Sunday, March 29, 2026
The State of the Jews--Part 1
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Letter to Dad #7
But if there was one thing you never were, it was full of shit. You spoke your mind every minute of every day, sometimes down to the second, utterly heedless of consequence. Amazingly..., whether due to environment or heredity, I picked up this behavior, and when I did it, you would act as though the world had ended.
People say we're now living in a post-truth age. That's a load of shit in itself. We've been living in a post-truth age at least since my adolescence. Bill Clinton based a whole career on composting truth into law-evading bullshit, and Republicans of the 90s with their accusations about 'liberal media' declared an outright war on truth.
I'm sure we could date the post-truth age much further back. The snake in the Garden of Eden was probably just a guy with a broken leg. But you warned me all the time: history is not the truth. The moment an event becomes history, the moment people become history, they are only seen through the filter of what people want to remember about them, so there is no history without an extraordinarily fungible relationship to the truth. Truth is something so easily abused, so easily manipulated, so easily coopted for propaganda that what does it even mean to tell it?
But yes, it has accelerated in recent years exponentially, and there is no better evidence for how the truth has been obscured than how fervently people believe in their vision of the truth. That's what propaganda does. The truth itself is not all that important until it goes missing, but you can tell it's gone missing because people start believing in the importance of truth much much more than they used to. Truth requires no passion, faith requires infinite passion. The more fervently people believe in their vision of truth, the less convincing they are about it to anyone who doesn't already believe them. The more people insist they speak the truth, the more suspect they should be of telling lies.
Truth goes away, truth reappears, but not first without the consequences of its disappearance. Lies are always present in worldwide discourse. You taught me that much, but I don't think I ever got a straight answer from you about whether you thought history was progressing toward any greater wisdom. I can't imagine you'd say yes, with your cynicism that made Billy Wilder look as earnest as Aaron Sorkin, but you had moments of surprise where you could pull a hopeful sentiment out of your ass: I wonder if it was just to keep us guessing, but whatever your mood was in the moment. I think you meant it, but it would just change from hour to hour as we all tried to ride the waves of your moods (and mine). But ultimately, I have to imagine you'd agree that all wisdom is temporary and eventually will be lost. The moral arc of the universe is long, but it bends towards itself. Eventually, every lesson is forgotten. I'm sure some people would call that pessimistic, but I just call it life. Everything dies, even wisdom and knowledge even as new forms of it are birthed.
When I was growing up, the truth was generally something accepted and not particularly disputed. It was disputed in the Soviet Union, but we all knew that what was told over there was lies: Soviet citizens were very particular about that in my youth. The only place where the truth was truly disputed was on the American right, where, apparently, every corner of media not them was riddled with as many holes of bias as Swiss cheese.
One of the telltale signs of a movement based more on faith than truth is their fixation on media bias. There is no such thing as 'media', there are many medias (moreso than ever today), many of which strive however imperfectly to ascertain the truth, and many of which strive, however imperfectly, to obscure it. The most reliable manner of knowing just how much they mean to obscure the truth is how much time is devoted to opinion rather than fact, and within the space devoted to opinion, how much is devoted to the same opinions regardless of who voices them. This is why I don't particularly care to watch MSNBC, but even MSNBC is much more factual than FOX where every liberal host and panelist is simply there so viewers can watch them be demolished.
The whole point of propaganda, the whole point of consuming media that conforms to your ideological orientation, the whole point of casting doubt on any media that does not proceed from your own ideological filter, is not truth but faith. The point is to believe that something is true by feeling rather than evidence. Evidence is not there to validate you or anyone else, evidence is there to ascertain the truth as best we can: we may get it wrong, but every day we get up and we try again. That's what it means to live a life of good faith.
The truth is that none of us are going to know the truth about the world, and even our best guesses to the truth are faith. But there is faith, and then there is good faith. The statistics whose veracity is disputed by so many different ideologies are collected by millions upon millions of people whose entire senses of self is gained by doing their job well. To dispute their findings is the kind of bad faith that only the faithful possess.
But it's not their fault: not when the fog of propaganda is impossible to see through from minute to minute.
I am so tired right now...
Friday, March 20, 2026
Letter to Dad #6
I literally went to shul today Dad to say Kaddish, but I told my brother that I didn't know if I'd be able to get through it without a scene if they mention the war. He said 'please don't make a scene', so I said 'Of course I won't long as the war doesn't get mentioned.' To which he said 'they probably will mention it.'
I'm sure he thought I'd be mature enough to handle myself in there so it wasn't a problem. I'm not, I never was. I've dealt with that building's bullshit my whole life, and now I never have to again. I'll come to shul to say Kaddish for you on days I know what the sermon will be about and I can leave the room when it's time to hear more of their Ein-sof horseshit, but on the days when I don't know it's coming, how does anybody go into that room? It's been seven months. Your soul is probably in Olam Ha'Ba by now, and I could be wrong but isn't the Kaddish supposed to be for the living? Not once does it mention the dead.
I know that the whole point is that it's supposed to be said in a community, and the community is supposed to bind us together. But this is a community that cares all about unity and not a vine or fig for communing. So long as everyone agrees, there's a place. But for those who need a place, for those who feel alienated, for those who don't know what it is to bond with people just one degree different from them, they're utterly lost to community. So many shuls are not real shuls, they're country clubs. They claim to learn, but how much learning goes on in these places that isn't agitprop?
It's not just agitprop about Israel. It's agitprop about the shul itself. A shul is a product just like a soft drink, and the big shuls are constantly advertising themselves to justify their ginormous operating expenses. I'm sure megachurches are exactly the same way, but we Jews have this problem that we kinda advertise to the world that we're better than this.... We're really not. For all the times you privately crapped on the entire Jewish world, including and especially your town of residence, you bought into this as much as anybody.
As a high school student at BT I used to say that the difference between KSDS (where our other synagogue was) and BT was the difference between anarchy and a totalitarian state. KSDS was a very high pressure school in many ways, but low enthusiasm was steeped into us from the moment we set foot in the door till the moment the learning disabled among us finished homework at 11:30 at night. By the time we were teens, as many of us skipped morning minyan (services) as could get away with it. Studies were, of their type, taken very very seriously in this school that never went past eighth grade: they called themselves 'The Jewish Gilman' (Gilman being Baltimore's most elite private school). They certainly were too important to make anyone go cheer at sporting events, which would languish in the gym with no cheers as quiet as a cathedral except for the sounds of a bouncing basketball and a deafening buzzer. Teachers were constantly yelling at the children but none of them could actually keep any classroom in order. We were encouraged to sing in order to learn our prayers multiple times a day until the day we graduated at 14, and everybody basically just droned the words as they fell asleep. The middle school head kept telling us that we should revere our teachers as ultimate founts of wisdom, founts that often wore a piece of jewelry each day on every finger, wore a seven hundred dollar pantsuit every day to class and their hair in beehives so tight they could serve as helmets, yelling at us in nasal Baltimore accents thick enough that you expected crabs to come out their mouths at any moment. Hebrew teachers would sneak belts of whiskey when they thought nobody was looking, and Israeli adults would talk crap in Hebrew about their students and other teachers right in front of them and assumed we didn't notice. In a lot of ways, I found KSDS an absolutely miserable experience, where teachers deposited a daily diet of aggression onto their students who then deposited it on each other. In others, it was an absolutely hilarious place. Like so many Jewish youth experiences in every generation, the real weirdos ended up teaching at Jewish schools, most of whom didn't even realize they were weird. Nothing about the place was serious, and nothing about the place was taken seriously by the students. The only people who took the school seriously were the administration, who put a kind of Potemkin front on the school to make parents think that it was an incredibly elite academic institution while most of the teachers were barely ahead of their students.
BT was, of course, the opposite. Certainly not the opposite in learning, though it did have a few very serious scholars in the high school, but the precise opposite in ethos. In many ways, it was as much a Potemkin front as KSDS, but the difference was just how desperate BT was to keep up the ruse. So far as I could tell from two years there vs. my nine at KSDS, there wasn't nearly as much yelling or contempt, though there was as much as any other school, but BT was a kind of parochial North Korea where the entire school from nursery school to 12th grade was constantly being brought into the main sanctuary as a way to praise donors who just bought the shul yet another Torah. Even the smallest happening at the lower school was advertised in the Baltimore Jewish Times as though it were an event at the 92nd Street Y. Every teacher seemed to have multiple fake honorifics, and every high school student got some kind of bullshit award every year: not to boost their self-esteem, but because the award would boost their transcript for college applications. Every teacher, every student, every janitor was under the eagle eye of Mrs. S____, an administrative autocrat so brilliantly exacting and intimidating that had she not been born frum she probably could have become Hillary Clinton. Kids at BT were divided very exactingly into the great hopes of Zion, and the execrations and astonishments. The high classes were afforded every educational amenity, privilege, and praise. The kids would be touted in the shul newsletter, in the Jewish Times, and by the time they got to college they had enough clippings that their futures were practically bought and paid for. The rest of us, they just kinda shrugged: "We know you don't have a future, you know you don't have a future, just leave us alone and you can do whatever you want and don't screw your life up before you leave."
Dad you spent your lifetime implying what morons the other people in Pikesville were. Sadly, in many cases you were right. We spent our lives being told just how amazingly smarter Jews were than other people: then we spent our childhood going around Pikesville where people were certainly more successful than elsewhere, but who was the average Pikesville success story? People who just were kinda mediocre, dull, second-tier, nothing of interest to say, and if they had something interesting to say, they were too success oriented to let anyone hear it. In many ways, it speaks incredibly well of this weird Jerusalem suburb in Maryland: the average person deserves success too, and if they can make it as an accountant, a lawyer, a doctor of an unvital organ, why not?
The only problem is the hypocrisy of it. It's fruitless to pretend that Jews don't tout ourselves as being smarter than everybody else, cleverer, more interesting, and yet somehow we often even think ourselves more moral. Something is wrong with that, and you could see it in how... well... mediocre Pikesville is: how few interesting things people there had to say or do, how materialistic were the possessions of your generation, how 'basic' are the interests of my generation (and you commented on both at least as often as I did...).
The fact remains, being Jewish is a drek sandwich in the best generations. We're hardly known as the easiest people to get along with, yet getting along with other Jews is a lot easier for Jews than getting along with the goyim who so often want to kill us. From generation to generation, the best and brightest of the Jewish world generally realize the grass is goyer, and they get out. They assimilate, and so they hope, they blend in until their progeny are indistinguishable from their peers. Our gene pool somehow absorbs the loss, and the genotypes of Jewish intelligence are embedded deeply enough that they keep showing up even in those people who carry it recessively. Many frum people are brilliant, god knows they've produced millions of Torah scholars, but are we really that much smarter than everybody else? And if, on the small off chance we are, does it matter at all?
In your generation, a disproportionate number of the best and brightest were the children of Holocaust survivors. In my generation, a disproportionate number of the best and brightest were the children of Soviet emigres. Like you, those kids existed in a diaspora within the diaspora. We knew about them, we went to school with them, and we marginalized them. Most (not all) of the Russian kids were social pariahs. They were scared to talk, and the kids among them who did open their mouths usually regretted it. I was pretty damn low on the social totem pole growing up. They were lower: the Jews within the Jewish community. For ten years I went to school with, of all people, Julia Ioffe, one of the towering journalists of our time, and in ten years, I'm not even sure I said two words to her. I'm not sure anybody else did either.
Like you and the other 'greenies' (children of survivors), they were the ones with the overwhelming hunger for achievement, they were the ones with the overwhelming drive for success, desire for recognition, and fear of failure. And like you, their fear of failure was probably more terror than fear. Their parents knew exactly what it meant for it all to come crumbling down, and they wanted fortresses of security so absolute that no establishment man could ever take them away.
And that's the problem. It's not just the Soviet emigres and the Greenies, it's not just the Jews going back before the War, or going back long before masses of Jews came to America. Like Hoffer said, we can never have enough of what we don't really want. Security is a myth, and so is success. There is nothing you can gain that cannot be taken away from you, and often the very conspicuousness of your security and success is what makes people so single-minded to remove it. You sort of realized all this in the end, but I don't think you quite got there.
You realized a lot of this, certainly better than many, certainly better than me at times. But if the failure to recognize this was your flaw, our falw, it was the flaw of everyone else we knew, everyone else we lived around, everyone else who breathed that same air of smoke fish and chreyn (horseradish).
More later...
Thursday, March 19, 2026
Letter to Dad #5 (related to 4)
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
Letter to Dad #4
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Contemplating Resurrection
Mahler's Resurrection is one of those pieces that hooks you to classical music forever, and once you've heard it a hundred times, you dread hearing it another hundred. When i listen to earlier Mahler, when i listen to late Mahler, when i listen to works as diverse as the third, the fourth and the seventh, there is never a moment when I feel as though I'll get tired of it, because there is no getting to the bottom of emotional meanings that ambiguous. When you hear the funeral march from the Titan Symphony, when you hear the end of the 9th and Das Lied, the finale of 7, the opening of 3, there is no saying what music like this means. It's as though every emotion hurtles toward you all at once and you can't possibly feel them all every time you listen.