Bathsheva's Bag

Stuff I'm into or not...speculations and ascribed motives and more...

Tuesday, November 20, 2012



I think Bibi Netanyahu's job might be the toughest job in the world. It's on his shoulders to see to it that this tiny little country placed smack dab in the middle of Jew hating countries on all sides, that is home to half the world's Jewish population doesn't get blown off the map. He's not in it for anything but the love of his people. His brother died for it. He faces strong resistance from everywhere including his own people in Israel and here. He is a good man, a good Jew and I love and respect him. And I am grateful from the bottom of my heart for his commitment to Israel and the Jewish people.

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Thugs Don't Get Assassinated



To Assassinate:  as·sas·si·nate ( -s s -n t ). tr.v. as·sas·si·nat·ed, as·sas·si·nat·ing, as·sas·si·nates. 1. To murder (a prominent person)

 

Israel’s Shortsighted Assassination

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/17/opinion/israels-shortsighted-assassination.html?ref=opinion 


I have to say I find it reprehensible, contentious and indeed shortsighted, that one would use the word "assassination" regarding ahmed al-jabari. This is a word that is reserved for people of a certain stature, politically and otherwise. I understand the dilemma when one is needing to feed the middle, but certain things are unacceptable regardless of intent. If for some horrible flaw in our system, our government was overtaken by thugs and somebody shot one of them down--it wouldn't be considered an assassination;  it would be widely considered that the thug was gunned down. 
To use the word 'assassination' gives credence to someone who does not deserve it. bin-laden was not assassinated he was gunned down like the dog he was, and here so too--jabari was gunned down. 

To use the term 'assassination,' regarding a common low-life thug who happened to belong to a terrorist group, is an insult to those of us who respect government and our officials-- and is not one that should be overlooked.


He went the way many hard core thugs go, whether its here in the states on the streets or our jails are filled with them for that matter*, or in rancid thug filled gaza.



A thug is a thug is a thug no matter how you dress him.


The author of this New York Times opinion, asinine as it was, is one Gershon Baskin. He can be reached on his website or his FaceBook 



*Please note this is not to take away anything from our thugs (at least they have heart) -trying to deal both  literally and figuratively just applying the term 'thug' in the abstract only.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

A Week In...





Now that the hoopla is winding down, we can perhaps focus on what needs to be done to bring this country back together again. We have to face it, we're never all of us going to agree on everything. But where it counts, maybe if we can't agree, we can at least come up with solutions that work for the majority. Which, if I'm not mistaken is what being a democracy is all about.

I think it's curious and a bit unsettling that with a fair election, we haven't heard from the losing party on it's willingness to put bipartisan ideologies aside and strive to work together with President Obama for the healing of this country. 

I think its telling that here we are a week later and we still have to endure both romney and ryan running around whining and moaning about why they lost. They are blaming others for their failure to appear as though they would be both viable candidates and decent human beings.





I am glad that President Obama won his second term. I hope he can achieve some of the goals he laid out. He has his work cut out for him. I truly believe that he's a man of great and enduring integrity. I truly believe with all my heart that he is doing the best he can for this country.


My prayer is that he can do what he said that he wants to do for this country.






 
 I pray with the entirety of my being 
that he keeps Israel close to his heart.







Wednesday, November 14, 2012

A Big Bang For hamas!




Military Leader of hamas Dead







Poor Car, suffered so with the stench of hamas permanently inflicted upon its cheap cloth interior. Nice of Israel to put it out of it's misery!







Word of the Year 2012...

...is GIF
 





How exciting is this!

Can't say us 'mericans are simple minded.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Texas Secession



Once again, the good ol' folk down in Texas are gurgling and burbling their secessionist rumblings. This is nothing new. It's just that now, there is that added underbelly ingredient of racism thrown into the pot of that ever stewing brew of rampant idiocy.


Texas Secession Petition Racks Up More Than 80,000 Signatures, Qualifies For White House Response

 

Texas Secession Petition



I remember as a little girl driving with my father (often), from Tucson, AZ (where we lived) through Nogales, Tx right into Juarez, Mexico. Juarez is now one of the most dangerous cities in the world--number two on the list.

If you don't know, read what goes on from no non-corrupt government agency, to no policia--Ay! Caramba! to daily beheadings. Bombings daily! Where there used to be towns, lie rubble. Blood flows freely in the streets like wine down an alcoholic's throat.


I'm wondering if these bright Texans, who so quickly jumped to sign this silly petition, considered the real ramifications of secession. If the U.S. permits this, I would hope, we take with us any and all monies allotted, our state, local and federal laws, agencies, police, military, border patrol and protection of any kind. El Paso, Texas is two miles from Juarez. Maybe these brilliant secessionists should pack up their crap and move to Juarez.


           Adios los gringos stupidos!









Sunday, November 11, 2012

Sometimes a Terrible Notion...

Sometimes a Terrible Notion...

This Just In: On a post card sent to his neighbors back on Planet Kolob, Twitt Bombney wrote, “America is great! Wish I were here!”

The other night America prevailed. The America I grew up in--the America I want back. The America I still believe in. Regardless of your politics, America won. In a campaign fraught with ridiculous sound bites (whatever that means) and a clear showing of lack of regard for the intelligence of the American people, questionable as it is sometimes, nothing tested my patience so much as when in the second debate, after his (own) numerous interruptions, romney turned to President Obama and said in his best ‘guest of’ Jerry Springer voice, “I didn’t ask you a question,” intimating that Obama needed permission from him to speak. In one fell swoop, romney managed to in general, insult all semi-intelligent life forms, including my fern sitting on the bookshelf in my home office. Specifically but not limited to, he insulted blacks and men, and the people who love them,  people who don’t watch Springer, people who do watch Springer--bad imitation, people who wanted Obama to punch him in the throat, people who wanted to punch him in the throat, people who felt that way but would never admit it  because they don’t watch Jerry Springer, people who vote, democrats, republicans, independents, people who respect the office for which he was running, the office for which he was running, and The President of the United States. Nice laundry list.

I’ve been accused now and again of being a good judge of character. When I saw romney speak, his face seemed to not believe what was coming out of his mouth. *He seemed to be a hollow holder of insincerity.* I read somewhere that Mormons view truth to be ever changing or evolving on apparently a minute to minute basis. So if for one second you can convince yourself of any given truth, speak that truth as relative and in-motion as it may be, it’s not particularly a lie if one minute later you don’t believe it and its not true. How accurate this is, I don’t know. Certainly not very Donny and Marie of him. He’s a little bit Mephistopheles.

So why did we entertain the notion of romney? Why does someone who is so clearly a virulent and remorseless liar and rude and hard-hearted make such an impact? Why was he a viable anything?

When I was a kid, truth and respect were values that were held with the utmost regard in my family and in most families I encountered. Today it seems, that it is only the end result that counts, never mind how you get there. The devil surely is in these details and damn us all to hell. The Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy was just done away with in our military but it reigns supreme in all of Academia and elsewhere.

A New York Times article recently reported the extreme number of high school and college age kids taking adderall, just to get by on three hours of sleep nightly, so they can deal with the rigorous daily routine required of them to get into and through a semi-decent college. This is also becoming more prevalent even among kids in elementary school. So steroids for the sports teams and adderall for the nerds--this is deceit at its most paltry. Not to mention how  unethical it is to the few kids who don’t know enough to put themselves in harm’s way to achieve their end goals.

It has also been noted that we live in a much ruder society than we did years ago. And its no wonder, with everyone jonesing for a fix. Please don’t get me wrong, I’m all for a little inebriation here and there, whether it be a glass of wine or a puff of something organic. May Connecticut be the next Colorado! But, adderall and steroids like heroin and other hardcore stuff, legal or not, do lead to personality disorders and rude/unruly behavior and/or criminal and/or negligent behavior. And certainly lack of judgment. I’m not saying everyone who voted for mitt used or advocated drug use, but certainly we have become accustomed to behaviors and criminality that were once considered fringe. Things that were once considered disgusting and beneath society as a whole, now pass for standard behavior. Two words--Jersey Shore. How many kids, now have a friend who could pass for one of those humanly challenged entities?

Do not for one second take this to be advocating against equality for all--this is not what I am saying. And, I’m not against vehemence in discourse either. And dissent! Is always a good thing! But somewhere along the way we confused accepting people for who they are and advocating equality with accepting every little fluctuation in decency and flight from pointed discussions and decorum. 




*In the interest of disclosure I would like to mention that this piece  was started and in particular the asterisked line was written before I saw the salon article where Mary Elizabeth Williams called romney a ‘Hollow tower of hubris” (www.salon.com/2012/11/07/romneys_concession_speech_was_not_gracious/) 


Until Then, Mr. Roth

Phillip Roth announced today, that he will no longer be writing any books.

To this I say...

He certainly has amassed an impressive body of work to keep one occupied, for those few who haven't read Roth. While we might miss him in book form, I suspect that Roth will keep in touch either through a blog or short stories or in some other way through social media. Some writers need to make sense of their worlds and writing provides that outlet.

For those of you would-be censors of Mr. Roth and other male oriented, pro male viewpoints Stop whimpering!

There are enough women writers out there to counteract any and all of it! For those who question whether women-hating view points be written, the answer is a resounding Yes! As well it should be! Misogynists as well as many other one-sided/ lop-sided characters (vampires, racists, serial killers, homophobes, zombies, neo-nazis etc...) should have their say, but only fictionally speaking of course. Fiction should never be for the faint of heart or those in need of constant bathing.

Perhaps better and more concerted energies could be spent seeing to it that worthy women writers have their equal time played out in our prominent book reviews. I for one would like to see women writers like Louise Erdrich, Gillian  Flynn or Jennifer Egan--whose short story "Black Box" rivals anything Hemingway ever did, get its real due, not whatserface who scrawled. "50 shades of garbage".

For now Mr. Roth--stay in touch!

Friday, November 9, 2012

Book Review Ex-Friends


Ex-Friends by Norman Podhoretz





First off, the only reason I picked up this book, was the fact, some blurb somewhere about this book, made mention of Allen Ginsberg. I came for Ginsberg and got so much more.

Ex-Friends offers us a look at a by-gone era, of a time when friends got together, attended parties and discussed meaningful things such as politics and literature. Norman Podhoretz recalls a time when he as a young man, smart, intellectual and perhaps more than a tad opportunistic, was adopted into The Family, a group of primarily New York Jewish intellectuals that included the likes of Hannah Arendt and Lionel Trilling. Interesting times.

The nice thing about rehashing old arguments with those of your dead friends or dead ex-friends as the case may be, is that the dead don’t rise to defend their views or their values. And so it is with Ginsberg, the Trillings—both Lionel and Diana, Hanna Arendt and Lillian Hellman. Podhoretz retells both points of view his and theirs, through his eyes. How generous!

The only exception to this safety net of dead silence is the story of his ex-friendship with Norman Mailer. I suspect this is due to the fact that nothing Mailer and Podhoretz argued over seems to be so insurmountable, that they couldn’t ostensibly see themselves back to each other. (At the time of Podhoretz's writing, Mailer is now deceased)

In retelling of his relationship with Allen Ginsberg, which wasn’t particularly close, and subsequent falling out, Podhoretz lays bare some real truths—as he sees them. He is disgusted with Ginsberg’s leaping into ‘lowbrow’dem. He feels that Ginsberg clearly has some talent and he is at a loss for why he would surround himself with the likes of Kerouac and the other junky hoodlum non-intellects he opts for. One can see his point, even sympathize to an extent. When I was younger, I would berate myself when, on the many times I picked up On The Road, only to a couple of chapters in—put it down, due to finding it unintelligent and unreadable. And boring! It was only as I got older that I realized I was right, regardless of the popular consensus. He clearly is offended by Ginsberg’s in your face homosexuality and his subsequent writing of it, Master, Master etal. He accuses Norman Mailer of trying to outlive his “nice Jewish boyness”, writing in that vein, and to his mind (Pohoretz’s) subsequently failing. And while I see his point, I am not personally particular to the graphicness of some of what Ginsberg shows in his poetry. But, to the multitudes of us who don’t and didn’t quite fit into that ‘nice’ Jewish or otherwise girlness or boyness, for one reason or another; aren’t we indebted to Ginsberg for making it okay?

Podhoretz doesn’t bore. He systematically lays out his arguments both literary and political. He delves deep regarding his falling out with the Trillings, as he does with his discussing his differing views with Hannah Arendt. He was surprised and put off regarding Arendt’s views on Israel. I’m inclined to agree with him 100% regarding the topic of Israel—on both his points. The first being, that Israel need not apologize or explain their rights and needs to be an autonomous individual, self-actualized Jewish State. Second that every Jew regardless of denomination, whether secular or not should make The State of Israel—a Jewish State—a priority.

The problem with Podhoretz’s thinking or at least his argument as put forth here, in Ex-Friends, is that he doesn’t extend his argument to offer a solution or an explanation and one is needed, whether he thinks so or not. The issue here is, and everyone should recognize this, is that it should never be an issue of a Jew having to dissect himself in order to grapple with Israel’s needs. And here is where Podhoretz fails. He doesn’t even offer up conjecture as to why America’s policies have to differ from Israel’s. The needs as well as the end game are very different. America was founded for very different reasons than was Israel. Needless to say, America was founded to maintain a way of life and Israel was founded to maintain a people. And while, Podhoretz, perhaps feels that the elite should be to America, what the Jews are to Israel, this just isn’t so. To simply  wish this so by advocating Reagan and his trickle-down economics and save for one sentence mentioning social policies doing more harm than good for the poor in the afterward of Ex-friends doesn’t cut it.

And it is here that we must judge Ex-friends for both its politics and its literary acumen. Regarding books, both political and literary, one cannot take one out of the context of the other, according to Podhoretz himself. For someone so versed in politics and the literary scene--and Mr. Podhoretz clearly is—he comes off not offering up more than the “policy wonks” he so clearly has no use for, nor for that matter, does he bother following the rules of literary etiquette. He decidedly never answers his own questions posed. This is death both politically and literarily.

Still, when all is said and done, Ex-friends offers a glimpse into another time- a snapshot if you will—of an old man reminiscing of a by-gone time. Do read.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Post Sandy

After the initial worry and terror of what would come, we settled in to what would be. We hoped that no damage, or expensive damage would come our way or to anyone we know. Other than still not having power or Internet or phone service we are fine, but getting antsy and maybe a bit aggravated.  And we send out a prayer to those we don't know--who suffered loss in one way or another. I am posting via an iPad with 3G service. You might ask why start blogging now?  And to this, I say, why not?

The opportunity to not tend to the everyday, the work, the school and countless other myriad of things to do, beside the essential... The opportunity to delve into the real, the family, to share a meal, the friends--to extend best wishes to those not often kept close to mind, to talk to our neighbors-- the ones we never talk to, to pull together, to loll about, to read that book you've been meaning to...To Write!  And write, I shall...