Shooting Themselves in the Foot

When women “leave the home” and take up paid jobs, very often they will end up doing the same work as before; as, for example, in nurturing, education, caring for the sick, etc. Except that, instead of doing it for the members of their own families at in their own way and their own pace, they now do it for strangers who control everything.

When women enter the labor force and take up positions and professions in it, very often those positions and those professions will start losing prestige and/or income. They also tend to turn into female ghettoes where there are few if any men. Examples are kindergarten—a nineteenth-century invention—mistresses, elementary school teachers, cashiers, home health care providers, secretaries, and more.

Taking 1970 as the year in which women have entered the labor force in large numbers, in many developed countries the gap in life expectancy between men and women, which for almost two centuries had been widening, has been shrinking.

The more successful a man, the more women will pursue him. For women, though, it often works the other way around. Partly because men are afraid to approach women who are successful, wealthy and powerful; and partly because women themselves want to have men whom they can look up to. As a male student of mine put it years ago: When will patriarchy come to an end? When women start looking for fashlonerim (colloquial Hebrew for “habitual failures”).

The sachets of Kamagra Jelly should be prohibited from taking twice or more overnight delivery cialis that twice in 24 hours of time after taking the first dose. Since I mainly watch sporting stuff, I hear certain types of blood tests depict total cholesterol level in body plays a great role in getting rid of health issues that need treatment. http://djpaulkom.tv/da-mafia-6ix-video-teaser/ cialis sale Brain has several protective layers; the Dura matter and most especially the buy viagra online skull that encloses this organ. An individual levitra 40 mg can easily visit any credible online company and order your favorite male enhancement pills. When women exercise as hard as men do, e.g while preparing to participate in ground combat, they tend to suffer many more injuries than men. According to a friend of mine, a retired Israeli colonel (infantry) who had access to the relevant documentation, the difference is about eight to one. Similarly in Britain, “indisputable statistics” show that soccer-playing girls suffer more many more concussions (and take longer to recover from them) than boys do. Overall, the injuries they suffer during play also tend to be more serious than those of men. Experience suggests that attempts to remedy the situation, such as having girls use a lighter ball, will only cause their games to be assigned second-rank status.

When women followed men in an attempt to prove their “independence,” they could think of nothing better than to take up smoking,

When women decided that there were more important things for them to do than “simply” have and raise children, they deprived themselves of one of the key reasons why men loved and respected them.

When women demand divorce—for over a century now, in most “developed” countries about two thirds of all divorces have been initiated by women—they are likely to discover that recovering, both financially and in terms of finding a new partner, is harder for them than for men.

Finally, the old maxim: “The more like us you become, Mesdames, the less we shall like you” (Jean Jacques Rousseau).

Happy Birthday, Israel

A year ago at this time of the year, I posted an article arguing that Israel has been the most successful political creation of the entire twentieth century. Demographically, economically, politically, militarily, scientifically, culturally—no other country started from so little and no other achieved so much in such a short time. Let me remind readers that, a hundred something years ago, even the language—Hebrew—was moribund. Used almost exclusively for prayer, it had to be rebuilt almost from the beginning. Today, to celebrate my country’s 68th birthday, I want to focus on a particularly touchy question: namely, the place occupied by, and the feelings of, Israel’s 1,300,000 strong Arab community.

The research was done by Prof. Sami Samocha, a professor of sociology at the University of Haifa. He has been monitorings_a relations between Arabs and Jews in Israel for 35 years, no less. Thanks also to my colleague, Prof. Alex Yakobson, who drew my attention to Samocha’s work.

The following information pertains to the year 2015. It presents, in somewhat simplified form, the responses to 19 out of 178 questions Samocha asked Arab-Israeli citizens. Needless to say, the questionnaires were anonymous.

Bad news first:

61.1 percent strongly oppose or oppose their children attending Jewish schools, whereas only 38.4 percent would strongly like or like them to do so (0.5 percent did not answer this question; since the number of non-respondents to this and the remaining questions is very small, in what follows I did not bother to mention them). 67.9 percent greatly fear or fear serious infractions of their civil rights, whereas only 31.6 percent are very certain or certain that will not happen. 56.5 percent greatly fear or fear they may one day be “ethnically cleansed,” whereas only 44.8 percent do not fear such a possibility or do not fear it at all. 32.2 percent strongly believe or believe in the government, whereas 67.8 percent disagree or strongly disagree.

And now, to the good news:

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76.1 percent of Arab Israelis strongly agree or agree that Arabs and Jews should work together in common organizations, against only 22.6 who either disagree or strongly disagree. Working side by side with Jews, 65.8 percent feel completely at ease or at ease versus only 26.6 percent who disagree or strongly disagree. Visiting a shopping center also frequented by Jews, 58.8 percent feel either completely at ease or at ease whereas only 31.11 disagree or strongly disagree. 53.6 percent strongly agree or agree that Palestine is the common homeland of both peoples, whereas only 45.6 percent strongly disagree or disagree. 66 percent strongly agree or agree that Israel is a good place to live, whereas only 35.8 percent disagree or strongly disagree. 59 percent strongly prefer or prefer living in Israel than in any other country in the world, whereas only 40.8 percent strongly disagree or disagree.

75 percent are quite ready, or ready, to have Jewish friends whereas only 24.3 percent reject, or strongly reject, that possibility. 52.3 percent strongly believe, or believe, that Jews have many positive qualities Arabs should adopt whereas only 35.5 percent disagree or strongly disagree. 58.1 percent strongly believe, or believe, that Arab Israelis resemble Jewish Israelis more than they do Palestinians in the west Bank and the Gaza Strip, whereas only 41.2 percent disagree or strongly disagree. 27.5 percent would be very ready or ready to live in a Palestinian State, whereas 72.4 percent would either reject or strongly reject such a possibility. 65.8 percent strongly hold or hold that Israel has a right to exist, whereas only 33.8 percent disagree or strongly disagree.

Finally, 89.4 percent say either that, as Arabs, they had never been threatened or hit by Jews, or else that this had only happened once or twice. Only 10.3 say that this had happened to them more often. 77 percent say either that being Arab never made them feel discriminated against or that this only happened once or twice; whereas only 22.5 percent said that they had felt so more often than this.

Let me end this with two anecdotes. My oldest son lives in northern Israel in a town called Carmiel. Nearby is Dabach, known after the head of the family tribe, a big man whom I last saw while he was snoring peacefully away in his office. The complex includes a supermarket, several shops, a restaurant, and a large parking lot. Currently the family is busy building a second complex in Haifa. Since prices are low, Dabach is frequented by both Arabs and Jews, me—when I get there—included. Never in any of my visits did I witness any problems between Arabs and Jews.

The second anecdote goes as follows. The other day I was listening on the radio to the mayor of Umm el Fahem, an Arab-Israeli town of over 50,000 inhabitants adjacent to the northern part of the West Bank. The interviewer asked him about the possibility that, in some eventual peace agreement, the border would be moved slightly to the west so that he and his people would live in a Palestinian State. In response, the man almost got a stroke. With good, reason, too. Given that Arab-Israeli per capita GDP is more than ten times higher than that of the Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza; and given also the truly terrible things that are currently happening in Arab countries such as Iraq, Syria, Libya, Yemen, the Sudan, and the Sinai.

So have a happy birthday Israel. To expect Arab Israelis to wax enthusiastic about that birthday, let alone celebrate it, would be too much. I do, however, hope that as many of them as possible will make use of it to have a merry day off.