Always_Ask_Questions

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  • in reply to: Bnos Pnina shutdown #2539329

    Chaim,
    you seem to be shy about providing sources of your heterim, could you please answer whether any of them are from R Feinstein, R Soloveitchik or R Yaakov Kamenetsky? (giving you some range here).

    in reply to: Bnos Pnina shutdown #2539328

    Chaim> I come from a different cut. i don’t think its such a sin to hire illegal or underage workers. (I know dina dmlachusa. There are heterim..

    qok, so why were you dreining my kopf and did not say so in the first place? This is exactly what I was saying – you don’t know how tov unaim is to sit and not rely on those heterim.

    > ” nursing homes are just as ehlich as finance”.

    got it. So, in plain yinglish, you are saying that nursing homes are not ehrliche, but “ehrliche enough”. As much as other gazlanim.

    I think you are pushing this shitah on others in order to justify yourself. Most Drs are not scam. Indeed, maybe only rare ones do not care about payment, as the bloodletter from Taanis, but most are providing fair service for the money.

    But if you seriously believe in this, then your only kosher solution is to go in the other direction – work honestly with your hands, earn enough to afford food, and spend the rest of your day teaching your kids (as you don’t want to rely on tzedoka and non-Jewish support).

    in reply to: Shatnez wool and linen the biblical reason for shatnez #2539327

    while looking for taamei mitzvos, how about this one:

    iron absorption is inhibited by calcium. Therefore, eating meat in close proximity with milk (or milk later – while meat is processed) leads to iron in meat not being absorbed. In the world where meat was scarce, this probably lead to severe anemia. Might explain why Yaakov’s sons are giants v. Mitzrim.

    any scientific or halakhic comments on this?

    in reply to: Shatnez wool and linen the biblical reason for shatnez #2539326

    qwerty> hat reason is because the Torah said so. If one would like to find additional support for Mitzvahs, he may do so, but no one can suggest that “HE” knows

    multitudes of scholars, such as Ramban, R Shimshon Hirsh, etc were exploring reasons for mitzvos of various type – scientific, social, psychological. Some of these reasons did not wear well with passage of time. In our times, many indeed like you say try to avoid that in order not to follow secular critics, but there is nothing wrong intrinsically in trying to figure them out. When Shlomo could not figure out red heifer, I am sure it was not because he did not try!

    As to how humble one should be when proposing such, this varies and the difference between rishonim and CR posters is obvious.

    in reply to: Little by little the State of Israel is embracing Torah values. #2539324

    just when I wanted to compliment someone who spend his time to discuss the sefer and respond,
    internets told me that these exact words were posted by, duh, “Joseph” in 2019 and by “Yeruchem Gold” on December 9, 2013.

    It is also possible that the quote originated with Yehoshua Pfeffer’s book.

    in reply to: Attn: Coffee Room moderators #2539323

    I asked LLM to comment on this story and it politely said that the story is “popular in alternative wellness circles”. But then it ventured with it’s own explanation that sounds at least as intriguing!

    Why Linen and Wool Actually Don’t Mix

    If you feel “off” wearing linen and wool together, there is a physical explanation: Static Electricity.

    Linen and wool sit on different ends of the Triboelectric Series.

    When they rub together, they create a significant amount of static discharge. This can cause physical discomfort, clinging, and skin irritation, which might be interpreted as a “drop in energy.”

    in reply to: Yom Haatzmaut #2539194

    I forward to my kids a photo of Ponevezh yeshiva with Israeli flag with some quotes from Ponevezher rov, and make sure not to daven in shuls that say hallel and shuls that say tachanun, as I am uncomfortable with both.

    in reply to: the 2 attemps to kick israel out of the IFSW (and more coming) #2539185

    I thought it is NSWF misspelled, so I did not even open this thread.

    Or maybe Israeli Figure Skaters (Women), also not appropriate for most posters here.

    in reply to: Math Riddles for Dr. Pepper (and other geniuses) #2539172

    Don’t give money to this Tamar, this is not enough of a proof:

    You can’t say that someone always lies. Shaarei teshuva are always open.
    You can’t say that someone always says the truth. Don’t believe in yourself until yom mita.
    You can’t have 2 of them with 1 middah and 2 with opposite. Even Esav had some good middos when raised in a proper home.

    in reply to: Shalom Bayis and Being M’vattar #2539153

    rescue> you have to stand your ground.

    Gemora recommends being an arova rather than a ceder tree – if you “stand tall and stand your ground”, you are at a risk of being broken eventually. Arova survives the wind. Look at books of R Pliskin and R Twersky for a lot of good practical advice on this.

    in reply to: Little by little the State of Israel is embracing Torah values. #2539152

    users, you can also read “בּוֹנָיִךְ as people who are productive in leading the nation, rather than simply rejecting any suggestions … similarly, T’Ch merabim shalom b’olam – if someone increases (real, not superficial) sholom, he is a T’Ch.

    in reply to: Little by little the State of Israel is embracing Torah values. #2539151

    chaim> I have no illusions that, those that oppose the State or have a Anti-Zionist hashkafa will somehow “see the light”

    front page has an article on yom haatzmaaut at Ponevezh, that is old news (although this should impress people even more), but then shows a couple of Belgian charedi Yidden putting the flag up and discusing whether to sing hatikva. I don’t know who they are – lamedvavniks or hidden mafdal agents planting a (literally) false flag …

    in reply to: Little by little the State of Israel is embracing Torah values. #2539149

    chaim barcuh > Eim HaBanim Semeicha”

    a good point – can we confirm from our resident antiZs that they read this sefer or have good reasons to ignore it? [this is inviting loshon hora, but I think it is l’toeles]

    in reply to: Little by little the State of Israel is embracing Torah values. #2539148

    duvid> How does Satmar explain the Chashmonaim?

    A good point, and I think many people make this connection. One of recent chanukkas I heard a dvar Torah from a Rav, who is very charedi/lakewood/moetzes but also not denouncing anything, somehow he integrates his “daas Torah” with his own opinions … so, he was, unusually, talking not about candles but about military victory – not in a secular way, but highlighting how moedh in shmone esre is focused on that.

    It all sounded traditional, but a little off. I then needled him in private “you sounded like a hidden zionist”. And he replied “why so hidden”? I think events of last several years made many people confront these contradictions or, maybe, confront that politics matters, not just a distraction from limud Torah as it sounds during better times.

    in reply to: Shalom Bayis and Being M’vattar #2538776

    Is bechor shor an only opinion on this issue or are there others? see how the attitude of pushing your own position while hiding the others moves from politics to drush…

    in reply to: Shalom Bayis and Being M’vattar #2538775

    I suggest excellent books by R Pliskin, especially one called “Marriage”. For some here, this is an urgent request (assuming you are married).

    And note that Avraham did not have the last laugh here, so to speak – later on, he gets explicit instructions: “listen to her”

    in reply to: Bnos Pnina shutdown #2538654

    rescue, I am not sure. I mostly skip long discussions when people attack each other personalities. If I need to learn about human drama, I’ll spend time with Tanach, Shakespeare or Dostoevsky. So, if you said something I disagree with, I might have objected, but it has nothing to do with number of people for or against you. (We do have laws of majority voting – where all views are reasonable and we need to take a vote).

    in reply to: Little by little the State of Israel is embracing Torah values. #2538652

    And R Soloveitchik was right when he spoke to Mizrachi congress in 1950s, or maybe even 40s:
    you come to US to only collect money for EY, but only the immigrant generation responds to you, not their children. Jews in EY will not be lost, they will get to Yiddishkeit in some way, while it is critical to build schools and Jewishly educate young secularly-educated American Jews before they get lost.

    in reply to: Invisible Tattoos #2538651

    Wolf, refuah shleimah. See R Bleich 2009 article survey of recent halachic periodical literature, 2009. it is available online.

    I can’t summarize all 40 pages of it, he goes into micropigmentation and other methods … but it seems that external invisibility as a significant factor, kal vehomer any invisibility.

    in reply to: Shalom Bayis and Being M’vattar #2538195

    I presume it is a joke, but if you look for the source, it is probably quran.

    in reply to: Bnos Pnina shutdown #2538194

    Chaim,
    A very good point about big companies. When you join a big group, you are forced to follow their rules. This applies in Jewish environment. One of my teachers from Baltimore said publicly (in front of a full hall of 20-y olds, including me), pointing to another Rabbi sitting near him – Rav X offered me to join our groups in this initiative, but I will continue running my small group because here I am responsible for decisions, rather than having to conform to someone’s else views that I may not fully subscribe to. I later wondered why the Rav said it in front of the person who invited him and all the yungeleit? I presume he wanted us to learn the lesson – both about joining the crowds and about having courage to say it in the face of people with different opinions.

    So, the short answer to your concern – yes, it is best to work in a small business. This is not a contradiction – I mean small professional business. In my humble experience, yes, you are still interacting with different customers and partners, but it is easier to get out of a bad situation by finding different customers/partners.

    On nursing homes, as I said I am concerned about yetzer hara in such cut-throat business. I am not running nor yet in a nursing home, so my thoughts here are speculative … But take, for example, small-scale constructions or cleaning. when all your competitors have workers with fake SSNs, are you going to use legit workers? And then you are left to argue, like an (in)famous meat processor that he is a victim of antisemites who prosecuted him more than similar-behaving goyim.

    My point is if we want to fulfil what most Rabonim in the siyum of Kiddush are saying (aside from R Nehorai) – select an easy and ehrliche _trade_.
    But we have is that bochurim do not get trade education and they are all excited about earning good money in business without having any skills.

    in reply to: Gebroks, Processed foods, and Mish #2538190

    YS, thanks, I think I heard that. Could be that the chabad shaliach used that to let me in, but did not tell me so that I satisfy my rebellious feelings?!

    I don’t think though everyone holds by that. I doubt that R Moshe would say – follow his minhag even among people who do not follow that.

    in reply to: Gebroks, Processed foods, and Mish #2538189

    CTL, train your spellchecker when young and it will continue repeating your spelling errors when you are old

    in reply to: Group think #2537093

    ujm > theoretically possible he gave someone a heter bshas hadchak to have a television (speculating that such a person might have engaged in worse activities, otherwise, in his opionion),

    this is a good reason. One of the reason for decreased sexual activities and crime from the current generation of teens is attributed to the time spent on TikTok – every minute someone scrolls the feed, he is not strolling around the mall engaging in risky activities.

    in reply to: Gebroks, Processed foods, and Mish #2537077

    is “ball tefilah” a prayer for the home team?

    in reply to: Group think #2537069

    Interesting to observbe yeridas hadoros here: R Miller wrote that it used to be ok to go read books in public libraries, but “nowadays” you cant read about such great role models as Tom Sawyer …

    same – TV of 20th century is probably cleaner than ads you see on YWN … maybe, reruns of those soap operas should be recommended as treatment for internet addiction. Consult your local ruv before following this advice from a random guy on internet.

    in reply to: Bnos Pnina shutdown #2536466

    I am glad to hear that there are yashar home admin. The point was that being in business raises stakes for yetzer hara, it does not mean that everyone succumbs. Out of curiosity, double-check public info about companies your friends are working in – medicaid ranks, public posts – and see how they stand against similar ones.

    in reply to: Gebroks, Processed foods, and Mish #2536465

    CTL, in truth you are not supposed to if you are joining a legit minyan. You would put tefilin at home, and then go to the minyan without. I do that when I am in a sephardi minyan. I am not sure about a temporary minyan where everyone brings his own minhag.

    in reply to: YWN Hacked By Iranians #2535897

    Logical, I understand halochos of loshon hora that you are not allowed to bring a person’s name if it predictably leads to some guy saying bad things. Yes, one should answer an apikoires, but after we answer a number of times and he continues same “gedolim”/aka R Elchonon references, people stop responding. Better talk about something more interesting.

    in reply to: Dehumanizing others #2535896

    gemora says “mohammed” exactly 0 times. I double-checked every page. Not sure why.

    in reply to: Bnos Pnina shutdown #2535277

    Nisht, I think we are talking about Yidden who manage nursing home. Maybe they hire other ydden to work for them.

    Working for a generic nursing home where you have no relations to the owners will have less of problem, indeed, but I never heard about Jews who live in places where there are no Jewish-run homes about this being a lucrative job. So, this raises suspicions.

    in reply to: Gebroks, Processed foods, and Mish #2535272

    DaMoshe> What about the Baal HaTanya, who changed from his father’s minhagim?

    Indeed. On this shitah, I was once for chol hamoed at a chabad minyan where there were exactly 10 of us. I used the leverage and said – I’ll come on the condition I can wear tefilin. I am aware this is contrary to the halakha “when in Rome …”, but I felt hasidim changed the minhagim so they can’t be too offended.

    in reply to: Gebroks, Processed foods, and Mish #2535271

    To understand the limits – one of R Moshe’s students did not eat gebrochts. Got married. Explained his minhag to his wife (or so he thought). Came to the kitchen 2 days before Pesach and saw his wife cooking kneldlach … not clear, whether he fotrgot to tell her, or she did not pay attention. So, he asked R Moshe – what is the way to deal with this situation? How to tell his new wife that the kneldlach are gebrochts?

    in reply to: הסבל של יהודי ארץ ישראל #2535245

    It is very concerning to me that I cannot figure out whether this is a real letter or satire! Maybe it is hard to get humor in a 2nd or 4th language ….

    Hayalim should daven for lomdei Torah? Maybe chayalim should say meshebrach for those who refuse to say mishebrerach for the chayalim?

    in reply to: Bnos Pnina shutdown #2534671

    Nursing home admin earnings, as any margin-based business, highly depends on difference between sales and costs. So, yetzer hara is high. And the cost include wellbeing of human being. A difficult proposition. A lawyer is paid by hour. Yes, you can get more hours by helping doing something not-so-legal; but you can also get enough business by being known for your integrity.

    If you want to have good, cheaper schools, you can. Use online for general education with some supervision; combine a couple of classes for Jewish classes. Plus most schools do get some donations, especially if they are doing a good job. So, if each parent chis in 8-10K per child, this should do it.

    in reply to: Gebroks, Processed foods, and Mish #2534162

    I understand that R Ovadia Yosef paskened that gebrokhts are minhag taut and should be dealt with via hatarat nedarim.

    in reply to: Chaveirim Damaged the Car, Whats the Right thing to do? #2534161

    Chaverim do a great job, but I am just wondering – do people in your area use AAA? It is pretty reliable OOT. Is it not good in-town, or there is moral hazard here – people know that chaverim could help for free, so why buy a service?

    in reply to: Group think #2534160

    Rambam “accepted emes regardless of a source”. In science also, there is a system of open publications that allows other knowledgeable people to verify what is published. So, if you are looking at a popular publication and there are several studies on the issue, you might rely on the exppertise. Still, context matter. While generally halakha defers to one doctor, R Mayer Twersly had a teshuva early on during covid where he explains that in this case of great uncertainty, we should consult several sources and act cautiously according to all of them. Now, our lack of knowledge about covid was not greater than medieval lack of knowledge about any diseases of the time, but we simply know better what we don’t know 🙂

    in reply to: Dehumanizing others #2534159

    qwerty> Rabbi Akiva said that one who studies Sefarim Chitzonim is an Apikorus.

    My source: R Eliezer, who only taught what he learnt from his teachers – lamented that R Akiva was the only one who asked him questions about magical cucumbers. And in order to explain to R Akiva difference between real avoda zora who are hayav misa v. those who just pretend to do it – he demonstrated both ways. As part of the discussion, the rav mentioned that he paskens differently for different students who want to learn about other religions – some who are in danger of being attracted are not allowed, others, who might need to support their own beliefs while living among knowledgeable goyim, were recommended. I imagine there would be some people in between.

    in reply to: Bnos Pnina shutdown #2533748

    > The question is why would people go otd so quickly if our lifestyle is supposedly the truth.

    right. It is a difficult balance – if you introduce, esp kids, to the world too early, you are risking OTD, or at least acquisition of undesirable views and middos. If you don’t introduce at all – then R Soloveitchik’s question from the 1950s still stands: if we claim to have truth from Hashem, why are we hiding in caves.
    Middle road is hard.

    People get addicted to 24-hour delivery of everything. Some things are hard, you can show respect and add those who are risking their lives in your davening.

    in reply to: Gebroks, Processed foods, and Mish #2533746

    The problem might be that these minhagim might need to change quickly with technology and social changes – sometimes l’kula, sometimes l’humra.
    For example, nobody was saying hamotzi on pizza 100 years ago – as it was a treat. Now people do because it became, lo aleinu, a full lunch.
    Processsed food became more uniform and with different ingredients. Humriche food became more accessible in many places.

    in reply to: Gebroks, Processed foods, and Mish #2533745

    what do you mean “new” minhagim? In my family, we did not eat machine matzah from the time of Beis Hamikdash.

    in reply to: Chaveirim Damaged the Car, Whats the Right thing to do? #2533453

    > it would be best not to name the town

    indeed, it is even worse in less densely Jewish towns. When you see a clearly observant person misbehaving on the road, you likely know the person and it is also weighs more into people’s perception.

    in reply to: Mamdani right?!?!?! #2533167

    Chaim, see Daniel Feldman True Lies, False Facts for in-depth discussion of trade-offs of free media amd loshon horo. Free speech is a necessary part of democratic governance, people need to have as much info as possible about those they appoint. Where exactly the nation decided to draw the line is not that important – as long as the democratic process works. The hard part becomes when observant Jews are entering this process – do we use same tools or do we follow higher path? It seems t me that at least we should be better than others and try to be yashar. Take Joe Lieberman for example – he was a politician and some of his positions and statements could be viewed as artificial and self-serving. But he was viewed as a moral person.

    in reply to: Bnos Pnina shutdown #2533166

    rescue> Put all the stress in your in laws. That sound very biblical.
    Or the govement =usury

    Of course you can support yourself and learn. Not a new idea. But as long as it is private and volunteer, there should not be a problem. Rambam learned while his brother supported him, and worked after that (and supported his brother’s family). I would have no problem supporting a Talmid Chochom as a S-I-L. It is just most of current learning is not at the level but it is “Torah as medicine” (idea endorsed by gemorah) – to prevent people going off the derech. For example, when I had please discussing various bochurim with their rebbes, they would say “he is learning”. What? How? “like everyone else. great”…

    Maybe, things will look better if we honestly requalify expense from “learning” to saving lives of people who will drown in modern society without being locked in yeshivos. Then, this expense becomes more justified. And then we sould remember that the best tzedokah is helping people to leave the tzedokah rolls – help them acquire work skills and social skills to live in the world without going OTD.

    in reply to: Bnos Pnina shutdown #2532817

    PS I guess you are troubled that you are “struggling”. But this is normal, Hashem did not sign a contract with us that everything should be totally easy.
    Surviving without camps or some other “necessities” may be that.

    On this note, someone quoted to me one of the gedolim, maybe R Kamenetsky, talking to baalei batim in Boro Park who were becoming more affluent:
    remember your “luxuries” will become your children’s “necessities”. So maybe you one of those who was raised like that. Luckily for me, I was not, so I appreciate those luxuries I can afford (and those that we choose not to do even if we can afford them). I am not so sure about the kids, though, even as we continue reminsdning them and even make them scrub the house before Pesach. Let me go see how they enjoy slavery.

    in reply to: Bnos Pnina shutdown #2532816

    Chaim, I think you are doing the right thing, you are just complaining about it.
    “choosing” not to work and rely on others paying for you is not an erliche option.
    If you think working in business is better … Not exact match, but there was shochet who told R Salanter that he doesn’t want to be responsible for aveiros in shechita, so he is going into business! R Salanter was horrified that he is not afraid of aveiros in business .. accounting is not shechita, but the business alternative is still the same. Not randomly, you bring the “nursing home” example – a business rife with people being in trouble with medicaid, hiring illegals, profits balancing how much you spend on feeding elderly … I would rather be an accountant for Enron that face this yetzer hara.
    So, just stop thinking that the grass is greener somewhere else, you are doing well.

    I would look at adjustments – 401k, vacations, camps – really, train your kids and learn yourself to enjoy interacting with them. If the choice is not being to pay for school, camp should go first (my school has question “which camp you go to” in there where they are trying to figure out how rich you are).

    If kids are too young for kiruv camps, they can help out in a local summer day camp with little kids. Mine started doing it, I think, when they were 12.
    Maybe assist at a local chabad house, if you have one or maybe your place is too frum.

    In terms of school costs, I am big proponent of doing general subjects in online schools from about 7-8th grades – you can then have all kids together in Jewish classes, and everyone can go there own way in general studies – some might want Yinglish only, some might want AP and SAT. And this cuts cost at school. If you are really pressed – experiment with 1-2 (better 2 close in age) kids in fully online Jewish schools for a year.

    in reply to: Chaveirim Damaged the Car, Whats the Right thing to do? #2532421

    When you have someone working for you, you should be liberal with their mistakes. There is also an idea that an expert is not liable for mistaken bad advice. BUT a non-expert is.

    In this case, I agree with you that you need to help them know when they are competent – and prevent future damage. Surely, you want to send a friendly message to whoever is in charge of the group.

    in reply to: Bnos Pnina shutdown #2532418

    You know, medical pain is an indicator that something is wrong with the body … the pain itself is not the important thing but it point to where the problem is. This statement that camp is a necessity may be such a sign – are your kids capable of doing something positive when they are not watched by a teacher? Do they take a sefer during the vacation? Do they have friends with whom they can spend quality time? Hobbies? Would they mind preparing for SAT or play basketball or piano? If there are many “no” answers here, then see how to change that and help them grow into healthy adults.

Viewing 50 posts - 1 through 50 (of 9,271 total)