‘To the Doctor With a Needle, Everything Sounds Like CORONA’

A teenage friend had virus-like symptoms and a sore throat. He also got the silly automatic call (חקירות אפידמיולוגיות טכנולוגיות) from the Shabak spies because his phone passed next to a “confirmed” Corona patient. So, he was told to stay far away from the “selfless” government doctors and just wait (and wait and wait…!) for a Corona test. And stay under lockdown.

He refused the test (אכמ”ל) but stayed inside. Meanwhile, he wasn’t getting better. Then a relative had the unoriginal idea of looking down his throat. One glance and it turned out he has strep, not Corona. But he was not being treated with antibiotics, because he was never even examined, let alone tested…

Streptococcus is a lot more dangerous than Shekerona!

(Of course, no matter what happened, you can be sure this would become a Corona statistic. Heaven help us.)

Moral: Corona excepted, you are on your own. More so than ever.


P.S., I’m too upset to do this scandal justice here (and I’m probably getting details wrong).

Why They Stopped Showing Moshe Rabeinu’s Face

The recently nearly-reverent attitude toward our forefathers and ancient rabbis is near-blasphemous. Perhaps this was caused by the political necessity of unitary decision-making by Agudas Israel.

One outgrowth is the recent prohibition (see Rabbi Yitzchak Hutner quoted here) against showing the visage (even via dramatic illustration) of Moshe, David Hamelech, et al. (in their adult years, anyway), see the approbations on the wonderful educational comics by rabbis Mordechai Chalamish and David Bichman.

On the other hand, we have a profusion of actual Gedolim photos (emblazoned with the out-of-context verse referring to Hashem: “והיו עיניך רואות את מוריך”)…

Most important, one should make it known this “prohibition” is a recent invention, with zero textual support.

 

GREAT NEWS: Loss of Faith In the Anti-Torah Establishment!

Israelis losing confidence in state institutions, poll shows

The 2020 Democracy Index finds only 42% of Israelis have faith in the High Court of Justice, merely 17% think social solidarity still exists. President Reuven Rivlin: Elected officials’ rhetoric is proving destructive.

The rift in the fabric of Israeli society is growing, the Israeli Democracy Index, shows. The 2020 index, a public opinion poll project by the Israel Democracy Institute.

Now in its 18th year, the poll, originally taken in June, was held again in October to account for what the IDI called the far-reaching effects of the coronavirus crisis on Israeli society.

The index, the summary of which was presented to President Reuven Rivlin on Monday, gauged the relationship between ultra-Orthodox and secular sectors, between Jews and Arabs, between the public and the government, and between the public and the police in the context of the global crisis.

The troubling finds show a decline in each of these parameters since the original poll was held six months ago.

The data found that only 17% of the public believe social solidarity still exists in Israel – a significant decrease from June, when the figure stood at an already worrisome 33%.

October’s data is the lowest for this criterion in a decade.

Only 32% of Israelis currently think the economy is doing well, compared to 37% in June and 50% in 2019. Some 64% think Israel is a good place to live in – a drop from 76% who said as much in June.

Some 61% said their current situation was “good” compared to 80% in June.

Over half of the public – 57% – worry that Israeli democracy faces a significant threat, compared to 53% who were concerned in June.

Sixty percent of Jewish respondents said the government showed democratic practices vis-à-vis the Arab sector, while 58% of Arab respondents disagreed with that claim.

The index further showed that public confidence in state institutions was shaken over the coronavirus crisis.

The IDF still ranked top for Israelis, with 81% saying that as of October, they had full faith in its ability – a drop from 90% in 2019.

This is the lowest figure pertaining to the IDF since 2008.

Some 56% of Israelis said they had faith in the presidency – a drop from 71% in 2019 and 63% in June.

Only 42% have faith in the workings of the High Court of Justice, down from 52% in June; confidence in the police dropped to 41%, followed by the public’s faith in the media (32%), the government (25%), the Knesset (21%) and political parties, the confidence in which has sunk to 14%.

From Israel Hayom, here.