Archive for category Culture

Taking Responsibility

Rabbi Avi Shafran offers a poignant reflection on how we — each and every one of us — may be more responsible for the suffering of our fellow Jews than we care to realize.

Required reading for all who aspire to self-perfection.

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America’s Royal Wedding

I was in Great Britain in the summer of 1981 when Prince Charles married Princess Diana.  It was a national holiday, broadcast live on every channel.  The quirky, aging bachelor prince had finally chosen his future queen, and the whole country was intoxicated with the young, fresh, beautiful, charming Diana.

It was nearly three decades ago which, together with the relative refinement of the British, meant that the festivities retained a measure of good taste amidst all the pomp and spectacle.  There were no rock bands, fire-jugglers, or dancing bears, and the newscasters had the good manners not to comment when the nervous bride interposed two of Charles’s four given names.

On the streets, however, schlocky memorabilia crowded the entrance of every shop.  Mugs, plates, key-chains, coasters, thimbles, and clothing of every kind sported the images of the royal couple.  Even in stuffy Britain, refinement and restraint gave way without a fight before the opportunity to make a buck — or a schilling.

I hadn’t thought much about the royal wedding for years, but reports of the Obamamebilia trade took me right back.  Mugs and tee-shirts were to be expected.  But who conceived memorial coins, implying but not quite claiming that they are special-issue government currency?  And it doesn’t even begin to stop there.

Writes Sheldon Alberts in NationalPost.com:

Want some Obama gold-embossed inaugural china? A single plate sells for $82 at the official inauguration store on E Street in Washington, just a few blocks from the Canadian embassy. An Obama inauguration medallion can be had for a mere $60.

For the less spendthrift fan of the president-elect, there’s no shortage of purchasing options – Obama colouring books, Obama chocolate bars, Obama bottled water and Obama paper dolls. For collectible newspapers buffs, The Boston Globe is selling a limited edition puzzle featuring its Obama election edition.

“People are spending anywhere between $20 and $300,” says Aissatou Sene, manager of Making History, a D.C. memorabilia store. The shop’s most popular item? Barack Obama hot sauce.

Maybe I’m just getting old, but all this strikes me as pretty undignified and distinctly unpresidential.  Especially when, according to NPR, vendors are hawking Obama underwear.  Is there more than an echo of Bill Clinton here?

I wasn’t even a year old when John F. Kennedy took office, but for all the irrational exuberance over the inauguration of Camelot, I suspect JFK’s coronation showed a little class.  There was hope-a-plenty then, as now, but exultation doesn’t have to be ugly.

In today’s classless culture, perhaps lamenting the loss of refinement is the equivalent of tilting at windmills.  But the memories of JFK’s Camelot and the wedding of Charles and Diana raise a different specter:  the danger of irrational expectations.

Had John F. Kennedy lived, he probably would have gone down in history as one of America’s competent but undistinguished presidents.  His performance facing the Soviets down in the Cuban missile crisis was admirable, but there isn’t much else to say about his presidency, other than the Bay of Pigs debacle.  On the list of presidential distinction, he probably would have gotten tucked in somewhere between Gerald R. Ford and George Herbert Walker Bush.

The tragic death of Princess Diana came too late to restore her to the pantheon of modern mythology.  Too much scandal and too much information irretrievably tainted her image  — and, to a large extent, the British monarchy with it.

Barak Obama truly does offer hope.  Most notably, he has exploded the fiction that a black man cannot succeed in America.  For that alone, his presidency is historic and his victory desirable.  But he is facing one of the most complexly contentious eras in American and world history, and experience is not on his side.  Most Americans hope he will succeed, since his success will be our success.  But if he fails, what then?  Will the media turn on him, as they love to do?  Will the Republicans or the Neocons or America’s White culture be blamed?  Will it be the fault of the religious right when the dream fails to become reality?

Most pointedly, with prospects so dim and expectations so unreasonably high, can Barak Obama succeed?  Or will the measure of his success demand impossibly high achievement, no matter how competently he acquits himself?

Good luck, Mr. Obama.  Today you’re marrying a very fickle bride.

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Inaugurating the Future

The Rick Warren flap reveals how precariously we are balanced between the new guard and the old guard, and how change in favor of moral relativsim is really no change at all.

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The Man in the Water

Here’s a beautiful essay by Roger Rosenblatt written after Air Florida Flight 90 crashed into the Potomac River, 27 years ago this week. It’s every bit as relevant today.

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Flight 1549 — A study in democracy

In an ancient curse, Elijah the prophet decreed upon a wicked community that “Every one of you should rise to leadership.”

The survival of the crew and passengers of US Airways Flight 1549 was an entirely different story.

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Don’t Depend on a Miracle…

However, if one comes along, don’t look a gift horse in the mouth.  These pictures a worth a look, and worth more than a thousand words.

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Links to Gaza

Jewish World Review offers these columns on the Gaza War.  They’re all worth a look:

Thomas Sowell on the fantasy of Mideast Peace.

Dennis Prager on how the Second World War might have been fought if the United Nations had been around to with its doctrine of moral equivalence, and on the Media, Alan Derschowitz, and cognitive dissonance.

Lawrence M. Reisman on the misinformation being disseminated by, among others, the New York Times.

Charles Krauthammer on Olmert’s second chance, and Jeff Jacoby, with a disturbing look at modern anti-semitism.

Some observations on why the Moslem street gets angry.

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Sanctifying G-d’s Name

Block Yeshiva High School students make a kiddush HaShem on the basketball court.  Any time others recognize quality of character in Torah Jews the purpose of Creation comes a little closer to its fulfillment.

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The Invention of Ideology

Nonsequitur gets it right again.

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You only hurt the one you love

“Man Bites Dog” would be a welcome relief from the sometimes-terminal stupidity that seems to be making its way into the news, like this report from last month.

We’ve come to expect full intellelectual shut-down here in America, where Senator John Edwards failed to anticipate that  a $400 haircut might undermine his position as a man of the people, and where the CEOs of the Big Three auto makers flew to Washington, D.C., each in his own private jet, to ask congress for money to bail out their failing businesses.  But there’s something astonishingly disturbing about an adult who fails to recognize the difference between a giant Panda Bear and a puppy … or a Beany Baby.

“Yang Yang was so cute and I just wanted to cuddle him. I didn’t expect he would attack,” the 20-year-old student, surnamed Liu, said in a local hospital, according to the official Xinhua News Agency.

As I’ve already written, the sages predict that the generation before the messianic era will be characterized by hesik haDa’as — the failure of reason.  Perhaps the militant activism for same-sex marriage and the search for affection from a brightly-colored omnivore are symptoms of the same affliction:  a profound, irrational confusion over the nature of love and intimacy.

There was a time, not so long ago, when sexual perversion may have existed but was kept securely locked in the closet.  Social pressure forced abherrent sexual behavior underground.  It existed, but it wasn’t fashionable.  Consequently, it wasn’t terribly attractive.

As the line of acceptibility shifts, we can expect more stories like this one, and further demands from the radical fringe.

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