Jewish History: A Very Short Introduction

Professor David N. Myers writes:

* we lack basic extra-biblical evidence that could attest to the existence of the Israelites and Moses in Egypt and, more particularly, to their flight to freedom. Even without overwhelming external evidence, the Israelites’ tale of Exodus has had deep resonances beyond the Jews, becoming one of the most widely replicated and admired narratives of liberation from oppression.
What we do possess is an important piece of external evidence from the thirteenth century bce that makes explicit reference to “Israel.” It is the Merneptah stele, a stone inscription that describes, in verse, the triumph of an Egyptian king, Merneptah, over a number of groups in the land of Canaan. The final line relates: “Israel is laid waste, his seed is not.” It is not clear what battle the stele is describing, but it seems to be referring not to a place name but to an ethnic group. Indeed, we begin to pick up the trail of a group or groups associated with that name in the thirteenth century, when Egyptian imperial control over the land was beginning to wane. Neither a unified social cohort nor an established polity existed at this point, but rather a network of nomadic tribes, which may have been divided according to the sons of Jacob…

* The Bible is replete with references to the distinct tribes; the Book of Joshua, for example, offers a detailed description of the disparate tribes joining forces to regain the land of Canaan, which God had promised them. Whether they consolidated themselves outside of Canaan or molded their distinct tribal identities within, we do not know. But it is reasonable to assume that between the thirteenth and eleventh centuries bce , residents could be found in the central mountain region of Canaan who shared a number of key properties that identify them as precursors to today’s Jews:
• Family : The most basic unit of social organization for the Israelite tribes was the tight-knit family with its own land presided over by the head male figure, father or grandfather, from whom identity was transmitted at this point.
• Genealogy : Members of families traced their own histories back several generations and linked their particular stories to the wanderings of the children of Israel. This became the foundation for Israelite historical consciousness.
• Language : Israelite tribes of Canaan spoke an indigenous Semitic language that would later be referred to as Yehudit and which we call today Hebrew. The formation of this language reveals the extent to which its speakers belonged to the larger Canaanite cultural world of the day.
Little concrete evidence exists of a fully developed religious system by this point, apart from the Bible. The Book of Exodus makes reference to a portable Ark of the Covenant that the tribes brought with them from Mt. Sinai that contained the Ten Commandments. This terse set of prescriptions would become one of the Israelites’ most notable contributions to the world—a moral code that has anchored both religious and political systems ever since. One of the Commandments declared that they should worship no other god than the God of Israel. But when exactly to date the advent of this important development—the rise of the monotheistic faith in a single god—remains an open question. Some scholars trace the idea to the preceding Egyptian period. Others date it centuries later, noting that the tribes continued to worship a variety of local gods such as El, Asherah, and Baal, only gradually developing the conviction in the supreme power of a god known by the letters YHWH. Even at this early stage, we can imagine a process by which the Israelites remolded local practices and ideas with which they were intimately familiar into their own distinctive forms.

* This impulse to distinguish people based on blood anticipated a key tenet of modern racialist discourse. Blood came to be seen as a determinant of racial purity in nineteenth-century debates about the evolution of humans. Alongside Charles Darwin’s iconic On the Origin of Species (1859), this debate included those who were intent on establishing fixed racial hierarchies, such as the German composer Richard Wagner in Judaism in Music (1850) and the French diplomat Arthur de Gobineau in Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races (1853–1855).
While Jews were often targeted in this new discourse, they also acquired fluency in the idiom of racialism, which was an ironic reflection of the extent of their integration into European society. Jewish scholars in the early twentieth century, such as Elias Auerbach, Maurice Fishberg, Arthur Ruppin, and Ignaz Zollschan, engaged in the study of anthropology, statistics, physiognomy, and phrenology (measurements of the skull) much as their non-Jewish contemporaries did. They had twin goals: to bring glory to the Jewish race and to elevate the study of race to the rank of a legitimate scientific discipline.

Beyond these narrow circles, Jews in Europe and North America frequently invoked the language of race and blood when describing themselves. Their invocation, even though intended to honor Jews, strikes an unsettling note. After all, it was race—and more particularly, the assertion that Jews were an inferior race—that drove the Nazi campaign to annihilate them. Hitler formalized the racial distinctions between Aryans and Jews at a Nazi Party meeting in Nuremberg in 1935, which produced a highly detailed scheme of racial classification that became a platform for mass murder.
In light of this history, one approaches claims of racial or biological characteristics of a given group with trepidation. And yet, the dramatic advances in understanding the human genome over the past half century have prompted scientists, often Jewish themselves, to aver that Jews possess deeply rooted genetic affinities that distinguish them from other groups. These unique properties lead, they claim, to a Jewish proclivity not only toward certain kinds of mental and physical ailments, but also toward a higher-than-average IQ. One of the most prominent researchers of Jewish genetics today, Harry Ostrer, builds on the work of the early-twentieth-century Jewish racial scientists in his book Legacy: A Genetic History of the Jewish People , especially in concluding that the “evidence for biological Jewishness has become incontrovertible.” Expanding on this claim, some scholars have argued that Jewish genes can be found among various unlikely groups around the globe, including the Lemba tribe in southern Africa. Not surprisingly, the work of Ostrer and like-minded colleagues has generated stiff criticism that disputes the notion of a shared Jewish genetic origin.
Most Jews in the world, mindful of the Holocaust, would probably eschew use of race or biology in defining themselves. They would likely acknowledge an enduring, though often unarticulated, sense of connection to fellow Jews, triggered by past memories, particularly of trying events. They might even speak colloquially and unscientifically of a Jewish “gene,” for example, when expressing a measure of pride at the high percentage of Jewish Nobel laureates.
That said, variations abound among Jews in defining themselves. Jews in Israel, the largest body in the world, tend to identify themselves with the state of which they are citizens. Jews in the United States, the second largest group in the world, tend to identify on a different basis. Whereas earlier generations saw themselves as Jews by religion, a study by the Pew Research Center in 2013 reveals that more than 60 percent of American Jews today identify principally with their shared “ancestry or culture.”
These most recent attempts at self-identification recall for us two related points. First, Jewish identity, like Jewish history itself, has never been a static proposition; from their humble desert origins, Jews have continually reimagined and renamed themselves—and been renamed by others—in response to shifting historical circumstances. And second, despite the constant change in their modes and names of self-identification, Jews have managed to hold on to a shared sense of history and fate that finds few parallels in history.

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Winning With Livestreaming (1-5-21)

“Evidence suggests that having a streamer in your life that is a source of entertainment and laughter has both physical and mental health benefits.”

“Watching people laugh and have fun is very good for our health and wellbeing, can help us feel socially connected, can provide us with energy and can boost our productivity. When we give back to content creators that entertain and energise us, we are rewarded with several neurochemicals that elate us and make us feel like a valuable and wanted member of a community.”

The Psychology of Twitch

How to Improve Online Gaming Behaviour

“emotions experienced together with others during live streaming are more intense than emotions experienced individually after the live streaming.”

* traditional co-viewing, such as watching TV programs with family and friends in-person, is a more cheerful experience compared to watching alone.
http://www.joonsungpark.com/papers/CSCW20_YouTube/

“What goes viral is what most deviates from expectations. Constant social media consumption barrages us with the unusual, skewing our sense of normality and detaching it from reality.” https://www.forbes.com/sites/tarunwadhwa/2017/03/30/three-ways-that-live-streaming-distorts-reality/?sh=2be79ec27052

Do ICUs typically run at capacity? No. https://www.kiiitv.com/article/news/verify/verify-what-capacity-are-arizona-hospitals-icus-usually-at-covid-19-bed-and-staffing-shortages-this-season-are-abnormal-compared-to-previous-years/75-8f5f96bf-99eb-45eb-9808-de3957c1e23b

“For most level 1 trauma centers and tertiary care facilities, operating intensive care units at 80 percent to 90 percent capacity is standard — even before the COVID-19 pandemic hit.”

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/patient-flow/2-healthcare-leaders-talk-icu-capacity-5-sound-bites.html

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How Important Is It To You To Not Get Covid-19? (1-4-21)

00:00 LA slammed by Covid patients, https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-01-04/los-angeles-hospitals-cannot-keep-up-covid-19-surge-illness
22:00 Mediocre White Male joins
34:00 Golem XIV, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golem_XIV
1:25:00 Jonathan Bowden, ‘Wyndham Lewis A British Modernist Life’, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ucNuwO_iM4Q
1:28:00 Do hospitals get paid extra for Covid diagnoses? https://www.factcheck.org/2020/04/hospital-payments-and-the-covid-19-death-count/
1:29:00 USA Today: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/factcheck/2020/04/24/fact-check-medicare-hospitals-paid-more-covid-19-patients-coronavirus/3000638001/
1:32:00 Jaw-Dropping New CDC Figures Suggest True U.S. Coronavirus Death Toll Approaching Half a Million, https://www.mediaite.com/news/jaw-dropping-new-cdc-figures-suggest-true-u-s-coronavirus-death-toll-approaching-half-a-million/
1:37:00 The Intellectuals and the Masses: Pride and Prejudice Among the Literary Intelligentsia 1880-1939, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=136235
1:42:00 Babs camps out in a cemetery
1:56:00 My Kitchen Wars: A Memoir, https://www.amazon.com/My-Kitchen-Wars-Memoir-Table/dp/0803220979
2:02:00 Babs & Bloodsports
2:08:00 Bunyip, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bunyip
2:47:00 Is Empathy a Good or Bad Thing?, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NR6QDTW-ceQ

Posted in Corona Virus | Comments Off on How Important Is It To You To Not Get Covid-19? (1-4-21)

With Or Without You

External validation was my favorite drug. Until my 50s, I often put more value on what other people thought of me than on what I thought of me.

As a child, I think I got most of my strokes for what I did rather than for who I was, so I developed a thirst for recognition and validation and I had a heckuva time getting off that performance wheel. Many people had many different experiences with my father, but my experience was that being around him made me feel inadequate and driven to prove my worth. I became so driven in fact that I drove myself into Chronic Fatigue Syndrome at age 21 and never fully got out of that mess.

I still enjoy external validation but I hope I no longer need it to feel OK. I’m willing to say things that are unpopular if I believe them to be important. I prefer receiving compliments to criticism, but I’d rather respect myself without any applause than to hate myself with the applause of fools. I’d rather get one compliment from a wise man than the adulation of idiots.

Receiving compliments remains a reason for why I create but a greater reason for my productivity is that I want to share things with the world that I think are good and true.

Compliments used to make me high and in seeking out that intoxication, I often made a spectacle of myself. I remember a couple of times in the 2000s that I felt so happy that I stepped on the gas and got speeding tickets.

I was talking today to a friend with a similar history of foot-in-mouth disease and we tried to figure out what was going on that led us to say so many hurtful things. We concluded that it was anxiety. When we felt uncomfortable, we were more likely to blurt out things that caused pain. In a calm state, by contrast, we tended to socially conform. When we resolved to keep our mouth shut, we usually didn’t get into trouble, but the combination of anxiety and an overpowering urge to make a joke often created offence.

I used to believe that Judaism’s step-by-step moral code (halacha aka Jewish law) was the best way to make a better world, but now I believe that helping people feel connected to their best selves, to other people and to the universe is the most effective method for tikkun olam (repair of the world).

As a reporter, I’ve interviewed thousands of people, and the inexperienced Americans were often giddy at the prospect of being asked questions while other peoples tended towards suspicion. It was the rare person I wrote about who conveyed an air of indifference to my coverage. These people journalists love because the vulnerable are a burden. It’s too much responsibility when strangers quiver over our random words.

Dennis Prager has noted that Protestants often deflect a compliment while Jews often ask for more. For some people, their immediate reaction to a compliment is to try to sign the person up for their free newsletter. They have the mindset that everyone is a prospect. For others, a compliment brings up a fear of becoming visible in the world. These people want to stay in their cave. The healthiest people are gracious when winning or losing in life while the most fragile are easily knocked off stride. I’ve often reacted to a compliment by trying to suck the person dry for a maximum of love and attention out of the fear that no more nurturing will come my way. “I have this image of you as an infant sucking a breast dry because you have no confidence that another feed will come along,” said a therapist. If the woman complimenting me was hot, I usually yearned to rest my head in her neck and go for the gusto. “Here at last is someone who understands me,” I would think. Fans were the best. I wanted to become so great that I only interacted with fans.

About 20% of the people I’ve known reacted to compliments with the suspicion that I was trying to con them (half the time they were right). A tiny number of women reacted with tears that I appreciated them.

Everybody I’ve known is more vulnerable than they initially appear.

Over the past few years, I’ve worked to give myself the attention and understanding I used to seek from others to feel OK.

LCSW Alan Gordon writes:

In many cases, people aren’t even aware that they’re treating themselves in an abusive or neglectful way.

Look at Brandon. When I ask him about ways he may be treating himself poorly, he responds, “I don’t drink, I don’t smoke, I don’t do drugs,” oblivious to the fact that that what he’s doing to himself psychologically could be just as damaging.

In these cases, recognizing and identifying the destructive behaviors is essential.

Let’s start off with abuse. There are three primary ways that people psychologically abuse themselves.

The first is criticism. People beat themselves up all the time. Some of the more general messages might be, “You’re worthless” or “What’s wrong with you?” More specific (and more subtle) examples might be, “How could you have screwed up that presentation?” or “You’re not talking enough, you’re so boring.”

These messages are toxic. Would you talk to someone you care about this way? Why would you treat yourself worse than a loved one?

Another way people abuse themselves is by putting pressure on themselves: “You’re not working hard enough,” “You’re not making enough money,” “You need to lose more weight.”

When you put pressure on yourself, it carries the underlying message of, “You have to do this or else…” You may not be saying these words, but that’s how our primitive minds interpret this pressure.

It’s like having a drill sergeant in your head.

A lot of clients I’ve worked with feel like the pressure is their friend. “If I didn’t put pressure on myself, I wouldn’t get anything done. I’d just lay around all day in my sweat pants eating bon bons. The pressure helps me accomplish things.”

In reality, the opposite is often true. Pressure can be a motivation killer. Remember how much more enjoyable it was reading a book for fun than when it was assigned for homework? Discipline can exist without pressure. You can be free to work on things with a sense of joy, instead of a sense of a heaviness. Some clients have told me that when they stop putting so much pressure on themselves, they actually become more productive…

Identify Source of Abuse
Where do these abusive habits come from? Often the way we treat ourselves is based on messages we get when we’re younger.

Maybe your mom made you feel bad about yourself.
Maybe your dad got excited when you got good grades and was bummed out when you didn’t.
Maybe your grandmother ignored you as a form of punishment.
Maybe your dad had epilepsy and unintentionally terrified you each time he had a seizure.
Maybe you had an older brother who got all the attention.
Maybe your mom was depressed and you were preoccupied with making her feel better.
Maybe your dad was irrationally anxious and you never felt completely safe.
Maybe you were one of eleven kids and you made yourself invisible because you saw how overwhelmed your parents were.
Or maybe your home life was relatively trauma-free, but you were bullied in 7th grade, went to an ultracompetitive high school, or your college girlfriend cheated on you.
There’re many different reasons why you could have come to develop this inner bully. Sometimes it can help to understand why. Sometimes it doesn’t matter.

There’s often an irony in learning about the way you abuse yourself.

When I point out to clients that they seem to beat themselves up a lot, they often respond, “You’re right. What the hell’s wrong with me?”

When I point out their tendency to pressure themselves and the impact it has, it’s, “I need to change this immediately!”

And with those that terrify themselves, “I don’t think I’m ever going to be able to stop this!”

It goes to show that the mind is so clever, even awareness of these tendencies aren’t enough to change them.

Posted in Addiction, Personal, Psychology | Comments Off on With Or Without You

The Intellectuals and the Masses II (1-3-21)

00:00 Sunrise
01:00 ‘In Defense Of Elitism’ Examines Who Is Part Of The Elite, https://www.npr.org/2019/10/28/773999992/in-defense-of-elitism-examines-who-is-part-of-the-elite
12:00 Rodney Martin joins
14:00 Do we need others to validate our stories?
19:00 Geographic chauvinism
55:00 Rodney does not regard Covid as a hoax
1:27:00 Marginalized people are attracted to marginalized politics
1:40:00 The Intellectuals and the Masses: Pride and Prejudice Among the Literary Intelligentsia 1880-1939
1:45:00 Southern Dingo vs Joseph Cotto, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=veol9kQgrYg (1:42:00)
1:50:40 Millenniyule 2020: James Allsup, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPd9WggGkjw
2:06:00 Lionel: What News Is Ignored When Terror Takes the Front Page?, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q_bE9nq22ps
2:10:00 Maybe You Should Talk to Someone | Joel Stein & Lori Gottlieb, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l2YKL3UtlnA

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