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Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipant
Hashmonaim were wrong taking over malchus, being Kohanim and not from Yehudah. Did any of tannaim mention this when dealing with any of those kings or queens? I think they were mostly dealing with the current events of the time.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantThe discussion of 3 oaths was relevant 100 years ago. It is not now – when we have a state. See what Hashem says to Yonah regarding the kikayon.
It may be of historical interest to see who was right or wrong, but this is also limited – there were much bigger mistakes made 100 years ago, underestimating danger from Commies and Nazis to Yidden in Europe comparing with relative safety of EY and goldene medinah.Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantakuperma> An argument can be made that a Melekh Yisrael (which by definition is a usurper, since he isn’t from Beis David) who goes against Torah, can and should be overthrown
Not so fast. See discussion between Herod and Bava Ben Zuta in the beginning of Bava Basra – rabonim were very reluctant to talk against the government even when it was extremely bad.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantakuperma> By drafting, and arming, Hareidim who see the zionist state as lacking legitimacy, you are giving weapons to those who will turn on the medinah.
Do peleg really represent ajority of charedi public? Probably, a majority of them will quickly learn how to live with the Army without comproming their principles – as long as the leadership let them do it.
January 12, 2026 5:48 pm at 5:48 pm in reply to: Is Chabad Sacrificing Their Youth In The Quest For Outreach #2498280Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipant> how many balei tshiva have been led astray with faux-Chabad’s faux teachings
how many became baalei teshuva due to you and your community efforts?
January 12, 2026 10:54 am at 10:54 am in reply to: Lna’ar Hazeh Hispalalti? The Dissonance of Redemption #2497730Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantZSK, thanks a lot for looking it up! I am glad the story is confirmed. Would anyone know what charedi poskim say about such matters – either early on or now.
January 12, 2026 10:54 am at 10:54 am in reply to: Military Self-Defense is a Torah Halacha #2497726Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantguteyid> Set up a independent self-defense course and you’ll have many (C)hareidim join.
a gut point! Not sure why you expect someone else to set it up – the charedi community should do it on their own. Can start by policing people who attack buses and army events. Then, extend to protecting their communities.
January 12, 2026 10:54 am at 10:54 am in reply to: Military Self-Defense is a Torah Halacha #2497727Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantJust> Everyone would be obligated to become a doctor in order to save lives. Rav Moshe Feinstein zt”l famously rules that no such obligation exists.
Self-protection from attackers is different from being a doctor, and obligation would be different. And even when one is not obligated, we have a lot of people who are trying to be super-frum in mitzvos. Maseches Taanis describes a doctor who was visited by yeshiva shel maaleh more often than Abaye and Rava (despite his bloodletting methods were not the most effective ones – surely a fact known b’shmayim!). I would presume many would like to follow in his steps.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantsome> as Rav Elchonon Vasserman said in the name of the Chofetz Chaim: the zionists are amulek.
this seems to a new claim to me. Does REW indeed say “in the name of Chofetz Chaim”? Before I saw only references to REW himself.
And given how much Chofetz Chaim published, it would be good to confirm this in his own writings. I did not see such so far.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantKatan> LOL. As per halacha?
I have siddurim that have prayers for Emperor Franz Josef and for Czar Niklai Alexandrovich (different siddurim, not at the same time :). Ponevezh rav used kal vahomer for having Israeli flag from having Lithuanian Republic flag. So, my kal vahomer is much stronger. So, you should also have prayers asking Hashem to have President and Prime Minister favor the Jewish people.
January 8, 2026 8:29 pm at 8:29 pm in reply to: Have you ever had your mind changed on this forum? #2496764Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantCTL, I am not arguing against your personal experiences. I am just saying that your personal experiences should not colour your opinion about world events. And at least you have some personal reasons, but what about all others?!
It is reported but R- support for action against Maduro jumped from 50% to 75% in several days due to the success. It is understandable that some people were not sure this will work (I was in this group), but liked it when it happened. At the same time, number of D- supprt jumped by a factor of 2!! from 6% to 12% …. how is it possible that 90% of D-s are against something so basic as an arrest of a dictator? Not all D-s are commie supporters – you are not.
I don’t know if you knew well your Senator Joe Lieberman. He would probably have approved – but that only 10% of D-s are capable of supporting a good thing just because the other party did it – it is very sad.Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipanton military prison without glatt kosher salami: could their friends bring food to them or this was not allowed?
Also, rabbonim who advised their students to risk prison should be responsible for the quality of the accommodation. They should either bring the food themselves (R Arye Levin used to do that during the mandate) or negotiate with the prison authorities in advance: “Shalom, this is Rav ploni, I am planning to advise my talmidim to violate a law, is it possible to deposit some glatt kosher salami in your freezer?”
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipant> “simcha613” vs. HaGaon HaRav Shlomo Yedidya Zafrani shlita:
I understand that R Mazuz (for example) holds that both are true, so here it goes.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantZSK> the fact that you’ve reduced the vast, multi-faceted corpus of Jewish tradition to a single, 20th-century anti-statist polemic
what I found interesting in this discussion that R Elchonon was a close student of Chofetz Chaim and they were writing in the same time period. So, what explains such contrast between REW loud position and Ch.Ch. not taking the stand? Did they ever discuss this between each other?
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantsomejew> a tinok shenishbu – like every jew – is not עמיתך if he breaks any of the three re-lines I mentioned as that is the definitional Torah standard of עמיתך
Could you please consult your rov, and relate to us what he said. Usual definition of the tinok is the person who does not know anything. He is raised by Russian communists or Indian gurus. He does not know what shabbos is. He is shogeg. In fact, there is a discussion whether he later on needs to bring karbonos for things he did by mistake, without knowing.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantZSK> Secularist Zionism is, Religious Zionism isn’t. The State exists, deal with it – ideally recognizing what HKB”H has given us (by saying the prayers for the State and IDF per halacha
to be fair, specific R Kook’s prayer is not without a controversy. Maybe charedim could settle on a pareve version at the level of Der emperor Franz-Jozef.
As it is, I feel uncomfortable when there are tehilim after davening in black-hat shuls. Some ended, some continued after recent hostilities stopped. Are they saying it for the chayalim, or are they saying it for draft evaders? Even as my Rav paskened that “there is nothing wrong saying tehilim with other Yidden”, I am not sure what to do. As a comparison, karbonos are invalidated by a wrong machshovah.
On a related note, some charedim positions are for public consumption but not necessarily held universally (as we see from some posters here). When I explained my kids, who are in a moderate-charedi school, that “EY” is sometimes used to avoid saying “medinah”, like in “I am traveling to EY”, they were first appalled at the thought and denied that this is possible, then admitted, then started noticing that some of their teachers are saying stam “Israel” in the class, but not when in public.
January 8, 2026 8:29 pm at 8:29 pm in reply to: ICE Hero Kills Domestic Terrorist in Minneapolis Saving Lives #2496749Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantI would wait for more info. It could be that ICE agents were frustrated by others obstructing them, then this lady happened to be in a wrong place, panicked in response to instructions, first did not move when told so, then started moving when told to get out of the vehicle, the agent upfront sees her backing into agents behind without seeing exactly where everyone is …
January 8, 2026 8:29 pm at 8:29 pm in reply to: Is Chabad Sacrificing Their Youth In The Quest For Outreach #2496746Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantyedl > Kiruv Rechokim
a good point. This term makes it explicit. Just saying “kiruv” makes it sounds a little nicer – but to whom can “kiruv” be applied if not to rechokim?
It is like saying “differently abled” applied to “disabled”, not “gifted”, although direct reading could mean the latter.I don’t know whether LR or anyone else made a distinction. Does anyone know?
January 8, 2026 8:28 pm at 8:28 pm in reply to: Is Chabad Sacrificing Their Youth In The Quest For Outreach #2496745Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantqwerty> About 15 years ago, I attended the Jewish National Retreat, Chabad’s annual convention.
I am worried for your unhealthy lifestyle. Look, I am not fond of NK, so I don’t go to their shuls and conventions. It is ok to get into a discussion once ina while, but why are you torching yourself.
> However, this doesn’t mean that they shouldn’t work on the disenfranchised. They’re able to reach people who are out of the purview of mainstream Judaism.
Nothing stops others from doing the same, except that they have other priorities or consider this beneath them. To put this in halachik terms: there are Hashem’s lost sheep in front of you. You are obligated to return them to the rightful owner. If you consider this too lowly for you, then you don’t have to, R’L.
January 8, 2026 12:22 pm at 12:22 pm in reply to: Have you ever had your mind changed on this forum? #2496388Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantCTL,
so you prefer to live in the world where our enemies influence countries in the world while we live according to the rules? There is mitzva to surrender.If US was able to capture a dictator, improve chances for democracy in the country, improve US standing in geopolitics, decrease standing of various reshoyim – what makes you upset? See an article by our French brother H Levy in today’s 1/7 WSJ – he destroys such attitudes in much better English than mine. He has his own concerns, of course. There is no op-ed without concerns.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantHaKatan> Once the Zionists invaded and flagrantly violated everything they could, they turned the entire region and beyond into a nightmare for Jews.
I might have missed your answer to this question: the entire region, much larger than EY, was a nightmare for most groups after WW2, comparing with North America and Europe (west of USSR). Is this Zionist fault they all got mad? If not, then would you claim that charedim would continue living in peace in the middle of Nassers/Assads/Saddams/Ayatollahs/ISIS/PLO/Huthis? (and in the numbers we have now).
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantsomejew > @always_ask_questions
> I don’t know what you might mean by “secular”. I would rather this conversation be Torah-centric (sorry zionists)IDK, some (other?) jew used this word “secular” in his accusations, I was exactly trying to get some clarity! Thanks for switching now to “Torah centric” approach!
in which case the baseline of who is called עמיתך is:
1) michalel shabbos b’farhesia
2) generally keeps common mitzvos (kosher, mezuzah, tahars mishpuche, tzniyos, mechitza, etc)
3) believes in the 13 principals of faithChofetz Chaim and I 🙂 hold by captured tinokos. This is pretty clear in cases, say, Reform Jews in US and non-religious Jews who came out of Russia: they are not familiar with basic Torah concepts and they also might think that they are familiar with them.
Israeli Jews are a harder case, as one might think that by the virtue of proximity and lashon, they are not ignorami. But culture is still culture: they live among “their people”, their knowledge of religion is superficial, in part acquired by observing Yidden in unfamiliar kaftans marching by and paying no attention to them. Also, there are multiple sub-cultures out there. You seem to be focused on “Zionists”, but as Riva and others told you – there are no real anti-religious Zionists left out there – there are anti-religious secularists; there are partially religious pro-medinah Jews who are not attached to any anti-religious ideologies; there are religious Zionists with whom we don’t have to always agree, but who are doing fine on your 1-2-3 list.
To sum it up, I don’t think it is easy to characterize everyone, but my estimate is that number of non-amitecha is pretty small, B’H.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantThere is a report about Moetses meeting where there were apparently differing opinions about how to respond to the draft law. Can someone please clarify what the differences are?
January 7, 2026 7:18 pm at 7:18 pm in reply to: Lna’ar Hazeh Hispalalti? The Dissonance of Redemption #2496245Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantZSK> [RZ] hey rediscovered the parts of the Torah that the author has conveniently forgotten in the comfort of his Exile—the laws of Yishuv Ha’Aretz, the laws of Jewish sovereignty, and the laws of Pikuach Nefesh on a national scale.
Maybe you can help me clarify whether this is real. I heard this from a RZ rabbi – but I am very suspicious of any ideological bias – so I am not sure whether this is story is 100% yashar. So, according to him, early on in Israel (or even before the medinah) there was a problem (maybe in Haifa, not sure) – where the thieves figured out that it is much easier to steal cars on shabbat. So, mishtarah asked a shailah of an “old school” rabbi, who advised them that there is no pikuach nefesh, but there is some tzr for the tzibbur – so it is asur to do miduaraita, but possible to violate midrabonon – so the police should use bikes instead of cars to pursuit the thieves. This was obviously not helpful. So, a RZ psak is to allow mishtarah to do their job in order not to have all cars in the city driven to Lebanon.
January 7, 2026 7:18 pm at 7:18 pm in reply to: Is Chabad Sacrificing Their Youth In The Quest For Outreach #2496244Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantyankel> the other orgs accompany the person during the entire journey whereas habad concentrate on the mitsva actions
(and qwerty, I think, saying something similar).I don’t think this is the right separation. Their tefilin and candle campaigns may be the most visible for you as you pass the Time Square (and you probably should not be there in the first place!). Plenty of Chabadniks in communities and college campuses deal with their students over time. And plenty of kiruv organizations take students for a year and then have limited contact with them after that. And plenty of senior Rabbis are OK with a short interaction with a person who asks a shailah in person or in writing… in Tanach, a goyishe general needed a dermatologist advice and got an appointment with a navi, no problem.
January 7, 2026 7:18 pm at 7:18 pm in reply to: Is Chabad Sacrificing Their Youth In The Quest For Outreach #2496243Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantyedl> I don’t think Chabad ever used the word Kiruv.
Indeed, and LR explicitly disapproved it. I didn’t like this word also before finding out his position. Just because your parents sent you to a cheder, and his parents did not send him – does not make you closer and him further away from Hashem. Look at Michtav Eliyahu, essay about Sulam Yaakov – yes, different people start at different levels on the ladder, but they are all united with a challenge and desire to go up and danger of going down.
I think “kiruv” originated with Ohr Sameach and Aish, fine institutions as they are, but they probably needed a powerpoint slide to explain the concept to the donors. Just saying we need to save drowning Yidden somehow did not raise the funds …
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantanon1m0us, thanks for looking up Chofetz Chaim on tinokos hanishba.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantflaiming> current economic setting which makes it difficult for any family to have children.
the general tendency is that the richer the society is, the less children they have. Policies that pay more for children help, but very marginally.
China is especially interesting – they rescinded their “one child” policy – but it already became a cultural norm.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantZSK> suggesting that if Jews had simply remained “quiet” and “submissive”, their enemies would have treated them with kindness.
your opponent (or whomever he learnt from) are in a difficult psychological situation: the assumption that his group theories were fully, and the only ones, correct does not fit the facts that people who followed those theories were persecuted (unless they faced reality and were able to save themselves at the last moment), and those who were opposite them – somehow had some successes. So, he needs to redefine what “success” is and who to blame – and he will continue doing so. I think you, and everyone else, made their point. Let’s talk about something else interesting!
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantI believe R Mazuz said today or yesterday that there is no contradiction between love of Torah learners and love of IDF soldiers.
January 7, 2026 8:17 am at 8:17 am in reply to: Have you ever had your mind changed on this forum? #2495257Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantExCTL > . It stems from personal business dealings.
This is so great! There are so many people who call Trump names even when he is doing good things – and they are doing it for no reason at all and there is so far no medicine to heal them. And he you are – having a personal grudge. Understandable. I feel much better than you are not afflicted with TDS virus.
Halakhists here can clarify whether nekoma is applicable only to amecha or not.
January 7, 2026 8:16 am at 8:16 am in reply to: Lna’ar Hazeh Hispalalti? The Dissonance of Redemption #2495255Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantpekak, great we agree on a lot of points.
In terms of curriculum, it is a great point that Gemora sharpens the minds.
Ideally, we should have Abaye and Rava discussing cars and modern physics … One possible reason we don’t is that we don’t have minds that are comparable… even with the benefit of having all information and all methodology and tools (books, search methods, indices) that they did not have … it is quite possible, of course, that all this extra information hurts modern scholars more than it helps and we do not have any Abayes and Ravas…BTW, one gemorah conclusion is that the ocean is a better rosh yeshivah than the one that uproot mountains. This is not true anymore, as modern scholars can uproot mountains while using all the texts and tools we have.
Still, it seems that we are not even trying – we have halacha working in multiple streams. How often do we have two rabbis meeting and having a public discussion about halakha? Maybe I am too impatient – after all gemora is a summary over several hundred years, and modernity did not get there yet.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantsomejew > Secular people cannot be part of klal yisroel and it is forbidden to love them
chofetz chaim> ואפיקורוס נקרא הכופרok, so we found where you seem to disagree with me and, I think, most people here: are “secular” Israelis apikoresim? Note that this group includes “traditional” Jews who might not always be observant, but do not deny anything. Another group are “tikonot” that learned Tanach in their school version and do not have knowledge to be a kofer at all. Maybe some Haaertz writers (and even readers) qualify for apikoresim.
Note that sefer חָפֵץ חַיִּים was published in 1870s, where – in Litvish context – there were real apikoeresim to deal with. R Salanter at about same time moved to Paris as he felt that it is more productive to work with those at the bottom (tinokos) than those in Lita who were going down (apikoresim, if you want).
If someone has halachik discussion about how to consider modern Israelis in terms of עמיתך
January 7, 2026 8:16 am at 8:16 am in reply to: Is Chabad Sacrificing Their Youth In The Quest For Outreach #2495182Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantqwerty> What I take exception to is the propaganda that Chabad is Mikarev Yidden all over the world. Putting on Tefilin on a 90-year-old Mechallel isn’t Kiruv.
Qwerty, you are going to Newcastle – not to sell your coal, but to tell them that their coal is not good enough?!
“kiruv” organizations attempted to copy what Chabad – and many community rabbis – was doing before them: talk to Jews where they are. I already quoted R Soloveitchik commending Chabad about these activities before the latest LR became the head of the movement. RJBS himself addressed that by talking to college students and trying to raise community rabbis so that they can lead small congregations all over the country
.
Majority of the communities that sponsor this “kiruv” are themselves not ready to worry about fellow Jews too close – but at least they can sponsor “kiruv” shluchim (which is great).Reducing their activities to putting tefilin on non-observant people is not fair (and why this “Ageism” anyway). This may be a visible transaction but a lot of chabad shluchim spend a lot of time raising their students (the best way they can – some fail in longer term, but the question then is – would they be better without chabad, and the answer seems to be “no”.
January 5, 2026 7:49 am at 7:49 am in reply to: Have you ever had your mind changed on this forum? #2494605Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantCTL, now you’ll be defending another dictator just so that you can stick it to Trump … It is a sad feature of democracies that every event has to be approved or condemned based on electoral politics. Some defended soviets to stick it to Nixon and Reagan …. Maybe for a short period post 9/11, there was a consensus supporting Pres Bush. Both in US and in Israel, and probably same in Europe, democratic government are not able to fight clearly evil forces because there is always someone angllng to make a partisan point about it. We make ourselves weaker and give hope to reshaim that they can manipulate us to achieve their goals.
January 5, 2026 7:49 am at 7:49 am in reply to: Lna’ar Hazeh Hispalalti? The Dissonance of Redemption #2494613Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantZSK> What Pekak said is true – Sifrei Shu”t are practical applications of Halachik issues (which is why they are usually more interesting than Gemara itself).
Right, I am just asking whether we-all live accordingly. 500 years ago, someone who learned gemora would be able to navigate his daily life. A lot of issues we are facing today are post S’A and post Mishna Berurah that created some unified halochah. Responsa differs by a group, most people do not learn it directly, so we are back to pre-gemorah mode where each one is asking his local rav and hope that he’ll ask the right posek.
Theoretically speaking, “gemora” means not the fixed dafim, but abilty to analyze sources of halochs (see Rambam). so learning how to navigate road traffic is no different from watching your cows.
January 4, 2026 11:58 am at 11:58 am in reply to: Halacha question:can you build a snowman on shabbos? #2494155Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantDovid, you listed all the reasons – people will walk in the street, slipping on ice under snow, slipping on ice on the road. Falling in deep snow may be safer than on the ground but it is not safer than not falling. There are a number of people for whom falling is dangerous.
In many (most?) places it is responsibility of the house owner to remove the snow. So, this sort of makes it in your reshus that you allowed others to travel on – so then it is your “bor” to remove?
All of that might not have been a big issue in a shtetl 200 years ago – roads were hard to walk anyway and snow probably did not add much.
January 4, 2026 11:58 am at 11:58 am in reply to: Lna’ar Hazeh Hispalalti? The Dissonance of Redemption #2494154Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantpekak,
1) I am not sure about your insistence of differentiating between “rov” and “talmid chochom”. I don’t think I said anything about who to ask. But I’ll be interested in hearing your opinion. Do you mean to focus on a community having one source of halocho from the “rov”?2)
pekak> Some people have good middos without being talmidei chachomim and some talmidei chachomim may be sorely lacking in middos.Is there an Am haaretz chosid? Not according to my pirkei avos… I understand of your observation that there are people who learned seforim and have no middos, it is a little disrepectful to T’Ch to call such people T’Ch … Our sources are obviously disapproving of bad middos that are kodem l’Torah, but it is not clear what their title should be.
anyway, my examples may be considered more of chassidus than of normative halocha, but those are easier to bring. If you want actual halocho – how about modern issues of paying taxes, relying on non-Jewish public assistance, following parking regulations.
I mentioned safe driving recently. R Akiva taught his students how to walk among unfamiliar people in Avoda Zara. Did your yeshiva teach how to behave on the road? I hope it did.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantsomejew, could you pls quote in full the chofetz chaim you say is supporting your position re: “secular people”
January 1, 2026 1:03 pm at 1:03 pm in reply to: Lna’ar Hazeh Hispalalti? The Dissonance of Redemption #2493869Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantpekak, first, I did not specify who you can ask. If you so medakdek – one definition of “talmid chochom” is indeed as you are saying – someone who can answer shailos in the maseches he is learning. A “chochom” is someone who knows to answer in all masechtot.
Frankly, when a question is tricky, I prefer asking a “chochom” – as many shailos crossover multiple areas, as in the brocha on the airplane example above: you need to know brochos, you need to understand what is person’s culture – is pizza a lunch or a desert for him, you need to know middos – are you bothering people around you …
But do you agree that those who lived among cows and learnt Bava Kamma were better informed about halochos of daily life than those who drive cars and did not learn anything about halochos of cars.
Another example: a bochur was driving R Kamenetsky on coney Island and tried to maneuver around a slow bus. Rav stopped him, explaining that “rabim” have preference. This halocho is as commonplace in our days. I presume the bochur knew what to do about a camel and chanuka candles in reshus harabim … why didn’t he know this one? Of course, there might be a bus lane already on Coney Island by now, so someone learnt that lesson.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantPeople who create headlines need their parnosah so maybe their rabonim gave them reshus to write like that. A friend of mine got a reshus to play music in ballet … but where do normal peope get reshus to say words like “declared war” for an event of canceled subsidies, and also for reposting articles that omit saying why subsidies were cancelled – my understanding these are schools that do not teach basic literacy skills. Governments usually pay for education that addresses their needs.
January 1, 2026 1:02 pm at 1:02 pm in reply to: Proposed Solution to the Arab-Zionist Conflict: Non-Denominational State #2493845Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantyankel> ujm’s proposal to ‘give’ EY to the US , is a total non starter
maybe not whole EY, just Gaza and part of PA? US can have a territory without giving it citizenship (state status) until they develop institutions and Congress (Senate?) accept them. This is how except first 13 states joined.
January 1, 2026 1:02 pm at 1:02 pm in reply to: Halacha question:can you build a snowman on shabbos? #2493837Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantcoffee > Yet square root would say it about R Moshe because he’s “overly machmir” in this regard
Did he? From memory, R Moshe suggested someone to follow his own Rav on a controversial topic (eruv?) rather than him. He also declined to respond to a sefer that attacked his positions – so that not to make the author lose parnosah.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantyankel> Napoleon invaded Europe against the wishes of its citizens there over two centuries ago. Napoleon insisted on fighting until he conquered all of Europe.
I don’t think this is such a simple story. Napoleon attacked countries that were attacking Frnech Republic and he was bringing ideas of French revolution to the rest of Europe. Many people were enthusiastic about this. In Russian empire, Poles and Polish Jews (except Chabad) were. Another lesson for Israel.
December 31, 2025 4:38 pm at 4:38 pm in reply to: Halacha question:can you build a snowman on shabbos? #2493455Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantcoffee > SQRT > So far as they are concerned, the more chumrahs, the better.
And you are NEVER allowed to disagree with them,To translate SQRT into a rational approximation: he says that these rabbis believe in being machmir bein adam l’makom and in their own being “daas Torah”. I don’t think this applies to every rabbi, I am pretty sure Rav Moshe was not holding by himself as such an authority, for example.
December 31, 2025 4:38 pm at 4:38 pm in reply to: Proposed Solution to the Arab-Zionist Conflict: Non-Denominational State #2493469Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantflaming, I think you start with an unrealistic assessment of current situation – it is not random, this framing exists among anti-Israeli activists that paint a picture of big powerful Israel against small hamas.
Imagine, Israel sandwiched between Switzerland and Netherlands, peacefully coexisting with them, and their only problem would be Gaza. Possibly, then, there would be a better way to deal with Hamas – most likely, close borders for weapons, move civilian population around while supplying them with food and slowly smoking Hamas out of tunnels. As it is, you might have noticed that there are several other groups/countries eager to attack Israel; partners are supporting today, stopping supplies tomorrow, etc. Under these conditions, Israel needs to prioritize defence and deterrence. In a case of a doubt, they can, and should, take the harder line.
December 31, 2025 4:38 pm at 4:38 pm in reply to: Lna’ar Hazeh Hispalalti? The Dissonance of Redemption #2493474Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantpekak > Car damages aren’t more difficult than “bull fighting”. The basis for nezikin is the beginning of Bava Kama.
Yes, you can take your car damage case to a talmid chochom and he might be able to apply Bava Kama to your car bumper by looking at responsa as you are saying. This is not the usual way. Just several hundreds years ago, a Jewish farmer would (or at least could) know what to do what he will owe when his cow eats neighbor’s grass and would also know to take care that this does not happen. Nowadays, there is no “mishna” that teens could learn before getting a driving license. Just for comparison – how often you see someone in a “frum” levush eating a cheesburger – not often, right. How about driving reckelessy? Pretty often. This is not only due to the haraas shaaa that we need to be “frum” first and middos later. In older times, such person would have his cow “muad” pretty quickly and he would be responsible for damages. In our times, nobody is going to take him into a beis din (as far a I know, prove me wrong!) – his insurance will pay. Also, car damages are happening less often but with more damage, I think (although maybe I never met a raging bull).
A little example how shallow our halachik knowledge is nowadays: I was listening to a yeshiva rov teaching halochos of washing/hamotzi/benching in an airplane – even if the meal says “mezonos” and even as only benching is meduaraita, if this is your real meal – you should do all 3. I asked him – if there is an inyan of bothering people (and also of those people who can read “hamotzi” and then see you bothering them anyway) – would it follow that benching is still a hiyuv, but one can skip washing? He said “good question”, thought for some time, and said “if so” [which I read – if you are so sensitive], then you should wash and start eating in the airport. My observation here is that our rebbeim did not yet collect all these halochos into one coherent set.
December 30, 2025 9:56 am at 9:56 am in reply to: Lna’ar Hazeh Hispalalti? The Dissonance of Redemption #2492583Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantZSK > Re Rambam’s approach to Avraham Avinu and the Akeida/Nevua: I don’t think that’s terrifying. It makes a lot of sense, all things considered.
I am also inclined to think that Avraham would not go without being sure, but Rambam’s description of Avraham spending 3 days in quiet contemplation is a little too much. It does match Rambam’s description of Avraham as a Mesopotamian Socrates though.
> Re more or less mysticism: I’m inclined to believe more, but I may be mistaken.
There are many aspects here, so just to be more specific:
gemora spends a number of pages dispensing medical advice. When you read it on our times – seriously – you would probably need to learn modern medicine and work on summarizing medical info for the daf yomi followers. Modern rabbis seem to think it is not their business and just send you to the doctor, but they should also enable people to know how to select that doctor, know how to read medical information, and earn enough to be able to get good health insurance.Or nezikin and employment law – it is way more complicated in our days. Should we learn about car damages as much or more as we learn about bull fighting?
December 29, 2025 11:44 am at 11:44 am in reply to: Halacha question:can you build a snowman on shabbos? #2492495Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantI am surprised by how many people care about snowballs v. cleaning the road along your house for people to walk. I don’t think this room is populated by teens (although sometimes it feels like it), maybe it is populated by parents who have hard time telling kids: no snowballs today, go learn, or help clean the road.
December 29, 2025 11:44 am at 11:44 am in reply to: Halacha question:can you build a snowman on shabbos? #2492494Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantIt seems that R Moshe (minority view) that snow is muktza is based on two considerations: (1) there is no use for it (2) people perceive it as nolad.
For (2), I would say that currently people know that snow is coming from clouds just by watching weather forecast. So, the perception has definitely changed.
On the permitted shoveling when there is a tzibur need (3 people or more, going to shul included) – it would only allow a small path along where people need to go. Also, not over dirt or grass. Preferably to shovel fresh rather than frozen snow.
O also wonder whether it should only be allowed if you did what you could before shabbos – such as sand the road. [you can also salt it, but then you’ll have to fix the road, of course]. This halocha would be a modern one – as previously we did not know before shabbos that there will be snow on shabbos.
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