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April 7, 2026 3:04 pm at 3:04 pm in reply to: american and israeli intelligence failure during the current iran war #2533747Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipant
People get addicted to 24-hour delivery of everything. Some things are hard, you can show respect and add those who are risking their lives in your davening.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipant> The question is why would people go otd so quickly if our lifestyle is supposedly the truth.
right. It is a difficult balance – if you introduce, esp kids, to the world too early, you are risking OTD, or at least acquisition of undesirable views and middos. If you don’t introduce at all – then R Soloveitchik’s question from the 1950s still stands: if we claim to have truth from Hashem, why are we hiding in caves.
Middle road is hard.Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantThe problem might be that these minhagim might need to change quickly with technology and social changes – sometimes l’kula, sometimes l’humra.
For example, nobody was saying hamotzi on pizza 100 years ago – as it was a treat. Now people do because it became, lo aleinu, a full lunch.
Processsed food became more uniform and with different ingredients. Humriche food became more accessible in many places.Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantwhat do you mean “new” minhagim? In my family, we did not eat machine matzah from the time of Beis Hamikdash.
April 7, 2026 10:17 am at 10:17 am in reply to: Chaveirim Damaged the Car, Whats the Right thing to do? #2533453Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipant> it would be best not to name the town
indeed, it is even worse in less densely Jewish towns. When you see a clearly observant person misbehaving on the road, you likely know the person and it is also weighs more into people’s perception.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantChaim, see Daniel Feldman True Lies, False Facts for in-depth discussion of trade-offs of free media amd loshon horo. Free speech is a necessary part of democratic governance, people need to have as much info as possible about those they appoint. Where exactly the nation decided to draw the line is not that important – as long as the democratic process works. The hard part becomes when observant Jews are entering this process – do we use same tools or do we follow higher path? It seems t me that at least we should be better than others and try to be yashar. Take Joe Lieberman for example – he was a politician and some of his positions and statements could be viewed as artificial and self-serving. But he was viewed as a moral person.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantrescue> Put all the stress in your in laws. That sound very biblical.
Or the govement =usuryOf course you can support yourself and learn. Not a new idea. But as long as it is private and volunteer, there should not be a problem. Rambam learned while his brother supported him, and worked after that (and supported his brother’s family). I would have no problem supporting a Talmid Chochom as a S-I-L. It is just most of current learning is not at the level but it is “Torah as medicine” (idea endorsed by gemorah) – to prevent people going off the derech. For example, when I had please discussing various bochurim with their rebbes, they would say “he is learning”. What? How? “like everyone else. great”…
Maybe, things will look better if we honestly requalify expense from “learning” to saving lives of people who will drown in modern society without being locked in yeshivos. Then, this expense becomes more justified. And then we sould remember that the best tzedokah is helping people to leave the tzedokah rolls – help them acquire work skills and social skills to live in the world without going OTD.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantPS I guess you are troubled that you are “struggling”. But this is normal, Hashem did not sign a contract with us that everything should be totally easy.
Surviving without camps or some other “necessities” may be that.On this note, someone quoted to me one of the gedolim, maybe R Kamenetsky, talking to baalei batim in Boro Park who were becoming more affluent:
remember your “luxuries” will become your children’s “necessities”. So maybe you one of those who was raised like that. Luckily for me, I was not, so I appreciate those luxuries I can afford (and those that we choose not to do even if we can afford them). I am not so sure about the kids, though, even as we continue reminsdning them and even make them scrub the house before Pesach. Let me go see how they enjoy slavery.Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantChaim, I think you are doing the right thing, you are just complaining about it.
“choosing” not to work and rely on others paying for you is not an erliche option.
If you think working in business is better … Not exact match, but there was shochet who told R Salanter that he doesn’t want to be responsible for aveiros in shechita, so he is going into business! R Salanter was horrified that he is not afraid of aveiros in business .. accounting is not shechita, but the business alternative is still the same. Not randomly, you bring the “nursing home” example – a business rife with people being in trouble with medicaid, hiring illegals, profits balancing how much you spend on feeding elderly … I would rather be an accountant for Enron that face this yetzer hara.
So, just stop thinking that the grass is greener somewhere else, you are doing well.I would look at adjustments – 401k, vacations, camps – really, train your kids and learn yourself to enjoy interacting with them. If the choice is not being to pay for school, camp should go first (my school has question “which camp you go to” in there where they are trying to figure out how rich you are).
If kids are too young for kiruv camps, they can help out in a local summer day camp with little kids. Mine started doing it, I think, when they were 12.
Maybe assist at a local chabad house, if you have one or maybe your place is too frum.In terms of school costs, I am big proponent of doing general subjects in online schools from about 7-8th grades – you can then have all kids together in Jewish classes, and everyone can go there own way in general studies – some might want Yinglish only, some might want AP and SAT. And this cuts cost at school. If you are really pressed – experiment with 1-2 (better 2 close in age) kids in fully online Jewish schools for a year.
March 31, 2026 5:04 pm at 5:04 pm in reply to: Chaveirim Damaged the Car, Whats the Right thing to do? #2532421Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantWhen you have someone working for you, you should be liberal with their mistakes. There is also an idea that an expert is not liable for mistaken bad advice. BUT a non-expert is.
In this case, I agree with you that you need to help them know when they are competent – and prevent future damage. Surely, you want to send a friendly message to whoever is in charge of the group.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYou know, medical pain is an indicator that something is wrong with the body … the pain itself is not the important thing but it point to where the problem is. This statement that camp is a necessity may be such a sign – are your kids capable of doing something positive when they are not watched by a teacher? Do they take a sefer during the vacation? Do they have friends with whom they can spend quality time? Hobbies? Would they mind preparing for SAT or play basketball or piano? If there are many “no” answers here, then see how to change that and help them grow into healthy adults.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantChaim, something is not right when you think summer camp is a necessity and your kids can’t spend time “without structure”. It means there is something wrong with the way you educate your kids during the year. This is a way more urgent problem that the money we are discussing. Start teaching your kids to be able to function.
Same for borrowing from 401k. You before said that you contribute to get match. Surely, you got match, now you can borrow. Remember, we are comparing with alternative – a heimishe job that presumably does not have 401k.
Same for classes. You can have your class during lunch at your job and listen to shiur while standing in traffic to the City. If you are booming with high paying respectable honest non-college jobs, this is great. Then bnos pnina (remember where we started!) would not shut down because the parents will have money to pay for the school. Tiuvta?
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantmisnagid, not arguing with you, but you need to look at the sources: many early opinions about various electric devices were just that … uninformed opinions. And then some are still propagated from the previous ones. So, you need to look at the issue and possibly by a rav who either knows the swcience or is known to consult those who know the science. R Auerbach, for example.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantThere was recently an explosion on rechov HaKatan in Tel Aviv – here is a hypocrite hiding in the middle of a Zioni city.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantChaim, here you go.
Either a parent could work in a camp, if he is underemployed, or better kids could work or volunteer in a regular or kiruv camp, or just spend the summer leisurely between a library and visiting grandparents. Seminary? Some of our daughters hold a grudge that they were not sent there – but they can’t point to anything their peers who went there acquired in ruchniyus that they don’t. Most kids can get a substantial number of clothes from older sisters if ou teach them how to take care of clothes. As our baby says : this is dress is “new to me”.
BTW, for a wedding, you can borrow from your 401k 50K after you got your match, or I heard you can even borrow against the 401k as an asset.
Anyway, given that you are listing camps and such as your spending problems, you are really not stressed at all.
And let’s not forget what the subject was – you are saying that because of some optional spending, you recommend changing ehrliche nice life as a professional, who has time to learn and have time with his family and turn into business where you are risking both money and olam haboh if you succumb to yetzer hora? I mean if you wan to risk it, at least have a high-tech startup with some possible upside.
March 23, 2026 9:19 pm at 9:19 pm in reply to: Gashmiyus and Lavish Simchas (again) Where are our Gedolim? #2528832Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantChaim> Its not to showoff, its just ingrained that this is what we do. And so here is the key point, the more the rich do things the higher it brings up a standard for everyone else. Its very hard not to spend the money when its the social norm. To your last point, I do not think dependcny is an issue. Thats even more rare.
“not show off, just ingrained” – you are trying to simple re-word and excuse it. It became ingrained because it is popular to show off.
I agree that rich folks are partly responsible, but these days people should know enough not to copy.On dependency – if you take a group of those who are independently middle-class and those who depend on some community help – it is true that the first one often show off even more (as they have more funds available – and I hear it is worse in NY area than in other places), but this group contains a sizeable cluster of people who do not show off – you simply do not notice them when they do not make those lavish simchas. The dependent group is pressed more to comply. It is what I see.
These issues show up in unexpected places – some of our kids insist already 3rd year in a row that they need to give shaloch monos to teachers with a good bottle of wine. Not because they love those teachers so much – this is shayach to any teacker – but because [wide eyes] that is what everyone does. We told them – you gift what you drink – grape juice.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantChaim,
I’ve been to lakewood and know people there, maybe not to degree you are. And I even know people who respond “I am not from Lakewood, I am from TOMS RIVER”.As I said, I agree with you that doing parnosa in Jewish community is often better than in a general one. Although, not always – if you are an only smart Yid in an Alabama village, you can have great business going. But, comparing apples-to-apples. You compare with big corporate world. You can also work for a smaller well-run company or have your own high-tech business (like I do). The focus is on difference in professional level:
compare being a corporate accountant v. being a salesman in a corporation
and compare running your own accounting shop with running your own candy storeand as you are saying – some trends hit low-educated (or generally, business) harder. I have a lakewood friend who was verry successful in RE untill it all got destroyed. But we are both just repeating gemora in kiddushin about trade v business. Old news.
So, family of 6 in NJm with $200K in W2, and $1mln home gets $2K/month after mortgage/transportation/utilities/food/etc, thanks chatgpt. That is enough to have 2-3 kids in private school or all 4 with some squeeze. Maybe suspend 401k or have wife or kids work a little and you are all set.
March 21, 2026 10:39 pm at 10:39 pm in reply to: Gashmiyus and Lavish Simchas (again) Where are our Gedolim? #2527538Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantChaim,
while you are right that rich people behavior affect the rest, and was it R Gamliel or R Shimon b Gamliel who ordered a modest funeral for himself in order to influence others? BUT a bigger issue is non-rich people cumulatively trying to play it up in front of each other. And, I suspect, dependency is an issue here:If I am independently non-wealthy, but self-supporting, I don’t need to show off. But if I am always looking to people for various benefits – discount in yeshiva; free invitation; a job at school or a mossad; then I need to maintain my image. So, having more people supporting themselves will reduce the pressure to show off.
March 20, 2026 11:35 am at 11:35 am in reply to: The antizionism amongst religious Jews has no legitimate detractors #2527219Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantDaMoshe, what was wrong with Uganda plan, especially for those non-zionist shevuos guys? Would it have been wrong to evacuate Jews from the upcoming murder by Nazis and Commies in Europe?
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantsomejew, everything I quoted is from images with signs held by NK-looking people. I don’t know who of them are true NK and who are not. Maybe you are looking at some other imagers where they did not post everything.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantI think some posters, whether Iranian or otherwise, were so frustrated that their posts were moderated out that they decided to take over the moderation.
BUT as Aristotle and Rambam taught us: “everything is better in moderation”.Happy new year to our Iranian readers and wishing you more freedom in Nissan.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantsomejew, march 7, 2026 demo generates headlines:
#Jews condemning the Zionist attack on #Iran and calling for “Hands Off Iran” at a protest in #Unionsquare, NYC, on Saturday, March 7, 2026.I see on the pictures:
Jews worldwide say: we condemn Israel’s war on Iran
Jews worldwide say: we condemn Israel’s war on Gaza
Judaism demands freedom for Gaza and all palestine
Judaism demands all palestine return to palestinian sovereignty
stop the war on iran
peace with iranMarch 19, 2026 12:36 pm at 12:36 pm in reply to: The antizionism amongst religious Jews has no legitimate detractors #2526375Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantujm > Herzl and Zionism were just as okay to have Uganda
just can’t make you happy. When Zs push for everyone to go to EY – shvuos, idol worship .. when Herzl suggested Uganda – you are not happy again. And his idea was rejected. I think this only proves that he tried his best to save Jews, despite his limited knowledge. And, again, explain to me why so many learned people did not see the dangers that he saw, and acted upon.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantmetoo, this ruling is for his time.
When pareve coffee cream appeared, one would leave a container near his coffee to avoid an impression that he is drinking milk after meat. By now, nobody is having a problem with that.
When Waymos will fill the streets, nobody will be confused.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantFlatbush, these are good ideas about takonos – what did your rav say about it?
But there is another way out of this vicious circle – become self-sufficient financially by working. Not only, this increases ability to pay, but also, ironically, decreases a desire for crazy spending. Let me explain: if the person depends on community support – reduced tuition, school principal paying your salary, etc, then there is an obvious desire to show oneself a loyal member of the community. This has good sides, keeping people conforming to religious norms, but it also generates the impulse to show off your dedication, including by creating such simchos. After all, if you don’t do that and don’t invite hoshuve people, then you will not be invited …
my kids brought the idea from school that they need to have special sholoch monos for their school teachers, including a good bottle of wine. Not because they love every teacher, but because “everyone shows kavod”. I suggested that they send to their friends and those kids that may not have many friends. We compromised on the teachers they like and even .. took several of their friends to … math teacher that nobody was planning to visit.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA, I just wanted to emphasize that when there is a range of options within these technical parameters, R Auerbach took into account kavod habrius.
on technical issues, I don’t think I learnt this sugya in depth: are we saying that combustion engine is fire? is burning in ICE halachik fire?
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantrescue, I gave you a reference to one paper, and now we are discussing whether papers are worth reading in general. Maybe give us feedback on this or related papers, and then we will learn more about this interesting subject.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantpure, so you still have one source – R Wasserman.
I do not understand how with so much written by and about him, Chofetz Chaim never revealed himself to other people; or other people never reported that. So, if we can’t resolve this enigma, maybe you can compile statements from rabbis who had opposite opinion and we can see if those are more or less trustworthy. And it will be a good exercise for you.Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantn0> This rational was used for Jews in America to work on Shabbos until 95 years ago.
I heard the following story from Canada. The person who told the story said that he saw a person who was always coming to shul on shabbos, sat in his coat in the back of the room, did not talk to anyone, and left at the end of davening. His story: he lost his job during great depression and only found one that required working on shabbos and he had a family to support. He minimized what he could: walked to the job pretty far away, at the end stayed until shkiya to return, etc. After he eventually found another job, he came back to shul, but put cherem on himself for being mechalel shabbos and sat in that corner for a couple of decades already, despite pleading from the kahal and the rav.
March 15, 2026 11:39 am at 11:39 am in reply to: What I believe is the truth about the Iran war #2524986Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantI am sure at some point there were Zionists who were focused on “their agenda”. This happens in any organized movement and it is not good.
But original idea came to Hertzl when he got disappointed with the path of assimilation seeing that even assimilated Jews were not accepted, so Zionism was a means to saving Jews as a separate entity instead.There is nothing wrong with this idea at the time when things were getting worse for Jews in Europe, and it is something to be explained – how is a naive journalist from Vienna can see whether things are going better than so many learned people.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantAviraDeArah> Rav moshe allowed a hearing aid to be worn on shabbos because it isn’t noticeably zilzul shabbos, which he held was a problem. He held that the other issurim involved weren’t clear, and that while they’re enough to asser in general, for a choleh we can be lenient.
From R Lichtestein’s hesped for R Auerbach, this seems to be more about kavod than just shabbos halochos:
Once I asked him about hearing aids on Shabbat. He permitted them. But he told me:
“Someone wrote to me from America saying that Rabbi Aharon Kotler was careful not to speak to someone wearing a hearing aid on Shabbat, lest he activate the device.”
Rabbi Shlomo Zalman said he could not believe such a thing. “Imagine — it is not enough that Heaven punished him with deafness… the Gemara says if
someone makes another person deaf he must pay the value of the entire person — as if he were dead. And that is not enough punishment?”
“And now when you meet him on the street, instead of saying hello, you speak like this… m…m…m…?”
To him the idea was absurd from the outset.
Some people almost seem to enjoy suffering on Shabbat. He saw this not merely as misplaced stringency but as a harm to Shabbat and to the human being. Life on Shabbat should not be misery compared to weekday life.Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantFrom R Lichtestein’s hesped for R Auerbach:
But everything reflected intellectual integrity, which of course stemmed from inner moral integrity.
At the same time there was in him — despite his awareness of the world — a certain note of innocence. Once he said to me:
“Imagine — someone came and told me that in America there are people who avoid paying income tax properly.”
He was astonished.
“And they are our people — observant Jews!”March 15, 2026 11:39 am at 11:39 am in reply to: The antizionism amongst religious Jews has no legitimate detractors #2524977Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantchaim> Rabbi Shlomo Zalman Auerbach: “In the time of Rabbi Kook, the majority of Torah giants were ‘all as if nothing’ compared to him.
Here is second-hand info, but still interesting and going beyond nice statements that can be made just out of politeness or political necessity:
from R Lichtenstein’s hesped for R Auerbach:
Someone once told me that Rabbi Shlomo Zalman served as honorary president of the Jerusalem Institute. They once wanted to add a certain distinguished figure to the board, but he vetoed it. Why? Because he heard that this person referred to Rabbi Kook simply as “Kook,” without honor. A person who spoke like that could not serve. He would not yield until the rumor was proven false.March 13, 2026 12:49 pm at 12:49 pm in reply to: What I believe is the truth about the Iran war #2524837Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantI understand YYA that he doesn’t want to go circles into debating Zionism, but this thread shows that people base their (sometimes insane) positions about current events on those theories.
Yes, it is possible to separate and say – let’s not debate old issues and look at current events, and it is very reasonable. But the reality is that many people are affected by years of propaganda – on each side of every issue. And when yo are dealing with decisions of life and death, it might lead someone, H’V, to very serious aveiros. This is also true about events in 1920s-40s when so many followed their group ideologies.
March 13, 2026 1:38 am at 1:38 am in reply to: Is Chabad Sacrificing Their Youth In The Quest For Outreach #2524780Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantSee gemorah drash about what word “es” means, and that “yire as haElokim” es possibly can not mean “something else”, but Rabbi Akiva says – it can mean that also “talmidei chachamim”. from this. yireh means something that when applied to Hashem can not be comparable to most other situationms. That, it i surely not general “fear” – it is either extreme fear or awe …
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantpure > Chafetz Chayim said the zionists are mizera amalek as stated by Rav Wasserman ztz”l)
it seems from your writing that we do not have any other source for such an opinion by Ch. Ch. despite him authoring so many seforim, articles, and private letters. Any explanations? He did not trust anyone except his favorite student?
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantPS Presenting one witness is a chapter in hilchos loshon horo. If you don’t have two witnesses – do not present info, go home.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantSo, the simplest way to stop such demonstrations is to invalidate the eruv? Just do it before the time of mothers taking kids to shul.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantRocky> I don’t really understand what a discussion on College has to Bnos Penina
retracing the steps:
my conjecture was that the root problem is parents’ inability to pay for school because the community is lacking good jobs; and a college is a way for having good erliche jobs for a wide swath of population. The other opinion is that people get by pretty well without college and .. hm. then I don’t know why they still can’t pay tuition … So, I am also lost by the claim that is not supported by facts!Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantrescue > Studies are manipulated propaganda from special interests most times and it’s an appeal to authority instead of fact. Observation, real life experience is a much better teacher.
I am not denying that there is propaganda in the world. At the same time, there are studies that are “observations” – conducted according to a protocol. When you read a proper study and look at the authors’ other work, and, if needed, can contact the authors to clarify, and sometimes having data published openly – you can find good observations. So, if you want your opinion to be taken seriously in this debate – you should open some studies and read them inside.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantrescue > Look around you? Do the liberals look like they have a high IQ no they don’t.
Not everyone with college degree is liberal, or have high IQ… It is hard for me to judge, indeed – I do not know many people with bachelor degrees, so what I observe personally may not generalize to overall population – that is why I am reading studies.
In my observation, highly educated people have a large subset of very smart people. It is true many exhibit signs of “schooling” – they are way more reasonable when they talk about their profession but less in others. Still, many who are teaching or doing research full-time can have interesting Torah discussions, comparable to Talmidei Chachomim, but much smaller number of non-college educated non-T Ch can do the same,
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantrescue, as I mentioned: in your – valid – criticism of college-educated people, just compare it with ignorance. Plenty of non-college-educated fall into a lot of logical pitfalls … starting from not being able to understand validity of sources, statistics, design of experiments, scientific method, etc. Can’t understand difference between a well-designed experiment v. anecdotes heard in a tiktok video.
One way to formulate your criticism – there is a difference between crystallized (learned skills) and fluid (ability to think) intelligence.
BUT educational level is positively correlated with IQ – from one study 1-5 IQ points per year of schooling. Is this due to self-selection or effect of college? check the original study or anything else like that.
How Much Does Education Improve Intelligence? A Meta-Analysis
Stuart J. Ritchie and Elliot M. Tucker-Drob
Sage Journal 2018 Volume 29, Issue 8
doi.org 10.1177/0956797618774253March 11, 2026 4:03 pm at 4:03 pm in reply to: Who is really a Gibbor? Who is really a Kadosh? #2523717Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantyankel> , rescue is influenced by his surroundings to arbitrarily proclaim his own ‘common sense’
R Daniel Feldman mentions “bias bias” – everyone is aware that people have biases. Therefore, when evaluate someone’s position, you correct it for their bias. Now, when you are evaluating your own position, you should also correct for bias – but you usually don’t.
Why? Because you experience your own thought process differently from others. With others, you only see the final output – writing, speech, maybe sometimes you hear them talking out load. You then reconstruct their thinking process and correct for biases. With your own thinking, you have access to all details of your thinking. So, you “clearly see” that everything you think is logical and unbiased. No need to go through evaluation!
Maybe a good example is voice. Do you know that you are thinking that your pitch is higher than what you think it is? You get sound from other people through air – while you hear your own sound through your head, which makes those waves lower frequency. Try recording yourself and listening.
March 11, 2026 4:03 pm at 4:03 pm in reply to: Is Chabad Sacrificing Their Youth In The Quest For Outreach #2523701Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA > It’s impossible to be an Ehrliche Yid without BOTH ??? ??? and ??? ???.
yes! and, as you mention, choices between might be different for different people/groups. but what is interesting that proponents of specific directions usually insist that “this is the right way”. Is someone treating the issue taking all views into account?
But, of course, the starting point is even earlier and fundamental from Adam and Hava time – knowing the difference between tov and ra.
Doing ra while you are thinking you are doing tov “is not an answer”.Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantrescue > College isn’t knowledge it’s propaganda
we are talking generalities here. Fill me in some details – how much propaganda is there in the 2nd year of calculus or organic chemistry?
in most technical undergrad programs, they mark up the propaganda – you need to take 2 classes in “cultural awareness” and 3 in “global culture” or something like that. Well-taught kids know what it is – and current administration works on having less of that. It is a waste of time & money, but it is what it is. You can try taking them in a cheap online college or even pull in some Jewish classes to qualify as “diversity”.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantChaim > , Thats no longer true. Corp America has constant layoffs and is not stable.
not. comparable. I was laid off a couple of times rather unexpectedly, and baruch Hashem, it saved me from some years working for businesses that were on the way down. They really did chessed to those who they laid off earlier. Still, most professionals are doing “ok” after such things, even if they lose in status. You can’t argue about general statistics. Your response seem to be that it is different in Jewish community, and I hope it is, and it should be, but it is an onus on you to show those numbers.
> I just think anyone who is motivated can now learn that online too.
That goes about everything – Torah learning too … I am, and I was, internally motivated, but I do owe a lot to some of my professors who showed me different things I did not see on my own. When you are at work, you are focused on very specific tasks and yo can miss the big picture. I mean, two Yidden don’t need to argue that learning is important.March 11, 2026 11:48 am at 11:48 am in reply to: What I believe is the truth about the Iran war #2523386Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantphil> it is an all-out war over “maybe and probably ” that is what I am against.
current technology is such that waiting for someone to obtain dangerous technology and to get a 100% proof of that may be too late.
it is enough if someone shows bad intent to act.
See example of Avraham – when Avimelech starts conversation with “who is this woman”, Avraham immediately activates his defensive psyops. He did not wait until Avimelech kills him and takes his wife.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantrescue, “if you think knowledge is expensive, try ignorance”
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantRambam puts out criteria for a Navi that includes everything positive being fulfilled up to a minute detail. So, if someone claimed to have access to Hashem’s proprietary information and then failed, he has bigger problems with beis din than monetary payments.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantChaim,
on college – there is no one answer. different people have different abilities and interest. Most decent (top 50-100 in US reports) have capacity to teach professional skills. From what I hear, Touro is not there (yet?). YU is somewhat there. Having several good professors with whom you can interact can help a young person move in a right direction. Higher level seminars at top 50 universities give you access to world-class researchers. All weird stuff can be avoided by attending a local commuting college and attentive parenting.We discussed that professional work is less conducive to yetzer hara in mamanos. Another important aspect – yishuv daas. A professional is way more sure of his employment prospects and can focus on learning/family.
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