T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
103.1 | Crazies? | CURIE::GOLD | | Tue Apr 08 1986 13:03 | 11 |
| It is even worse. Not only do they throw stones at peole on their
streets, but they throw stones at people passing by on main streets
and highways. Several people have been seriously injured by these
attacks. I remember riding by on a bus once, and seeing these madmen
yelling and screaming and waving their fists.
They also do not believe there should be a state of Israel, because
only the messiah can bring a state of Israel into existance.
Jack
|
103.2 | diff'rent strokes... | KATIE::RICHARDSON | | Tue Apr 08 1986 13:07 | 17 |
| Meah Shearim is an interesting place. The streets going into that
area (which is only maybe five by two blocks) are well-marked by
overhead signs, detailing the rules that the people who live there
follow and expect visitors to follow, mostly (SIGH) having to do
with very lengthy and complex women's dress codes. If you follow
the rules, it is a very interesting place. I stayed far, far away
from there from noon on Friday until Sunday, though. Meah Shearim
is not on the way from anywhere to anwhere else, really, so there
is no need to offend the residents (even if their ways are not your
ways) by driving through there - hmm, actually, the edge of it may
be a shortcut to the Damascus Gate from part of the new city, but
you certainly don't have to go there. I think the same separation
is true of the other "super-strict" neighborhoods. Kahane is an
exception, even amongst his own followers, and so are the bus station
vadalizers.
/Charlotte (hoping to return to Israel one day)
|
103.3 | Who's throwing stones? | GRAMPS::LISS | Fred - ESD&P Shrewsbury MA | Tue Apr 08 1986 13:46 | 35 |
|
> comment: One would think that after 2000 years of being
> made to conform to someone elses religious view of things , Jews
> ,of all people, would be sensitive to other's beliefs.
>
> David
>
Re 0
Do you think the verbal stones you throw hurt any less than
the ones that strike the passing cars?
You use terms such as "self imposed ghetto". I live in
Worcester's West End. This is one of Worcester's two Jewish
neighborhoods. I live here because I wish to live in a Jewish
community that respects the Sabbath (to the letter of the
Law). Here, religion means more than occupying a seat on
Friday night and Saturday morning. It continues on a
religious and personal level throughout the week. Tell me
David, what about Brookline, Cambridge, Newton, and the
countless other "ghettos" around Boston?
>
>question: 1. How dare they impose their religious beliefs
>on non-orthodox Jews,Christians and Moslems?
>
I think it is despicable that the Reform Rabbis have banded
together and are petitioning the American Jewish Federation
to withhold all funds from Israel until they are accepted as
Rabbis in Israel.
Fred
|
103.4 | shades of the Ayatollah | BIGALO::SPECTOR_DAVI | | Tue Apr 08 1986 13:57 | 18 |
|
re:2
I have no problem with anyone's religious prohibitions as
long as they limit it to themselves in their home,synagogue,church
job,etc..
I feel very uncomfortable when it is imposed by force on
public streets,sidewalks,buses,public swimming areas,etc..
If they feel that strongly about it let them remain in
their homes on the sabbath with the blinds down.
Although they are not going around executing people like
the Ayatollah there are certainly many similarities to his gang.
David
|
103.5 | Out in the open! | GRAMPS::LISS | Fred - ESD&P Shrewsbury MA | Tue Apr 08 1986 14:29 | 14 |
| < Note 103.4 by BIGALO::SPECTOR_DAVI >
-< shades of the Ayatollah >-
"If they feel that strongly about it let them remain in
their homes on the sabbath with the blinds down."
Every Erev Shabbos we light seven candles very close to our dining
room window. Do you suggest we close the shades so as not to offend
some non-religous Jew that may be walking by our house.
Fred
|
103.6 | In the spirit! | MTBLUE::SPECTOR_DAVI | | Tue Apr 08 1986 14:37 | 26 |
|
re: .3
> Do you think the verbal stones you throw hurt any less than
> the ones that strike the passing cars ?
Fred,
If, I have hurt you or anyone else by my note it was not
my intention.
> Tell me David, what about Brookline, Cambridge, Newton, and
> the countless other 'ghettos' around Boston ?
What about them? I did not say they were bad or good just
self imposed.
> I think it is despicable that Reform Rabbis have banded etc..
That is grist for another note. It is not a response to
my question. I have no ax to grind for either side.
Hoping_my_note_is_taken_in_the_spirit_it_was_meant
David
|
103.7 | Cool down!! | WHICH::SCHWARTZ | Steven H. Schwartz | Tue Apr 08 1986 14:58 | 53 |
| This is getting -way- out of hand.
There are two bodies of opinion here, each based upon fundamentally
different beliefs:
1) We live in a democratic society (Israel or U.S.). As such, we
are permitted to behave freely provided we do not cause tangible
harm to others. Loosely stated, but I believe accurately.
2) As Jews, we are required to live in accordance with halacha.
Shabbat is a fundamental concept of the Halacha. Divine
providence toward Jews is determined according to how they fulfill
mitzvot. This is particularly true in Eretz Yisrael, where territorial
rights are given by G-d in return for observance of the commandments.
Again, loosely stated.
The Streets of Meah Shearim have become a particular focus of this
disagreement. I believe in the validity of the halacha, and the
centrality of Shabbat to Jewish life. Throwing stones will not
help spread this message. I am no expert on halacha, but I know
of no heter (permission) for this practice.
On the other hand, there is no reason for these vehicles to proceed
through Mea Shearim. They are not servicing local buildings, and
the residents of the area desire that the streets be closed to
non-emergency vehicles during Shabbat. These are generally one-lane,
one-way streets, little more than alleys. They are -clearly- marked
by barriers. Anyone using these streets is probably going out of
his way. What should the Klan (lehavdil, let's distinguish)
expect if they march through Skokie?
So we have a conflict. Neither side -believes- it should compromise
with the other. Fine. I don't -believe- I should have to override my
cruise control while commuting on I-495. Nevertheless, there are
drivers out there whose habits strike me as less than courteous,
and sometimes I have to slow down or "floor it."
For residents of the Shabbat-observant neighborhoods to close their
streets does not strike me as unnecessary infringement of others'
rights, any more than a neighborhood block party which closes local
streets. "But the latter has a police permit!" Fine: I believe
that streets in mainly-observant areas -should- be legally closed
on Shabbat. I don't like the idea of streets in other areas being
open. But that's something I yield on, in return for free practice
of my own beliefs.
My ultimate wish is that the time will return when we -all- understand
the nature of Torah and G-d's intentions for all of us. It's been
a long time since the revelation at Sinai; the message has become
lost to many. I hope we regain it soon, not by blood, but by peace.
--- Steve Schwartz
|
103.8 | Let Shabbos shine! | MTBLUE::SPECTOR_DAVI | | Tue Apr 08 1986 15:07 | 15 |
|
re: .5
> DO you suggest we close the the shades so as not to offend
some non-religious Jew that may be walking by our house ?
Fred,
Absolutely not!!
My point was that it is the responsibility of the people
in Meah Shearim to avoid that public behavior which offends them
not to prevent that public behavior by force.
David
|
103.9 | My $.02 | PFLOYD::CHERSON | | Tue Apr 08 1986 17:30 | 33 |
| I've got to add my two grushim in this.
1) The section in which people had been throwing stones at passing
motorists in Jerusalem was not Mea Shaarim, but Ramot, which does
border on a highway.
Fred - If you've lived in Israel, then you'd be aware of the tyranny
of the Orthodox estabilishment, even many religious people admit
to it. These people are not kindly, Hassidic Torah sages you read
about in fables, but rather Eastern European social fascists who
want to impose their will by hook or crook(you bet) on Israel, and
by extension on all the Jewish people. The only reason they have
the power they have now is not from spiritual purity, but rather
through political manipulations with the first Ben-Gurion govt.
They have no right to discredit the Reform or Conservative movements
in the Galut. The entire "Who is a Jew" argument is a disgrace
for all the world to see. I'm afraid that I agree with the fact
that if you want to deal with the Orthodox estabilishment, then
you have to speak the same language, and if that means witholding
contributions (a tough thing for an Israeli to say) then so be it.
I have respect for anybody that graduates from ANY rabbinical school,
eight years is long road to hoe. I personally find the Reform movement
bizarre in many aspects, but I consider a sin to slander them (I
think there is even a perek in chumash dealing with slander against
another Jew). My brother's late father-in-law had graduated from
the Hebrew Union College, and he was a respected Torah scholar all
the same.
You'll never know you're on the road to heaven until you get there.
David
|
103.10 | Further thoughts | R2D2::GREG | Your friendly contact in Geneva | Wed Apr 09 1986 02:39 | 24 |
| Amen, David. I do however recall being in an army vehicle that was
stoned in Mea Shearim on shabbes and it took a great deal of self
control, personally not to deal with "these" people who constantly
address petitions to the UN demanding that the State of Israel be
abolished and managing to find ways of avoiding army service.
The orthodox community and their power, as David rightly stated,
is in the hands of a bunch of lunatics. Do you realize that we may
end up with 2 time zones in Israel this year because the minister
has decided not to enforce summer time (he is from the Guardians
of the Torah party) whilst the rest of the country will go ahead?
The debate of who is a Jew only aleniated a substantial part of
world jewery. For a country like Israel who is at least 75% agnostic,
please see the state of the beaches friday and saturday, to have
a minority wreck such havoc in a country is hard to beleive. Ministers
who are travelling abroad have to return by urgent flight in order
to cast their one vote so that the current coalition is not
overuled...the mind really boggles. If the orthodox had as much
tolerance for others as some others have for them it wouldn't be
bad however...the closing of the theaters in Ramat Gan,the abolition
of shabbes flights for El Al which cost the company dearly etc...
has certainly not endeared them to a lot of people. Howver as long
as the current system of elections continues we can expect the same
balagan (mess). Kahanism should be addressed as a separate note
:^)
|
103.11 | Who's an Orthodox Jew? | WHAT::SCHWARTZ | Steven H. Schwartz | Wed Apr 09 1986 09:37 | 29 |
| The news media have long fostered an image that "Orthodox" = Mea
Shearim. We're talking about what, 1000 families?
Re .10:
1) The Neturai Karta group, which advocates the disintegration
of the State of Israel, is on the order of 500 families -total-
(so I'm told).
2) The -government- is remaining on standard time. -Industry-
has decided to implement daylight time on its own (see elsewhere
in this notesfile).
3) My impression of Israeli society is ~15% halachic, ~15% secular,
and a bit more than 50% "traditional." The last group is not shomer
Shabbat, but hardly "agnostic." (These figures were given to me
5 years ago. Comments from TAV*::?)
4) El Al profits have -increased- since the company stopped
Shabbat flights.
5) Israeli government is organized on a multiparty system.
This ensures that relatively small groups which represent significant
portions of the population are represented in government. A fair
deal, given the diversity of Israeli society. There is a corresponding
import attached to every vote. Consider the alternative: a legislature
where "a few votes here and there" don't make a difference. Is
that preferable?
|
103.12 | ...since it was mentioned in .10 | WHAT::SCHWARTZ | Steven H. Schwartz | Wed Apr 09 1986 09:49 | 21 |
| Try this perspective:
For 2800 years, a Jew has been determined by:
1) his mother's religion;
2) halachic conversion.
Now, the Reform organization decides to change the rules. Trouble
is, the Orthodox organizations and most of the Conservative population
don't accept this. The end result is a two-class system:
1) clearly Jewish;
2) considered Jewish by some, Gentile by others.
Israeli society is already fragmented by various conflicts,
religious-secular, Ashkenaz-Sefard-Edat_haMizrachi, upper/lower
class. To recognize patrilineal descent would introduce
halachically/patrilineally Jewish to this cholent.
We don't need another battle front. The halachists make one formidable
argument: status quo. Changing it would worsen the problem.
|
103.13 | 50% traditional? | PFLOYD::CHERSON | | Wed Apr 09 1986 11:13 | 12 |
| While I can't say that I agree with what the Reform movement has
done vis-a-vis determining Jewish lineage, it's never going to make
me in the least sympathetic to the Orthodox estabilishment.
Whoever came out with the figures that only 15% of Israelis were
secular was completely wrong. What did change though were the number
of people declaring themselves "traditional". But you have to keep
in mind that the Israeli definition of traditional is far different
than what you practice as traditional in the diaspora; i.e., lighting
candles on Erev Shabbat, that's all.
David
|
103.14 | | TAV02::GOLDMAN | | Wed Apr 09 1986 11:50 | 16 |
| Certain neighborhoods are closed off on the Sabbath by
OFFICIAL police barricades. There is some sort of law
(possibly a municpal by-law) which says something to the
effect that if the majority (as in about 90%) of the
residents are Sabbath observent the road is closed.
This is with the exception of emergency vehicles on
emergency duty - as opposed to a bunch of people joy-riding
around in an army jeep/half-track or whatever.
As to the percentage of secular Israelis - I have no
figures but my gut feeling is that the number of totally,
and I mean TOTALLY secular Israelis is closer to 50%.
The stone-throwers are a definite minority and their
actions are NOT condoned by more than a very small fraction
of the ultra-orthodox community.
|
103.15 | Perspectives | R2D2::GREG | Your friendly contact in Geneva | Thu Apr 10 1986 02:44 | 33 |
| I think that a number of issues have gotten mixed in here. To clear
the matter perhaps separating them and dealing with them that way
will make things a little clearer.
1) Orthodox -> their power,% of population,# of Knesset seats
2) Who's a Jew as proposed by the bill submitted to the Knesset,
which was defeated
3) Other issues such as El Al flights on shabbat, summer time etc...
Re; .14, I don't beleive the IDF looks very kindly into "joy riding"
as you say in whatever vehicle Mr. Goldman, at least not when I
was there.
Percentages are difficult to come by, I was only using my eye sight
and estimating by the number of friends and so on who were either
on the beach or elsewhere on shabbes rather than at the synagogue.
I can't remember how many parties were represented at the last
elections, but it was something like over 24 (?). This makes it
very difficult to form a majority government without seeking coalitions
which are "on the verge" of breaking up because: Sharon said one
thing to Peres or Moda'i accused so and so of being ignorant etc...
At every turning a vote of confidence is called and ministers who
are abroad have to rush home since the absence of even one vote
causes the coalition to crumble. How the religious parties can hold
a whole nation to ransom, when viewed as to what power they really
represent nation-wide, is, for me at least, hard to reconcile.
The reason the Government is not implementing summer time but
businesses and the army (I read in some paper as well) is because
not enough time would be left for prayer purposes. Most countries
implement summer time in order to save on electricity etc... However,
I'm glad to see that Israel is rich enough not to need this kind
of saving...since all we have to do next year in ask Uncle Sam for
a further increase in the aid package.
|
103.16 | | TAV02::GOLDMAN | | Thu Apr 10 1986 07:38 | 41 |
|
> Re; .14, I don't beleive the IDF looks very kindly into "joy riding"
> as you say in whatever vehicle Mr. Goldman, at least not when I
> was there.
They sure don't look very kindly Mr. Greg, but it sure does exist!
I personally have seen cars driving through orthodox
neighborhoods tooting there horns with the (apparent)
sole intent of disturbing people.
> How the religious parties can hold
> a whole nation to ransom, when viewed as to what power they really
> represent nation-wide, is, for me at least, hard to reconcile.
Such is politics in many places. It is common to see relatively
small but highly visible interest groups wielding more political
power than their numbers would seemingly give them.
> The reason the Government is not implementing summer time but
> businesses and the army (I read in some paper as well) is because
> not enough time would be left for prayer purposes. Most countries
> implement summer time in order to save on electricity etc... However,
> I'm glad to see that Israel is rich enough not to need this kind
> of saving...since all we have to do next year in ask Uncle Sam for
> a further increase in the aid package.
The army and "businesses" have NOT implemented summer time.
A handful of small factories have shifted their workday to
start one hour earlier.
To date there has been no objective, definitive study produced
which claims that summer time will save energy in Israel.
I personally would like to see summer time implemented but I
feel that the energy saving thing is a crock. In the past,
when it has been done we still ran our airconditioners the
full workday. Also, in order to have hot water for a morning
shower I had to use electricity to heat up the water because
the sun had not been out long enough to give us hot water from
our solar heater.
|
103.17 | Change the title | PFLOYD::CHERSON | | Thu Apr 10 1986 09:46 | 6 |
| Wow, this discussion has really gone into a tangent! I suggest
that we change the title of this note from "Orthodox Bullies"(a
weird title, would have been a great name for a band during the
punk era - The Othodox Bullies!) to "the Whole Ball of Wax".
David
|
103.18 | We be smoking the Kosher Ganja. | CADLAC::MAHLER | Michael | Thu Apr 10 1986 10:00 | 11 |
|
I can see it now, a group of Chasid's,
Oy wee be Jammin, Mon !
Oy, Rast fa ?
Oy.
|
103.19 | Back to the original note | R2D2::GREG | Your friendly contact in Geneva | Fri Apr 11 1986 02:48 | 30 |
| So, trying to get back to the initial title of this note...
What I find disturbing is this: the rise of "Khomeinism" in Israel.
- The burning of bus stops in the Jerusalem area
- The increased number of youngsters that are being brain washed
by this ultra-conservatism that end them up saying "we're the guardians
of the law let Shmuel go to Beirut and get shot"
- The increasing intolerance of the VERY small minority and the
passivity of the majority
- The closing of movie houses on shabbat
- The cancelling of El Al flights on the eve of shabbat
- The Bill of who's a Jew
- The immersion requirements for Ethiopian Jews (I mean either they
are or they aren't if they aren't why the hell were they air lifted?)
- The summer time issue
The method of proportional representation in Israel was a good idea
initially, the problem with it is that so many parties are represented
that it makes forming a government a nightmare. How many parties
managed to squeeze in between Tehiya and Kach? It ends up being
a chouk:"I'll give you my donkey if you lend me a hammer". It's
no way to run a railroad and it sure as hell ain't a way to run
a country. We need a strong government who is able to tackle the
difficult issues which are "the day to day bread" in a decisive
manner. We don't need to have a party simply there to arrange deals
between Moda'i, Peres and Shamir. We don't have to have votes of
confidence on every single little disagreement,and in any normal
country should someone have uttered the words of Sharon or Moda'i
he would have been out so fast they would have had to send his bags
after him...NOT spend 2 weeks trying to find a compromise solution.
|
103.20 | a hierarchy of cemetaries? | DELNI::GOLDBERG | | Fri Apr 11 1986 11:42 | 30 |
| Tourists visiting a Druse village are asked not to photograph the
women. So they don't. In houses of worship and in domiciles
throughout the world, it is cusomary to remove one's shoes before
entering. And so we do. Why cannot the same people who respect
such customs do the same when it comes to Mea Sharim? Does respect
for the customs of other stop at the borders of our co-religionists,
as much as they may deny a commonality of religion with those outside
of their community?
But. Enough is enough!
I read in the Jerusalem Post that violent objections are being raised
against the interment of a Reform Rabbi in the Mount of Olives
cemetary. Concrete blocks, in fact, were placed around the grave,
presumably to that the consecrated ground will not be desecrated
beyond the remains interred there.
What next?
Will there be, in the future, cemetaries for the conservative, for
the orthodox, for the ultra-orthodox, for the reform Jews? And
the remains of one who was born of a conservative and orthodox union?
Where shall they be interred? May and orthodox son say Kadish for
a reform father? HOw about the reverse? Is it possible that an
entire set of Nurenberg-like laws will have to be written to determine
who is a dead Jew and who is not?
Who are these people who would take a religion that examines and
blesses this life, this world, and turn it into a hierarchy of cemetaries?
|
103.21 | | WHAT::SCHWARTZ | Steven H. Schwartz | Fri Apr 11 1986 13:32 | 25 |
| Preface: I don't rely upon the Jerusalem Post any more than upon
National Public Radio. The paper sports an unabashedly anti-Torah.
Much of the "religious" conflict in Eretz Yisrael appears to be
political, i.e., "I want," rather than, "the Torah specifies."
This happens within the halachic community, as well as in contact
with the greater population. This is also seen here, though to
a lesser degree.
-Who- is raising these "violent objections"? A community council?
A group of individuals? The Chief Rabbinate? If I were to run
a red light, does that make all "Orthodox Jews" traffic violators?
That's like saying, "All secular Jews accept intermarriage," because
a subset are vocal about it.
I don't know enough about this cemetery case to comment upon it.
I -do- resent this "look what the frummies are up to now" attitude.
A converse attitude thrives within the halachic community.
Of course, each side justifies its own behavior. That's a natural
human response.
I have strong intuition that most denizens of the world are not
"into" calm, reasoned discussion, as (usually!) occurs in this
notesfile. Let's keep that in mind when evaluating the actions of
"outside" people.
|
103.22 | That was way-out | PFLOYD::CHERSON | | Fri Apr 11 1986 15:19 | 13 |
| I don't think that discussion is leading to anything fruitful anymore
(if it did at all). Calling the Jerusalem Post anti-Torah is a
bit way-out of a remark. I never thought of it as that, just a
shitty paper, that's all. If there is any bias, it rests with the
great number of South African Jews who work on it, that's why we
always see a story about a South African zionist who laboured over
the thought of having to give up cheap household help in order to
come to Israel.
By the way, what's wrong with NPR? It happens the only unbiased
and informative news service in the U.S.
David
|
103.23 | Information = Power | WHAT::SCHWARTZ | Steven H. Schwartz | Fri Apr 11 1986 15:35 | 18 |
| Re .22:
I don't agree that NPR is unbiased. I -would- say that they carry
stories that the -other- news services are biased against. I heard
a radio editorial the other morning -- may have been WEEI (Boston
all-news). The gist was that journalists should take a more -active-
part in hostage negotiations and resolution.
If information is power -- and -no-one- working for DEC should doubt
that -- then information control is a form of power brokerage.
It occurs to me that the following tidbit was not well-publicized
over here: Several weeks/months back, an ad appeared in one of
Israel's dailies. A group (the name escapes me for the moment)
threatened that if any more religious -legislation- were passed,
they would start a civil war. This was -not- a "religious" paper,
but Ma'ariv/Ha'aretz or somesuch.
|
103.24 | Or Lagoim? | TAV02::NITSAN | | Sun Apr 13 1986 08:20 | 40 |
| To any of you: You are lucky that your name is not "Cohen", you
don't want to marry a divorced woman, and you don't live in Israel...
Well I hope not not offend anybody, nor do I have solutions to the
problems stated here (excuse me for mistakes in English, ok?), but
I do feel that sometimes I am forced to do things that disturb me
without any good reason (as I see it) because of religous people
in Israel.
Again, these things tend to "flame" some people, which I try to
avoid, so I'll just say what bothers me:
It bothers me that I am convinced (by radio, TV, newspapers, feelings)
that summer-time clock will help us, but we don't have it. I KNOW
it will help me personally (am I an exception?).
It bothers me that Arab members of the Knesset vote on "who is a
jew", NOT because they are arabs, but because I think the subject
should not be discussed in the Knesset.
It bothers me that my wife HAD to go bathing in this place with
green smelly water in some old building in Tel-Aviv in order to
GET PERMISSION for marrying me.
It bothers me that some rules about kosher food are made as laws,
not because I am against kosher food, but when you make it a law
it's not "kosher" food anymore, but "legal" food. I don't want
to feel as a criminal eating a cheeseburger (This is not the
situation... yet... I am just explaining the point).
Well, I have a long list but this is not the place to re-write
the Bible, but in general I feel that "being a jew" was once (let's
say... 3000 years ago) being ahead of your time, ignoring all these
ignorance around you, but seeing these black people with funny
black suits and everything, it somehow looks different today.
AGAIN, I do hope not to hurt your feelings, just stating an opinion.
Nitsan.
|
103.25 | | R2D2::GREG | Your friendly contact in Geneva | Mon Apr 14 1986 05:46 | 6 |
| Thank you Nitsan for trying to explain, from Israel, what it means
really; not what "one hears".
Perhaps you really should try and put down the rest of your thoughts
on it and we can get other people ba 'Aretz to contribute (Yonel,
Adi, Morris, Warren...) to see what impact this is having on your
daily lives.
|
103.26 | A good joke! | GRAMPS::LISS | Fred - ESD&P Shrewsbury MA | Mon Apr 14 1986 12:49 | 16 |
| < Note 103.22 by PFLOYD::CHERSON >
-< That was way-out >-
"By the way, what's wrong with NPR? It happens the only unbiased
and informative news service in the U.S."
Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha!
That was a good one Dave. The only thing you forgot was the smiling
face!
Fred 8-}
|
103.27 | A Clarification | PFLOYD::CHERSON | | Mon Apr 14 1986 13:13 | 17 |
| re:.25
Fred, let's just that I prefer NPR's biases over that of say, Rupert
Murdoch. What I really meant to say was that they are a preferable
alternative to what is passing for "news" organizations in this
country (U.S.). I don't think that there is a more informative
radio news show on than "all things considered". My wife who has
an aversion to news in general, says she has learned quite a bit
just from listening to this show.
By the way, when I lived in Israel, I found newspaper reading to
be the greatest aid in learning the language. I started out with
Omer (for beginners), and proceeded to read practically every Hebrew
paper in Israel. I became familiar with all the points of view
of the various factions by reading their rags.
David
|
103.28 | Editorials | GRAMPS::LISS | Fred - ESD&P Shrewsbury MA | Mon Apr 14 1986 13:45 | 12 |
| Re .27
I don't think it's a question of biased news. Today it is considered
good journalism to pass off editorials as news. Each reporter wants
to add his own flavor to the news and is not happy until he's pissed
on the fire hydrant. I'm guilty of the same thing myself. If I don't
like the weather report on one station, I tune in a station with
a weather report more suitable to me.
Fred
|
103.29 | | WHAT::SCHWARTZ | Steven H. Schwartz | Tue Apr 15 1986 09:42 | 2 |
| If I don't like the weather in the morning, I change to another
atmosphere.
|