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Why Do So Many Millions Continue to Support Donald Trump?

13 Friday Sep 2024

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donald-trump, joe-biden, news, politics, trump

I’ve been baffled for years about why millions of Americans continue to support Donald Trump after his disastrous handling of the Covid epidemic, his 34 felony convictions, his 54 remaining indictments, his massive grift, his pathological lying, his central role in the only insurrection led by an American president against the United States government in our nation’s history, his 2 impeachments, his craven disrespect for soldiers and gold star families, his utter lack of virtue, his dark, dystopic, cynical, and pessimistic attitude about America, and his racism, misogyny and hatred against immigrants of color and anyone who critiques him.

Political thinkers, psychologists, constitutional scholars and lawyers, podcast and cable news commentators, and print journalists have offered all kinds of reasons for the fealty of so many millions of Americans who show ongoing support for arguably “the most flawed person I have ever met in my life.”  (General John Kelly – a 4-star general and one of Trump’s former Chiefs-of-staff).

Many of the reasons offered make some logical sense: he’s entertaining; his need for vengeance resonates with the life-experience of many of his fans who are angry like him and feel they’ve not benefited in the American dream; his role as a cult leader offers a sense of belonging for people on the margins of society; his tough-guy persona gives many a super-hero with whom to identify; the perception that he was good for the economy; the expansive reach of a myopic right-wing media bubble that reinforces his brand; the persuasive power of ‘don’t believe your eyes – believe me’ that enables people to stop thinking; the racism, misogyny and fear of the “other” many of his followers also feel; the support of evangelical Christians who like his right-wing judicial nominations and reversal of Roe v Wade; and the fact that there are so many life-long Republicans who just can’t imagine leaving their political and cultural “tribe” and supporting a Democrat.

All those reasons are compelling and likely true – but what else might be attracting some of Trump’s followers?

The renowned Swiss-Polish psychoanalyst and philosopher Alice Miller (1923-2010) may offer a measure of insight not only into Trump’s character, but the character of many of his followers. She wrote at length about why people and nations follow evil leaders in her two books: For Your Own Good – Hidden Cruelty in Child-Rearing and the Roots of Violence and The Drama of the Gifted Child – The Search for the True Self.

In the Preface to For Your Own Good she explained:

“Since the end of World War II, I have been haunted by the question of what could make a person conceive the plan of gassing millions of human beings to death and of how it could then be possible for millions of others to acclaim him and assist in carrying out this plan.”

Donald Trump is NOT Adolph Hitler and the MAGA right is not the Nazi party. However, Trump fits the profile of the leader that Dr. Miller described in her books.

She concluded that every act of cruelty, no matter how brutal and shocking, has traceable antecedents in its perpetrator’s past – most often from childhood. She cited and quoted from a mid-18th century German book on child-rearing by Johann Georg Sulzer who, in 1748, wrote in “An Essay on the Education and Instruction of Children”:

“Obedience is so important that all education is actually nothing other than learning how to obey…. It is not very easy, however, to implant obedience in children. It is quite natural for the child’s soul to want to have a will of its own, and things that are not done correctly in the first two years will be difficult to rectify thereafter. One of the advantages of these early years is that then force and compulsion can be used. Over the years, children forget everything that happened to them in early childhood. If their wills can be broken at this time, they will never remember afterwards that they had a will, and for this very reason the severity that is required will not have any serious consequences.”

Sulzer continued:

“I advise all those whose concern is the education of children to make it their main occupation to drive out willfulness and wickedness [in the child] and to persist until they have reached their goal… by scolding and the rod [for the purpose of creating] obedient, docile and good children [from as early as] the child’s first year.”

Dr. Miller opines:

“Neuroses and psychoses are not direct consequences of actual frustrations but the expression of repressed traumata…” [the child] “…will experience feelings of anxiety, shame, insecurity, and helplessness, which may soon be forgotten, especially when the child finds a victim of his/her own… A child’s ever-growing discomfort at the loss of the pleasure he/she would have had if the child’s wishes had been granted, eventually find satisfaction only in revenge, i.e. in the comforting knowledge that one’s peers have been subjected to the same feeling of discomfort or pain. The more often the child experiences the comforting feeling of revenge, the more this becomes a need, which seeks satisfaction at every idle moment. In this stage, the child uses unruly behavior to inflict every possible unpleasantness, every conceivable annoyance on others only for the sake of alleviating the pain the child feels because his/her wishes are not fulfilled. This fault leads with logical consistency to the next; his/her fear of punishment awakens the need to tell lies, to be devious and deceitful…”

Does this sound familiar when thinking of Trump?

Dr. Miller concludes:

“When still in diapers, the child learns to knock at the gates of love with ‘obedience,’ and unfortunately often does not unlearn this ever after… all the requirements will have been met to enable a citizen to live in a dictatorship without minding it; he or she will even be able to feel a euphoric identification with it… In a totalitarian state, which is a mirror of the child’s upbringing, this citizen can also carry out any form of torture or persecution without having a guilty conscience. His/her ‘will’ is completely identified with that of the government.”

The psychoanalytic principle of “identification with the aggressor” – a defense against an over-powering and threatening adversary – is helpful in understanding why many of those who identify with Trump find such comfort in their doing so. He presents himself as the ultimate alpha male aggressor. Trump’s niece, the psychologist Mary Trump, has written that when Donald was a child, he was a thin-skinned playground bully.

Trump loves dictators – Vladimir Putin, Kim Jong Un, and Viktor Orbán – and calls them “strong” and “smart.” One of Trump’s ex-wives said that he kept Adolph Hitler’s Mein Kampf on his bed’s night stand. Marine Gen. John Kelly and Trump’s former Chief-of-Staff said that, as President, Trump complemented Hitler saying that “he did some good things” seeming to ignore the millions the Nazis murdered and the 400,000 Americans who died in WWII.

Was Trump beaten into submission by his hard-driving father? It is unclear. However, in a NYT’s article (July 28, 2020), Trump’s father Fred was described as

“…a disciplinarian who spent hundreds of millions of dollars financing his son’s career and taught him to either dominate or submit. In Fred Trump’s world, showing sadness or hurt was a sign of weakness. ‘The only thing that Trump ever cared about was ‘I’ve got to win. Teach me how to win,’ George White, a former classmate of Mr. Trump’s at the New York Military Academy who spent years around both father and son, said in an interview. Recalling Fred’s hard-driving influence, Mr. White said that Mr. Trump’s former school mentor, a World War II combat veteran named Theodore Dobias, once told him that ‘he had never seen a cadet whose father was harder on him than his father was on Donald Trump.’”

Mary Trump has written that Donald “suffered deprivations that would scar him for life.” Perhaps many of his followers also suffered childhood deprivations that drew them to the former president.

It remains to be seen how many of the millions of Trump’s followers will vote for him again on November 5th. It seems to me (anecdotally) that we are witnessing a significant enough abandonment of Trump by hundreds of former traditional Republican leaders from the Reagan, Bush Sr., Bush Jr. and Trump administrations who have come to the conclusion that Trump is corrupt and a significant security risk to the United States. As Kamala Harris has emerged as a strong, competent, experienced, and joyful Democratic standard bearer, the Cheney family and so many others recognize that she (despite their policy differences) will assure the continuation of American democracy, the rule of law and obeisance to the US Constitution.

How significant the number of Independent-leaning Republicans and Republicans will vote for Kamala is hard to say, but I’m optimistic not only because Trump represents the worst in the American spirit, but that Kamala Harris represents the best.

“Don’t Panic – We all have to understand the assignment” by Dan Rather

10 Tuesday Sep 2024

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donald-trump, elections, kamala-harris, news, politics

I love Dan Rather. He has lived and been in the news business long enough to offer us wisdom and perspective. Here is today’s “Steady” newsletter in which he wisely counsels “Don’t Panic”:

“Waking up to The New York Times headline: ‘State of the Race: A Dead Heat With 8 Weeks to Go’ is at the very least sobering, but by no means conclusive. It may even be a good thing.

To my Steady friends, the name of our newsletter says it all. We need to stay steady. The 2024 presidential election was always going to be tick-tight. The Democrats were never going to ‘Walz’ into the White House (pun intended), though he helps. You know what else helps? Having motivated supporters. A close poll can do a lot to activate the bench sitters. There is no room for even an ounce of complacency between now and November 5.

Since Barack Obama’s huge victory in 2008, the American electorate has become more polarized and calcified than ever before. According to a recent Pew Research Center poll, 49% of registered voters are or lean Democrat, while 48% are or lean Republican. These numbers trend with what we have seen in the voting booth. In 2016, Donald Trump won by just 70,000 votes in the swing states that decided the election. In 2020, Joe Biden’s victory margin was even smaller. There is no reason to think 2024 will be any different in terms of winning margins.

Along with shrinking margins, the number of undecided voters making their choice during the last two weeks of the campaign has also decreased. Exit polls in 2016 put the number at 15%. In 2020, it was around 6%. At this point, with two months to go, about 15% are still undecided, of which three-quarters say they do have a preference. That leaves just 3% in the ‘don’t know’ category. In other words, a very small number of voters in swing states will decide this. If you truly “don’t know” at this point, we need to talk.

That is a lot of numbers to throw at you … but know that heading into the final stretch of the campaign, I’d rather be Kamala Harris than Donald Trump. She has more room to move the needle. He has barely any.

For one, an anti-MAGA majority exists, even in swing states. The 2022 midterm elections proved this. Traditionally, midterms break hard for the party not in power. There was every reason to believe that would be the case in November 2022, with inflation high and Biden’s popularity low. Ultimately, Republicans, who predicted a ‘red wave,’ made only modest gains and lost several key races. The reason: A majority of Americans were determined to stop MAGA. 

Two, love him or hate him, Trump is a known commodity. Need I remind you that he has been running for president for nine years? Harris is comparatively a blank slate. More than a quarter of voters told The New York Times they want to know more about her.Many in that block of voters are from groups Harris has made gains with: younger voters, voters of color, and independent votes. The poll showed these voters are more eager to hear about her plans for the future than they are to hear from Trump.

Three, the Harris/Walz campaign is better organized and more disciplined, and Harris is a better candidate — on paper and in real life. She has energy and is relatable. And her room for growth well outpaces his. Remember, it need only be a point or two. She has a plan that appeals to the center. Whereas Donald Trump doesn’t seem to have any plan at all. At Tuesday night’s debate, Harris will have the opportunity to continue to tell her story and expand on her ideas for the country. By being herself, she can be the “normal” candidate. More voters may be looking for change, but change within the bounds of what has been considered normal.

The other day, our friends at Pod Save America reminded me of an adage attributed to Ben Wikler, the chair of the Wisconsin Democratic Party. In a play on an election truism, he said a ‘race is within the margin of effort.’ 

Effort.

Maximum effort is what it will take to keep Trump out of the White House and save democracy as we have known it. Every door knocked, every phone called, every text sent, every dollar given, every hour volunteered can make a difference. So will registering to vote and getting to the polls.

In a close race, good luck favors those who care the most and work the hardest.”

My Postscript:

I believe that VP Kamala Harris will do well tonight on the debate stage. Her clarity of thought, her ability to communicate her policies (see her website), her depth of knowledge of and understanding of what Americans want and need, her commitment to the law and the democratic order here and internationally, her compassion, upbeat and joyful countenance, her capacity to think on her feet and respond appropriately and with dignity to Trump’s misogyny, racism and low-life vulgarity, and her well-defined moral compass will persuade enough undecided voters across the political and demographic spectra to be persuasive that she can indeed be a good and competent President consistent with the constitutional history of the United States.

As Nancy Pelosi liked to say: “Don’t agonize – organize.”

My New Book

29 Thursday Aug 2024

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From the West to the East – A Memoir of a Liberal American Rabbi – Purchase directly from the publisher at https://westofwestcenter.com/product/from-the-west-to-the-east/

I am writing now before the month of Elul begins next Wednesday, September 4, because there is much to think about for all of us in this month before the High Holidays in our personal lives, in the United States as we move towards the election and in Israel-Palestine as this war continues, the hostages remain in Hamas’ hands, and terrible danger lurks in the north of Israel and in the West Bank.

My Memoir is a distillation of a life-time of thinking, writing, social justice and liberal Zionist activism, and there is much, I believe, in its pages to stimulate your thinking and reflection before the High Holidays begin with Rosh Hashanah on Wednesday evening, October 2nd.

Here is praise of the book:

“From the West to the East is a beautifully written and thoughtful guide to the challenges facing American Jewry, shared by one of America’s most influential rabbis.”–Congressman Adam Schiff, author of Midnight in Washington – How We Almost Lost our Democracy and Still Could, lead Manager for the first impeachment trial of President Donald J. Trump, lead congressional author of “The Protecting our Democracy Act”

“In this moving memoir, Rabbi Rosove models how a liberal Jew can be a passionate lover of Israel while remaining uncompromisingly faithful to the prophetic tradition. Now, at a critical crossroads for the community, he offers an indispensable guide to help American Jews navigate through a time of crisis.” -Yossi Klein Halevi, senior fellow, Shalom Hartman Institute, author of the New York Times bestseller, “Letters to My Palestinian Neighbor”

“In his powerful and revealing memoir, Rabbi Rosove guides us through a consequential life as the religious leader of one of the most historic and influential congregations in the United States. He confronts some of the most challenging moral issues of our time, including Israel-PalestineIt’s a book full of lessons to help us navigate a world that often seems unrecognizable.” –Zev Yaroslavsky, former member of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, author of Zev’s Los Angeles – From Boyle Heights to the Halls of Power, A Political Memoir

“From the West to the East is a beautifully written, intensely personal and deeply profound book. John’s love for Judaism, America and Israel shine through on every page. A rabbi’s rabbi, his memoir is a must read for rabbis and all who are interested in the contemporary Jewish experience.” -Rabbi Ammi Hirsch, Senior Rabbi, Stephen S. Wise Free Synagogue, Manhattan, NY – author The Lilac Tree, and host of “In These Times Podcast”

“Rabbi Rosove recounts the personal odyssey of a unique rabbi unafraid to wrestle with man and God in his quest for Tikun Olam.” -Anat Hoffman, Founder and Chair of Women of the Wall, former Executive Director of the Israel Religious Action Center

“Rosove’s memoir illuminates how the interplay of activist courage and faith have been builders of American liberal Zionism.” -Robin M. Kramer, former chief of staff for both Los Angeles Mayors Richard Riordan and Antonio Villaraigosa, and past president of the board of trustees of Temple Israel of Hollywood

The Qualities of a Great Leader

27 Tuesday Aug 2024

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Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, the late Chief Rabbi of the United Kingdom, wrote:

“Great leaders are great not just because they care for their own people – everyone except a self-hater does that – but because they care for humanity. That is what gives their devotion to their own people its dignity and moral strength… To be an agent of hope, to love the people you lead, and to widen their horizons to embrace humanity as a whole – that is the kind of leadership that gives people the ability to recover from crisis and move on. It is what made Moses, Isaiah and Jeremiah three of the greatest leaders of all time.”

As we prepare to vote in the coming election, I’ve been thinking a great deal about those personal qualities and virtues that make for great leadership, and I want to offer here my own thoughts and conclusions.

Taking everything into account, based on my own 40+ years leading synagogue communities and being engaged actively in a number of not-for-profit and political organizations watching good and bad leaders succeed and fail, I believe that great leadership requires, in addition to Rabbi Sacks’ insights, not just vision and high moral rectitude, but the love of truth, the love of humanity, the virtues of humility, gratitude, generosity and wisdom, a respect for the dignity of every individual and a commitment to further the common good.

Great leaders constantly are honing their skills, are curious, committed to learning and embrace experimentation in their work, and seek to synthesize information and apply what they learn carefully and thoughtfully. They don’t fear failure because they know that from failure they learn the most. They delegate responsibility to enable colleagues and followers to do their best work knowing that they can’t do everything themselves. They recognize that there are others who know more and are better able and well-suited in ways in which they themselves lack appropriate expertise and skills.

Great leaders support those they lead, offer fair criticism so that others may grow in their own right and according to their capacity, goals and dreams. Great leaders are available to advise and act as sounding boards for new ideas. They credit others generously for their respective successes both privately and publicly. They take pride in others’ accomplishments and thank them personally for what they do on behalf of the leader and/or the organization of which they are active members and/or leaders. They rely upon team-work and encourage everyone to do their best. They take responsibility when things go wrong and never blame others for mishaps and failures. They are open to constructive criticism and how they themselves can improve and grow. They work hard but they take time for themselves, for their families and friends. They encourage the people with whom they work to do the same because they understand that everyone needs balance between love and work.

In recent years, the servant-leader model of leadership, encompassing a values leadership approach in religious institutions and non-profit organizations has taken hold. Rabbi David Ellenson (z’l), the emeritus president of the Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion, wrote:

“[The servant-leader] is servant first… It begins with the natural feeling that one wants to serve. Then conscious choice brings one to aspire to lead. The servant-leadership model is one that promotes such values as collaboration, trust, foresight, listening, and the ethical use of power and empowerment… relationship-driven leaders are more empathetic, patient and tolerant. They approach decision-making subjectively, using personal values as a guide, and they examine how each option will impact others. They are approachable, strive for harmony amongst their employees and work to build consensus and trust. They also admit when they are wrong and seek constructive criticism… they are adept at listening and forging personal connections.”

Doris Kearns Goodwin, the American presidential historian, offered these insights:

“Leadership is the ability to use one’s talent, skills, emotional intelligence to mobilize people to a common purpose and to make a positive difference in people’s lives. The qualities important for leadership are humility, empathy, resilience, self-awareness, self-reflection, the ability to create a team where people can argue with you and question your assumptions, and the ability to communicate to people with stories to make people feel a part of what you are saying. The most important thing is the willingness to take a risk because the ambition for the greater good has become greater for you than for yourself.”

Great leaders take risks even when they know they will be criticized and possibly attacked. “You must be headlights and not tail-lights,” said Representative John Lewis.

Leadership is often difficult, painful and lonely. Leaders need the support of allies who join them in their mission. They need, as well, trusted loved ones with whom the leader can confide his/her fears, doubts and despair, and who can advise them by always being honest with them.

Any government, political party, company or business, religious or educational institution, non-profit organization or cause succeeds or fails based upon the moral values, competency, skill and vision of its leader. It is therefore in the best interest of everyone to choose their leaders wisely and carefully and, in an ongoing manner, evaluate critically and fairly the leader against high moral and ethical standards.

Zev Yaroslavsky, a former long-time Los Angeles City Councilman and Member of the LA County Board of Supervisors, wrote: “I have long believed that the key question is not which positions politicians will support or oppose. It’s the issues they’re willing to lose their office over in the name of principles that matter.”

As we move closer to voting, perhaps these ethical and functional standards of great leadership can help guide us in our decision-making in the voting booth.

Post-DNC Recommendations

23 Friday Aug 2024

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For us political junkies who crave not only a Harris-Walz White House victory on November 5, but keeping the Senate and winning back the House, I offer below an analysis of “Punchbowl News AM” published this morning (August 23) about the critical races being run by Democrats Sherrod Brown in Ohio and Jon Tester in Montana. I’ve met both Senators and they are worthy of our financial support. They must win for Democrats to keep the Senate.

I have given financial support also to Colin Allred in Texas, Jackie Rosen in Nevada, Bob Casey in Pennsylvania, Ruben Gallego in Arizona and, though he doesn’t really need it, my friend Adam Schiff in California.

My family and I are taking Michelle Obama’s inspirational advisory to heart – for everyone to do something going forward until election day – and that means giving financially to those campaigns that will be critically important to Democrats on November 5: phone banking, visiting Nevada or Arizona (for Californians), or other swing states to do whatever those state campaigns require of volunteers, and to be certain that everyone we know of voting age (family, friends and colleagues) are registered to vote and vote by mail or at the polls on election day.

Thankfully, the DNC and the Harris-Walz Campaign have hired thousands of lawyers in the swing states and across the nation to combat in the courts the MAGA Republican legal efforts to subvert the election by changing state election rules to favor Trump and Republicans, denying the vote to black and brown registered voters, and preparing for the day-after election Trump’s and his minions denial of Kamala’s victory, assuming that Trump loses the election, again.

Democracy and freedom really are on the ballot, and I hope that Democratic voters plus Independents and traditional Republicans, who have come to realize what is at stake and recognize Trump for the snake oil salesman and would-be autocrat that he is, will defy predictions of a close presidential election and produce a landslide for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz not only to keep the election-deniers to the minimum but to vanquish the criminal-Trump and Trumpism once and for all.

The following is the Punchbowl News AM report today of a conversation with Chuck Schumer at the convention:

“With West Virginia already flipping to the GOP, Republicans just need to win one more seat to retake the Senate majority. Their best pickup opportunities are in Montana and Ohio. But Republicans are also pouring millions into presidential battlegrounds like Nevada, Arizona, Pennsylvania and Michigan, where Democrats are defending seats.

Ticket-splitting: Democratic Sens. Jon Tester of Montana and Sherrod Brown of Ohio can’t win their races without a massive chunk of so-called “ticket-splitters” — voters who choose former President Donald Trump in the presidential race and Tester or Brown in the Senate race.

As we’ve written before, this is an increasingly rare phenomenon. We asked Chuck Schumer how Tester and Brown could possibly win enough ticket-splitters to overcome the massive edge Republicans have in those states. Schumer said it’s up to the candidates themselves — and Harris — to not veer too far to the left:

“There’s a good chunk of Republicans — those who voted not for Trump but for Nikki Haley, and even before that [Ron] DeSantis — who really don’t like Trump. So as long as our presidential candidate, but also our Senate candidates, can convince them that they’re mainstream, not too far left, and they care about their state above all, they can get a lot of those votes.”

Plato warned that passivity and withdrawal from the political realm carry terrible risks: “The penalty that good [people] pay for not being interested in politics is to be governed by [people] worse than themselves.”

For Your Children and Grandchildren in Colleges and Universities

15 Thursday Aug 2024

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In May, I posted a blog entitled “Talking Points for College Students Concerning Palestinian Protests.” College and University students are now preparing to start classes in the coming weeks and they are likely going to encounter either demonstrations on their campuses on behalf of Palestinians in Gaza and against Israel or fellow students who have an incomplete understanding of the Hamas-Israel War and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

In addition, in next week’s Democratic National Convention, Palestinian protestors and their supporters are planning mass protests outside the convention hall. Vice-President Kamala Harris has already encountered and responded to similar protests in her campaign.

I have written at some length about the Hamas-Israel War and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in the republishing of my 2019 volume Why Israel and its Future Matters – Letters of a Liberal Rabbi to his Children and the Next Generation (republished after October 7 and available on Amazon) and in my recently published Memoir From the West to the East – A Memoir of a Liberal American Rabbi (available from the publisher at https://westofwestcenter.com/product/from-the-west-to-the-east/

I offer once again those talking points for you to share with your college age children and grandchildren and, for that matter, with anyone else you think might benefit from what I have written. You can access that blog here:
Talking Points for College Students Concerning Palestinian Protests – 31 Friday May 2024  

Coping with Anxiety and Fear

05 Monday Aug 2024

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These are anxious times – be it as a consequence of American presidential politics, or threats to our democracy, or the suffering begun on October 7 and continuing in the Gaza Strip, Israel and the West Bank, or in Russia’s war against Ukraine, or whatever each of us is experiencing personally. Anxiety can be suffocating. Hopefully, each of us has ways to relieve the tension that builds up from the sense of powerlessness of which anxiety and fear are the consequence. Strategies can include turning off the news, exercising, listening to music, binging on TV series’ re-runs and old films, eating chocolate and ice cream.

Over the past 30 years, I’ve collected wise quotations from Jewish and world literature on every imaginable theme. I checked today the theme of “anxiety and fear” and found following. I hope at least one or two help bring you a measure of calm and/or inspiration.  

“The only thing we have to fear is fear itself – nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance.” —President Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945)

“You gain strength, courage and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face. You are able to say to yourself, ‘I lived through this horror. I can take the next thing that comes along.’” —Eleanor Roosevelt (1884-1962)

“There is only one way to happiness and that is to cease worrying about things which are beyond the power of our will.” —Epictetus (1st-2nd Century AD Greek Stoic philosopher)

“Anxiety does not empty tomorrow of its sorrows, but only empties today of its strength.” —Charles Spurgeon (19th century English Baptist Preacher)

“Nothing diminishes anxiety faster than action.” —Walter Anderson (20th century American painter and writer)

“You cannot always control what goes on outside, but you can always control what goes on inside.” —Wayne Dyer (20th-21st century American author)

“Life is ten percent what you experience and 90 percent how you respond to it.” —Dorothy M. Neddermeyer (20th-21st century psychotherapist)

“Nothing can bring you peace but yourself.” —Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)

“Calm mind brings inner strength and self-confidence, so that’s very important for good health.” —Dalai Lama (1935- )

“There are moments when all anxiety and stated toil are becalmed in the infinite leisure and repose of nature.” —Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)

 “What else does anxiety about the future bring you but sorrow upon sorrow?” —Thomas á Kempis (14th-15th century Dutch-German author)

“Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.” —Pastor Reinhold Niebuhr (20th century American Ethicist)

“If you don’t like something, change it. If you can’t change it, change your attitude.” —Maya Angelou (1928-2014)

“America must not become a nation of onlookers. America must not remain silent. Not merely black America, but all of America. It must speak up and act … for the sake of the image, the idea and the aspiration of America itself… When I was the rabbi of the Jewish community in Berlin under the Hitler regime, I learned … under those tragic circumstances that bigotry and hatred is not the most urgent problem. The most urgent, the most disgraceful, the most shameful, and the most tragic problem is silence.” —Rabbi Joachim Prinz (1902-1988; words spoken on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, 1963 March on Washington)

“Despair is not an option.” —Yaron Shavit, Deputy Chairman of the Executive of the Jewish Agency for Israel, President of the 38th World Zionist Congress  

“Get in good trouble, necessary trouble…Do not get lost in a sea of despair.” —Congressman John Lewis (1940-2020)

“The world is a very narrow bridge; the important thing is not to be afraid.” —Rabbi Nachman of Breslov (Ukraine, 1772-1810)

Kamala Harris’ Superb Nuanced Statement About the Necessity of Ending the Israel-Hamas War Now

26 Friday Jul 2024

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gaza, hamas, Israel, palestine, politics

Introduction: I could not have hoped for a better, more nuanced, comprehensive, and urgent statement from Presidential Candidate Kamala Harris about this awful Israel-Hamas War. If you did not hear her give it in her masterful verbal presentation, here it is (click onto the blue below to see her actually deliver her statement):

I just had a frank and constructive meeting with Prime Minister Netanyahu. I told him that I will always ensure that Israel is able to defend itself, including from Iran and Iran backed-militias such as Hamas and Hezbollah. From when I was a young girl collecting funds to plant trees for Israel to my time in the United States Senate, and now at the White House, I have had an unwavering commitment to the existence of the State of Israel, to its security and to the people of Israel. I’ve said it many times, but it bears repeating. Israel has a right to defend itself and how it does so matters. Hamas is a brutal terrorist organization. On October 7th Hamas triggered this war when it massacred 1200 innocent people including 44 Americans. Hamas has committed horrific acts of sexual violence and it took 250 hostages. There are American citizens who remain captive in Gaza – Sagi Deo Hen Hirsch Goldberg, Poland Idan, Alexander Keith Siegal Omer Neutra and the remains of American citizens, Judy Weinstein, God Haggai and Itai Hen are still being held in Gaza. I have met with the families of these American hostages multiple times now, and I’ve told them each time they are not alone and I stand with them, and President Biden and I are working every day to bring them home. I also expressed with the Prime Minister my serious concern about the scale of human suffering in Gaza, including the death of far too many innocent civilians. And I made clear my serious concern about the dire humanitarian situation there with over 2 million people facing high levels of food insecurity and half a million people facing catastrophic levels of acute food insecurity. What has happened in Gaza over the past nine months is devastating. The images of dead children and desperate hungry people fleeing for safety sometimes displaced for the 2nd, 3rd, or fourth time. We cannot look away in the face of these tragedies. We cannot allow ourselves to become numb to the suffering, and I will not be silent. Thanks to the leadership of our President Joe Biden, there is a deal on the table for a ceasefire and a hostage deal and it is important that we recall what the deal involves. The first phase of the deal would bring about a full ceasefire including a withdrawal of the Israeli military from population centers in Gaza. In the second phase, the Israeli military would withdraw from Gaza entirely, and it would lead to a permanent end to the hostilities. It is time for this war to end and end in a way where Israel is secure, all the hostages are released, the suffering of Palestinians in Gaza ends, and the Palestinian people can exercise their right to freedom, dignity and self-determination. There has been hopeful movement in the talks to secure an agreement on this deal; and as I just told Prime Minister Netanyahu it is time to get this deal done. So to everyone who has been calling for a ceasefire and to everyone who yearns for peace, I see you and I hear you. Let’s get the deal done so we can get a ceasefire to end the war. Let’s bring the hostages home and let’s provide much needed relief to the Palestinian people. Ultimately, I remain committed to a path forward that can lead to a two-state solution. I know right now it is hard to conceive of that prospect; but a two-state solution is the only path that ensures Israel remains a secure Jewish and democratic state, and one that ensures Palestinians can finally realize the freedom, security and prosperity that they rightly deserve.  I will close with this. It is important for the American people to remember the war in Gaza is not a binary issue. However, too often the conversation is binary when the reality is anything but; so I ask my fellow Americans to help encourage efforts to acknowledge the complexity, the nuance and the history of the region. Let us all condemn terrorism and violence. Let us all do what we can to prevent the suffering of innocent civilians, and let us condemn antisemitism, Islamophobia and hate of any kind, and let us work to unite our country. I thank you.

The Art of Growing Old – Thoughts for Joe Biden

21 Sunday Jul 2024

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Uncategorized

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Art, artist, life, painting, writing

I love Joe Biden – always have. He has heart and his personal losses, wonderful marriage and loving children and grandchildren, the esteem of his colleagues and from the Democratic Party, and his understanding of America’s purpose in the world have made him a great president with accomplishments that will be compared with FDR and LBJ. But, he’s having a hard time aging and letting go, and that’s sad to watch. We all get old, if we’re lucky. At almost 75, I’m beginning to understand the effects of aging much better myself – mild memory loss, loss of quickness of mind, more aches and pains, physical weariness earlier in the day, etc. etc. etc. – but so much positive comes with aging too – a greater perspective, enhanced appreciation, deepening gratitude, wider generosity of heart, inner calm.

Joe is a great man, and perhaps his resistance in stepping aside is part of the reason for his greatness, that his dogged persistence in making a difference, to do what few human beings have been successful in doing – reaching the highest office in the world – blinds him to the new reality in his life – getting old. Joe’s accomplishments as a leader, politician and statesman are very great, but his time to step aside has come – that’s obvious to any objective observer.

Step aside Joe – we love you. We admire you. Your legacy will stand the test of time. You will rise even higher than #14 in the long list of presidents as history judges you so very well.

Here are some inspired thoughts about getting older, both from the perspective of one who ages and from philosophers, anthropologists, sociologists, artists, and writers. If anyone knows Joe personally who reads this, share these quotations with him and Jill. He has nothing to fear and everything to gain. He has been and can be still our hero and example.

Aging is a gift – “Aging is a gift, a chance to keep growing, learning and experiencing life in new ways. It’s about defying limitations and embracing the possibilities that lie ahead… It’s not about passively accepting age it’s about actively living each day to the fullest, wrinkles and all.” -David S. Cantor

Senility and Aging – “I feel as if I’m losing all my leaves. The branches, and the wind, and the rain… I don’t know what’s happening any more. Do you know what’s happening?” -“The Father” with Anthony Hopkins

Compensation of Growing Old – “The compensation of growing old, Peter Walsh thought, coming out of Regent’s Park, and holding his hat in his hand was simply this, that the passions remain as strong as ever, but one has gained – at last! – The power which adds the supreme flavour to existence – the power of taking hold of experience, of turning it round, slowly, in the light.” -Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway

Respecting the Aged – “Respect an old man who has lost his learning: remember that the fragments of the tablets broken by Moses were preserved alongside the new.” – -Babylonian Talmud, B’rachot 8b

The Aging Artist – “The art of fresco was not work for old me…one paints with the brain and not with the hands.” -Michelangelo

“Clouds of affection from our younger eyes / Conceal the emptiness which age descries. / The soul’s dark cottage, battered and decayed. / Let’s in new light through chinks that time hath made.”-Rembrandt

Characteristics of Old-Age Style in Work of Greatest Painters and Sculptors – “A sense of isolation, a feeling of holy rage, developing into what I have called transcendental pessimism: a mistrust of reason, a belief in instinct. … the feeling that the crimes and follies of mankind must be accepted with resignation… a retreat from realism, an impatience with established technique and a craving for complete unity of treatment, as if the picture were an organism in which every member shared in the life of the whole.” – Kenneth Clark, Aging Artists

The Complete Life – “The complete life, the perfect pattern, includes old age as well as youth and maturity. The beauty of the morning and the radiance of noon are good, but it would be a very silly person who drew the curtains and turned on the light in order to shut out the tranquility of the evening. Old age has its pleasures which, though different, are not less than the pleasures of youth.” -W. Somerset Maugham, The Summing Up

Loving Life – “No man loves life like him that’s growing old.” -Sophocles, Acrisius

Growing Old – “Grow old along with me! / The best is yet to be, / The last of life, for which the first was made.” -Robert Browning

The Secret of Old Age – “The secret of a good old age is simply an honorable pact with solitude.” -Gabriel Garcia Marquez, One Hundred Years of Solitude

Continuing On – “There is only one solution if old age is not to be an absurd parody of our former life, and that is to go on pursuing ends that give our existence a meaning.” -Simone de Beauvoir, The Coming of Age

The Blessings of Age – “For age is opportunity no less / Than youth itself, though in another dress. / And as the evening twilight fades away / The sky is filled with stars, invisible by day.” -Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Morituri Salutamus

A Truth About Growing Older – “As you grow older, you will discover that you have two hands, one for helping yourself, the other for helping others.” -Audrey Hepburn

The Life of the Elderly – “We cannot live the afternoon of life according to the program of life’s morning.” -Carl Jung

The Art of Growing Old – “The art of growing old is the art of being regarded by the oncoming generations as a support and not a stumbling block.” -Andre Maurois, An Art of Living

Jerusalem Youth Chorus on America’s Got Talent

17 Wednesday Jul 2024

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Uncategorized

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Watch this spectacular audition with Israeli and Palestinian teens singing “Home” together. A must watch in these tough post-October 7 times.


https://www.jta.org/2024/07/17/culture/jerusalem-youth-chorus-advances-on-americas-got-talent-with-performance-of-home?utm_source=JTA_Maropost&utm_campaign=JTA_DB&utm_medium=email&mpweb=1161-74884-93170

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