w00t!

About time too. Whether or not America’s politicians can find a way to sidestep the brutal automatic military cuts of sequestration, the era of rising Western spending on weapons and wars is over. link Discuss.

your price of gas open friday thread

by liberal japonicus Over here, I don't think much about the price of gas. No really critical uses of the car, and gas is sold in liters. For me, there is some sort obsfucation constant that is added whenever you translate something from imperial to metric. "It's 39 degrees celsius" and I yawn. 'It's 103 … Read more

Cue the HUZZAHS! and the urine tests

by Doctor Science It is an exciting week Chez Science, because Sprog the Elder is about to start a FULL TIME JOB. WITH BENEFITS. IN HER CHOSEN FIELD. (Said field being “library and book work”. Because “best-selling novelist” isn’t something a sensible person *counts* on …) It’s taken almost a year and half of temporary … Read more

anti and pro military on the left (retry)

by liberal japonicus

This weekend, I was watching the internet thru my new iphone, which was a bit like taking in a baseball game thru a knothole in the fence. You can catch the basic action, but you don’t see the whole game.

So it was with the second campaign of the CT-LGM blog war*. The first, which could be termed The battle of Conor’s bluff, was part of a larger war and centered around whether one should vote for Obama despite the use of drones or make a statement and vote for Gary Johnson.
The second campaign, The fight of Navy’s need, took place over the weekend. (I hope those attempts at factual restatements don’t insult anyone on either side) In both campaigns, some current and former ObWi commenters were part of the troops arrayed. This post is not about either of those fights (so I’m not linking to them, though going to CT and LGM should be sufficient) but about what I think is the larger question behind them. If that intrigues, check below the fold.

*I should add that whether or not is was a ‘war’ is questioned by some of the participants.

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A master debater

By liberal japonicus The title is a hangover from the detour into Portnoy’s complaint. I didn’t see it and I’m now at a a retreat with students. I caught a small bit of one commentator saying that Romnet behaved like an alpha male and that this might hurt him. Given the amount of testosterone that … Read more

A different green

by Doctor Science In every wood in every spring there is a different green. — J.R.R.Tolkien This is a section of a picture I took last week on my morning walk: I used an Olympus D-510 camera, which is really pretty old at this point. What I was hoping to capture here were the many … Read more

The Spiritual Crisis of Zionism

by Doctor Science

Peter Beinart’s The Crisis of Zionism came out in the spring, but I only recently got a chance to read it — supposedly it wasn’t all that popular, but it still took a while to work its way down to me on the public library waiting list.

The Crisis of Zionism may not have gotten much in the way of sales, but it sure generated a lot of heat. Andrew Sullivan did a pretty thorough job of tracking reviews and commentary about the book — most of which was negative, to Sully’s great disappointment.

My take: Beinart is talking about a real, critically important issue for Israel, Zionism, and the worldwide Jewish community:

In Israel, the deepening occupation of the West Bank is putting Israeli democracy at risk. In the United States, the refusal of major Jewish organizations to defend democracy in the Jewish state is alienating many young liberal Jews from Zionism itself.

I think the book’s greatest weakness is that Beinart mostly talks about the issue as a political problem, to be solved by political means. He doesn’t spend enough time thinking about this as a religious or spiritual issue: the non-Orthodox majority of American Jews are finding Zionism-as-she-is-practiced less and less compatible with our beliefs about what we, as Jews, are called to do. American Jews are not becoming more secular, we are becoming more religious — but in a different way than Israeli Jews.

I had intended to write and put up this post at the beginning of the Days of Awe, for seasonally-appropriate discussion, but it grew to be over 4000(!!) words long. By that point there wasn’t time to have an actual discussion before I would have had to close the comments for Yom Kippur. So I’m posting it now, for an early start on *next* year’s Days of Awe.

Be warned that I will be policing the comments with extra firmness — I’m aware that this topic is one of the third rails of the Internet, with Godwin pre-installed. Historical comparisons had better be supported by historical evidence, not just by your feelings.

Shofar-NMM

Carved shofar from 17th-18th century PolandNational Music Museum in Vermillion, SD. The carvings are Kabalistic, and draw numerological connections between the shofar’s sounds and the story of the Binding of Isaac, the Torah reading for Rosh Hashanah.

Four different shofar calls are sounded on Rosh Hashanah; you can hear them in this YouTube video. The Yom Kippur service ends with the long blast, Tekiah Gadolah, prefiguring the Last Trump of Judgment Day. If your shofar-blower is bald or nearly so, you’ll see a wave of red (or even purple!) wash over his whole scalp for the last seconds of the call.

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Your meeting the troll Friday open thread

by liberal japonicus He drove me off Twitter, hacked my Facebook, and abused and terrified my family. Yet the biggest shock of all was meeting him A fascinating Guardian article, originally from this site (though the white font on a black background is a bit tough to read) about one person's very surprising experience with a troll. 

Lincoln’s Laws of War and Our Own

by Doctor Science Yesterday was the 150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation. John Fabian Witt writes that: Emancipation touched off a crisis for the principle of humanitarian limits in wartime and transformed the international laws of war. In the crucible of emancipation, Lincoln created the rules that now govern soldiers around the world. …. In … Read more