It’s Hard to BOTH Criticize Israel AND be Antisemitic…

Human Rights Demand Migrants Must Stay In Israel, A Horrible Racist Country

by Balila Haki, Btselem activist

Tel Aviv, December 29 – I do not know how to make my organization’s position on this matter any clearer. Our assertion, born of dedication to moral sensitivity and global awareness, is and remains that people who have traversed much of East Africa to reach Israel, a country so profoundly unjust that it maintains racial Apartheid, persecutes non-Jews, and disenfranchises people o color, must not be sent out of the country, but, according to the dictates of human rights, stay there. Because Israel is oppressively racist, and keeping the migrants in an oppressively racist country is what upholding human rights demands.

So racist is Apartheid Israel that tens of thousands of Africans each year try to make it here, traveling through Egypt and other countries on the way, but deciding not to remain in those countries because they are oppressive and dangerous, and they mistreat people from other countries. Once the unfortunate migrants make it past the human traffickers and the smugglers, suffering untold abuse and extortion along the way, they wind up in Israel, which as everyone knows perpetrates the worst crimes of all, and we cannot tolerate Israel flying the migrants out to some other, less racist, country. Because it’s all about doing the right thing, for us human rights organizations.

Any attempt by Israel to deport those who entered and remain there “illegally” only cements the country’s status as a bigoted hellhole that thousands of migrants risked their lives to reach. Imagine the desperation of people who decline the relative enlightenment of Sudan, Egypt, Eritrea, and elsewhere to seek a life in Apartheid Israel. They could stop anywhere along the way to make a life in a place far less problematic than Israel, but they do not, presumably because racist Israel forces them to keep going, with its promise of a better, safer locale for earning a living, which is all a chimera because Israel is a racist country – did I mention that yet? – that wants to do nothing but persecute and expel minorities, and obviously the humane thing to do is keep those unfortunate migrants in Israel.

We and our other NGO allies will continue to fight to keep migrants in Israel and not allow them to be flown to, for example, Europe, where treatment of migrants is far more humane than anything Israel has to offer. It’s the only way to uphold the rights of the migrants.

From PreOccupied Territory, here.

How To Persuade Jews to Ascend the Temple Mount: Copy Altruistic Organ-Donor Testimonials

Like so (some of these adaptions are meant to be funny):

  1. “I feel like I put my Avodas Hashem into practice.”
  2. “Entrance is completely free, and statistically far safer physically than driving!”
  3. “Many people asked me if I had any doubts…”
  4. “I feel like I won the lottery. This has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my life.”
  5. “Better and much easier than I expected.”
  6. “I researched the halacha first…”
  7. “I was offered to donate some time and effort on the way to rebuilding the Beis Hamikdash. How could I say No?!”
  8. “OK, well it took some time until my spouse was on board…”
  9. “For me, it wasn’t really a matter of choice; it was what Hashem would want me to do.”
  10. “A friend told me: ‘I still don’t dare, but because of your example I will now do more.'”
  11. “Most were awed. Some thought I was mad. My older brother was supportive.”
  12. “Mother says it’s bad for shidduchim. Well, if someone is that closed-minded, I’m anyway not interested in them!”
  13.  “I have no regrets whatsoever.”
  14. “My life has changed for the better in so many ways. I thank God for the amazing opportunity. May God bless Rabbi Shimshon Elbaum and the rest of the team with all success, and may they merit to see the rebuilding of the Holy Temple!”
  15. “Sounds cliché, but on my birthday I gave the gift of life to the Jewish people.”
  16. “It felt good to make a difference.”
  17. “Everyone should do it too!”
  18. “It was far easier to convince the policeman at the gate I wasn’t a lost Kosel-goer than to convince the kidney donors psychologist of my compos mentis.”

And so on…

Wokism Funded by Superabundance of Govt Giveaways

These days we are seeing a superabundance of govt giveaways and how strongly they are distorting market signals, incentives, and prices. From health to energy to college.
I find it humorous that with the govt lending students limitless funds, school tuition and thus student debt load have gone through the roof.
Standford university has about 17,000 students, 2,000 to 3,000 faculty, and… 17,000 administrators.
The University of Michigan hired 163 diversity equity and inclusion (DEI) officers.
By the way, there has been a major shift from using tenured and tenure-track professors to using part-time adjunct faculty. Costs order of magnitude less… Leaving more money to hire… more administrators.
It’s a Shanda.
It reminds me of a gemora that says if you leave a drunken man to his own devices he falls down on his own.
Shabbos 32a:
רב חסדא אמר שבקיה לרויא דמנפשיה נפיל.
By the way, this corruption of universities is simply a symptom of the general life cycle of nations:
Infancy, adolescence, mature adulthood, the decline of middle age, senescence, feedstock for archaeologists.