viewpoints » S end letters to: letters@thejewishnews.com letters OBJECTIONS TO “HOW THE GOP MEETS A JEWISH MILLENNIAL WOMAN’S STANDARD” Lena Epstein’s viewpoint article in the Oct. 20, 2016, issue (“How the GOP Meets A Jewish Millennial Woman’s Standard,” page 8) contains so many contradictions and inaccuracies, I do not know where to start. First, she says she would not want Donald Trump to be her future children’s Sunday school teacher, but would it be all right for him to be her children’s presi- dent? She also says he is a person of action and insinuates she believes what he says. Therefore, I think she must believe that he has assaulted women and there must be credence in the 11 women’s accusa- tions. She mentions she believes he is a great businessman but fails to mention all his unsuccessful and shady ventures, and the fact that he lost almost $1 billion in a single year. She estimates his net worth, but since he has not released his tax returns, it is impossible to verify. He also has admitted and thinks it is smart not to pay federal income taxes. She mentions insulting the office of the president of the United States, but fails to mention that is what Donald Trump did for many years with his birther campaign. As for Israel, Trump believes that it would be good for Israel’s enemies to have nuclear weapons. How is that securing Israel’s future? There has also been a lot of anti-Semi- tism peppered throughout his campaign; remember the cartoon of Hillary Clinton with the Star of David and a pile of money in the background? If the people he hired to run his cam- paign are any indication of who he will Funny Jewish Tweet @InFullBloomUS Time for some election humor. Yiddish curses for your political opponent: • May you sell everything and retire to Florida just as global warming makes it uninhabitable. • May you live to 120 without Social Security or Medicare. • May you make a fortune and lose it all in one of Sheldon Adelson’s casinos. • May you live to a ripe old age, and may the only people who come visit you be Mormon missionaries. • May your son be elected president, and may you have no idea what you did with his birth certificate. • May your insurance company decide constipation is a pre-existing condition. appoint to positions of power, in the unlikely case he should win, we are all in trouble. As an example of the type of people he may appoint, he hired Steve Bannon, who ran Breitbart News, to run his campaign. Breitbart News is known as an alt-right, anti-Semitic organization. Bannon has also said he did not want his children to go to school with Jewish children. I understand she is a longtime Republican activist, but there comes a time where country needs to be put ahead of party. She should also know that Hillary Clinton was the senator from New York, not Illinois. She should read Jordan Acker’s viewpoint (“Who Can You Be Proud Of?” page 8) and reread her own excuse for an endorsement. Maybe that would get her to do the right thing and retract it. and hours of labor that a car company buys is determined by the number of customers willing and able to buy their cars. Therefore, the consumer class is the job creator, not businesses that hire reluctantly. Lack of investment capital can kill jobs, but an excess does not create jobs. Excess private capital only drives down inter- est rates and creates investment bubbles when capital runs out of productive investments. The mortgage bubble burst- ing in 2008 bankrupted General Motors, not NAFTA. And, I believe Hilary Clinton best understands textbook economics (and climate science) while Paul Ryan reads Ayn Rand fantasy novels and Trump the National Enquirer. Neither pride nor prejudice but objec- tive data is my guide. Marc Roland West Bloomfield Dennis Green Farmington Hills Lena Epstein’s viewpoint expressing pride in her choice of Donald Trump exempli- fies what is behind the chaos in politics. Too many people make their choice not on reasoned analysis but on tribal loyalty and emotion. Pride can be taken for one’s accom- plishments but not for one’s opinions. I can take pride in being a member of the Jewish community because of our dispro- portionate achievements as a community, but my loyalty is no basis for pride any more than is the loyalty of a racist to the KKK. Selecting the leader of the free world is a serious decision, not a sporting event where you take pride in supporting the winner. Benjamin Franklin said that the great- est threat to our republic is ignorance. Justice David Souter elaborated that when government fails to work and the people don’t understand why and who is at fault, someone will come along and say, “I alone can fix it.” Those who don’t know better will believe him, and that’s how Rome lost its democracy. Without a solid economic foundation, a strong military and support for Israel aren’t possible, but Congress is repeating the mistakes that dragged out the Great Depression. Ms. Epstein lists economics as impor- tant. Trump’s investments may turn to gold as she claims, but it came from gam- ing the system, cheating others and too often led to bankruptcy, which is just a legal way of stiffing more people. If gold is the measure, I may as well write in Bernie Madoff. Here’s where Trump and the Republican have it destructively wrong: Labor is a commodity — just like steel — that a business purchases as needed to make a product. The pounds of steel Regarding Lena Epstein’s endorsement of Donald Trump, before I begin, let me make two points. First, I’m an indepen- dent voter, terribly disappointed that Mitt Romney did not win the 2012 presidential election. Second, it is with regret that in the 2016 election, I’ll be forced to vote for Hillary Clinton by default. Frankly, with a meritorious candidate, I believe the GOP could have won the election. Her essay made several good points when referring to the GOP in general. As to the presidential candidate, I have trouble with her arguments and what she left out. Just because someone is a person of action doesn’t necessarily qualify him for her for a certain position. In addition to being able to act, that person must be rational, balanced in judgment, able to make well-thought-out reasons for his or her positions so he or she can convince others with opposing views, and they must be able to compromise to achieve his or her goals. Unfortunately for the GOP and the country, Mr. Trump has none of these qualities. He is argumentative to the point of being divisive, repressively, unabash- edly, disrespecting of others and has NO ability to compromise. Further, he has no political experience and, I fear, has no idea of how government actually works. It is impossible to explain away Mr. Trump’s character flaws by criticizing his opponent. I’m hopeful he hasn’t done permanent damage to the GOP, but that has yet to be seen. It may well be that his candidacy will cost his party the loss of its Senate majority and possibly even its majority in the House. As we’ve all seen on several occasions, Mr. Trump has completely disregarded the sanguine advice of his advisers with costly consequences, which he always blames on someone else. This because he believes that no one, regardless of their expertise, knows better than he does. Apparently, no one but Mr. Trump is infallible. It is an embarrassment to our great country to have a person such as Donald Trump as a presidential candidate! Joel Gershenson Farmington Hills NO JUSTIFICATION FOR GROUP INTENT ON DIVIDING AMERICAN JEWS In response to Rabbi Orkmand’s review of Trouble in the Tribe (Sept. 1, 2016), his review displays the uncritical acceptance of anything critical of Israel that defines the “progressive, heal-the-world” contem- porary Jew. Consider, for example, his take on J Street, which he describes as “a progres- sive alternative to AIPAC.” This is at odds with J Street’s own description of its pri- orities. As reported by James Traub in the New York Times, Jeremy Ben Ami described J Street this way: “Our No. 1 agenda item is to do whatever we can in Congress to act as Obamas’s blocking back.” What does this suggest about J Street’s agenda and loyalties? Ben-Ami was applauded at the 2015 J Street conference after he addressed Netanyahu directly, telling him, “You don’t speak for us.” What does this sug- gest about J Street’s regard for Israel’s vot- ers, who actually think they should make decisions about who will speak for Israel? J Street was created to divide and polarize American Jewry, and recognition of this led the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations to wisely decline J Street’s request for membership. Trouble in the Tribe offers justifications for groups created to increase tensions and divisions within the American Jewish community and to undermine support for Israel. Israel will live or die by the decisions it makes. The opinions of American Jews do not offer superior wisdom, and we would do well to bear that in mind. Julia Lutch Davis, Calif. RABBI STARR’S SERMON MISUNDERSTOOD Rabbi Starr’s Sermon regarding “Kaddish For Tikkun Olam” has been misunder- stood by many writers. The point he was making was we Jews must take care of each other first. There are many Jewish elderly, in particular those living by themselves, who need our assistance, but we do not know where they are or what they need. Once the needs of our own people have been taken care of, we can than look after the needs continued on page 10 8 November 3 • 2016