Itzik_s

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  • in reply to: Achdus Versus Sholom Bayis #637287
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Sorry, I am gone (I am just figuring out how to block the site in Chrome; I already have it blocked in FF and IE while I wait for the person who admins my filter to come online and let me add the site to my main filter).

    This is just the nature of discussion sites; every sort of krumkeit, sinas chinam and utter shtus comes to the surface because, let’s face it, that stuff is interesting and therefore sparks debate.

    After my friend’s father in law AH was killed in a car accident, someone wrote (tongue in cheek) that the niftar was considered a bit “boring” because he did not waste his time discussing the politics that divided his community. I’d like to see a site which is “boring” in that way. But it would get no hits and not be able to sustain itself.

    Maybe better online where it really just goes to the wind than in real life (where all of this rambling has little influence anyway) but this rambling is a waste of time and no good comes of it.

    in reply to: Achdus Versus Sholom Bayis #637285
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Also, just so that no one wastes bandwidth trying to convince me to come back, please understand that I have added the URL for this site to my filter (and I don’t control the password).

    in reply to: Achdus Versus Sholom Bayis #637284
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Sadly, I see that I just created more machloikes with this thread, which was meant to generate ways of avoiding just that while allowing everyone his own hashkafah and minhagim.

    Add me to the list of those who have left the Coffee Room.

    in reply to: Cholov Akum #772598
    Itzik_s
    Member

    And itzik I was talking about the lakewood brand golden fluff

    BS”D

    Which is pas yisroel, bishul yisroel and pareve :). Not that it also can’t be used for killing rats LOL. In fact according to the Darchei Kareis you cannot feed rats that which you do not eat yourself because they may be gilgulim of reshoim and you are depriving them of the ability of doing tshuva by feeding them that which may be metamtem es halev ve’es ha’moach………………….(Purim IS coming!!!!)

    in reply to: Help At Home #637474
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    I am super machmir and burn my house down every Thursday night so the insurance company puts me up in a hotel for Shabbos. No need for a cleaning lady.

    in reply to: Legalizing Marijuana – Against Torah? #636773
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Please post – I have no access to Reb Moshe ZT”L’s sforim here.

    in reply to: Cholov Akum #772597
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    I am saying that cheese curls are fit only to poison rats because they are so full of chemicals (and they look and smell like rat bait LOL).

    in reply to: Achdus Versus Sholom Bayis #637275
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Most importantly, though, if something connected to a rov whom you follow happened and you said something seemingly out of line regarding that rov, I would understand it. And if you said it in private it would be none of my business, any more than a supposedly questionable performance at a controversial time by a particular singer at a private Purim party was my business.

    This is the double edged sword of the Internet; private should not always be made public.

    If something your rov predicted came true and you spoke about that in a way that was meant to convince everyone that the derech of your rov is the truest mehalech, I would accept it as legitimate even if I disagree because my hashkafah and practices are very different. I would in fact expect you to believe that your derech is the truest one – for you – and I would expect you to want to speak about it and teach to others but would hope you would do it in a non-threatening and non-demeaning way (the opposite of which is a problem across the board especially when kiruv is involved). At the same time I would expect you to accept the fact that I am happy as I am and just may not have the inclination to listen to other hashkafas for reasons that could just as soon include time constraints or being so steeped in my own derech that peronally I can’t relate to much else anymore even as I respect the legitimacy of the other 69 ponim laTorah.

    in reply to: #1052264
    Itzik_s
    Member

    If your Yiddish is now mostly Hebrew, then you’re not speaking Yiddish anymore.


    BS”D

    Then all the more reason to preserve it because it is a special haimish Torah Yiddish that is one more boundary between us and assimilation. However, I agree that it should not be forced upon anyone as a first language but rather as something special for use within Yiddish speaking communities or to be able to speak to the older generation.

    a course in Yiddish


    Do we have such things? Most Yiddish seems to be learned at home or by teitching the Chumash.

    In the end it is Lipa Schmeltzer who is preserving Yiddish for us by demystifying it and making it something young people want to learn in an informal way.

    in reply to: Eretz Yisroel #636846
    Itzik_s
    Member

    itzik, i think i’m right in saying that most of rav kook’s followers aren’t really following his shitta. he wouldn’t agree with half the things they say and do. but rav kook himself was a great man and even though he had a lot of opposition, you can’t say he wasn’t chashuv.


    BS”D

    I agree. Some of his so called followers make him sound like a certain musical performer and self appointed rebbele in terms of disdain for halacha and lack of boundaries between mutar and ossur L”A.

    in reply to: Cholov Akum #772594
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Ah, yes – cheese curls. Hmmm…going to the Home Depot site…clicking on rat bait…and finding something that looks suspiciously similar to cheese curls. Checking the ingredients on cheese curls and seeing that PETA would be all over you if you tried to use cheese curls to rid yourself of rats!

    (You don’t like Bamba? Similar texture, different flavor and conveniently pareve).

    Those Golden Fluffs sound suspiciously similar to something marketed by a firm in Lakewood that my rav in NYC once bought for an event, but these are pareve bishul yisroel.

    Going back to the first post – when was the famous psak of Rav Moishe Feinstein ZTL issued and how many times was it restated? I don’t hold by it (though I understand and accept the circumstances and reasoning behind it) but I believe it is more recent or was restated more recently than the original poster indicated. Then again, while I always thought organized, commercial CY in the US goes back to the late 1950’s, very little CY was available even into the 60’s and early 70’s according to what even some Chassidim have told me.

    in reply to: Achdus Versus Sholom Bayis #637273
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    No one believes that anyone other than Hashem runs the world. (Even those meshichisten who have not taken total leave of their sanity do not believe that anyone but Hashem rules the world.) There is no mekor anywhere for the statement he made in the midst of his grief.

    What he believes and probably thought he was saying is what the Gemara says which is that tzadikim are still with us after they leave the world so that the Rebbe still has (spiritual) hashpaah over the situation – but when he already knew in his heart that the worst was the case he broke down and said something that makes no sense.

    Every Simchas Torah I get hammered, use the bima as a pull up bar, and sing an old song about HaRabbi Shlita; everyone who sees that and joins in knows all I am doing is remembering old times because I know all too well that the Rebbe is not shlit”a anymore (but I would never let anyone video that scene or even do it on Purim when pictures could be taken).

    I also know how he reacts when under stress and how emotional he often gets when speaking about emotional subjects. His mother A”H has not been with us for years now; when I heard him speak the Shabbos of her >15th yahrtzeit, he was speaking with the same heartfelt sense of loss as if she had just passed away a few days hence. I felt as if I knew her, even though all I knew of her was her name and that she had predeceased her husband A”H.

    We knew but did not want to believe that there was little hope (sadly I figured out what the situation was when the Holtzberg parents tzu langer yorn got a police escort to take them to the airport) and most of us were in a state of mourning even though we had not gotten official news because of the time zone differential.

    That video should never have been made public – it was a private situation – but knowing him I think he likes the controversy and he is not the type to care what anyone thinks of him. If he weren’t like that he could never have done what he does and continues to do for Yidden and Yiddishkeit (or survived as a practically lone frum boy growing up in a changing neighborhood – he’s not from Crown Heights).

    If he said something like that on a normal day, everyone would be right to question and my first thought would be that perhaps he had become ill (knowing him as I do). If he had a website filled with that kind of thought, it would go into my filter with the other obscene trash and I would probably think of him in the same terms as I think of the Ku Klux Kartel. (More likely, if this were the case I would ask family members if he is ill L”A or being treated with medications that may have psychological side effects).

    But when someone speaks from heartfelt grief, you never know what they are saying because they are not thinking straight.

    If you said something absurd or unusual under unusual circumstances, I would pay it no heed. That includes anything as mundane as your sukkah beam crashing on your head, or even being drunk on Purim, as well as L”A the kinds of things that should never happen to any Yid. I assure you I don’t use bad language in English or any language people can understand but when my hat flew, my reflexes took over and I screamed the 2 most offensive words in the English language in a very public place. No one cared except to try to help me retrieve the hat.

    If you wrote articles defending j4j or anything else outside of Torah, I would probably write a long post attacking you on every point and then throw your site in my killfile. If you had made a name for yourself with kefira or even plain shtus, you’d earn yourself a profile in my infamous satire blog (which has 2 Lubavitch entries, one for a freak meshichist and the other for someone who spent countless hours attacking a popular entertainer over total nonsense).

    in reply to: Legalizing Marijuana – Against Torah? #636766
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Re smoking: if marijuana were used casually and not on a regular basis would it be as bad as cigarettes healthwise?

    Re underage: how hard is it for underage kids to get alcohol in NYC? I was 19 when the age was raised to 21 and theoretically got the raw end of the stick but in reality I could buy all the liquor I wanted at NYC liquor stores and I was served along with a group of underage freshmen in a bar. (The only time I was carded was when I was 23 and went to buy Shabbos wine at a store that was being monitored as its owners were known for tax and other violations; I was tempted to ask them why they waited so long to check me since I had begun shopping there at age 19 or 20!)

    in reply to: Eretz Yisroel #636844
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Also, there are far more children of RZ families who become more charedi than vice versa as it once was. Even some nominal RZ have charedi hashkafas especially after the double shock of Yigal Amir (framed or not) and Gush Katif which led to a general decline in the self-image of religious Zionists and questioning of their ideology.

    Today’s real religious Zionists, the hilltop youth, Bat Ayin etc, are new age neo- Charedim who follow a strange mixture of Chabad, Breslov, Carlebach (music or ideology – I am not sure) and the writings not so much of Rav A”Y Kook but of his more radical son. Their rov is the decidedly charedi Chabad mekubal R’ Yitzchak Ginzburgh and I believe they also respect R’ Eliezer Berland of Shuvu Bonim who is politically somewhere to the right of R’ Meir Kahane HY”D. Strange people and way outside the mainstream but at least they have real values which they put themselves on the line for and are not corrupted by the medine that has so disappointed their sincerely old line RZ parents.

    in reply to: Eretz Yisroel #636841
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    How can anyone support a state that does not support itself and surrenders the land it is meant to protect while it endangers the inhabitants thereof and Jews throughout the world?

    What have Rav Kook’s people done for the society of the medine except trying to blend in? I remember very well how a certain politician from Mafdal would go out of his way to make it miserable for those who observe shmita properly because HE believed in the heter mechira. And Rav Kook called America “ama reka”; have his followers done anything to stop the dependence of the medine on American goodwill that can easily run out at times like this?

    If tomorrow, the medine elects a government that, while not being Torah true (that can come only with Moshiach) has the guts to say: “We will stand alone if we have to but we will do what is necessary to preserve the safety of the JEWISH people in the Land!” then I might feel differently. But Begin did not do that, neither did Shamir and neither did Bibi. That is because, by definition, a non Torah state cannot succeed in E”Y and must be replaced with a Torah state.

    At this stage in history, that can only happen with Moshiach. The medine is the antithesis of Moshiach; it was founded to turn the Jews into a nation like all other nations. The novi says: od teshvu zkenim uzkeinois birchoivois Yerushalayim. Zionism has achieved, as Herzl YMS* and Ben-Gurion OLBM wanted: od teshvu POSHIM ve Z**OT birchovot Yerushalayim (ve’nashim belaylot lo telchu merov pachadim) – in short they have turned kedusha into klipa and light into darkness.

    * The reason not to say YMS after a Jew’s name is that you do not want his family line to be wiped out as they can do tshuva. Herzl has no family line; all of his descendants met bad ends and one son was a meshumad. I therefore have no problem saying Herzl YMS though I rarely find him worth discussing. He suffered from delusions caused by a very ignoble infection that spread to his brain and these delusions are evident in his thoughts and writing. OLBM = “Of Less than Blessed Memory” or zechuso yagen – lo aleinu!.

    in reply to: Eretz Yisroel #636837
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Also, there were very few visas available to Mandate Palestine; the debate over the rabbonim who told their followers to stay is almost moot as there was nowhere for them to go after the Evian Conference.

    There indeed were abuses of the visa process by the Labor Zionists and unbelievably callous quotes which showed that their priority was to build a state for their own egos and ideologies at any human cost. I can’t even post them here; they are worse than obscenities.

    Bar-Ilan has attracted more and more secular students; it is not a successful institution as far as any sort of Torah values are concerned. It is not the YU of E”Y, but rather a “Jew-ish” Brandeis with a small kipa.

    And the reason you do not get appeals from Zionist institutions in EY is that they are government controlled, sponsored and (overtly or covertly) monitored.

    In the end, the economic crisis will be a nightmare for secular and religious Zionists alike as charedim enter the mainstream workforce and excel as we do in other countries. The failure to do so in E”Y has to do with politics and it indeed cannot stay that way.

    And if there is an alternative service bill, then what you will see is 100 more Yad Sarahs and Ezer MiTzions and Migdal Ohrs that serve every sector of society and will end up bringing charedim even further into the mainstream. (That is why it is the medine that does not want charedim serving in any way; my friends who ended up leaving E”Y for Chabad shlichus abroad would have been a threat to the secularizing nature of the army and the last thing the medine wants is these guys manning social service organizations all over the country and spreading Yiddishkeit as they go along).

    in reply to: Velvet Kippah #650671
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    cantoresq – Eichler’s in BP has just about any style yarmulke you can imagine.

    in reply to: #1052258
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    What everyone is forgetting is that haimish Yiddish is full of Torah references and words from loshon koidesh. As I posted before, even a no parking sign in Williamsburgh, let alone lehavdil a drosho by a Yiddish speaking rov or Chassidishe rebbe, is so close to loshon koidesh that you barely need to understand the Germanic and Slavic components of Yiddish to know what is being said. Yiddish, especially as spoken today in the haimishe world, is really an adaptation of loshon koidesh for daily or informal use.

    I never really needed to learn Yiddish to understand the Lubavitcher Rebbe ZY”A who spoke in Yiddish; I picked up the non lh”k words I needed from context. I learned everyday spoken Yiddish from friends who insisted on preserving it and from the songs of Chassidishe entertainers. And if I can’t remember or don’t know a word, I often substitute lh”k/ivrit conjugated in Yiddish (others use English in the same way; I probably speak Yiddish mostly with people from E”Y and copied their speech patterns).

    In fact a relative of mine who is secular but can read Yiddish looked at an old headline from the Forward about the Triangle Shirtwaist fire. When she saw the word “korbanois” written in loshon hakoidesh, she had no idea what the word meant and had to ask me to translate it because she never learned much in the way of lh”k or Ivrit.

    The real holiness, though, is in keeping alive a language that is disdained by those who preached assimilation in the US and those who tried to create a new Jewish culture devoid of Torah roots in E”Y. And that is because the language as we speak it represents a world that was nearly exterminated by the fire of the Churban and the floods of assimilation and secularism.

    in reply to: Jeans #665009
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    although the ‘jean wearing jobs’ dont demand jeans.


    They are easier to wash, and for a building contractor or tradesman or auto mechanic who needs to work on his knees in crawl spaces, the thicker fabric provides more protection.

    in reply to: 3 Boys in Japan #656186
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    These bochurim were very sheltered and were not properly warned, or like all of us they succumbed to temptation not knowing the circumstances.

    As far as they were concerned, they were doing something along the lines of bringing one extra bottle of mashke or carton of cigarettes through the green line (or buying mashke underage in duty free) which everyone does and which is not even enforced.

    in reply to: The Funniest Purim Costume #999541
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    I still say go for the Iranian or Afghan woman (chador or burqa) but in tinfoil and with a funny sign about tznius…maybe something like “School Uniform for 5770”.

    in reply to: Eretz Yisroel #636829
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    However, we see that the Aguda has adapted itself well enough to the reality of life in the modern world that it indeed is the future and while Rav Soloveichik’s way is chas vesholom not the past, many of the children of his followers are moving closer to the Aguda in terms of hashkafah and practice.

    And when Rav Kook’s followers protest the unraveling of their once hallowed dream by singing Reb Amram Bloy’s once almost notorious Hashem Hu Malkeinu (once known only as Hashem Hi Malkynee), that hitherto was mostly a Purimdige niggun in their circles and just about everywhere else, I think we know which way the arrows are pointing.

    My Hashem Hu Malkeinu ringtone is not the narrishkeit of the ragtag Ku Klux Kartel singing off tune in a grotesque pronunciation that sounds like me singing who knows what words to “Gelt” on Purim; it is recorded in perfect modern Ivrit by Ariel Zilber, a former paratrooper and erstwhile secular recording star who saw the light after Gush Katif.

    Hmm..strange hashgocho protis – no sooner was I ready to hit Send Post than Toker started to play….Gelt. What words should I write this year…….let’s see what happens in the elections and who sells out for a bissel nisht kusher GELT!

    in reply to: Cholov Akum #772590
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Oy – this probably shows just how successful “food scientists” have been in using cheap, unhealthy ingredients to come up with something that is more tasty but of infinitely lower quality than its original natural predecessor. (in the same way that orange drink, which should have the i and n replaced with the fifth and third letters of the alphabet, tastes better than orange juice).

    I haven’t had Hershey’s since I was a child and looking at those ingredients even if it were C”Y the only thing I would do with it is hmmmm…leave it firmly on the shelf.

    Interesting re powdered CY – thanks to all who mentioned it as I have seen hechsherim saying “for those who consume powdered chalav nochri” in E”Y and I always wondered why they mentioned powder. As for butter, one kosher list in this part of the world that mentions C”S products as an aside recommends but does not endorse only one very reliable upscale brand of butter from a country with the strictest standards – now I understand why.

    in reply to: Jewish Music Is Jewish? #638199
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    As for the exact gedarim, it can’t be given.


    Well, I would think that a song, if you call it that, with words that advocate misogyny and disrespect to law enforcement officials, (aka gangsta rap) is beyond kashering LOL.

    in reply to: Eretz Yisroel #636824
    Itzik_s
    Member

    I must ,however, reserve my utter disgust for itzik. The scenario he depicts is a second Holocaust and a third churban. Enough said.


    BS”D

    Please see a qualified learning specialist. You cannot seriously believe that the replacement of the corrupt medine by malchus beis Dovid, which is the wish of every Jew INCLUDING those who follow in the way of Rav Kook, is a second Holocaust and a third Churban. Had you READ what I WROTE you would see I was discussing two scenarios that are purely HYPOTHETICAL before making it clear that like all anti-Zionists who are not of the Ku Klutz Kartel variety,

    I believe that ONLY Moshiach can now supplant the medine – but unlike the Zionists I do not wish for it to succeed but rather for Jews living in E”Y to be safe and prosper. We ALL know the medine is failing us in that respect and that only its becoming a truly Jewish state, which is impossible without Moshiach, will allow for “yisroel yishkon lavetach”.

    I also realize that every Jew must be brought closer to Hashem and if dealing with the corrupt medine, a/k/a going deep into the mud, to make sure one more Jew has a Torah education, so that there is one less customer for the pork store that is open on Shabbos and one less potential mate for Elena whose mother is not Jewish even if some halfwit Sochnut shaliach changed her name to Elanit when he pushed through her emigration, is what is necessary then so be it so long as it is professional askonim backed by daas Torah who are engaging with the corrupt and unholy medine for the sake of klal Yisroel.

    in reply to: Please Rate President Obama�s Performance #637987
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    And the more I think about it, there is NO POINT explaining the dangers of Obama to citizens of E”Y or Ukraine who cannot vote or in any way affect American opinion.

    However, the fact that they don’t understand means that they do not understand that the old American values, and not socialism and vapid liberal lunacy, are what Torah is all about.

    And that scares me, along with a couple of loudmouth frum Jews in name and appearance only who loudly supported and riled up others to support Obama, revealing that for them frumkeit is just another alternative lifestyle that they sort of adopted while their real values are mired in the 1960’s. I fear for their kids, who make up a large part of the OTD crowd because of the mixed messages they get at home. Many of them are the ones who are most financially and socially dependent on the community, and they will get quite a potch when their rabbis and community leaders are starved for resources and have to cut down on their support of these ungrateful Deadheads who tax their funds and patience alike.

    in reply to: Cholov Akum #772586
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Well – Entenmanns is apparently made with CS powder so you are off the hook on that one according to some very valid opinions.

    Milky Way? You are surrounded by all that delicious Syrian food and you consider Milky Way EDIBLE??? Feed that to stray cats in the UK and you will land 60 days as a not very honored guest of Her Majesty the Queen.

    Hershey’s: here are the ingredients: “Chocolate: Hardly any.” An actual Hershey’s chocolate bar only contains between 4% and 10 % chocolate. The rest of it is sugars, emulsifiers, milk solids, and other fillers.

    From the label: Ingredients: SUGAR, CHOCOLATE, COCOA BUTTER, COCOA PROCESSED WITH ALKALI, MILK FAT, LACTOSE, SOY LECITHIN, PGPR, VANILLIN, ARTIFICIAL FLAVOR, AND MILK.

    (taken from WikiAnswers) NO COMMENT LOL!

    Herr’s – you mean the sour creme and onion ones?

    Otherwise the inyan is bishul Yisroel; some people including some very good friends of mine whose kashrus I trust more than my own eat non Bishul Yisroel potato chips b/c potato chips are not roui leshulchan melochim. I don’t want them anyway because most are cooked in oil that makes WD-40 seem healthy so I am machmir LOL – so machmir I don’t eat the bishul yisroel ones here in Ukraine or in the US!

    Again, if potato chips of any description are food, I am a polar bear.

    Seriously, in your case you’ll be better off in many ways if you give up CS junk food for health reasons! I’d have a hard time convincing you to give up Haagen-Dasz or Ben and Jerry’s but that junk food you mention is about as healthy as breathing car exhaust :(.

    Then you can ease into CY as I did; give up the hardest thing last. And if you really want CY junk you can find it LOL; Blooms, Paskesz and Elite-Megadim among others are your friends :).

    in reply to: Eretz Yisroel #636821
    Itzik_s
    Member

    I have been told by several people (one of them a close talmid of Rav Shach, zatzal, now a well known Rosh Yeshiva but I don’t want to mention his name without his permission) that Rav Shach, zatzal, said that l’shita he agreed with the Satmar Rav a hundred percent, just that he felt that l’maaseh it was impossible to follow it in the present time.

    BS”D

    Which, surprisingly is not far from a known quote of the Lubavitcher Rebbe ZYA regarding either Satmar, the real NK or both. The Rebbe said that if the kanoim were not out there doing what they did, he would have to do it (implying that this would jeopardize the work Chabad does with victims of the medine going back to accepting bochurim from the infamous maabarot into Tomchei Tmimim at the time of the mass aliya from Teiman and Morocco and thereby saving them from the forced secularization at the hands of none other than Yossi Sarid’s father OLBM at the behest of Mapai). When Torah askonim of any community are dealing with the medine, they are doing so to save Jews and to preserve Torah uMitzvos in E”Y; they are NOT recognizing that the medine has legitimacy or chas vesholom holiness, rather that it happens to control E”Y in these dark days of golus and that not one Jew can be left behind.

    The Ku Klutz Kartel are wrong in that they:

    1) Demonstrate against the medine along with terror supporters, in ways that encourage anti-Semites including dangerous ones. The Satmar Rov (Reb Yoilish ZYA) pointed out that for non-Jews, being against the medine is being against Jews. When we protest, it is one thing to protest anti-Torah policies and another thing to call for the destruction of the medine and claiming it should be replaced with an Arab state. The successor to the memsheles zadoin is NOT HAMAS or FATAH chas vesholom. It is malchus beis Dovid, and if dealing with the corrupt medine brings one Jew one step closer to Torah then it has to be done – but by professional askonim who do not get swayed or corrupted themselves. (I know that this is not always the case and that is why the Satmar shita of no engagement whatsoever is very admirable but not always practical or recommended for everyone).

    2) Engage in dialogue with and support for our mortal enemies, enabling themselves to be used by same.

    in reply to: Cholov Akum #772584
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Awww..never mind CY and CS (which of course is very important to me but you have who to rely on if you eat CS and for that matter chocolate probably contains only CS powdered milk which apparently only we Chassidim consider CY) – you just don’t know what good chocolate is! Milk Munch does NOT qualify LOL – if it is what I think it is, the last time I had a piece is when someone offered it to me and I took it so as not to offend them because they were nice enough to bring enough over to be able to offer it to guests. To put it mildly, I did not want a second one even when offered LOL.

    However, it is about time that someone once again breaks the CY cartel and produces good CY at a major plant the way Goldman’s did.

    The sad demise of Ahava shows that the community just can’t support a decent (but not particularly high quality, even if it was healthier) CY dairy because such a dairy cannot achieve the proper economies of scale and it is beholden to moisdos and groceries which cannot always afford to pay on time.

    What we need is a CY line that is similar in price to CS and is distributed to the major outlets. If CY can be sold as a premium quality product that just happens to be CY and is no more than 5-10 cents a half gallon more than CS (and if gallons are available for big families outside the city who have more room and bigger fridges), it will be ideal.

    That will radically change the CY situation and make it easier for more and more people to keep CY. Problem is that it has to be done outside the framework of the haimishe firms and stores; the product must be available to the general public as well.

    in reply to: Melava Malka #648454
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    My rav in NY actually told me not to worry about eating melave malka because it just about causes me agmas nefesh to eat again so soon after a big Shabbos meal. Usually I just have two flatbreads and listen to some music so I am sort of yotze.

    But I love it when we have a melave malka farbrengen or a sheva brochos two or three odd hours after Shabbos ends in the winter; I make sure to walk to wherever it is held so I can eat and enjoy myself.

    in reply to: Jeans #664998
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Also, the problem here is that we (and I am the most guilty because I discussed CY in the wrong thread) are confusing halacha with minhag.

    Not wearing jeans is a communal minhag but if they are clean and respectable the issur is only a communal one with no real halachic validity. (Ditto for denim skirts; I understand that some communities frown upon them as do some families, but in most places if they are clean and the right length you’re usually well within the rules).

    On the other hand, going to shul in dirty jeans or hip hop styles is a bizayoin. If you are a known entity in your shul and you show up like that, unless it is obvious you’re in the middle of cleaning your home or car and you wanted to run to minyan because you might be #10, expect stares and dirty looks because you’re not treating the shul with proper respect.

    in reply to: Please Rate President Obama�s Performance #637985
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    The saddest thing is when I have to continually explain to frum people from E”Y who should know better that Obama is not David Levy, a man from a supposedly disadvantaged minority who rises to power against all odds; he is Achmed Tibi, a fifth column who was assisted in his rise to power by foreign governments and anti-American movements.

    They are not old enough to remember Jimmy Carter and what he did to E”Y as well as the US.

    I, on the other hand, remember when our school nearly ran out of funds and would have had to cut services and fire teachers (well, I wasn’t too unhappy that the music teacher would be canned LOL), and I remember when my mother got an embarrassing 25 cent food stamp token in change because due to layoffs and closings so many food stamps were being used in our suburban supermarket that the cashier had no quarters in her till! (I probably still have the shtempale in my old coin collection which is in storage at my parents’ house :)).

    Most of all, I remember the hostage crisis and the humiliation of America by the likes of a Khomeini; now it may be Chavez as well as Ahmadinejad who embarrass America under Obama.

    in reply to: Eretz Yisroel #636816
    Itzik_s
    Member

    Fait Accompli example: A couple gets married against our advise and have children. Afterwards we will pray for their happiness and success.


    BS”D

    A Jew goes off the path and marries a non-Jewish woman despite all of our efforts to stop the intermarriage.

    We daven day and night and do whatever we can so that either the non-Jewish partner becomes a ger tzedek and the children convert (the equivalent of the medine electing, if not a frum government, at least a government that is proudly Jewish and will uphold Jewish values, defend our mekoimois kedoishim, and cease to cause anti-Semitism throughout the world by its incompetent actions and lack of ability to either wage a decisive war or make a decisive peace).

    Alternately, we do what we can so that the marriage breaks up (in this case we daven for the peaceful dissolution of the medine so that, as Aguda really wanted, Jews would have rights to have Torah communities, access to mekoimois hakedoishim, but no sovereignty). We tell the non-Jewish partner that she is not ours and we will not tolerate the way she has corrupted a pure Jew (the medine vs the Jewish people) but we cannot kill the non-Jewish partner or cause her any harm.

    Since neither in the case of the hypothetical marriage nor in the case of the medine will this happen al pi teva, we daven for Moshiach to come and replace the memsheles zadoin with Malchus Beis Dovid, all the while trying to ensure, by whatever means necessary including dealing with and in a way subverting the corrupt structures of the medine (Aguda of today, Chabad), that no further physical or spiritual damage is caused by the medine.

    This present state has NO sanhedrin and no kedusha. Those who serve in its army do indeed protect their fellow Jews, but the reason the army has not been wiped out is ONLY because of the Torah life which goes on in E”Y DESPITE the best efforts of the medine. The failures of 1973 and Lebanon and the recent cowardly surrender in Aza should make that clear by now.

    in reply to: The Funniest Purim Costume #999526
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Something with tinfoil can be funny and easy to do; maybe a tinfoil burqa or chador and a sign marked “Approved by the Mishmeres haTznius”! I think the school would LOVE that!

    in reply to: Cholov Akum #772583
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Syrian, they don’t sell the Schmerling and Camille Bloch chocolate where you are? I can’t stomach any of the snack type chocolates and hope no one wastes any on me for Purim because I don’t pass on sholoch mones LOL :). Hershey’s is very heavily processed low quality chocolate and if you can get hold of the real thing (Swiss CY or maybe Vered HaGalil from EY is still good) you’ll never go back.

    in reply to: Melava Malka #648452
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Does everyone sing Al Tira Avdi Yaakov at a melave malka or is that strictly Chassidish?

    in reply to: Jeans #664995
    Itzik_s
    Member

    If He wanted us to do the chumras, THEY would have been the halacha m’Sinai.

    BS”D

    Many of the chumras are just that; they were proper halacha but due to economic and social hardship in Europe and the Eastern lands as well as the travails of the early emigration to the US, it was impossible to keep halacha on a proper level. Now, with economic prosperity and social freedom everywhere Jews live except Iran (and now Venezuela), we enjoy our freedom as Hashem wants us to, by giving up the phony yoke of social correctness in favor of ol malchus Shamayim. However, since there are those sincere Yidden who still live in the old times and do not realize why we have our freedom, the halachic corrections are mistakenly called chumras instead of what they are – corrections or hachzoros atoro leyoishno.

    On the other hand, heterim and kulas are not meant for everyday living. They are meant for situations such as travel, interaction with secular relatives, baalei tshuva at various times in their personal development, physical and psychological limitations and illnesses L”A etc.

    If the first immigrants to the US had been able to hold on to Yiddishkeit instead of kosher and Shabbos keeping Yidden having become a minority very quickly, we probably would have had cholov Yisroel, pas Yisroel, and glatt as the standard in the United States as the CY standard would have developed in 1880 and not 1955 so that the large firms would have had to have allowed mashgichim for C”Y (which is not hard anymore and one day the present situation will be fixed when a major firm goes C”Y and brings costs down).

    in reply to: The Funniest Purim Costume #999524
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    I think the teachers would love the Ahmadinejad idea but somehow I don’t think you can pull it off :). It is more for a guy who usually shaves and would prepare by not shaving for a few days…and not showering for a month!

    in reply to: Cholov Akum #772580
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Syrian, the CY chocolate out there is far better than the CS (and between where you are and Lakewood you can get it on sale for the same price at times, especially now around Purim). The CY is real Swiss chocolate; the CS is full of all kinds of chemicals. Some of the rest of the stuff you mention, if you mean well known brands of single serving cakes and baked snacks, is best avoided for health reasons whether it is CY or CS.

    in reply to: Melava Malka #648415
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Drinking 96% alcohol is an old Russian tradition but pure and perfectly drinkable grain alcohol (like Everclear in the US) is only legally sold as heavily taxed rubbing alcohol in pharmacies here and in Russia.

    in reply to: Melava Malka #648410
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Prepared for Purim today – I drank the rubbing alcohol (pure 96%) that I keep in my shul locker for ummm…emergencies.

    in reply to: Cholov Akum #772571
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Syrian, you get used to it and you end up not missing whatever you used to eat. Ice cream was the hardest for me to give up. I used to make myself fleishig all day so I would not be tempted to eat Haagen-Dasz when I switched to CY. Now I don’t care to eat dairy ice cream anymore; the only time I do is Shavuos.

    Unless something has changed, there is excellent CY cheese (mozzarella, string cheeze etc) under the JSOR. I used to go to the Syrian shops in Brooklyn just for that – it is hand made and natural.

    in reply to: The Funniest Purim Costume #999520
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Hmmm…dress up as Ahmadinejad with a noose wound (LIGHTLY) around the neck.

    Dress up as a wannabe Ku Klutz Kartel – wear a tinfoil Yerushalmi bekeshe over your brightest color dress and high heels and carry a sign like “Jews Out Of Palestine, TX!” or “We Have No Connection with Judaism or the Jewish People!”

    in reply to: Good Shabbos! #1135468
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Gut Shabbos all/let this past Shabbos have been the last Shabbos in golus so that we can hear the Leviim sing shira this shabbos!

    in reply to: Jeans #664944
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    ChanieE – considering that the Queen of England is but the matriarch of the world’s most famous dysfunctional welfare family, I would have no problem meeting her while wearing jeans – if I actually had a pair :).

    in reply to: YWN CR Board Meeting!!!!!!!! #659307
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    Is that cheque guaranteed by Madoff or by his largest legal competitor, namely the Social Security Administration?

    in reply to: Out Of The Mailbag: (A Parent’s Involvement In A Child’s Shidduch) #636553
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    It is well known that shidduchim where the essentials, such as color of Shabbos tablecloth and style of shoe, either do not match or are not up to the other party’s standards, lead to unhappy marriages and then L”A divorce.

    in reply to: #1052196
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    And one more thing – Lipa Schmeltzer is sparking a new interest in Yiddish as he has basically demystified the Chassidish lifestyle of which his dialect of Yiddish is a part and made it creative, offbeat and welcoming (which was the intention of the Baal Shem Tov).

    I am sure more Lipa’s are on the way and people will be learning to at least understand Yiddish from Chassidish singers and badchonim who enter the general Jewish market with their albums and performances (my daily vocabulary improved quite a bit when Avremel released his Yom Tov Ehrlich tapes and listening to Lipa, Michoel Schnitzler and Yonason Schvartz helps me quite a bit when it comes to everyday speech).

    in reply to: #1052187
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    And one last thing – let’s just say that Yiddish IS holy. Fine – but that does not make YOU not holy or less holy for not being able to understand it. The kever of Rabbi Yaakov Abouhassira ZYA (Abir Yaakov) in Egypt is holy but I am not less holy because I don’t want to visit it or any other part of Egypt for any reason even though I could have done so many times.

    in reply to: Jeans #664928
    Itzik_s
    Member

    BS”D

    It depends who you are and what you do. If your community allows them and they are clean and respectful then so be it. If you are wearing them as a sign of rebellion, then you will be treated accordingly.

    However, many haimish contractors, repairmen, building supplies dealers, food preparers/butchers etc wear jeans to work and I do not see how they can change for mincha in the winter nor would they be expected to.

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