Friday, October 17, 2025

More Kings


I'm going to No Kings. Of course I am. You don't live through all this without choosing a side, and the idea that I would ever be anywhere in this but with the anti-Trumps is so unthinkable that the very idea makes me wretch. Parts of this side don't thrill me, people who've read a while know what they are, but most people reading this know what needs to be done.
I have very little love for a left that can't be bothered with how they oppress Jews, views traditional Democrats just as oppressors with a human face, and treats every moderating criticism as the equivalent to violenc*. But the difference between them and conservatives is that conservatives have power! They control all three branches of the government even as they represent a clear minority of the population, and the more power they have, the more phantom threats they see while ignoring real threats all the more. Apparently a couple campus radicals are cause for a hundred times the alarm they sound over Russian interference in a Presidential election, or even than they sound about how the Chinese government uses our very technology to spy on us and all levels of our government (assuming they look on Silicon Valley's spying with approval...).
Churchill said 'If Hitler had invaded hell I should find myself making favorable reference to the devil in the House of Commons.' Well, I'm not thrilled about marching with a left who will no doubt coopt some of these demonstrations for Gaza, Gaza, Gaza, even while we currently live in the best hope for peace since Oslo. One day, traditional liberals like me may have to fight a vastly turbocharged version of the worst among them, but right now, they're our allies, even if I feel like I have to wash my hands in their company.
On the one hand, the silence of the Left over the Gaza peace deal is absolutely deafening. The devil must get his due if he is not to come for us, and the Trump administration did something heroic: they got the hostages home, and 2000 Palestinian prisoners are coming home too. Some of these prisoners are heinous terrorists who will try to kill Jews all over again, some were thrown in jail indiscriminately just for appearing at demonstrations or throwing a rock, and some who were senselessly thrown in jail are now radicalized into potential terrorists.
On the other hand, the idea that this deal will probably work is madness. We're supposed to believe that Hamas will unilaterally agree to leave, but Hamas didn't even wait a day before starting to execute any opposition: some in public. Reuters claims the number is 33, but I'm sure that number will climb precipitously. Meanwhile, Hamas accused Israel of killing another 30 since the treaty. This is peacetime?!
The hostages are home, and it says something that all the living hostages are now men. What happened to the women? I have a bad feeling I need to spell it out, so read the rest of this paragraph at your peril........................................... I think it's pretty clear that any forensic exam would show that sexual violence was done to them. They were killed so they wouldn't talk about it, and Hamas will inevitably claim that the bodies were irrecoverable.
On the other hand, what changed in the last month? Why now?
It wasn't about the Nobel Prize, or it wasn't 'just' about the Nobel Prize. Even an idiot like Trump knows very well that he'd have to maintain the peace as well as stop the war before he would ever be considered, but he could, as always, feed his not getting it as another grievance to his base. No, the reason is still more selfish.
What happened was that Israel bombed Qatar, a country that very shrewdly gifted Trump a giant plane in public and god knows what else in private; and Israel did so without even telling the US that they would. There's no question, Qatar is an Israeli opponent who helps fund everything from Hamas to Yemen's Houthis to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, who broadcasts antisemitic propaganda every day on al-Jezeera, but client states don't go behind their protectors' back to bomb an opponent who tries so hard to stay in the Godfather's grace.
Yes, Trump caused peace in the Middle East, at least for a week, but he did it by doing what Biden and Obama never dared: bring Israel to heel. Force Israel to accept peace, pledge that America would never let Israel annex the West Bank. Behold, the most pro-Israel President...
The truth is, by the standards of historic fascism, Trump has still barely scratched the surface. I think everybody's a little nervous about tomorrow, but this is still so far from 20th century fascism. Fascism used to mean the wholesale ban of any political opposition with no political party allowed but the ruling party: all critics of the government are thrown into jail immediately, all suspected critics are too. It doesn't stoke vi*lence by subtle implication, it tells you outright what it wants to do, then it does it. Within the first six months of H*tler's rule, 30,000 political prisoners had been thrown in prison. Not Jews, just government critics. That would be the equivalent of Trump throwing roughly 200,000 of his critics in jail by July.
No, Trump is not H*tler, he's not even Franco or Mussolini, not yet at least. But he does bare a passing resemblance to Kaiser Wilhelm: a bombastic idiot who blunders his way into dominating a continent by dumb luck, only for the huge risks he takes to eventually ruin his country for generations and potentially take down a hundred million people in his wake.
Whomever Trump resembles, he's capable of so much worse than he's yet done, and even if it turns out he isn't (unlikely), he's so taken the lid off of society that someone with still much worse machinations can do still much worse with impunity, left as well as right. We're still in Year 1 of a very long four years, and potentially much, much longer.

Thursday, October 16, 2025

Connection


I've developed something truly horrible in the last little while: an addiction that once acquired, is nearly impossible to shake off; one of the most destructive forces there is which eats its way through American life and lays waste to hundreds of thousands of lives every year. It destroys families who can only watch helplessly as the lives of people they love are torn apart forever, their loved one unrecognizable to themselves, and can only wonder whether they too may eventually fall to the same addiction:
I'm leaving internet comments.
Long ones: practically letters and essays in themselves. Comments that I can only hope are read, but finally, unwashed comments meant to be read by the unwashed: exposing the world to my bombastic self I've left only to friends to endure.
I haven't the will lately to get things on paper for regular consumption. Few essays, just procrastination as I have for the same ambitious ideas as ever, but writing is more than ambition. Writing takes will, writing takes nerve, writing takes the ability to persist in spite of no support. I don't have much of that right now.
What I need is connection. In some ways I've done a better job of that than you even know, but in others, I haven't done well enough. Mourners need to be out of their heads, consistently, deliberately, we need the replenishment only supportive friendship provides.
A lot of social interactions can be deeply unfulfilling. You know how it is. All it takes is one person who doesn't mean well and the night out makes things worse. Even as you get all kinds of invitations, you become shy and the urge to withdraw grows. Particularly because you remember all those times when you were probably viewed as that person who meant ill, and you worry about your ability to be an affirming flame in a period of grief.
But I have been so lucky in the face of my father's passing. I found love: a friend of thirteen years who is the best thing to happen to me in... has anything this good happened? Warm and beautiful, affectionate and loving, the most supportive person I know. I now have reason to affirm the flame. I'm happy even as I have to grieve and that fills me with guilt, but I shudder to think what this period might have been without R____. I feel healed around her/them, secure and embraced. The longer I spend in her company, the more my ambition grows slaked, and I no longer feel the need to prove my worthiness to the rat racers I know. If I write a good book or choral work: great, but I suddenly find it more important to have connections with whom I can fan out.
If only they were around in time to meet Dad, if only my Dad could have charmed them even while prodding for our weak spots. I miss Dad terribly, I even miss the ways he tormented me for decades. So many people expose themselves to internet comments because it's a way to make oneself vulnerable to their pathological wounds in a manner that's relatively safe rather than exposing the wounds in real life. Trauma is trauma, pathology is pathology; it's not going away without years and years of work. Part of the reason online discourse is so fraught is that we now have a place to deposit our pathologies, yet at the same time, expectations of in person behavior have gone up. Yelling is less tolerated, manipulation too, tolerance for bad taste jokes is down, so is intolerance and prejudice, yet so too is nearly any disagreement at all. All these trends are utterly enmeshed. We are less tolerant of in-person disagreement because people online are so fearsome that we all fear the shameful nature of online discourse spilling over into our private lives. Is all this a good development? It doesn't matter. It just is.
So even as I'm calmer and happier, no trauma's revealed itself online. I do not troll, I certainly don't plan it, and have only been trolled ever so slightly. The biggest problem of all this? Elon Musk liked my comment: precisely the comment meant to be a high-road response to people's attempts to rage against my thank you to NPR for doing a story on the psychological effects of the Gaza War on Israelis. If Elon Musk likes the comment, does that mean that you should have done the opposite?
I tell myself that the point of leaving comments is to find inspiration for eventual writing, but I know that's bullshit. I leave the comments because I want to be read and responded to. I want an audience, not an audience of anonymous readers, but an audience of potential friends, with whom I can discuss the subjects that obsess me.
At this point, it's fruitless to pretend you can't have friends you never meet in person. In person is obviously preferable, but as we become ever more addicted to social media, the media becomes more and more social, and we find those people who respond to the same niche interests as we do. Some of them act like mole people, and there is no greater friend online than the block button.
And yet the two friends I talk to more than any others are people I've never met but found in facebook groups: one in Chicago with whom I discuss music, the other of whom from Melbourne with which I discuss literature. My life is inestimably richer for their presences in it, however incorporeal.
Yes, I'd rather have friends like this in person, but the internet can make pen pals so easy and rewarding that it's very easy to forego attending to real life friendships for people with whom you can discuss the very small nuances of your niches no one else can find.
And yet the psychic price of these online connections is incalculable. The more holed up in your niches you become, the less you have in common with those who don't share them. Without common frames of reference, people become isolated from those nearest to them. The gulf in values that separates them culturally, politically, philosophically, is unjumpable: even perceptions of facts become incompatible. Even the truth itself becomes a matter of opinion.
Just as one generation passes and another comes, so do forms of communication and connection. This world is so badly in need of connections. Until we can see and touch our friends elsewhere, we are locked in isolation, and nothing can replace the somatic, physiological connection we and I have to people like R____. I was insanely lucky to find them, and it is only luck that brings love together. It makes bearable any form of isolation and grief. I can only wish I found a connection like this one a long time ago, and wish the same to you.
Amen

Sunday, October 12, 2025

Vespers by Spivakov

 Confession: I've always kinda hated the Rachmaninov Vespers... until today.


One at a time, the Vespers are a magnificent experience. They're so beautiful, so spiritually deep, but they all sound the same... One chorus of Godiva chocolate after another, until they all blur into a pool of generic, monotonous beauty, like angels floating around a church.

Rachmaninov may sometimes wear on ears like mine, but the Vespers's beautiful reflection pool is so unlike the musical personality we know so well. Rachmaninov's piano playing is tightly coiled, cast in bronze, so rhythmic, so dynamic, so solid. Richter called him 'an oak.' Rachmaninov the composer is a born architect, always terracing every moment of a piece so that we know exactly where are its peaks and valleys. There's a story of the young Rachmaninov conducting Mozart 40. Everybody was used to hearing Mozart 40 in Dresden Doll dress: slow tempi, legato phrases, monodynamic gentleness. Rachmaninov apparently intuited the modern way with faster tempi, full dynamic contrasts. It came upon the Russian audience like a revelation.

Today I heard Vladimir Spivakov conduct the Vespers and my view of it completely changed. Spivakov is a violinist first, conductor second, and choral conductor tenth... He clearly has a unique perspective on a work lead by every choral conductor in the world, most of whom have their paint-by-number interpretation, no different than anyone else's.

This Rachmaninov dances, it has percussion and angles. This is the country of the Trepak and Troika, the Barnynya, the Kamarinskaya and the Kalinka. There is plenty of spiritual beauty to offer the Lord, but here is also beauty of the earth. This is the oaken Rachmaninov of our memories.

Compare this performance to a performance like Robert Shaw. Shaw's singers are so exquisite, so beautifully matched to the church's echo. Shaw conducts like the brilliant choral conductor he is, with blend, intonation, diction, matched so euphoniously that it attains a kind of perfection.

The only problem is that Rachmaninov is not a choral composer. He is an instrumental composer who made but two major ventures into the choral world and otherwise returned to the piano and orchestra. What shape does this music have in most performances? In most Vespers performances, the formlessness coagulates like a luminescent amoeba.

This Rachmaninov has imperfect intonation. It also has spine, it has development, it has a plot and expresses something more specific than merely the ineffable. Dostoevsky was as much a creature of the Russian earth as of the Orthodox heaven. Why should Rachmaninov not be the same?

Spivakov: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w9ylzdggQzk

Thursday, October 9, 2025

I'm not in the mood for peace....


Well of COURSE this isn't peace. That's a given. But it may get the hostages home, it may get a thousand longtime Palestinian prisoners home, and even if it will inevitably be the most radicalized Hamasniks who arrive, this progress is a miracle in itself.
Don't credit Trump. He obviously didn't do shit except yell at his underlings. Credit Jason Greenblatt, David Friedman, Avi Berkowitz, and of course, Jared Kushner. These are the true authors of this peace plan, and just those names tell you this is not serious, it also tells you just how authoritarian the Republican party now is that the most insanely pro-Israel hawk team of Middle East operators just arranged a deal that they would find loathesome until yesterday on general principle.
Of course, the chances of it sticking is less than 5%, but it will give everybody time to heal just a little bit, maybe only enough to gather sufficient resolve to resume fighting, but it's still an accomplishment.
On the other hand still, well, this is almost worse news. It is the first proof we truly have that American authoritarianism can truly function, hold onto power, and use it properly. There won't be much proof of it, but from now on, all MAGA has to do is point to this deal, and they will be sufficiently convinced to never relinquish Trump's hold on them.
That is... if it lasts past tomorrow...
.....................................................................
On this respite of peace, at least a brief one, I feel no relief. I feel anger. Overwhelming anger.
Believe it or not, I've gotten through the last two years by suppressing the vast majority of it, telling myself over and over again, 'this is history, this is just how it works.' People have a death wish, they steer themselves right toward the storm then grow stunned when the storm turns in their direction. We are the storm we've been waiting for.
Life is precious, life is delicate, life can be great, but it can all be over tomorrow and you'll never have time to say goodbye.
It's that uncertainly of life that's the ultimate condition, the uncanny valley between life and death, love and hate, belief and doubt, right and left or left and right or right and wrong. Believe too fervently in one or the other, life is ruined. Life is life, and over its course we're meant to feel all those things. Put too much belief in one or other pole, you court the death of the state you love.
Now apply that to politics, apply that to history, apply that to religion and even science. You now have ideology, the stablest force of belief on earth, and therefore the most unstable force of action. When you believe too fervently in your solution, you provoke those who disagree with it, and thus does the situation continue until both sides are destroyed and a critical mass of those left relinquish their beliefs.
In order to provide for a future, you have to plan for all contingencies. No ideology does. It can't. Embrace an ideology and you can't expand your mind to accommodate any possibilities but the one you are certain will happen.
I don't see a lot of friends I miss, but it's so difficult for any Jewish person but an anti-Zionist to hear people we once trusted excuse one of the most totalitarian organizations on earth as an understandable Palestinian response to mass murder while lumping every Zionist together as some monolithic force we don't recognize known as "Israel," knowing that it may come up at any moment, and even a glance of protest could start the fight of the century.
It's equally difficult to go around family in that state of terror, including your own mother, knowing that any moment could be the one that starts a heated, personal contest of one-upmanship that could end with weeks of tension, knowing that any single word against Israeli policy, any defense of Gaza's defenseless, can be the one to do it.
I know, I know, don't talk about politics, and compared to what goes on over there, this is nothing. Even if it's nothing, it's still something. Politics finds you even when you're not looking for it, we all know that at this point. Even the most apolitical animals have been politicized now, hell, the apolitical ones are the most liable to radicalize.
That susceptibility to radicalization is exactly the problem. 98% of people aren't evil, we're just dumb. We know what we think we know, and we can't be talked out of it.
For all the irritability of my natural temperament, I have changed my opinions so many times that I can reasonably acquit myself of closed-mindedness, and have worked so hard to be more agreeable, and still find it this hard...
People wonder how I stopped towing the progressive party line as early as college, made life difficult for those who generally agreed with me, did not properly gauge all my fire toward the Republicans where they think it all belongs, but the answer is so simple: I'm a Jew.
Most people aren't antisemites, including most accused of it, but you cannot possibly go into any comment section or progressive hotspot and not hear the oinking throats of people who claim to love all humanity yet carry hatred for Israel. Dig just a foot and you see that they equate Israel with all Zionists. Dig just another foot and you see that they equate all Zionists with 90% of Jews. They know nothing about the conflict: you point things out to them and every single fact you name they dismiss as 'propaganda.' Turn just a few degrees left, and millions turn into Alex Jones or Tucker Carlson, turn a few degrees right, and millions begin to sound like Chapo Trap House and The Young Turks.
When people simply hate what Israel does, it's easier to deal with. They might sometimes misinterpret Israel's actions, but the idea that they're antisemites is willful madness of the type that only ideology accommodates. And yet, among those disgusted by Israel these days, say, probably 15% of them, there would be no difference had Israel sued for peace consistently for a hundred years. They hate Israel because it exists. Israel is the only country in the world which people demand it ceases to be. Sometimes they merely demand Israel to cease as a Jewish state, but we all know what they mean. This is antisemitism, purely and simply, and those who believe it could take account of the hatred in their souls, but they choose not to. Why? Because ideology makes them not themselves. Once you subscribe to a movement, a part of you IS the movement, and prohibits you from questioning why you believe what you believe.
But even more troubling than that is their excuses for Hamas. 'What do you expect? Of course an organization like Hamas will happen when Israel acts like that!' Well, of course they're right! That's not the point. They expect Israel to deal with Hamas cooly when they can't even let Charlie Kirk die without dancing on his grave. Hamas just killed 1200 people, filmed it, and sent the videos to their families. What did YOU expect? Once upon a time the left excused Marxists, and eventually, as many as 148 million people were killed because of their excuses.
But we're not in imminent danger of a Hamas-like ideology killing 148 million any time soon. More on them in a moment, because we have to talk about the 'other' ideology, because willfully stupid as those who excuse Hamas are, they have a point.
Is Israel as evil as Hamas? Of course not. Is Israel as deadly as Hamas? Of course not. It's much deadlier. The power differential between Israel and Hamas is the difference between the British Empire and the Boers or Mau Mau rebels. Even if Israel's motives are purer than the British Empire (not anymore...), they exceed Hamas in power so vastly that they could decide on a dime to turn overnight from a power like the British Empire to a power like the Belgian Empire and not a person on earth could stop them from slaughtering and enslaving every Arab in the Middle East.
They're not going to slaughter every Arab in the Middle East, but keep going on this trajectory... they will slaughter millions of them, and no one will stop them. No one in the world could, no one in the world with power would.
The world is not in danger of an authoritarian left-wing takeover any time soon. However, right-wing authoritarianism is an imminent threat, just in time for the Ages of AI, drastic global warming, internet misinformation, and mass weapon proliferation. The entire world stands on the brink of authoritarian takeovers, and not from those supposedly omnipotent campus radicals, but from septuagenarians who long for absolute power, from tech utopians who want to transform humans into computer hybrids, from nativists who aren't just anti-immigration but view immigration as an existential threat.
Whether or not you see it, we are potentially on the cusp of death that makes the 20th century look like heaven itself. Will we get it? Probably not yet, but a horrific level of it announces itself that makes Gaza look like Vermont, probably in our lifetimes, and whether such murder continues from the left, it is instigated by the right.
This is what ideology has always wrought over the long contemptible unfurling of human history. The beliefs themselves change, but the fervor never does, and the mental repression to stop it never lifts until it's too late.
So no, I feel very little joy at all this. When I hear of peace, I can't find it in me to be happy yet. Maybe when the peace proves longer than a week. All I can think of right now is how much it took us to get here, who would benefit from it, and what they would do next.

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

A Message This Yom Kippur

 My favorite thinker, Isaiah Berlin, warned of the dangers of something called 'monism.' He divided the world between 'foxes' who know many things and do not overly subscribe to one, and 'hedgehogs' who know one big thing and see the world in one overarching rubric. Foxes are 'pluralists' who see the world as being able to accommodate many sorts of values, many of which fall into contradiction with one another and still see some value in them all. Hedgehogs, however, are 'monists', who believe that there can only be one solution, and in Berlin's opinion, which happens to be mine too, 'in politics, these are the most dangerous of men.'

There are many things to recommend about 'hedgehogs.' Their belief animates the passion for action that foxes usually don't have, and if their belief is correct, they implement solutions that work. But their inability to consider alternatives usually guarantees that they're beliefs are incorrect. And it's also true that lack of commitment leads to complacency: sectioning off the oppressed so we can go about our lives untroubled--but better the complacency of oppression than the silence of death.
This leads to the paradoxical contradiction: those of us who believe in value pluralism, right and left, see that those who disagree with them are not inherently our enemies, but at the same time, we have to act as though those who believe differently than us are very much our enemies. Your beliefs are what lead to fanaticism, and fanaticism leads to death: deaths many times more frequent than the world even experiences now.
Even if your beliefs are correct, your inability to accommodate disagreement is what provokes those who oppose you with every fiber of their being to support leaders who enact measures you find the ultimate in murderousness. Your beliefs can only lead to the exact opposite of what you seek.
But to those who oppose Israel's actions with every cell in your bodies: your inability to realize how much Hamas has enacted the Gazan predicament is precisely what leads Gazans to squalor and death, and half culpable for what enables Netanyahu's stranglehold on Israel. All this could have been avoided, and your beliefs in the sole culpability of Israel are what kept Hamas in power. Hamas had 38 billion dollars in foreign aid and used it solely for self-enrichment and tunnels into Israel they do not permit their citizens to enter even as they're being slaughtered. You may be anti-imperialism, but you are pro-totalitarianism. You are as much what enables the left-wing dictators of today as people who excused Stalin in the 1930s and lead to the deaths of literal tens of millions. How many other regimes will you support in your vendetta against the West which gave you everything before you get it into your heads that your beliefs are the opposite of productive to your goals?
To those who support Israel's actions with every cell in your bodies: the extremity of your vitriol against the Palestinian goals has lead you into the hands of a government that may strip the country you love into becoming precisely the sort of authoritarian regime you excoriate in Gaza. By thinking no act of the Israeli government is worthy of accountability, you've made the country you supposedly love into an authoritarian state where a demagogue can game a dysfunctional system for more than fifteen years to stay in power nobody wants him to have. He incurs the worst defeat in Israeli history and still, two years later, nobody can still get rid of him. He's oppressive not only to Palestinians but to Jews. The offensive part of this war should have ended a year and a half ago. Netanyahu knows that prolonging the war is to his electoral advantage: he dooms the hostages and any number of IDF troops who senselessly die even as they unnecessarily kill. Netanyahu and Likud may not have anything like as extreme beliefs as Hamas and their supporters in Gaza, but Israel is hundreds of times more powerful, and every inch of your extremism carries so much more capacity for death and mass murder than the extremism of Gazans. It is probable that the future of the West is exactly the sort of authoritarianism you mean to eradicate elsewhere. You are simultaneously pro-imperialism and pro-authoritarianism. Your extremism will lead to our time's equivalents to Franco, Mussolini, and yes, the other guy. How many more will you insist on killing before the murder is visited on us?
Whatever your beliefs, if you believe so strongly in your own convictions, your inability to consider alternatives can only lead to the death of democracy, peace, and liberal rule of law, because there is no action extreme enough that you cannot convince yourself to support them, and convince yourself much faster than you think you can. The realities of the moment change us all, and even if we think we're immune to propaganda, we never are, and judgement altering anger can rise up so quickly that the heart inevitably dictates the head, and the head inexorably loses the facilities of judgement you're meant to have.
There is no way to be diplomatic about this, and if God holds me accountable for being so self-righteous before Yom Kippur, so let it be written.
Even as I write all this arrogant screed, I know I need to atone for my self-righteousness and on my knees I ask for your forgiveness and God's. But you too have to atone. And if you don't atone now, you will be made to atone in a generation when your beliefs have only wrought violent death and murder on a scale so past this.
G'mar chatima tova. History is watching you.

Monday, September 29, 2025

The Days of Judgement

 It's still difficult to write. I have so many ideas, but so little energy to pursue them to their logical conclusion. 

I'm eating again. Not binging like I used to when I was fat, but experimenting with food that is still ostensibly gluten free, and 'tis enough to make me sick every time. Day after day of food experiment because the usual diet is unbearably narrow for a solemn pain like grief, and day after day of illness. The burping, the bloating, the brainfog and memory problems, the dizziness and accelerated heartrate, the esophageal pain that occasionally emanates all through my back. Pretty soon there will be an outside shot I may follow Dad if these experiments do not cease. Such is the detriment of addiction. 

It feels good to say that out loud. I don't know if it's true, I certainly hope it's not, but it's right to think that way this fortnight. At the same time I want desperately to live a healthy life, I dream of an 'artist's death.' Working yourself into oblivion as your body fails, leaving things for eternity, posturing for history even as you depart from the here and now which matters so much more, but I'm so blocked, so lazy, so procrastinative. There are so many writers online with so much larger an audience, who can possibly be noticed among this buzzy din? Let alone a not much better than solid writer like myself.... All I wanted to do is be a great artist: instead I'm just a sloppy purveyor of sentences. Occasional flashes of something better appear, but who would notice among so much that's not much better than mediocre (I'll at least give myself credit that a lot of it's OK...). 

Nevertheless, on Rosh Hashana God opens the Book of Life and the Book of Death, and he chooses to inscribe us all in one or the other. 

That's the extent of our reason to be terrified. This time of year is more solemn than terrifying. Judaism does not believe in heaven or hell. Judaism consigns the dead to a place of purgatory for a few months where one atones for their sins, and then the soul ascends to Olam Ha'Ba, the Next World, where there is nothing to do but pursue the chiefest of all joys, the font and source of joy for all our lives: learn Torah.... for all eternity...

The terror is in this world. On Rosh Hashana we intone the awful fates of the Unetanah Tokef, the most terrifying among many terrifying prayers this time of year, giving us the awful litany: 

Who shall live and who shall die,

Who shall reach the end of his days and who shall not,

Who shall perish by water and who by fire,

Who by sword and who by wild beast,

Who by famine and who by thirst,

Who by earthquake and who by plague,

Who by strangulation and who by stoning,

Who shall have rest and who shall wander,

Who shall be at peace and who shall be pursued,

Who shall be at rest and who shall be tormented,

Who shall be exalted and who shall be brought low,

Who shall become rich and who shall be impoverished.

My father's parents were Holocaust survivors, and while Bubbie Witow lived her most blessed old age to a hundred, Bubbie Tucker would hear the great litany every year and weep. God alone knows what memories went through her head. 

But the melody of the Unetaneh Tokef is so beautiful, and Zaydie Tucker, with so little ear for music, truly loved it. In the last years of his life, beset by dementia terribly, Dad would sing the melody of its line, and Zaydie would smile. The melody of the two lines immediately preceding: 

On Rosh Hashanah it is inscribed,

And on Yom Kippur it is sealed.

Almighty God, 

Please sentence me to life,

Amen

Sunday, September 28, 2025

Happy new year to everybody. Gut yontif, gut yor.

This has been a painful two years for Jews. Jews are now realizing the time immemorial Jewish position of being caught and tangled by history. Insurmountable problems, zealots everywhere, including among us, blamed for things that are not our fault, and occasionally even blamed for things that very much are. Where we are is where dozens of generations of Jews have been before us and dozens of generations after us will too. There is never an easy way out of this net, it just is what it is.

I could be very wrong, but I don't see the Gaza war resolving over the next year. I hope and will pray I'm wrong, but this is an historic maelstrom so much bigger than us all. Even if it will seem over for a little while, it's not over. And still worse, Gaza could be just a dress rehearsal for all sorts of things that happen elsewhere.
Hopefully none of that will happen, but no matter what happens, be there for each other in any way you know how.
May you be written in the Book of Life. L'Shana tova, tikatevu v'techatemu.
Amen

Friday, September 12, 2025

My Father's Radicalization


I decided to do an essay with that title the day before he died. On August 14th, I stared at the screen and had no idea what to write. My dad seemed to have no idea I even wrote. "You're so insightful, why don't you write your thoughts down?!' "I've been doing that for twenty years Dad. I usually get published every year. Don't you remember?" "I guess... You should do more!"
My dad was as much scholar as comedian and businessman. He spent his whole life obsessing about August 1914 and the senselessness with which World War I broke out. Something in him had a deep compulsion to crack the code nobody else could. What was it about Old Europe that made a senseless war that upended the world and destroyed his family seem like a good idea? It just makes such sense that he died in August, and it makes sense he died in 2025. It doesn't make sense that he died physically, but for a man obsessed by history, it makes perfect sense that he died the moment the world shattered his view of it.
Sometimes the timing of a death seems uncanny. Death days can seem auspicious for a variety of reasons; but in my family, our biographies so tied down by 20th century history, history seems even tied to the moments we die. Many members of my family seem to die at auspicious times.
My grandfather died exactly 40 years ago on September 11th: precisely six months to the day after Gorbachev came to power. Anticommunism was Zaydie's whole life. He was a missile defense engineer for the Pentagon and one of those original generation neoconservatives for whom no amount of USSR opposition was enough. Going through his house four years ago when Bubbie died, I would still find right-wing newsletters stuck into his books.
But he died practically at the moment when USSR no longer seemed monolithic and peace seemed like an option. His life was based on the idea that communists were as dangerous to us all as any Nazi, but it turned out that the Soviet Union was not what he thought it was, at least it wasn't by the time he died, and whatever the reason the cosmos arranged his death (colon cancer), it almost seems as though he was not capable of living in that new reality.
Dad was born in Poland right after the War to survivors who'd already lost a child. He came to America less than a year old and lived his entire life in postwar Boomer security. With him, the entire social compact of postwar America seems to be dying a final, catastrophic death.
My father was a rock. He had a rock's dependability and a rock's flexibility. He was brilliant enough to speak English, Yiddish, Hebrew, Romanian, German, French and Italian. He got a PhD for which he went behind the Iron Curtain to study in Romania in 1970, one of the very worst years for Cold War tensions. He learned the highest level math an amateur could learn, adapted in business to endless new technologies, knew nearly everything a semi-atheist could want to know about Jewish history and practice. Nobody but his friends knew who he was, and they all thought he was a cartoonish hyena whose life was a never-ending standup routine. It was that, but that was just the image he presented socially, including to his family. Behind the facade, his true colors wisely disguised, was the most formidable man: a stern authoritarian who brooked no dissent. Even his compliments could shake you to your core. He believed he was smarter than everybody because he was--including his eldest son, whom he never let forget it. Getting approval from him was tied at all times to our willingness to acknowledge not just his authority over us, but his superiority. The ultimate injustice was that he was our superior: his intellect, his competence, his work ethic, his moral sense, exceeded nearly the entirety of Jewish Baltimore. There was not a single favor he wasn't willing to grant for anyone who needed it, even when they didn't want it; and he would inevitably do the favor for them better than they ever could do for themselves, and he expected to be acknowledged for exactly that. There was never a time when he would spare us that he believed we made a mistake, and unfortunately, 90% of the time he was right. Whether or not he was ever recognized for it, he was a giant, and had a giant's impatience with the small people around him. This man could have run a Fortune 500 Company, or been an A-list Hollywood producer, or been one of the top academics of his day, perhaps even been a great comedian like Mel or Albert Brooks. Instead, he was my father.
He believed fame and prestige was hollow, and his belief in achievement was tied to his beliefs about what the world is. He believed in family, he believed in stability and security, he believed in settling for whatever life throws at you. He believed very mightily that people were either successes or failures, but his idea of success was not the pursuit of happiness, it was entirely the ethos of his parents: choose a respectable profession, have a spouse and kids, become a person of influence, and only be noticed for what you do correctly.
He came to America a year old, but to his dying day he viewed the world like an immigrant. His views of what constituted achievement and success were completely 20th century, completely 1950s: there was no accommodation for alternate paths or lifestyles. He was born to the first year of boomers and grew up surrounded by sixties counterculture, but he viewed alternate lifestyles as unforgivably decadent, as did he view people like his son who pursued them. He believed in studying the humanities deeply, yet was perpetually shocked that the son he taught so thoroughly valued humanistic learning more deeply than success or security.
My father spent his entire life lecturing his loved ones about the dangers of irresponsibility. He spent his whole life warning anyone who'd listen that America was thoroughly corrupted by insisting on rights before responsibility. He was obsessed by the collapse of the Europe from whence he came, and I think he resolved for himself that by valuing individualism so fervently, Europe unwittingly embraced total war and totalitarianism. Personally, I think he somewhat misunderstood what happened in the leadup to WWI. We talked about it many times, and of course he never conceded an inch. I think he misunderstood America, I think he misunderstood Europe. Not because he believed in individualism too little, but because he believed in it too much.
He thought there was a way to prevent collapses. I'm more cynical even than he. I think collapses simply happen. Civilizations have life cycles just like people do, and we just have to do our best to stand upright in the hurricane winds and choose the priorities of our moral fights very selectively, but precisely because societies can collapse into dictatorship and war, we have to fight for individual rights: unceasingly, deeply, uncomfortably, for the entire duration, and by all means until victory. I've been unfaithful to those beliefs for a long time, and I'm sure it's in large part a futile attempt to please him.
But he was right in many crucial senses. I suppose one could be summed up pretty neatly: By embracing one side of any argument too fervently, you unwittingly provoke your opposition into greater intensity. This is what Marxism did simultaneously to nationalism, and together, he believed they caused a century-long collapse. Ultimately, I agree with him completely. Radicalization collapsed Europe, and radicalization may collapse this country, but radicalization is as inevitable as the moon changing ocean tides. It's tied to the development of new means of communication, it's tied to new weapon and transportation technologies, it's tied to manufacturing trends, it's tied to the inevitable decay of social orders. Against onslaughts like those, it can't be stopped any more than you can stop a freight train with a human hand.
But for all his warnings about what might come here, when it came time to see America for what it now is, this child of the fifties still believed that we would muddle through as we ever did. Against all the parallels he had studied and warned about his entire life, when it came time to see what was happening in America, he did not see it coming, and was very withering about those who did.
I warned from the beginning that Trump was a violent authoritarian, and until January 6th he entirely poo-poo'd it. 'If he's a fascist, where are the crowds?' 'THEY'RE RIGHT IN FRONT OF HIM DAD!' 'Where are the propaganda organs?' 'YOU CAN SEE THEM ON FOX NEWS AND TOWNHALL EVERY DAY!' 'Where are the secret police?' 'HAVE YOU SEEN WHAT ICE IS DOING?!' 'Evan, you're a pessimist by nature who thinks there's a catastrophe around every corner and you're usually wrong.'
And yet, in 2025, my Dad was almost unrecognizable from the center-liberal he was. At times he could sound like Noam Chomsky. Every hour of the day, you could find him at the slow desktop computer in his house's den, obsessively devouring the news. My conservative mother thought there was something not quite sane about the way he would always bring up the latest outrage from Trump and Netanyahu, and when she excused it, he would go below the belt as he always did: "YOU'RE DRINKING THE FOX NEWS KOOL-AID! IS THERE ANYTHING YOU WON'T EXCUSE?"
In the last six months of his life, this man who said for ten years that I overreacted to everything was suddenly arguing I'm underreacting. I'd spent twenty years telling him it wasn't 1967 anymore, but only in 2025 would he bemoan to me: 'I never thought I'd see the day when America/Israel would be the country to do this.' When I told him that there may in fact be light at the end of this horrific tunnel, he dismissed it. When I said that this is the inevitable collapse that often happens in history, he would say something along the lines of 'OK, if you want to be philosophical about it...'
I've been warning about a lurch to authoritarianism in American life since The Great Recession in 2008, perhaps earlier. Lots of writing and ample numbers of friends can attest to this. You don't hollow out a country's economy like that without the wealthy and powerful growing drunk with power. You don't fight as dirtily as Republicans have in election after election, national and statewide, without coming ever closer to achieving a systemic monopoly. And for the twenty years of my adult life so far, we fought each other about it, and as in our fights about everything, we fought each other dirtily. In addition to fights about how I was wasting my life and he was being a hypocrite about how he lived his, in addition to constant accusations that we hated each other and one or another of us was a bully, there were the fights over politics and history, culture and sports, the way he talked crap about people behind their backs and the way I did the same; everything was personal, the real subject was how we were enmeshed and co-dependent. Neither of us got what we wanted from the other and we were forever seeking it.
Eventually, the son wins every fight. He's around longer. His point of view is fresher. He is the person still active in the world, enmeshed in current realities long after the father can retire from them. But eventually my sense of reality will curdle just like his did. I will probably fail to distribute the wisdom I attained at the very moment when my wisdom is most useful, because if my dad taught me anything, it's that this is the nature of human folly. That is the nature of history. This is the nature of one generation passing to the next, who picks up the story where the last one leaves it.
In the last year of my father's life, every secure assumption he had about the world came undone: America, democracy, Israel, his fellow Jews. He no longer felt he could defend any of them. My father was an incarnation of the postwar world, and that world now seems dead along with him.
I miss him like anything. In good moments and bad, the voice that accompanied my whole life is gone. There will be plenty of time to be more sentimental and talk about how much I loved him even as we pissed the shit out of each other right until the day before he died. But this week particularly, the only thought that goes through my head is this:
What would you say right now Dad?

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

Dohnanyi: As much of an appraisal as I can give right now.

 It really pissed me off to read Karajanites shitting on Dohnanyi in Lebrecht's comment section. Much was made about Dohnanyi hating Karajan's interpretations. Well, according to Dohnanyi, Karajan clearly tried to stymy his career, and Dohnanyi had to go to America to achieve the stardom he frankly deserved more than Karajan ever did. As for his aesthetic objections, would you expect a light and balanced Erich Kleiber-like maestro like Dohnanyi to think differently of Karajan's virtuoso soup?

Dohnanyi's crime was saying out loud what half the music world clearly thought. Apparently he didn't think much of Bernstein or Rattle either. His taste wasn't entirely the same as mine, but Dohnanyi was a servant of music whereas music was a servant of Karajan.
Dohnanyi, like so many of his generation, was unforgiven for not being an adrenaline junkie. And as addicted to adrenaline as the 'big three' conditioned us to be (Karajan, Bernstein, Solti), the Karajan-spawn made us far more addicted: Maazel, Dutoit, Muti, Mehta, Gergiev, Ozawa, Levine... as far as I'm concerned, these are not artists of integrity. They had moments of greatness, particularly Levine and Gergiev I think, but they made us drunk on loudness, they deafened their orchestral musicians, they ruined their singers' voices. Any nuance in their performance was secondary. What we remember is the loudness, the overwhelming blare of the brass, the percussion that obliterates every harmonic change, the thick blanket of string vibrato. The poor wind players never stood a chance. Audiences may have come away shocked by the fire, but can it be a coincidence that this was the period when the classical music world may have burned down?
Compare this Salome to Karajan's famous one. The TV sound here is... ahem... not good, that's being charitable, and yet you hear more detail here than in Karajan's famous recording. Dohnanyi had more ability than nearly anybody, the Vienna Philharmonic apparently called him 'rabbit ears', and when he decided to do so, his baton technique could 'Kleiber' with the best of them. He could, if he wanted, drive an audience mad with excitement; but he wanted to lower the temperature, not raise it. He never took the easy way. He saved his virtuosity for the difficult 20th century music that truly demanded it and sent most of the audience home puzzled rather than electrified. Many a great soloist would prefer to send the audience home cleansed rather than stimulated, but that's a rare quality among conductors (except perhaps in his particular generation). I think that aim in music is infinitely more valuable.
In this period of my father's passing, I still don't have a full essay in me, but I wasn't going to get through this period of renewed Dohnanyi enthusiasm without some comment. Dohnanyi was perhaps the greatest conductor in a generation with lots of overrated names, and still many conductors who had many candidates.
Dohnanyi had a wider repertoire than nearly any major conductor born between 1920 and 1935, and among those with a wide repertoire, the only conductors who could do it all with similar excellence almost all the way through were probably Mackerras and Gielen (maybe Skrowaczewski)., But however brilliant, Gielen is unceasingly cool, while in Mackerras's giant repertoire he never found a space for new music. Dohnanyi's taste for new music took in everything from Birtwistle and Carter to Adams and Glass. He may have been austere, but he was never cold; beneath his reserve was unceasing warmth. he thought with his heart and felt with his brain. His only weakness? He couldn't do Mahler. But we have (had) great Mahler everywhere. A conductor of his time practically had to only pick up a baton to do excellent Mahler. For anyone mature enough to appreciate the subtle things he was doing, Dohnanyi did practically everything else magnificently.
The other names usually mentioned don't have Dohnanyi's uninterrupted excellence. Haitink almost never 'rubato'd', but Dohnanyi's rubato was subtly omnipresent. Abbado's 'sound' could be much too comfortable and luxuriant, Dohnanyi practically banned luxury. I love Harnoncourt, but he could not turn off his overwhelming personality, even when it got in the way. The more traditional the repertoire, the less Boulez seemed to care (and Boulez often seemed not to care in the revolutionary stuff he was famous for). but Dohnanyi had as much regard for tradition as innovation. Kleiber? Well, he wasn't a conductor in the sense that others were, he championed no unknown composer, he built no orchestra, he mentored no successors or soloists. He took from music without giving back. Dohnanyi gave back everything.
Dohnanyi was one of the greatest podium musicians there has ever been. Even to those who couldn't embrace his austerity, he should be a beacon of artistic integrity.
Danke meister. May your memory remain the blessing it is.

Wednesday, September 3, 2025

 I would like very much to write again, but the feelings are still too raw, the shock too great, the perception of reality too tenuous. It still feels like he's here. 

...this is gonna be raw. Stop reading if you don't like exhibitionist display.

I will never see the giant who dominated my life again. I don't know how others feel when they lose their parents, but I still haven't figured out how to grieve except awareness that there is an enormous void where once was a planet around which I revolved. He was my worst enemy, he was my best friend, he was my greatest and my worst teacher. He was the man who succeeded by every traditional metric life threw at him, and I was his outside the nine dots son who oI will never see the giant who dominated my life again. I don't know how others feel when they lose their parents, but I still haven't figured out how to grieve except awareness that there is an enormous void where once was a planet around which I revolved. He was my worst enemy, he was my best friend, he was my greatest and my worst teacher. He was truly the most devoted father imaginable, he was also the most controlling, willing to do literally anything for his son except let go of him. He was the man who succeeded by every traditional metric life threw at him, and I was his outside the nine dots son who only thrived in alternative environments. Alternate sorts of people were the only thing about life he didn't understand, and because he didn't understand them, he disapproved of us all. He was the father whose approval I always doubted, and I was the son whose love he always doubted. Even as we joked around for part of every day, there was part of the day when we strongly suspected we were hated by the other. To me, he was both a god and a demon. There was not a single development about which I did not know every detail of his opinion, either about my life or anyone else's. We were enmeshed, inseparable even when neither of us wanted to be. We loved each other dearly, but neither of us could ever be what the other wanted. When it was great, it was fantastic. When it wasn't, it was awful. He was so much more than the public comedian. He affected cynicism about people's ambitions and successes, but he craved the world's approval as much as anyone I've ever met. He went to comically distant lengths to conceal the true extent of his success and intelligence. In private he was the most formidable man whose abilities and work ethic commanded awe to anyone who saw them, and he took it very personally when his eldest son could never command anything like the same awe. I will forever feel unworthy next to him. He was everything in my life. What is my life without him?nly thrived in alternative environments. Alternate sorts of people were the only thing about life he didn't understand, and because he didn't understand them, he disapproved of their very existence. He was the father whose approval I always doubted, and I was the son whose love he always doubted. He would do literally anything for his son except let go of him. Even as we joked around for part of every day, there was part of the day when we strongly suspected we were hated by the other. To me, he was both a god and a demon. There was not a single development about which I did not know every detail of his opinion, either about my life or anyone else's. We were enmeshed, inseparable even when neither of us wanted to be. We loved each other dearly, but neither of us could ever be what the other wanted. When it was great, it was fantastic. When it wasn't, it was awful. He was so much more than the public comedian. He went to enormous lengths to conceal the true extent of his success and intelligence, but in private he was the most formidable man whose abilities and work ethic commanded awe in everyone who saw it, and he took it very personally when his eldest son could not command anything like the same awe. I will forever feel unworthy next to him. He was everything in my life. What is my life without him?