

"The Left believes in the state. The Right believes in the individual. You do not know what to do with your own money. The Left knows what to do with your money because they are smarter, finer, more compassionate, more intelligent, more scientific. Everything good. They will tell you what light bulbs to use. They will tell you what temperature your house should be. They will tell you what kind of language you may use on a daily basis. They will tell you what kind of questions you may ask on your job. They will regulate more and more. They now want to regulate Tylenol. They love power. They know better than the rest of us how we should live. Their contempt for the individual is deep."

"I am fascinated by how the president says in the same speech that we are headed for insolvency because of Medicaid, Medicare, therefore we should take over the entire medical system."

"There is not a centrist bone in [Obama's] body."

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Shining A Light

Shira emails: Dear Luke, I am thinking of you, while working. What comes to mind is that things are coming together. Your important work and service to the community is bearing fruits. In the past, I have stated that it’s time to clean up the community from the self appointed leadership and corruptions. To my disappointment, it was not done. You give me a ray of hope: perhaps things are moving… Cases in point: The issue with the Ger Tzedek. He is getting ‘a new ear’ in civil court. The fact that the story was published here, is NO coincidence!!!

The other story that is gaining momentum, in my opinion is the Meir Kin divorce and ‘The pretending Agunah’. No one else had the right ‘equipment’ tell the story baldly, only you!!! Y’shar Koach.

Chaim Amalek emails: There was a time five years ago when I would check Luke’s website five or six times a day, just to see what he was posting (which often was what I was writing). Not so these days. To begin (and end) with, the substitution of news about LA’s rabbis for the chance to interact with fertile young white women (even if it was at a great remove) just does not inspire one to read it or contribute much to the effort of writing it. (Also, the "Failed Messiah" website does a better job of Jewish muckraking, possibly because it is the work of someone who was born into the orthodox world and thus has an edge that Luke as the never-quite-accepted "convert" cannot match.) This is sad, because we can all see the trajectory being followed here and where it leads. But I don’t see any good options left for Luke. He had his moment in the sun but simply failed to seize and build upon it.

Khunrum emails: “His latest “column” lost it’s Sunday errrr! excuse me, Saturday Punch. The news is turgid, depressing and lost the one plus that made old Luke such a joy to be involved with, Humor!”

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The Jewish Week In Review

Steven I. Weiss reports:

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