Alex Rodriguez and the Sports Drug Culture

Alex RodriguezBarry Bonds was a sports hero but he has not played baseball since 2007.  He holds many baseball records.  He was charged with using performance enhancing steroids.  He has been accused of using those steroids as early as 2000.

Bonds is not the only sports figure accused of using performance drugs. Lance Armstrong, winner of the Tour de France seven times.  He does not deny using drugs.

There is little point in listing all of the sports personalities who have been accused of using drugs.  The issue is winning and making big money.

Money is the driving force.  Owners of professional teams are aware that there is the use of drugs.  It is not a new occurrence.  This has been happening for many years.

So what is new about the Alex Rodriquez suspension?  He is quoted as saying, “I am disappointed with the penalty and intend to appeal and fight this through the process.”  No denial!  The Yankees?  They are permitting him to play tonight.

You want me to attend baseball games?  You want me to support drug use?

Shame on the players.  Shame on the owners.

Trancoso’s Hidden Jews

More than five centuries after Portugal’s Jews were compelled to convert to Catholicism, the Torah has finally returned to Trancoso.  Today visitportugal.com recognizes the history of the Jewish population of the town.

by Michael Freund

Slowly but energetically, the festive procession made its way through the narrow and winding alleyways of the ancient Portuguese town.

The sounds of buoyant Hebrew song cascaded off the cool stone walls, prompting residents to open their windows and stare inquisitively at the unfamiliar sight, as dozens of people from across the country danced and clapped in a rousing surge of emotion.

Among the participants, who were all swept away in the moment, many a moist eye could be seen glistening in the midday sun at this remarkable and most unexpected turn of events.

More than five centuries after Portugal’s Jews were compelled to convert to Catholicism, the Torah has finally returned to Trancoso.

In a moving ceremony organized with the local municipality this past Sunday, Shavei Israel, the organization I founded and chair, arranged for the dedication of a Torah scroll to inaugurate the village’s new Jewish cultural and religious center.

It will serve the large numbers of B’nai Anusim (people whose Iberian Jewish ancestors were forcibly converted to Catholicism in the 14th and 15th centuries and whom historians refer to by the derogatory term “Marranos”) who reside in the area.

The facility, named the Isaac Cardoso Center for Jewish Interpretation, is named after a 17th-century Trancoso-born physician and philosopher who came from a family of B’nai Anusim. Cardoso later moved to Spain with his family and then fled to Venice to escape the Inquisition, where he and his brother Miguel publicly embraced Judaism.

He went on to publish a number of important works on philosophy, medicine and theology, including a daring treatise in 1679 titled The Excellence of the Hebrews, which defended Judaism and the Jewish people from various medieval stereotypes such as ritual murder accusations and the blood libel.

The initiative for the center came from Trancoso’s mayor, Julio Sarmento, who invested more than $1.5 million in erecting the modern structure, which will include an exhibition about the Jewish history of Portugal and the renewal of Jewish life in the region in recent years.

At Sarmento’s insistence, the building also contains a new synagogue, Beit Mayim Hayim, “the House of Living Waters,” whose name was suggested by Rabbi Raphael Weinberg of Jerusalem, the first rabbi to visit Trancoso.

Near the entrance to the synagogue is a memorial wall filled with the names of B’nai Anusim who were tried and punished by the Inquisition for secretly practicing Judaism, including some who were publicly burned at the stake in the 18th century, nearly three centuries after their ancestors had been dragged to the baptismal font.

Located in the Guarda district in Portugal’s northeastern interior, the charming village of Trancoso was home to a flourishing Jewish community prior to the expulsion and forced conversion of Portugal’s Jews in 1497.

A local journalist and historian, Jose Levy Domingos, who has spent decades lovingly recording and preserving the town’s Jewish past, has discovered well over one hundred stone etchings and other physical traces of that bygone era in Trancoso’s old Jewish quarter, some of which are poignant and emotive.

On typical Jewish homes, for example, the windows were laid out in a decidedly asymmetrical fashion, at varying heights and lengths, creating a sense of architectural imperfection and inadequacy.

Domingos explains that this was done intentionally because the Jews wanted to underline that only the Temple which once stood in Jerusalem embodied perfection.

Many of the medieval homes have crosses engraved adjacent to the entrance as an ostensible statement of piety. Fearful of running afoul of the watchful eyes of the inquisition, Trancoso’s B’nai Anusim also engaged in this practice, albeit with a twist.

Domingos points out that at the bottom of the etching, they added what appear to be three prongs, as if holding up the cross. But to Jewish eyes, it is clear what their real intention was as the three spokes clearly form an inverted “Shin,” the Hebrew letter that is often used to denote one of the Divine names.

This was how Trancoso’s hidden Jews sought to cling to their heritage, subtly indicating that they had not forgotten, nor abandoned, the faith of their forefathers.

The Jewish spark cannot be extinguished. We truly are the immortal nation.

It is in memory of their tenacity that we gathered dozens of their descendants, all of them Portuguese B’nai Anusim, to take part in the ceremony this past Sunday. Symbolically, we began the procession with the Torah facing a large and imposing cathedral in the very same public square where the Inquisition had once tormented Trancoso’s hidden Jews.

Speaking to the assembled crowd, my voice cracked with emotion as I pointed at the basilica and told the B’nai Anusim, “we are here today because your forefathers did not surrender to those who sought to force them to abandon their faith. They bravely and stubbornly clung to their Jewishness in secret, risking everything. Let us all take inspiration from their example.”

As we neared the synagogue, I noticed a young man, one of the B’nai Anusim from a nearby village, looking longingly at the Torah, but seemingly shying away from it at the same time. Taking the scroll, I went over to him and offered it to him to hold. He hesitated for a moment, the surprise on his face giving way to joy as he lovingly embraced it and danced it towards its destination.

It was, I later discovered, the first time since his ancestors had converted to Catholicism in 1497 that he or anyone else in his family had ever held a Torah in their arms, as far as he knew.

And then I understood as clearly as I have ever felt before: the Jewish spark cannot be extinguished.

We truly are the immortal nation.

David Bancroft

Who Should Receive Welfare?

Conservatives (GOP) are the group most likely to oppose welfare programs in America.  Their primary argument is that recipients rely on the benefits to the extent that they are not motivated to obtain employment.  After all why work when you can receive housing, food stamps, and money to pay for everything else.

The question is: If welfare aid was reduced would those relying on that money starve or go elsewhere in search of work?

 Of course the question is too simplistic. 

  • If a single mother has no one to care for her children where will the money come from for the day care?
  • Can the people receiving welfare perform a job?
  • Do any of these unemployed people have physical or mental handicaps?

This calls for discussion and compromise between the political parties.  It appears that agreements are an unlikely event.  Rigid positions taken by both Democrats and Republicans have brought congress to a near stand still.  When it ends, the 112th Congress will have passed about 220 public laws — by far the least of any Congress on record. This according to the Washington Post.

Unless the president finds a way to reach a compromise, the country will most likely be managed by continuing resolutions.  In other words, whatever we have been doing we will continue.  Current welfare recipients need not fear for the next three years.

We need new leadership in both houses and in the administration.  I look forward to 2016.

Elusive Solution for Unemployment

It’s a dog eat dog world.  For most people the attitude is your unemployment is not my problem.

If you were hoping that congress might pass some laws that would stimulate hiring, you will be disappointed.  Members of Congress are more concerned with their own employment than employment for everyone else.  Today is the last scheduled work day before both houses will recess until September 9.  Other than lowering taxes or starting major infrastructure projects there really is very little they can do to encourage employment.

Businesses look for ways to reduce their labor costs.  That means outsourcing and automation.    Today’s monthly employment report offers little hope for any significant relief in the next year.

The labor report says “In July, the number of long-term unemployed (those jobless for 27 weeks or more) was little changed at 4.2 million. These individuals accounted for 37.0 percent of the unemployed. The number of long-term unemployed has declined by 921,000 over the past year.”

If you really want to work you will have to take extraordinary measures.  It might mean moving to North Dakota (you can make $15 an hour serving tacos, $25 an hour waiting tables and $80,000 a year driving trucks). An alternative might mean moving out of the country (jobs in Alberta, Canada thanks to oil sands extraction).  Filipinos have emigrated throughout the world to obtain work.  Why not Americans?

Manning and Snowden are Not Alone

Bradley Manning Bradley Manning and Edward Snowden are not the first people to release government secrets and they won’t be the last.  Historically Daniel Ellsberg’s release of “The Pentagon Papers” is one of the most famous cases of a military analyst divulging government secrets.  Ellsberg, working for the Rand Corporation, worked on a top-secret report ordered by Defense Secretary Robert McNamara entitled U.S. Decision-making in Vietnam, 1945-1968 (The Pentagon Papers) copied the entire 7,000-page report and released it to the New York Times and Washington Post.

Aaron Swartz, another geeky computer type/hacker, recently committed suicide (January 11, 2013) while facing charges for downloading academic papers from MIT and digital library JSTOR.

Time Magazine (June 24, 2013), says the internet calls these geeks heroes.  They must not have read the conservative commentaries on these self appointed “heroes” who prefer the possibility of harm to Americans than protecting Americans. 

TIME Poll question:

What do you think of the government’s collecting phone records, e-mails, and internet search records?

48% approve

44% disapprove 

We just went to the Hollywood Bowl this past Saturday.  It is an outdoor amphitheater that holds 18,000 people.  The security when entering? A cursory check of our picnic baskets.  We did not have to remove all items before the checker said “OK.”

Millions of phone calls and e-mails are made daily in the USA.  What is the likelihood they are listening to your conversations?  Why would they want to listen?  Could the program be a review of where people are sending emails and phone calls?  Obsession with intruding into your business seems to be the objection to the NSA’s efforts to stop terrorists.  Let’s hope no someone, undetected, does not carry a bomb into an amphitheater on ball stadium.

Manning and Snowden may not have meant to help terrorists but they have harmed our efforts to stop them.

They should be jailed for decades.

Retirement Paradise

Pismo Beach retired-and-the-livings-easy

As I review the options I am horrified.  The reason is that most of us do not have the funds needed to live the same lives we lived when we were employed.  Social Security in the United States provides an average of $1,230 per month.  The Maximum Social Security Benefit for a Worker Retiring at Full Retirement Age is $2,513 per month.  So even if both spouses are eligible for the maximum benefit, an unlikely occurrence, the benefit would be $5,026 per month.  You have to save significant amounts to impact your retirement income.  I knew about the need to save a long time ago.  Feeding the family, paying the mortgage, and all the other bills just made this a difficult assignment to fulfill.

Then I read “Baby boomers’ mobile-home paradise” in The Week magazine.  I found this article depressing.  Most of these people are poor.  They have little to do to occupy their time.  How many times can you walk on the beach?  Pismo Beach is in a particularly bad spot in terms of warm days.  Every time we stop there on the way to San   Francisco the sky is overcast or it’s a sunny but very windy day.

Laguna Woods home

When my parents moved into Leisure World in Orange County, California (now called Laguna Woods) they at least had the money to enjoy their retired years.  That community has literally dozens of clubs and groups for a variety of interests.  The sad reality is that most people are not as fortunate as they were.  They accumulated the money by living in poor working class neighborhoods all of their working years.  When I grew up we shopped at Sears and JC Penney’s. Cars were driven until their next destination was the junk yard.

All retirement communities have two things in common – 1) you are surrounded by people at least your age and 2) your next move is to the grave yard.

As long as I am able to drive my car I believe I would be better off remaining in my home.  Mostly, it’s paid for.  I know the neighborhood.  I have easy access to shopping, doctors, and educational opportunities.  When I can’t drive a car I might consider Leisure World.  It’s expensive but I can’t take my money with me.

Environmentalists Gone Wild

Environmentalists have the desire to return the earth to its native state EVERYWHERE.  Thus their idea is to limit national park access to hikers only.  No cars or other vehicles should be permitted to enter.  Entering Yosemite Valley would only be available for the hardy who can hike there from the park entrance.  Riding in an inflatable raft in the Merced River would be banned.  Grocery stores and gift shops would be closed.

The Environmentalists would also remove the concrete walls of the Los Angeles River.  It is really a wash that only holds rain water during the winter months.  There are no streams or creeks that feed into this wash.  There are no springs from surrounding hills that trickle in.

Despite the fact that the concrete walls protect the city from flooding that was prevalent in the first half of the 20th century and all times earlier the Environmentalists want the concrete walls removed to restore the natural appearance of the wash.  They have done such a good job of promoting their vision that a group called L.A. River Revitalization Corp. have convinced the Army Corp of Engineers to consider proposals costing at least $444 million for making the banks of the wash more environmentally pleasing.  At the high end the cost would be $1.06 billion.

1934 flooding before the LA River was controlled

A house that was washed a block away from the river, 1934

 Amnesia seems to have affected both our government officials and the general public.  As reported in the Los Angeles Times on February 12, 1992 “City emergency workers in helicopters and rubber boats rescued 48 people stranded in cars and other vehicles as floodwaters rose rapidly on Burbank Boulevard and other streets that run around and through the basin.”

kayaking-the-los-angeles-river

The concrete Los Angeles River was built to protect the city from massive flooding.  Sepulveda Dam, which was constructed in 1941, protected downstream neighborhoods (and allowed others to be built); the postwar concretization of the upstream riverbed allowed the development of the San Fernando Valley.  All of the homes and businesses from Canoga Park going downstream could be seriously impacted if those concrete walls were removed.  Kayaking down the Los Angeles River is not a necessity.  Protection from flooding is a necessity.

News Media – All About the Revenue

News Media Sign PostJust this past December everyone was talking about the killing at Newtown, Connecticut.  Then there were the Marathon Bombers.  And just two days ago there were hundreds of parades and demonstrations over the George Zimmerman verdict.

I was certain that “Justice for Trayvon Martin” would not be easily forgotten.  But the birth of a new prince in England has pushed everything off the front page.  Even “Hardball with Chris Matthews” devoted his entire program to the birth.

So my question is, How important are the daily stories presented in the news?  The media wants us to believe that the current story really is the consequential event.  They keep feeding us with a non-stop flow of tragedy and drama that suits their need to obtain advertising revenue.  And what does the public do?  We watch and listen to every bit of information no matter how trivial.

The newspapers are not much better than television and radio.  Washington Post’s front page article “For some, a drive across the Chesapeake Bay Bridge is a harrowing experience” may be interesting to some people but is this a front page story?  The Los Angeles Times Column One story The NRA newest Sensation tells of a Black man who is also a member of the organization.  Both stories might be interesting to some people but is this front page news?  To me it is trivial events that have little bearing on anyone other than their immediate families and maybe not even them.

Is it any wonder that so many of us have turned off the news broadcasts and canceled our newspapers?