Opinion Editorials are posted and archived on JNonline.us . Dry B ones I sfk G N gsu ONCE AGAIN IT'S TIME TO UNLEASH OUR OPTIMISM Editorial Israel's Hunger Factor I srael's biggest and most pressing social problem is hunger — hunger exacerbated by a climate ravaged by Palestinian terror despite the recent economic rebound. The gap between the haves and have-nots is ever present. Soup kitchen lines continue under the radar, especially in neighborhoods of new immi- grants from Russia and Ethiopia and areas housing mainly Israeli Arabs. Hunger: It is Israel's other urgent con- cern after security. The fear in the diaspo- ra is that the terrorist threat will obliterate the scope of Israeli hunger. One of Israel's largest kitchens is Hazon Yeshaya, which provides 400,000 hot meals each month at 60 distribution points. Eighty percent of the meals go to school kids, the state's future. Malnourishment could affect their normal development. Elderly shut-ins also benefit as do many people in the anonymous middle. The hunger story is lousy PR for Israel. But it's too important to hide. Lives are at risk. Unlike in the past, Israel's jobless rate isn't necessarily the problem; it's at 6.9 percent, the lowest since 1996. But that still totals 200,000 people. Israelis who are destitute put medicine and shelter ahead of food when their government aid of a few hundred dollars a month arrives. The percentage of Israeli children living below the poverty line is the highest in the Western world, higher even than in some developing countries like Mexico. And that's alarming. Israel's poverty line is 3,000 shekels a month, or $785. We don't fault the government pour- ing almost every shekel into defense, not when llamas rules Gaza and the West Bank continues to breed suicide bombers. We just want Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to acknowledge starvation's fury, as evi- denced by more government referrals to the soup kitchens. Two Members of Knesset, a Jew and an Arab, recently visited America under aus- pices of the Religion Action Center of the Reform movement to plead Israel's case on behalf of hungry Jews, Arabs, Druze and Bedouins. They sought support for secur- ing Israel's National Food Bank, Leket, which serves 10,000 people daily. The aim is to assure a nationwide food bank sponsored by the government, volunteers, businesses and philanthropists. Hunger knows no ethnic bounds in Israel, where 60 percent of the poorest families are Arab. The state and the Jewish people, however, are responsible for all Israelis. The Torah directs us to provide food for the poor and the stranger. You can join the cause to bolster Israel's National Food Bank by making a tax- JUST GET OUT A SHOVEL AND PLAN? A TREE .. . www.drybonesblog.com deductible contribution to U.S.-based Mazon: A Jewish Response to Hunger for people of all faiths and backgrounds worldwide: Mazon, Leket Food Bank, P.O. Box 250250, West Bloomfield MI 48325. There is a midrash that teaches that when you are asked in the world to come, "What was your work?" and you answer, "I fed the hungry:' you will be told, "Come this way and enter the gates of heaven." Sixteenth-century shtetl rabbis wouldn't allow a simchah until the poor were fed. The story reinforces in a compelling way that support for the desired national food bank in Israel is a metaphoric way to invite the hungry to dinner. 0 The pay is so crummy that employees depend on such tips. I hate to be hard-hearted to a kid working in one of these places, but that's not my problem. I don't see why I should support a deliberate policy by these companies to suppress wages and enhance their own bottom line. • The Detroit Lions. Talk about taking money under false pretenses. The company joke is that William Clay Ford Jr. wrote his master's thesis at Massachusetts Institute of Technology on "How to Make Money on a Losing Football Team." I have no sympathy for those who keep whining about the wrong-headed blun- ders of this franchise and continue to buy season tickets. Nothing will change until that changes. Just as Red Wings fan forced a sale of the team by the Norris family in the 1980s by not showing up and Tigers fans forced Mike Hitch to bring in some- one who knew what he was doing to run that operation, Lions fans have it in their power to provoke change. Why won't they use it? Ah, there is a fit topic for another MIT thesis. • So we're at this bad steakhouse in Canton. My wife orders a sirloin strip and it comes to the table not prepared as she had stipulated. So she sent it back. This in itself is not unusual. But when the steak made its second appearance it was round. "That does not look like a strip," said Sherry, observantly. "Sometimes;' responded the waitress, "they change shape when you cook 'ern." I had to admire her ability to think on her feet. But I still hold to the old fash- ioned belief that when you order a strip you shouldn't get a ribeye. Reality Check A Gallery Of Goniffs T he credit card companies must be the most shameless bunch of crooks in the country. Many people were shocked to learn recently that even if they pay their bill on time but are late with payments elsewhere, the interest rate on their card will be raised without notice. The card company "justification" is that trouble in one payment sector is a warning of coming trouble in their sector, too. In other words, they are saying: "We understand you may be having a tough time — so we're going to make things even tougher for you!' The reality is they will use any excuse, no matter how illogical, to gouge their cardholders and we should all thank our Sen. Carl Levin for exposing their antics. Some of the company executives apolo- gized to Levin at his hearings and said they won't do it anymore. I would prefer to have seen them dragged from their limou- sines and beaten with shovels ... just as an object lesson. • I love the ads that Comcast has been running for the last several months. It refuses to accept the pricing policies of the Big Ten Network, it claims, because Comcast has the best interests of its subscribers at heart. The use of the words Comcast and "best interests of its subscribers" in the same sentence is the funniest line I've seen in months. It would cer- tainly be a first. •Why do coffeehouse chains permit tip cups to be placed at the ordering counters? I'm perfectly willing to tip like a grand duke at a sit-down restaurant. But I don't quite grasp how grabbing a latte and a muffin and handing it over the counter merits the same sort of extra payment that table service involves, even if it is just spare change. The burger chains don't allow it and neither does Panera. ❑ George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor614@aoLcom. January 17 • 2008 A29