tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4008006782907969381.post3354680568266810878..comments2024-01-01T01:47:59.449+02:00Comments on Yaacov Lozowick's Ruminations: The Idiocy of an Israel HaterYaacovhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12835192312242961481noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4008006782907969381.post-52566579429049804242008-08-20T18:46:00.000+03:002008-08-20T18:46:00.000+03:00FROM CAROL HERMANAh, me. In a different world, le...FROM CAROL HERMAN<BR/><BR/>Ah, me. In a different world, leading up to, and following WW2, there were plenty of Jews who made the limelight. And, whose books were read. <BR/><BR/>As a kid, I can remember (TV was black & white), my mother pointing at the screen and telling me: "He's Jew. "She's a Jews." And, then Elizabeth Taylor became one, too.<BR/><BR/>Now? Where has all the talent gone? Why are we so bereft of a voice that belongs to a Jew? (Okay, I happen to know that Matt Drudge's father is Jewish. But Drudge had real problems with him. And, it doesn't count. Because these days Drudge a convert.) But the talent? <BR/><BR/>Where's the rest of the talent?<BR/><BR/>The other thing I'd be willing to bet is that the Ha'Ha'aretz has an audience (separately). Some in Hebrew. Some others in English. And, their readership is probably to the left of liberal.<BR/><BR/>I just wish there were more voices out there.<BR/><BR/>There was a time a Jew coming to New York, saw 7 newspapers. Dailies. Afternoon editions. The Forward's. Everybody, it seemed, read. Everybody had a penny for a paper. And, everybody talked. Loudly. <BR/><BR/>Sure. The world changed. The "glories" of labor turned into something else. And, labor actually got left in the dust. Can't fix that, now.<BR/><BR/>As a matter of fact, when the world moves on you can't replace "yesterday" by tree-hugging symbolism.<BR/><BR/>Personally, I don't think today's youth even see the anti-Semitism that once was, when the Catholics shouted it out from their pulpits. And, other Christian faiths based their faiths on Jews being Christ killers.<BR/><BR/>Up ahead? Myths will tear off the old chazer. And, while there's plenty of competition to go around, there's only so much when it comes to success stories.<BR/><BR/>The golden age is gone, now.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4008006782907969381.post-28874543878124056722008-08-20T06:30:00.000+03:002008-08-20T06:30:00.000+03:00I agree she sometimes overdoes it. But it's the sa...I agree she sometimes overdoes it. But it's the same method you'll find in Zionist blogs, including yours -- clinging to some minor fault on the part of a newspaper, or, in this case, a translator, to make a petty point. (That said, Haaretzniks are not to be thought to be dumbasses who are unaware of the effect quotation marks will have on their English-language readers.)<BR/><BR/>However, she was right about Samson Blinded. Haaretz has stopped publishing ads for the hate-site. Ynet hasn't, however. One down, one to go.Ibrahim Ibn Yusufhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09839484683464457225noreply@blogger.com