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Posts Tagged ‘Olmert’

70 years after Kristallnacht

November 12th, 2008 admin 2 comments

It’s sad that on the 70th anniversary of Kristallnacht,  Ehud Olmert and Tzipi Livni felt compelled to mitigate their political vulnerabilities with offers of appeasement to Palestinian terrorists.

Political spin is not a sound replacement for national pride.

Translated literally from the English as the Night of Broken Glass, Kristallnacht was a pogrom  in Nazi Germany in November 9-10. That night, 82 Jews were murdered and 25,000–30,000 were arrested and deported to concentration camps.

Olmert, Livni and Peres should listen up and learn from an event that happened this Friday in Berlin.

I got this item – courtesy of Joseph Bernadette.

The Rykestrasse synagogue in Berlin was torched  on Kristallnacht. This past Friday  saw rabbis bringing the Torah to the synagogue, in a ceremony witnessed by political leaders and Holocaust survivors from around the world. The synagogue, with a capacity to seat 1,200, has been described as one of the jewels of Germany’s Jewish community. Rabbi Chaim Roswaski, who presided at the ceremony ,described the reconstruction as “a miracle.” The re-opening comes at the start of a Jewish culture Festival this week in Berlin.

Who would have thunk?

US companies had no plan for the downturn?

October 24th, 2008 admin Comments off

Alistair Milne, a professor at the City University of London’s Cass Business School deserves gets my nomination for Cassandra of the year award.

I saw a report on BNET this morning that “1/3 of US companies had no plan for the downturn”.

In Israel it’s more like 99% of companies and 100% of the government (Tzipi Livni is still clueless that anything is going on the world financial markets and Ehud Olmert and Ehud Barak have already taken profits and deposited them in an off-shore account).

A year ago I blogged about the upcoming recession – :

American Economic Association’s two-day annual meeting in New Orleans spoke of a recession as almost a given but differed over how severe it will be. Alistair Milne, a professor at the City University of London’s Cass Business School, said he’s expecting “a really weak year,” he said, the US economy won’t likely get back on track until 2010 and will require more capital from overseas.

On Sarah Palin and Zipi Livni

October 5th, 2008 admin 1 comment

This political cartoon was posted exactly 2 years ago in the Jerusalem Post. The world financial markets are on fire and Zipi Livni  is busy logrolling and playing spin the bottle with Shas and the Labor Party (who are trying to disguise their own version of corruption as a social conscience).

Omer Zak has written recently about a systematic flaw in Israel’s defense strategy

I know it is fashionable the past 2-3 years to talk about not starting a war without knowing how you are going to get out or what you will do the next day “after”. Iraq, Lebanon etc…

I like Omer’s thinking, but I happen to disagree with him on two basic issues:

1) The root cause of the problem (winning wars and losing the country)

Omer is correct that Israel has a systemic problem. but  I disagree that it is Israelis agreeing on what kind of country they want.

Before we attain national consensus (and one can argue that in a true democracy there will never be total agreement on anything), we need to have leaders who can define what they want for the country, and not what they want for themselves.

Israel needs leaders with values. Sharon was a leader but his values were shady.   Olmert is not a leader and his values are corrupt and corrupting.   Livni is neither a leader nor a value role-model.  Her only qualifications for the job are that she has kept her nose clean in 7 offices; but being a woman and currying to Politically Correctness cannot cut it when the world economy is on fire. Let’s compare Livni to Sarah Palin – Sarah Palin has better hair, better fashion taste, an (albeit short) track record in Alaska (Livni’s only asset is that she has no record at all…), and is a tough public speaker (Livni doesn’t even score in this category because a) she doesn’t speak in public and b) her English is atrocious to the point of embarrassment.

We deserve better; the only way we will get good national leadership is by demanding it.

2) Why our leaders don’t lead?

Omer believes that “A consequence of the internal conflicts [in Israel] is that it is impossible for any Israeli leader to define, articulate and consistently pursue any coherent set of [war] goals.”

Olmert’s and Barak’s spin tactics cannot change the fact that they are fundamentally weak and corrupt leaders.   Weak leadership and corruption are not a result of a free-wheeling market of ideas and the  internal conflicts that ensue.

We will never get the leadership we need without getting back to basics; the basics of democracy, making Israel a country for the people, by the people and of the people.

Perhaps we have become inured to the corruption and violence, but we must remember what Thomas Jefferson wrote over 200 years ago:

“We can no longer say there is nothing new under the sun. For this whole chapter in the history of man is new. The mighty wave of public opinion which has rolled over it is new.”
–Thomas Jefferson