NYT: ‘Actually, Egypt Is a Terrible Ally’

From the New York Times Op/Ed:

When Vice President Mike Pence visits Egypt on Wednesday, he will follow in the footsteps of countless American officials who have stopped in Cairo to laud the “strategic partnership” between the United States and Egypt.

This has become a vacuous and badly outdated talking point — the kind we both drafted during our years in the government. Mr. Pence shouldn’t pay lip service to it.

American and Egyptian interests are increasingly divergent and the relationship now has far less common purpose than it once did. Mr. Pence should make clear to Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, Egypt’s president, that the two countries need a reset, beginning with a major reduction in American military assistance.

In addition to saving American taxpayers’ money, this would send an important message to other recipients of American aid that our support is not unconditional. It would also help to rein in an arrangement that has distorted Egyptian-American relations.

I’m just glad the Times did not say these terrible things about America’s greatest ally — Israel.

There was a time when both countries derived important mutual benefits, including reliable Egyptian support for the United States’ interests in the Middle East. But over the past decade, the United States has poured more than $13 billion in security assistance into Egypt with little to show for it except more jobs for a defense industry exporting materiél that is ill-suited to Egypt’s defense needs and that allow the Egyptian military to sustain a patronage system that distorts the economy and fuels corruption.

For too long, the United States has allowed the Egyptian government to treat security assistance as an entitlement owed for making peace with Israel. The United States has not held Egypt accountable for how this money is spent and whether it serves broader American objectives in the region, giving Egypt a free ride on American generosity. The Obama administration took initial steps to make military assistance less generous and limit the weapons systems Egypt could buy with American funds. The Trump administration has withheld or reprogrammed more than $200 million in military assistance.

This is a start. More needs to be done.

In light of Egypt’s declining strategic importance and its problematic behavior, Washington should sharply reduce its annual military assistance by $500 million to $800 million to align our resources with our priorities. A cut in Egypt’s aid would free up badly needed funds. And a move to start reducing security aid to Egypt to a level that is more in line with the actual value the United States derives from the relationship would be broadly popular in Congress, which has grown frustrated with Cairo.

I’m glad the Times is not calling for reducing Israel’s aid “to a level that is more in line with the actual value the United States derives from the relationship.”

How can anyone question Israel’s strategic importance to America? Unlike Egypt, Israel never engages in problematic behavior. I’m glad the Times is not arguing for disabusing Jerusalem “of the notion that assistance is an entitlement might help to restore some leverage to extract concessions from” Jerusalem.

Instead of acknowledging that Egypt’s importance has diminished, President Trump has doubled down on the relationship, promising to be a “loyal friend” to Egypt and lavishing Mr. Sisi with praise. The White House has gone silent on the Egyptian government’s abhorrent human rights abuses, which fuel radicalization, increasing the global threat from terrorism. In so closely tying the United States to the Sisi government and its repressive practices, the administration is all but ensuring that millions of marginalized Egyptian youth will view the United States with hostility.

America is getting a bad deal in Egypt. That’s ironic for a president who prides himself as a negotiator. Mr. Pence’s visit is an opportunity to turn a new page with Egypt, and make the United States’ commitment to the country commensurate with what Washington receives in return. If the Trump administration does this, it will take a small but important step toward restoring America’s tarnished credibility and reputation in the region.

As all right-thinking people understand, the end of the Cold War in no way diminishes Israel’s strategic importance. American remains Israel’s loyal friend and we lavish it with praise. Nobody in the Islamic world is likely to have negative feelings about America due to its support for Israel.

America is getting a great deal in Israel. That’s not ironic for a president who prides himself as a negotiator. Recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital is a small but important step toward restoring America’s tarnished credibility and reputation in the region. Nothing makes the Middle East happier than staunch American support for the Jewish state.

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Going Postal

Comments at Steve Sailer:

* Taibbi wrote one of the best books on the 2008 debacle (Kleptocracy) and Ames wrote the only serious book on the mass shooting phenomenon (Going Postal). Ames was for many years the editor of the Exile, the best English-language newspaper about Russia (although it did have a nakedly supremacist streak and a good deal of the content was freakshow-watching, “look at those crazy goyim, ha ha they sure are poor”), there was still very good, unique journalism. The Exile was shuttered by Putin but Ames was still objective enough after that to point out that Putin was not the bad guy in the Georgian-Ossetian situation. Ames also vociferously defended LAPD burnout Dorner, who was criminally overreacting to very real problems in the department which the major media decided to ignore.
Attacking these real journalists who stand above an ocean of glow-in-the-dark intel operatives and airheaded liars — on the grounds that they sometimes chat like men — is simple witch-hunting.

* I remember a mysteriously venomous piece that Taibbi wrote in 2005 for a now defunct free paper called the NYPress, in which he made fun of the dying Pope John Paul II.

It was called “THE 52 FUNNIEST THINGS ABOUT THE UPCOMING DEATH OF THE POPE.”

Here’s how it began:

52. Pope pisses himself just before the end; gets all over nurse.

51. After death, saggy, furry tits of dead Pope begin inexorable process of melting away into nothingness, like coldest of Sno-cones under faintest of suns.

50. Pope survives just long enough to be acquired by Isiah Thomas for Stephon Marbury, 2005 #1 pick and cash considerations. “We feel like we’ve made ourselves younger and more competitive,” Thomas says.

49. After beating for the last time, Pope’s heart sits there like a piece of hamburger.

48. Whole world waiting until the last minute for a sudden improvement of his condition. Long lines of girls in the Philippines kneeling and praying. Catholics everywhere with ears pressed to radios, transfixed. Pope gives one last groan, spits, dies.

For more such hilarity, you can check out the rest.

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My Great Great Grandfather

This guy was my father’s mother’s grandfather:

There were few better known men
througout North Queensland than the late
Mr. George Simpson who took a most active
interest both in local and national politics.
Gifted with the power of speech and acute
reasoning powers he was an awkward
opponent, and whether in or out of the Mun-
icipal Council, he had always a say in the
local government of Townsville. Mr. Simp-
son who succumbed while chloroform was
being administered to him was about 44 years
of age, and was a native of New South
Wales. He came to Townsville about 15
years ago and started business as a saddler;
subsequently he edited the Townsville
Herald when it was a small four page bi-
weekly issued from an office opposite the
A.U.S.N. wharf. Afterwards Mr. Simpson
started as an Auctioneer and Commission
Fix this textAgent, and at the tame of his death was
keeping the Family Hotel. On and off he
was a member of the Municipal Council for
about 12 years but was never Mayor. In
1883 he contested the Kennedy against Mr.
Lissner but was defeated. Mr. Simpson’s
impetuous disposition and biting tongue
roused much temporary opposition but in
reality he was of an easy going temperament
and his sarcasms were soon forgotten. He
was an earnest advocate of the claims of
Townsville, in which place he held a large
landed interest; recently it is to be
feared with little profit to himself; the
value of property having collapsed there as
elsewhere.

Having a sarcastic difficult personality certainly makes him a Ford.

My father’s mother’s other grandfather was the Chinaman Chen R. Yeen, who operated King Yeen & Co. in Rockhampton and one of the products he trafficked in was opium.

My father published some short stories about crime in 1944 and 1945: Perfection, The Benevolent Looking Gentleman, One Night in Berlin, and Bolt from the Blue.

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Parasha Vayigash (Genesis 44:18–47:27)

Listen here and here and here.

Watch. Wikipedia: “In the parashah, Judah pleads on behalf of his brother Benjamin, Joseph reveals himself to his brothers, Jacob comes down to Egypt, and Joseph’s administration of Egypt saves lives but transforms all the Egyptians into bondmen.”

* Wikipedia: “By Way of Deception: The Making and Unmaking of a Mossad Officer [1] is a nonfiction book by a former katsa (case officer) in the Israeli Mossad, Victor Ostrovsky.”

* Link: “This week, Netflix released Wormwood, a four-hour mini-series that blends documentary filmmaking with dramatized sequences featuring Hollywood actors to tell the story of the CIA’s top secret MKUltra Program.”

Revelation 8:10: “Then the third angel sounded his trumpet, and a great star burning like a torch fell from heaven and landed on a third of the rivers and on the springs of water. 11. The name of the star is Wormwood. A third of the waters turned bitter like wormwood oil, and many people died from the bitter waters.”

* “This video is not intended to condone violence or hate.”

* Salma Hayek: “Harvey Weinstein is my Monster Too.” Friend: “I like how she’s not aware that she actually does have nothing going for her but her sexuality.”

* New Yorker: Cat Person

* Variety: Inside Matt Lauer’s Secret Relationship With a ‘Today’ Production Assistant

We went to lunch. My intentions were purely professional…

He opens the door. There you go. It crossed the line. It was a consensual encounter. It happened in his dressing room above studio 1A, which was empty in the afternoons. He got in his car and I had to go back to work, and now my life had completely changed…

The last time I saw him that summer was at the 2000 Democratic National Convention in California. The “Today Show” was live from the Staples Center floor. He was looking at a script, and he leaned over and said to me, “Do you see that bathroom over there? Meet me there in five minutes.” I was leaving and I had no other chance to talk to him. So I went—and we had an encounter. He was like, “Alright. I’ll see you later.” He had no interest in making sure I was cool….

Even though my situation with Matt was consensual, I ultimately felt like a victim because of the power dynamic. He knew that I was leaving, and that there was no better prey than somebody who is going to be gone. He went after the most vulnerable and the least powerful — and those were the production assistants and the interns.

* Heartiste says Roy Moore did nothing wrong.

Friend: “In terms of biological realism, it’s more perverse to lust after a 40-year old than it is to lust after a 14-year old. That’s not to say the young ones should be legal, but our disapprobation shouldn’t involve terms like deviancy or depravity necessarily.”

Gen. 46: 3 “I am God, the God of your father,” he said. “Do not be afraid to go down to Egypt, for I will make you into a great nation there. 4 I will go down to Egypt with you, and I will surely bring you back again.”

How would the Egyptians feel that the Israelites are going to become a “great nation” within their midst, simply use their land for a pasture during a famine, and then return to their own land triumphant?

Gen. 46: 31: Then Joseph said to his brothers and to his father’s household, “I will go up and speak to Pharaoh and will say to him, ‘My brothers and my father’s household, who were living in the land of Canaan, have come to me. 32 The men are shepherds; they tend livestock, and they have brought along their flocks and herds and everything they own.’ 33 When Pharaoh calls you in and asks, ‘What is your occupation?’ 34 you should answer, ‘Your servants have tended livestock from our boyhood on, just as our fathers did.’ Then you will be allowed to settle in the region of Goshen, for all shepherds are detestable to the Egyptians.”

Is there any down side to a group developing a tricky and dishonest reputation? Will becoming known for dishonesty and running scams and manipulation serve a group well in the long run? How do you think the Egyptians felt when they realized they had been manipulated or are the goyim too stupid to ever catch on? Might there be a backlash for this trickery? How would Jews feel if an alien group came to live among them and use manipulation and deceit to get what they wanted to keep the majority off balance?

How should Egyptians feel about a new group entering their land who made their living as shepherds when apparently the shepherd is detestable to Egyptians and the sheep is worshiped as divine? How would Jews do in the beef industry in India where the cow is sacred?

Gen. 47: 5 Pharaoh said to Joseph, “Your father and your brothers have come to you, 6 and the land of Egypt is before you; settle your father and your brothers in the best part of the land. Let them live in Goshen. And if you know of any among them with special ability, put them in charge of my own livestock.”

So how might Egyptians react to their Pharoah giving the best parts of their land to foreigners? Might there be a backlash? How would they feel about these foreigners getting to run the Pharoah’s livestock? How do they feel about a foreigner (Joseph) being second in power in the land next to the Pharoah? Might they resent this foreign power and intrusion?

Gen. 47: 20 So Joseph bought all the land in Egypt for Pharaoh. The Egyptians, one and all, sold their fields, because the famine was too severe for them.

Might the Egyptians come to resent Joseph and his people for turning them into slaves?

Posted in Torah | Comments Off on Parasha Vayigash (Genesis 44:18–47:27)

R. Gabriel Elias On The Way Out At Mogen David

I don’t have the full story yet.

Sandy says:

They never really have distinguished themselves from YICC or Beth Jacob, the two shuls most similar in practice to MD’s Ashkenazi minyan. A lot of the regulars are guys who used to go to YICC or BJ, and either live closer to MD or are old buddies with Rabbi Elias (or their wives are).

One unsung hero of Mogen David’s Ashkenazi minyan is their Torah reader, Aaron Breitbart. Aaron is about as self-deprecating a fellow as you’d ever meet, with a great sense of humor backed up by an academic’s intellect.

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