h/t der Forverts
Blogging since 2.0 was a thing
Urban Institute: Implications of Partial Repeal of the ACA through Reconciliation
Center for Budget and Policy Priorities: Eliminating Two ACA Medicare Taxes Means Very Large Tax Cuts for High Earners and the Wealthy
Mazel Tov to the Forward for recording Daniel Kahn’s brilliant “transdaption” of the Leonard Cohen classic.
Reprinted from this week’s Jewish Standard.
On Shabbat morning, August 8, 2015, my mother died. On Sunday, October 16, her gravestone will be unveiled. Here is the eulogy I delivered at her funeral.
“My mother, my teacher,” is how we refer to our mothers when we pray for their blessing in the Grace after Meals.
My mother unquestionably was my earliest teacher, but those earliest lessons date from long before my memories coalesced. What I can remember, though, what stands out for me, and what I want to share, is what my mother taught me in her final months of cancer and illness, through both example and conversation.
“If they get the chance, Paul Ryan and the Republicans will do what they say they want to do. They are true believers, cult-like in their allegiance to the money power, and religious in their devotion to the alleged character-building benefits of poverty. They are not committed to building a viable political commonwealth. They are committed to something very much darker.”
<a href=”http://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2016/10/6/13163220/trump-hotels-and-casino-resorts?utm_campaign=vox&utm_content=entry&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook”>http://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2016/10/6/13163220/trump-hotels-and-casino-resorts?utm_campaign=vox&utm_content=entry&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook</a>
A Vox article spells out the scam.
Hey Twitter: I’m just testing out my new yudel.com YudelLine blog.
My story in this week’s Jewish Standard:
It is the season for seeking atonement for broken promises.
Which turns out to be convenient timing for Israel’s chief rabbinate, which stands accused of breaking a promise to America’s leading body of Orthodox rabbis — as well as violating long-accepted Jewish law concerning the welcoming of converts.
At issue is the recent decision by the rabbinate, whose decisions determine whether someone can marry or be buried in Israel as a Jew, to require further investigation into the conversions of four people who converted in America under Orthodox auspices.
This despite the fact that these converts had had their conversions investigated and stamped kosher by two leading American Orthodox rabbis: Rabbi Gedalia Dov Schwartz of Chicago, who heads the court of the Rabbinical Council of America, and Rabbi Mordechai Willig, who teaches Talmud at Yeshiva University and is considered another one of the Rabbinical Council’s authorities in Jewish law.
In Teaneck, the Israeli government rabbinate’s refusal to trust America’s leading Orthodox rabbinic group was greeted harshly by Rabbi Shalom Baum, who leads Congregation Keter Torah — and more to the point, is serving a two-year stint as the Rabbinical Council’s president. Rabbi Baum put his name to a press release that “strongly” objected to the chief rabbinate’s action.
“We have already begun an investigation into this latest disgrace and we demand a thorough report of how this could happen,” Rabbi Baum said, in a press release issued by the RCA.