What the rabbi does not mention is the elephant in the room.
Why not ? Maybe fear. But the elephant is there, nonetheless.
 
The political Left is increasingly anti-Semitic. Now, in California
--where else ?-- Left-wing inspired anti-Semitism is becoming
mainstream, for now just through the ludicrous issue of circumcision.
But this is only the start. 
 
"Vote Democratic and help rid the world of Jews." Not quite what
is on the table for the national party, but it is coming. Not this  year,
probably not next, but the portents are clear enough. To the extent
that California is a bellwether state, its hard to miss, and can only
be missed if you simply don't want to see it and refuse to see it,
or are so uninformed that you  haven't heard the news, the
hard Left is increasingly anti-Semitic. Most normal Democrats
are anything but anti-Semitic, but the trouble is that the further  Left
in the party almost always pulls the leadership along with it , 
in due course.
 
For which , the Republicans, in their usual fashion, refuse to talk
about anything that doesn't hold promise of earning money
for Fat Cats. A rising tide of anti-Semitism on the Left
as a subject for discussion ?  It is beneath their dignity
to talk about, especially since doing so would distract
from what it really important, what to do about 
capital gains and cutting still more taxes.
 
You can not possibly understand just how sick and tired
I am with BOTH political parties.
 
Billy
 
--------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
 
 
 
Jewish Journal
June 2,  2011 
The realities of the circumcision  debate
by Rabbi Michael Gotlieb

There is nothing esthetically appealing about a Brit Milah, the 
circumcision  procedure performed on an 8 day old Jewish baby boy.  To witness 
a barely 
 one week old child strapped down with Velcro to a “Circ Board” in sight 
of  everyone gathered is visually unappealing, if not spiritually 
uninspiring.   If that were not enough, some officiants still engage in 
Metzitzah—the 
oral  suction of blood from the circumcision. If not done by mouth directly, 
a pipette  is used. 
To make matters worse, some ceremonies are complete with crude, unholy  
behavior and locker room jokes. I can’t repeat what one officiant said as he  
un-swaddled his grandson in preparation of the baby’s Brit Milah. 
Is there any wonder why Jewish parents are slowly opting out of the ancient 
 ritual of circumcision performed on their newborn sons independent of the  
ongoing medical debate as to whether or not the procedure’s even  
warranted?  Is there any wonder why circumcision is currently under attack  
with the 
possibility of it being outlawed in the destination city of Santa  Monica, 
should it be put to a vote this September? 
But leaving aside all the issues that may or may not compel one to 
circumcise  their son, the decision is for the family to ultimately decide, not 
the  
government—or even one’s religion for that matter. 
As a congregational rabbi, I can only make the case to my congregants for  
having their son’s circumcised in accordance with Jewish law and  tradition. 
 I can actively recommend to them officiants who conduct  ceremonies with 
the utmost professionalism, skill and compassion. 
I can tell them the ceremonies to which these hand-selected officiants  
preside are warm, offering meaningful words and explanations.  They welcome  
the child into the covenant of God and the Jewish people making clear that our 
 hopes for this young life—once grown—consist of “Torah, marriage and acts 
of  goodness.” 
I can teach them the overarching purpose of a Brit Milah is not biological, 
 but rather theological. It is a physical reminder intentionally made on 
the male  organ of progeny.  It states before God and community the male 
drive, be it  sexual or otherwise, is a good and healthy force. But left 
unchecked and without  limits can become destructive and all consuming. 
I can inform them that the current debate among doctors and researchers  
regarding circumcision is mixed.  I can tell them that while science is an  
indispensable discipline to the enrichment of life—it is far from exact and  
constantly changing. 
It seems that over a 7 to 10 year period, conventional “state-of-the-art”  
medical wisdom is turned on its head and re-evaluated.  I recently took a  
CPR course that contradicted and rewrote what was taught to me just 4 years  
earlier.  Today circumcision is under scrutiny.  Even though all over  
Africa where AIDS kills scores of people, billboards exhort men to get  
circumcised, since circumcision prevents AIDS in many cases. Years ago it was  
recommended without hesitation. I suspect 7 to 10 years hence doctors and  
researchers will again offer a different and new perspective on the subject. 
In the meantime the wisdom of a 3,500-year-old Jewish tradition continues 
to  advocate circumcision on religious grounds.  Parents who choose to have  
their 8-day-old son circumcised are not mutilating his genitalia, anymore 
than  piercing a little girl’s ears is mutilation.  Furthermore, it is  
un-provable that a child who is circumcised, as a baby will grow up having less 
 
sexual satisfaction as an adult. 
True, no religion is above the law. No one who is found guilty of a legal 
or  moral trespass should be able to hide under the protection of his or her  
faith.  The Biblical days when someone guilty of a crime could find safe  
haven within the confines—“the horns”—of the priestly altar are thankfully 
long  past.  According to age-old rabbinic law, the law of the land is the  
law. 
But those who advocate outlawing circumcision to anyone 18 years or younger 
 equating it with a clitoridectomy are deeply misguided.  One is genital  
mutilation, denying a woman sexual pleasure, the other—male circumcision—is  
not.  I can’t help but think underlying the anti-circumcision movement is a 
 disdain for religious expression cloaked in a concern for a child’s well  
being. 
The American Jewish Committee calls the movement to prohibit circumcision 
as  “making a direct assault on Jewish religious practice in the U.S.”  That 
 may be true.  What is truer still, we have far more substantive issues to  
fill our ballots with come this September and November, banning 
circumcision  performed on children at the request of their parents and 
caretakers is 
not one  of them

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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