Daily Archives: October 20, 2020

How I was accidentally sectioned into a psych ward during the coronavirus lockdown – ABC News

Posted: October 20, 2020 at 6:26 pm

The two worst things that happened to me during the March COVID lockdown were:

In all honesty, it was the eyebrow thing that caused me the most grief. But given that everyone suffered some sort of corona-related DIY body hair disaster (hello, pandemic bangs), I'll focus on the accidental institutionalisation.

I've always been certifiably crazy (I know that's a politically incorrect term but I feel strongly about having the right to use it about myself). Some of my earliest memories as a child involved existential dread and serious contemplation of ... well ... not being alive, to put it bluntly.

Mental illness stalks several members of my family so at least some of my madness is probably genetic. But multiple episodes of abuse from the past has also hardwired my central nervous system into near constant fight, flight or freeze mode.

People who've suffered trauma know the deal. We'll be gaily going about our business in 2020 and suddenly we teleport back in time and it feels like The Terrible Things are happening all over again live.

Unsurprisingly, there have been many times in my life when I've barely held it together.

One of those occasions was my late teens when, after dropping out of high-school and running away from home, I barely survived a year of eating disorders, cutting and industrial-grade risk taking.

Then there was the time I was a new mother with a six-month-old baby who'd yet to sleep more than a few hours in a row. I woke one Sunday morning quite convinced she would be better off without me.

Checking myself into the postnatal depression (PND) unit of a nearby psychiatric hospital worked like a charm.

It wasn't because the treatment I received was particularly useful for an anti-social weirdo like myself. (While most of the staff were delightful, one especially Nurse Ratchet-y individual who talked to me as if I was my daughter's age had a habit of wandering into my room after lights out, shining a fishing torch into my face and shouting "HAVE YOU DONE YOUR MENTALLY CALMING, GETTING-READY-TO-SLEEP RELAXATION EXERCISES?" as I was trying to do my mentally calming, getting-ready-to-sleep relaxation exercises.)

What actually helped was the realisation that I was developing way more insight into the way my brain worked (and didn't work) than many paid professionals.

Indeed, my designated psychiatrist in the PND ward urged me to leave only five nights into my six-week stay because he decided that in my case institutionalisation was contraindicated for sanity. That said, I'd still re-admit myself in a hot minute if I thought I needed it.

These days, I'm extremely skilled at living as the DSM-5 personified.

When I get those "time to die" thoughts, I tune into the sliver of myself that still speaks sense. Instead of panicking about the blackness and bleakness of my thinking or buying into their "logic", I use them as diagnostic. "Wow," is what I think to myself. "Check out the blackness and bleakness of THOSE thoughts. Time to outsource for some assistance."

This is how things went down during my COVID crisis. For months, it had been just me and my teenaged daughter living under what felt like house arrest. I am immunocompromised as a result of having had cancer, which meant we had to remain hermetically sealed from the world way longer than everyone else.

I kept up an excellent impersonation of a sane-ish lady until the weekend my daughter went to stay at her dad's for a few weeks.

In the absence of any exogenous reasons to give meaningful shapes to the days, I spiralled. It's difficult to find the words to describe the visceral and malignant misery I felt though David Foster Wallace has a good stab at it in Infinite Jest:

"The so-called 'psychotically depressed' person who tries to kill herself doesn't do so out of quote 'hopelessness' or any abstract conviction that life's assets and debits do not square ...The person [whose] invisible agony reaches a certain unendurable level will kill herself the same way a trapped person will eventually jump from the window of a burning high-rise ... Their terror of falling from a great height is still just as great as it would be for you or me standing speculatively at the same window ... The variable here is the other terror, the fire's flames: when the flames get close enough, falling to death becomes the slightly less terrible of two terrors ... You'd have to have personally been trapped and felt flames to really understand a terror way beyond falling."

Foster, tragically, didn't make it. In 2008, he committed what the German philosopher Immanuel Kant called "self-murder".

I, on the other hand, have become a complete cockroach when it comes to doing the Bee Gee's thing of stayin' alive. When I started feeling that terror way beyond falling earlier this year, for instance, I did as I have done for many decades now and sought help.

I started by ringing my preferred crisis line and as per usual given my mega weirdness ended up in an oddly meta conversation with the anonymous counsellor.

The ABC gains unprecedented access to join social worker Anne-Marie Skegg and psychiatric nurse Chris Ward on the job, as they respond to acute mental health emergencies.

"I feel like you're reading from a script," I said.

"What I'm hearing you say is that you feel like I'm reading from a script," he replied.

"Now I feel like you're doing Active Listening with a capital 'A' and a capital 'L'," I said.

"What I'm hearing you say is that you feel like I'm doing active listening with a"

Long silence.

"Oh," he said finally. "I see what you mean."

And then as has happened so frequently in our house this year the line dropped out.

At the time, I didn't think much of it. I was feeling slightly better and figured the actively listening phone dude would call me back if he was concerned. I did, however, take the additional precaution of ringing my closest friend and asking her to come watch over me for a while.

Five minutes after she arrived, there was a firm knock on the front door.

On the NSW North Coast everyone knows each other. And everyone seems to know someone. Someone who has lost a loved one to suicide; someone who has become acquainted with the black dog.

Standing on my front porch were three burly police officers and two paramedics. Police vehicles and an ambulance blocked the street and neighbours were gathering in small, complex formations.

"You made a phone call earlier today," the largest of the police officers said by way of introduction.

"That is correct," I replied, launching matter-of-factly into a blow-by-blow account of the entire crisis conversation in a typically neuro-atypical manner.

I explained about the call drop-out. I explained I was feeling a lot better. I pointed out my friend. But the vibe was rapidly unravelling.

The three facemask-free officers insisted that I unlock the front door and show them every medication in the house. I said I was concerned about COVID.

"If you don't open the door immediately, we'll have you sectioned," the biggest one said.

Whether you want to know more about how depression actually manifests, different treatment approaches or go deep on specific experiences, from the light-hearted and humorous to the confronting and challenging, we've got the book for you.

My friend got antsy. "You're making things so much worse for her," she said, pulling out her phone to start filming.

The volume of everyone's voices rose rapidly. By the time I unlocked the front door, the police had changed tack.

"If you don't get in the ambulance immediately and get professionally assessed in hospital, we'll have you sectioned," was their new line.

At which point, I decided the sanest move was simply to succumb to asylum-isation.

During the ride to hospital, I apologised to the cute paramedics saying I really was OK and felt bad for wasting their time when so many other folk must be in greater need of their help.

"You're not wasting our time," one of these two women said. "A lot of the times we attend these sorts of calls, we don't find a person, we find a body."

For every death by suicide, as many as 30 others attempt to end their life. Australia has a suicide problem it seems we can all agree on that but when it comes to solutions, the verdict isn't so clear.

I felt an overwhelming sense of gratitude. Not because I personally needed police and paramedic protection right in that moment, but because I live in a place where mental health is taken so seriously entire, emergency squads arrive at the domiciles of civilians regarded as psychiatrically imperilled.

Once we reached the hospital, the police decided for reasons I still can't fathom to section me anyway. The woman at the front desk of the psych ward took all my stuff and patted me down.

She then sent me in to talk to the (exceedingly delightful) triage nurse who agreed the whole sectioning exercise was bizarre, though he did gently explain that the crisis line I'd called had a duty of care to contact emergency services if its phone folk believed that life was in immediate danger.

His view was that I should simply be permitted to go home but because of the circumstances of my admission I had to be assessed by a psychiatrist first.

For three hours I waited in a room lit only with a reptilian green bulb or fluorescent tube. It did not soothe me so much as space-shuttle the whole scene into peak surrealism. During this increasingly weird wait, a call from my 13-year-old daughter came through via my smart watch.

I did my very best impression of a normal person (though this always makes me feel like I'm wearing drag) and hoped she wouldn't use the tracking app we both have on our phones and notice I was not at home but trapped in what was becoming an increasingly boring B-grade psych ward movie (though, just FYI, I did fill her in on the latter later).

Finding the right psychologist is a bit like app dating. You hope it'll be a good match, but sometimes you're left disappointed.

Finally, the psychiatric registrar (also delightful) arrived, sat cross-legged on the floor in front of me, chatted for a while, and said, "you're free to go".

I walked out feeling decidedly chipper. I'm a maestro in a crisis and having to wrangle my fiercely protective friend and the three pushy police officers had been fantastically distracting. Plus, I've a total sucker for urban thrill-seeking.

"So, this is what it's like to be sectioned in a psych ward," I'd kept thinking to myself. "Now that's something to tick off the bucket list!"

Then, inevitably, the adrenalin wore off. The slow, painstaking details of psychiatric rebuilds aren't nearly as exciting as a crisis: gradual experiments with new meds, a period of more frequent therapy, endless mindfulness meditation, annoying exercise, dosed bursts of sunlight.

It's a yawn-fest but, for me at least, it works.

I find the annual "mental health chat" with my GP incredibly uncomfortable, but there are ways to make it less of a drag, Graham Panther writes.

What also works is telling people. When other humans ask how I am, I answer honestly.

"Experiencing a bit of suicidal ideation, now that you ask."

"Amused that the cops who sectioned me on the weekend chastised me for not changing out of my pyjamas before boarding the ambulance."

"Entirely mortified by the Groucho Marx eyebrows."

I blurt these things out partly because one of my multiple diagnoses is autism spectrum disorder and as the comedian Hannah Gadsby puts it about her own autism:

"[T]hat's how we roll. Pretty much, it's like, 'I have a piece of information you seem to be missing. You may or may not be ready to hear this information, but I'll tell you, because knowledge is power, ignorance is a cage and feelings can be dealt with. I bid you good day'."

The other reason I talk is that silence around mental health is toxic sometimes fatally so.

David Foster Wallace is my favourite writer ever but his burning building analogy is flawed. It's true that choosing to stay alive with an unquiet mind can burn so badly it feels excruciating, unbearable even. But, unlike the flames of a real inferno, it's possible to sit this type of scorching out and eventually walk away mostly unscathed.

In that other place, however, there are no takebacks.

Emma Jane is a freelance writer and an associate professor in the School of the Arts and Media at UNSW.

Here is the original post:
How I was accidentally sectioned into a psych ward during the coronavirus lockdown - ABC News

Posted in Politically Incorrect | Comments Off on How I was accidentally sectioned into a psych ward during the coronavirus lockdown – ABC News

Why Latinos and Hispanic Men Are a Part of Trump’s Base – The New York Times

Posted: at 6:26 pm

PHOENIX They packed into the room to cheer their heroes.

The crowd of more than 100 hollered enthusiastically at Henry Cejudo, a local hero and Olympic gold medalist, the son of undocumented immigrants from Mexico who had gone on to become a mixed martial arts superstar.

But they were really there to celebrate President Trump.

Wearing red Make America Great Again hats, several men held giant American flags and stood in front of several campaign signs: Latinos for Trump, Cops for Trump and another imploring them to text WOKE to get the latest information on the campaign.

In the words of Eric Trump, the presidents son and the headliner of the event, the battle is simple. Its right versus wrong, he said, to a loud round of cheers.

They are trying to cancel our voice, guys.

Men are the core of President Trumps base. In polling, gender gaps exist in nearly every demographic: among white voters, among senior citizens, among voters without a college degree, men are far more likely than women to support his re-election. And little of that support has shifted in the days since Mr. Trump announced he had tested positive for the coronavirus. Polls suggest that this presidential election could result in the largest gender gap since the passage of the 19th Amendment a century ago.

Then there is one of the most enduring questions of the Trump appeal: Who are the nearly 30 percent of Hispanic voters who say they support him, despite his anti-immigration rhetoric and policies?

There is no one simple answer. Mr. Trump has strong backing from Cuban and Venezuelan exiles in South Florida, who like his stance against communism. And his campaign has heavily courted evangelical Latinos throughout the country. But no other group worries Democrats more than American-born Hispanic men, particularly those under the age 45, who polls show are highly skeptical of former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.

Yet what has alienated so many older, female and suburban voters is a key part of Mr. Trumps appeal to these men, interviews with dozens of Mexican-American men supporting Mr. Trump shows: To them, the macho allure of Mr. Trump is undeniable. He is forceful, wealthy and, most important, unapologetic. In a world where at any moment someone might be attacked for saying the wrong thing, he says the wrong thing all the time and does not bother with self-flagellation.

I feel so powerful, the president declared at a rally in Florida on Monday, standing in front of Air Force One. Lest anyone miss the message, the rally ended with Macho Man by the Village People blasting on the speakers.

Paul Ollarsaba Jr., a 41-year-old Marine veteran, voted for a Republican for the first time in 2016, won over by what he saw as Mr. Trumps commitment to the military.

I am Mexican, Mr. Ollarsaba said, adding that for years he thought that meant he had to vote for Democrats. When he began supporting Mr. Trump in 2016, his family ostracized him. My parents say: Why are you supporting a racist? Youre Mexican, you have to vote this way, he said. No, its my country. Its fear, people are afraid of saying they support the president.

Keep up with Election 2020

Mr. Cejudo clearly had no such fear. When President Trump hosted large rallies in Nevada last month, Mr. Cejudo joined several other M.M.A. fighters who backed his campaign.

Ive been the biggest fan of him, said Mr. Cejudo, 33, recalling watching The Apprentice in a high school class. We need a businessman, we need somebody like this to run our country.

Other attendees at the event with Mr. Cejudo and Eric Trump spoke of watching Mr. Trump on The Apprentice, saying they liked his strong style, his apparent confidence in his own opinions. In interviews, they said they viewed his actions as president much in the same way: Even those they do not wholeheartedly agree with, they see as further evidence of his strength.

They said they saw his defiance of widely accepted medical guidance in the face of his own illness not as a sign of poor leadership, but one of a man who does his own research to reach his own conclusion. They see his disdain for masks as an example of his toughness, his incessant interruptions during the debate with Mr. Biden as an effective use of his power.

We saw him being a boss, said Edwin Gonzales, 31, who held a large American flag outside the Trump campaign office. And for him to go down the escalator is basically the same thing its like, Dang, the boss has stepped down and hes putting himself out there to be the president. Thats whats exciting.

Mr. Gonzales added that for him, and many other Trump supporters, the president represented the best of capitalism, adding, Hes a boss and they wanted to be him, they idolize him.

At the event, voters said they admired President Trump and also criticized Mr. Biden, whom many of these supporters described as weak and deserving of the derogatory label coined by the Trump campaign: Basement Biden.

Indeed, many of these men dismiss the need for masks themselves. After being screened with temperature checks at the event with Eric Trump and Mr. Cejudo, almost none of the audience members wore a mask, nor did any of the speakers.

Mr. Biden has mocked President Trumps reluctance over masks. What is this macho thing, Im not going to wear a mask? he said during one town hall event this month. The comment prompted a commentator on Fox to retort that Mr. Biden might as well carry a purse with that mask.

Were at a turning point in this country where we can either be afraid or move forward, said Ricco Rossi, 40. I think what they have done in the last few months, they have damaged their party more. They try to scare us.

Oct. 20, 2020, 6:07 p.m. ET

Though Hispanic women overwhelmingly support Mr. Biden, Hispanic men appear to have a persistent discomfort, with polls showing him struggling to maintain more than 60 percent of the group, far below his average among nonwhite voters. (Polls show him still well ahead of Mr. Trumps roughly 30 percent support from Hispanic voters.) Mr. Biden has not done enough to directly reach out to these young Latino men, Republican and Democratic strategists say.

You have these U.S.-born Hispanic males under 40 who are pretty Trumpy, the question is why? said Mike Madrid, a Republican consultant involved with the Lincoln Project, which is working to get Mr. Trump out of the White House.

Both parties have often focused their outreach efforts on white, working-class voters, though many Hispanic men share the same basic priorities. Theyre English dominant, they are facing very similar economic situations, listening to the same media, Mr. Madrid said.

After facing months of persistent criticism that it was not doing enough to reach out to Latino voters, the Biden campaign has released several Spanish language advertisements in the last few weeks, including one featuring Bad Bunny, a pop star known for his gender-fluid style. Other advertisements focus heavily on the way Trump administration has targeted Latinos, a message that simply does not resonate among men who do not want to see themselves pitied.

Some Democrats argue that the support for Mr. Trump is an example of machismo culture, venerating traditional gender roles and a kind of hyper-masculinity. But the enthusiasm hints at some of the underlying trends among U.S.-born Latinos. More Hispanic women than men attend and graduate from college, while Hispanic men tend to be overrepresented in law enforcement institutions, including the military, the Border Patrol and Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Yet the admiration of Mr. Trump reveals something deeper as well. Democratic pollsters who have closely tracked Hispanic men say they are more likely to prioritize jobs and the economy and less likely to be concerned about immigration and racism. Many Hispanic men are singularly focused on earning a living, gaining an economic edge that they can pass on to their children. There is a deep belief in an up-by-your-bootstraps mentality and that Mr. Trump did no such thing seems utterly beside the point.

Joshua Tapia, a 35-year-old cashier, said that before the pandemic, he believed he was much better off economically, because he started investing in the stock market. And now?

A lot of jobs are suffering right now, and I dont blame Trump, I just blame circumstances, unfortunately, he said. Nobody could have seen how this played out.

Even devoted Democrats have criticized Mr. Biden for offering a somewhat fuzzy economic message, at a time when the pandemic has left more than 10 percent of Latinos unemployed and many more with a reduction in wages.

In the Latino community, you are defined by your ability to provide, said Toms Robles Jr., an executive director of Lucha, a progressive group that is campaigning for Mr. Biden and other Democrats in Arizona. Folks who live in a perpetual state of economic insecurity want to look around and at least believe that you can do great in this economy. Biden needs to have a message that they matter, that he is going to create an economic reality they have the ability to make it.

In interviews with scores of Hispanic Trump supporters at events in Florida, New Mexico, Nevada and Arizona over the last year, nearly everyone said their politics angered some friends and family, and rejected any suggestion that their support was based on anti-immigrant attitudes.

And it is not quite assimilation either: These men are proud to be Latino, children and grandchildren of Mexican immigrants specifically, and many have made an effort to continue speaking Spanish.

Many say there is some appeal in being a political curiosity and voting differently than the vast majority of Latinos.

Even Mr. Cejudo, the M.M.A. star, told the enthusiastic crowd in South Phoenix that he had been shunned for his views, which had made him only more outspoken.

Getting backlash as a Latino, you know what that tells me, he said. That theres a lot of ignorance in this game.

He told the group supporters of a president whose first campaign was largely built on opposing illegal immigration that his own mother came from Mexico in a politically incorrect way. He said his father was later deported, while his mother helped him nurture his dreams of becoming an Olympian.

Then he posed for pictures with a flashy bicep flex.

Go here to read the rest:
Why Latinos and Hispanic Men Are a Part of Trump's Base - The New York Times

Posted in Politically Incorrect | Comments Off on Why Latinos and Hispanic Men Are a Part of Trump’s Base – The New York Times

MKs Regev and Zohar caught acting as blackmailers -opinion – The Jerusalem Post

Posted: at 6:26 pm

I do not remember exactly when various supporters of the Center-Left started referring to part of the Likud leadership especially Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and a group of his henchmen from among the Likud ministers and senior MKs as a crime organization. Use of this term by former soccer player and current TV presenter Eyal Berkovic opened a whole Pandoras box of politically incorrect and legally problematic statements.I must admit that I am not happy with the use of crime organization in this context. A crime organization may be defined as a centralized, hierarchical enterprises run by criminals to engage in illegal activity, most commonly for profit. Even though I feel that Netanyahus conduct in recent years, which appears to be dictated primarily by his approaching trial on criminal charges, and the blind support he receives from his staunchest supporter are highly irregular, at times even bordering on breaches of the law, I do not believe they qualify to be defined as a crime organization.A WEEK and a half ago, on the Friday evening talk show on Channel 12 Ofira and Berko, presented by Ofira Asayag and Eyal Berkovic, Transportation Minister Miri Regev attacked Berkovic for having allegedly referred to the Likud as a whole as a crime organization, and to its 1.5 million voters as supporters of a crime organization, in an interview the previous week with Coalition Chairman Miki Zohar.In the interview with Zohar, Berkovic had complained that the government totally ignored the policy proposals of Coronavirus Project Coordinator Prof. Ronni Gamzu. You are behaving like a crime organization. You are doing whatever you please. You dont give a damn about [Alternate Prime Minister Benny] Gantz.To return to Regev, she proceeded to demand that Berkovic apologize immediately to the 1.5 million Likudniks or else she would do everything in her power to ensure that he will not be chosen as the next head coach of Israels national football team a position that Berkovic covets.But that was not all, Regev started hurling personal insults at Berkovic, inter alia called him a steak, claiming that he keeps turning over like a steak on a grill, claiming that in the past he had worshiped Blue and White leader Gantz (for whom he had voted), and now worships Yamina leader Naftali Bennett. That was our transportation minister talking (or, rather, shrieking).I must admit that I view Berkovic as a sort of Israeli Archie Bunker, even though until 15 years ago he was one of Israels greatest soccer players, albeit one with a tempestuous temper. To say the least, pearls of wisdom do not pour out of his mouth. cnxps.cmd.push(function () { cnxps({ playerId: '36af7c51-0caf-4741-9824-2c941fc6c17b' }).render('4c4d856e0e6f4e3d808bbc1715e132f6'); });However, that does not justify what Regev did, which was to publicly blackmail him live on television, blackmail being a criminal offense, no matter how, where and against whom performed.Not only that. Even when Regev was culture and sport minister, the appointment of the official head coach of the national soccer team was not within the frame of reference of her job, and even if it had been, the official position of FIFA (the International Federation of Association Football) has always been to try not always successfully to ensure that soccer and politics remain separated. In other words, Regev played foul, no matter how one looks at the event.It is interesting to note that Zohars reaction to his confrontation with Berkowitz the previous week was simply to declare that he would never again appear on Ofira and Berko. However, within days he, too, was caught online in an act of blackmail. The event he became involved in was much more serious than the one in which Regev had been involved. This time the person on the receiving end was not a big-mouthed ex-soccer player, but Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit.Mandelblit, whose aspiration is to be appointed to the Supreme Court after he completes his term as attorney-general, carries with him an affair from his past as the military advocate-general (the Harpaz Affair from 2010, connected to the appointment of the 20th IDF chief of staff) from which he was never entirely cleared, even though he had never been officially charged with anything, and which could prevent his appointment to the Supreme Court. On October 13, the content of a telephone conversation Mandelblit had held in 2017 with former head of the Israel Bar Association Efi Nave (who is about to stand trial on criminal charges on a personal matter), in which he bad-mouthed the former state attorney Shai Nitzan for having failed to clear him of wrongdoing in the Harpaz Affair, was reported on Channel 12.Due to both Nitzans and Mandelblits roles in Netanyahus indictments, and despite the fact that the Harpaz Affair had nothing whatsoever to do with Netanyahu or the charges against him, Zohar demanded on October 14, during an interview on radio station 103FM, that Mandelblit resign immediately and close all of the cases against Netanyahu, or else additional embarrassing recordings from Efi Naves mobile phone would be revealed. When asked, during the interview, whether this was a threat, Zohar answered no, it is a promise.In fact, once again we are facing a case of blackmail, live on the media, involving a senior Likud member. However, unlike the case of Regev and Berkovic, on this occasion Zohar was admonished by Netanyahu, who expressed his reservations about what Zohar had said, apparently because he had been warned by his attorneys that Zohars words could legally harm him.Zohar then issued a statement that he had been misunderstood, which is his usual reaction when he makes a hasty statement of which Netanyahu disapproves. This is also what happened at the end of July, when he threatened MK Yifat Shasha-Biton of the Likud, who chairs the Knesset Corona Committee, that she would be fired because her committee had refused to approve some measures that Netanyahu sought to get its approval for, before being provided with data justifying the measures.AN INTERESTING question is whether Regev and Zohar represent todays Likud in their conduct, or only a fanatic group that blindly supports Netanyahus approach regarding the law enforcement institutions and agencies as being involved in an anti-Bibi conspiracy, and the anti-Bibi demonstrators as being extreme left-wing anarchists whose sole goal is to cause the spread of the coronavirus in order to create chaos.When former Jerusalem mayor and current Likud MK Nir Barkat appeared last Friday on the Ofira and Berko show, there were those (including myself) who expected to hear a different Likud voice from him, especially since he has an ax to grind with Netanyahu. But, alas, all he spoke of was the unity of approach within the Likud, with no clear criticism of Regev and Zohar.But perhaps this was to be expected, given that Barkat was one of the senior mask-clad Likudniks who surrounded Netanyahu on the day his trial opened on May 24, as he gave his scandalous speech against the law enforcement agencies inside the courthouse and just before entering the courtroom, to hear the charges against him being read.

Originally posted here:
MKs Regev and Zohar caught acting as blackmailers -opinion - The Jerusalem Post

Posted in Politically Incorrect | Comments Off on MKs Regev and Zohar caught acting as blackmailers -opinion – The Jerusalem Post

We Need to Talk About Jim Carrey’s Joe Biden Impression on SNL – The Mary Sue

Posted: at 6:26 pm

Saturday Night Live has been on television for 46 seasons, and from the very beginning the show has routinely spoofed politics and presidential elections. From Chevy Chases bumbling Gerald Ford to Darrell Hammonds randy Bill Clinton to Tina Feys unqualified Sarah Palin, many cast members have made names for themselves by crafting on-point impressions. All you have to say is strategery, and you can instantly visualize Will Ferrells inept, bumbling George W. Bush.

But in recent years, SNL has ceded presidential impressions to A-list actors, like Alec Baldwins low energy and very orange Donald Trump. And after Woody Harrelson and John Mulaney trotted out their Biden impressions last year, Jim Carrey has joined this season to offer his zany, energetic take on Joe Biden. The announcement was met with excitement; Carrey is, after all, an iconic figure in comedy.

But after the first three episodes of season 46, it brings me no pleasure to note that Jim Carreys Joe Biden just plain doesnt work. While the SNL make-up team have done an admirable job with Carreys transformation, Carrey himself never manages to capture the essence of Biden. He is too high energy, always mugging and pointing finger guns, to capture any of Bidens gravitas.

Last nights episode spoofed the two presidential debates, where Carreys Biden comes out in full force, but then takes a turn for the soporific, appearing as both Mr. Rogers and Bob Ross. Great impressions should be a distillation of character traits, but there is nothing authentically Biden in Carreys disconnected performance. If anything, Carreys frantic mugging is more Ace Ventura or Fire Marshall Bill than it is Biden.

And worst of all, its not funny. SNL has struggled to find satire in the already cartoonish Trump administration, but has played it safe with their political material. There have been solid sketches and some incisive Weekend Update moments, but in one of the most politically tumultuous eras in recent memory, SNL has dropped the ball hard.

And its not like there isnt funny material to mine in Joe Biden. Jason Sudeikis spent much of the Obama administration delivering a goofy take on the vice president that played on many aspects of Bidens personality: his working class Scranton roots, his long-winded stories, and his politically incorrect fumbles.

And the impression worked, highlighting the dichotomy of Obamas reasoned and mature delivery with Bidens cowboy-ish antics. But Carreys Biden is hamstrung by a bothsidesism that has twisted the mainstream medias coverage of the election. Its a narrative that has boiled down to Trump and cronies have killed over 210k people and they are wildly corrupt and inept, but look, Bidens old too! that simply doesnt match the current political moment.

Will SNL shift gears and swap Carrey out for Sudeikis or someone else? Its unlikely, given Carreys star power and the fact that were only 2 weeks out from the election. And its a shame, because political satire has often been what SNL does best. Perhaps theyre just as exhausted and burnt out by the relentless news cycle of 2020 as we are. Whelp, at least we still have Maya Rudolph as Kamala Harris.

(featured image: screencap/NBC)

Want more stories like this? Become a subscriber and support the site!

The Mary Sue has a strict comment policy that forbids, but is not limited to, personal insults toward anyone, hate speech, and trolling.

Have a tip we should know? tips@themarysue.com

View original post here:
We Need to Talk About Jim Carrey's Joe Biden Impression on SNL - The Mary Sue

Posted in Politically Incorrect | Comments Off on We Need to Talk About Jim Carrey’s Joe Biden Impression on SNL – The Mary Sue

Democrats want revenge on an Arizona judge who ruled against Prop. 208. It’s a bad idea – The Arizona Republic

Posted: at 6:26 pm

Opinion: Democrats and certain pro-education groups are trying to toss a judge off the bench for daring to (briefly) strike down Proposition 208. Do we really want to go there?

A judge's decision that it was in the best interest of two children for their mother to lose parental rights was correct, the state Supreme Court found, reversing an earlier decision that such a move was based on shaky facts.(Photo: Getty Images)

Democrats and certain supporters of public education have a message for Arizonas judges, one they are hoping voters will deliver on Election Day:

Cross us at your peril.

It seems the Maricopa County Democratic Party is mad because Proposition 208 was briefly tossed off the ballot by Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Christopher Coury.

Mad enough, in fact, that the party has mounted a revenge campaign to throw him off the bench one that has been endorsed by Save Our Schools Arizona and Planned Parenthood.

Judge Coury, the party says, has a dangerous record of abusing his position to pursue his own extreme political agenda.

Turns out this "dangerous record of abusing his position amounts to one case in the 10 years he has been on the bench:

Proposition 208, the proposal to raise income taxes on the wealthiest Arizonans.

Coury in July tossed the initiative off the ballot, ruling that the 100-word summary of the proposalwas misleading by its omissionof its principal provisions.

Looking for the other side of the story?Subscribe today for access to even more opinions.

It was a terrible decision, both in its tone (snarky) and its content (alarming). Had his ruling stood, Arizonans likely would have found it far more difficult to put any initiative onto the ballot.

Fortunately, Coury was overturned by a unanimous decision of the state Supreme Court.

That had to sting.

But tossing ajudge off the ballot because of one decision a political party doesnt like?

That's a sting could be felt far and wide in the state.

Since 1974, Arizona has had a merit selection system for appellate judges and superior court judges in the states larger counties. Rather than electing the candidate who can amass the most campaign contributions, applicants are screened by a committee that then forwards a selection of names to the governor. Once appointed, each judge then periodically goes the ballot so that voters can decide whether he or she should be retained.

The idea is to create a system of independent judges who can focus on the law rather than their re-election prospects.

Rarely have judges been targeted for ouster since Arizona went to merit selection, but that seems to be changing. Two years ago, a grassroots education group threatened to try to knock out Supreme Court Justices John Pelander and Clint Bolick because they were among the 5-2 majority who voted to toss Invest in Ed off the 2018 ballot.

Now, the county Democratic Party is taking up whereRed for Ed left off.

After over 400,000 Arizonans signed petitions to put the Invest in Ed initiative on the ballot, Judge Coury tried to remove it and issued an opinion that was politically motivated and legally incorrect ..., the party says. Now we have a chance to tell Judge Coury to keep politics out of the courtroom!

Actually, if Coury is ousted, the Democrats will have succeeded in ensuring thatpolitics is front and center in every courtroom.

Courysays ethical rules prevent him from discussing his decision because the Supreme Court has not yet issued its reasoning for reversing him. He actually went on Sunday SquareOff this week to plead for his job, emphasizingthat he's been reversed fewer than five times since being appointed by Gov. Jan Brewer in 2010.

"I am a judge who actually follows the law as it is written," he told 12News' Brahm Resnik. "That's what I interpret my job to be and that's what I've done. Politics don't enter into my ruling. They never have."

Apparently, the Arizona Commission on Judicial Performance agrees.

The 33-person panel,comprised of judges, attorneys and members of the public,does performance reviews of every judgeup for retention. By a vote of 33-0, Coury met all five standards includinglegal ability, integrity andtemperament.

Every judge met the standard this year and in fact, rarely is a judge recommended for ouster. (It does, however, happen.)

So we have a choice.

We can do as Democrats are campaigning for us to doand dump a judge who made one boneheaded decision out of thousands made over a decadeon the bench a decision, by the way, that was promptly overturned uponreview.

We can send a message to every Arizonajudgeto rule based not upon the law but upon what will get them re-elected.

Or we can have faith that in the end, a judgemade a mistake and the judicial system worked to correct it, as it is supposed to do.

Me? Im thinking we have enough political hacks in this state without invitingmore into Arizonas courtrooms.

Reach Roberts at laurie.roberts@arizonarepublic.com.

Read or Share this story: https://www.azcentral.com/story/opinion/op-ed/laurieroberts/2020/10/19/democrats-revenge-campaign-against-arizona-judge-christopher-coury-bad/5980269002/

Read the original post:
Democrats want revenge on an Arizona judge who ruled against Prop. 208. It's a bad idea - The Arizona Republic

Posted in Politically Incorrect | Comments Off on Democrats want revenge on an Arizona judge who ruled against Prop. 208. It’s a bad idea – The Arizona Republic

Analyzing the Design of Unusual Japanese Butter Tableware – Core77.com

Posted: at 6:26 pm

Why is this shaped like this?

Let's talk about two things that used to not go together: Japan and butter. Like other East Asian cultures, butter was never a part of the traditional Japanese diet, and was actually treated with disgust when introduced by Europeans in the 19th century.

(Fun politically-incorrect fact: When living in Japan, I learned that the word "butter" was used in an outdated anti-foreigner slur. Both Westerners and overtly Western things were referred to as bata-kusai, "kusai" being Japanese for "stink." It was thought that eating butter produced uniquely European body odor, hence the slur was "butter stinkers.")

Today Japan has accepted butter (particularly where baked goods and confectionaries are concerned). Uptake isn't as brisk as in America or butter-crazy France, but it's produced locally (in the Hokkaido region) and consumed in enough quantities that the country experiences occasional butter shortages, like this one in 2014.

Also, butter in Japan doesn't come like butter in the 'States: It comes in slabs, as they've adopted the traditional European form factor. (I believe it's just us Yanks that form butter into sticks.)

American butter form factor

French butter form factor

Japanese butter form factor

Image credit: Jada Yuan

Why explains why, to Americans, Japanese butter dishes look strange and wide-bodied:

Yoshikawa EA?CO Butter Case Container

Yoshikawa EA?CO Butter Case Container

Yoshikawa EA?CO Butter Case Container

Yoshikawa EA?CO Butter Case Container

Yoshikawa EA?CO Butter Case Container

This one's even got an integrated cutter:

Skater Butter Cutter & Case

Skater Butter Cutter & Case

Skater Butter Cutter & Case

Skater Butter Cutter & Case

You probably noticed that funky knife in the photos of the Yoshikawa Case above. If you saw it out of context, you'd probably not know what it was:

Yoshikawa EA?CO Nulu Butter Knife

The angle in the handle is a function of the slab form factor of European/Japanese butter. The little holes are to extrude separate noodles of butter, which (the Japanese find) are easier to spread.

Yoshikawa EA?CO Nulu Butter Knife

Yoshikawa EA?CO Nulu Butter Knife

Yoshikawa EA?CO Nulu Butter Knife

The serrated side is for cutting toast.

Yoshikawa EA?CO Nulu Butter Knife

This design for a butter knife/grater takes the manufacturing a step further, stamping nacelles into the surface to guide the butter noodles:

Arnest Butter Knife Stainless Steel Grater

Arnest Butter Knife Stainless Steel Grater

Arnest Butter Knife Stainless Steel Grater

Arnest Butter Knife Stainless Steel Grater

Arnest Butter Knife Stainless Steel Grater

Lastly, there's this bizarre thing. Why on Earth should it be shaped like that?

KAI Rectangular Cut Butter Knife

KAI Rectangular Cut Butter Knife

My speculation--and this is based purely on the year I spent living there, during which time I witnessed fantastically anal-retentive table manners--is that a) This is for those who don't want to grate the surface of their butter, which probably gets messy as you work your way down through the slab, and b) this satisfies the Japanese need for order.

In other words, for us Americans who want a pat of butter, we just cut one from the stick; but for Japanese users faced with a slab, a crosswise slice would be too unwieldy to balance on your average butter knife.

An alternative would be to cut more manageable diagonal slices--i.e. cut a corner off of the slab--but I'm guessing a slab of butter with 45-degree angles cut into it would be too visually chaotic for Japanese sensibilities. This "tool" leaves behind an orderly 90-degree cut.

KAI Rectangular Cut Butter Knife

Read the original post:
Analyzing the Design of Unusual Japanese Butter Tableware - Core77.com

Posted in Politically Incorrect | Comments Off on Analyzing the Design of Unusual Japanese Butter Tableware – Core77.com

No ‘bang for buck’: Budget is big on political correctness, weak on job creation – Sydney Morning Herald

Posted: at 6:26 pm

First, give tax breaks and incentives to businesses, in the hope that this will induce them to expand their operations, spending more on capital equipment and new employees.

Second, give tax cuts (or maybe one-off cash grants) to individual taxpayers or welfare recipients, in the hope that they will spend most of the money and thereby generate economic activity and jobs.

Those two categories involve the government making "transfer payments" from itself to households or firms. The third category is the government spending money directly by paying someone to build a house or an expressway or to work for the government and perform some service.

As a rule, economists expect direct spending to yield a greater stimulus (and thus have a higher "multiplier" effect) than transfer payments. Thats because all the governments spending adds to demand for goods and services in the "first round", whereas some of the money you transfer to a firm or individual may be saved rather than spent, even in the first round.

Economists consider saving a "leakage" from the various rounds of the "circular flow of income" round and round the economy. Other leakages occur if the money is spent on imports rather than locally made goods and services.

Still on direct spending, if your primary goal is not so much to add to the production of goods and services (real gross domestic product) as to increase employment, youd be better off directing your government spending to a labour-intensive purpose (employing an extra uni tutor or aged-care nurse, for instance), rather than a capital-intensive purpose, such as a new expressway.

Now lets look at how the budgets main measures fit these three categories. Its temporary measure to allow firms an immediate write-off of the cost of new equipment (costing the revenue $26.7 billion over four years), its temporary measure allowing firms to carry back current losses for tax purposes ($4.9 billion), its research and development tax incentive ($2 billion) and its temporary JobMaker "hiring credit" - wage subsidy ($4 billion) add up to total revenue forgone under the first category of tax breaks to businesses of almost $38 billion.

This is far bigger than the money going to individual taxpayers and welfare recipients in the second category: personal tax cuts ($17.8 billion over four years) and "economic support payments" to pensioners ($2.5 billion), a total of just over $20 billion.

Under the third category, direct government spending on goods and services, the main measures are various infrastructure programs mostly via grants to state governments - worth more than $10 billion over four years.

So you see how much the budgets fiscal stimulus measures have been affected by the governments "core values". No less than $38 billion goes as tax breaks to business, three-quarters of the $20 billion in transfers to individuals comes as tax cuts, leaving about $10 billion in direct spending going to the least labour-intensive purpose transport infrastructure.

Liberal "core values" over "bang for buck": Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Treasurer Josh Frydenberg before the budget announcement.

Now, according to the budget papers or according to the budget "glossies" fudged up by ministerial staffers with lots of colour photos of good-looking punters the government and its minions have estimated the number of jobs the top programs are expected to create.

The immediate asset write-off and loss carry-back for businesses is expected to create about 50,000 jobs. Is that a lot? Well, remembering we have a labour force of 13.5 million, it doesnt seem much. And dividing the 50,000 into the budgetary cost of $31.6 billion gives a cost of $632,000 per job.

Thats infinitely more than any of those extra workers are likely to be paid, of course, and absolutely pathetic bang per buck. Giving money to business in the hope it will do wonders for "jobs and growth" is a classic example of "trickle-down economics". Clearly, a lot of the money doesnt.

But, when you think about it, its not so surprising that so much money produces so few extra jobs. Why not? Because almost all the capital equipment Australian firms buy is imported. And because firms get the concession even if they dont buy any more equipment than they would have done.

Loading

Next, the budget documents imply that the personal tax cuts worth $17.8 billion will create a further 50,000 jobs. That works out at $356,000 per job still terrible bang per buck. Why so high? Too much of the tax cut is likely to be saved.

Finally, the budget documents tell us the $4 billion cost of the JobMaker hiring credit will yield "around 450,000 positions for young Australians". Thats a much better but still high - $8900 per "position" which I take to mean that a lot of the jobs wont be lasting or full time.

So, what measures would have yielded better job-creation value? The ones rejected as politically incorrect: big spending on social housing, a permanent increase in the JobSeeker unemployment benefit or even just employing more childcare workers.

Ross Gittins is the Heralds economics editor.

Ross Gittins is the Economics Editor of The Sydney Morning Herald.

View post:
No 'bang for buck': Budget is big on political correctness, weak on job creation - Sydney Morning Herald

Posted in Politically Incorrect | Comments Off on No ‘bang for buck’: Budget is big on political correctness, weak on job creation – Sydney Morning Herald

The Election is Decided, Just Not Announced Yet – The Journal

Posted: at 6:26 pm

Photographs courtesy of https://time.com/

On September 29, over 73 million Americans took to their televisions to witness an unsightly dogfight that some are calling a presidential debate. With two more debates on the calendar leading up to the election, each candidate is looking to sway voters in their direction. Be that as it may, their mission will prove difficult. Here is why.

As a result of the 2016 election, the term silent majority has made a comeback. The silent vote, which consists of Americans who vote for a candidate but choose not to support them publicly, played a crucial part in the election of President Donald Trump. However, 2020 is a much different story.

President Donald Trump is and has been losing in national polls consistently for the last year. In fact, the deficit has yet to go below 6 percent since June, according to RealClearPolitics. This is nothing new for Trump. He was consistently down in the polls prior to the 2016 election. The difference Trump faces this time around is a greater challenge to overcome.

There is no underestimating Trump in this election. Democrats see him as an urgent matter that must be dealt with. Polarization in the U.S. has plagued Americans, in both a sense of unity and bitterness. People either love Donald Trump or they hate him. There is not much middle ground.

Some promising news for the Trump administration is that a majority of his loyal base seems likely unphased by his recent faux pas.

RealClearPolitics average of national polls show:

Questions surrounding the importance of the popular vote arose following the 2016 election. Due to the electoral vote, Donald Trump was able to defeat former secretary of state Hillary Clinton despite losing the popular vote. In spite of this, current polls paint a much different picture rolling into November.

Florida, Wisconsin and Arizona are just a few of the significant states to watch come Election Day. Each of these states electoral colleges voted in favor of the current president last election. If the tides were to turn in these three states as polls are projecting, former Vice President Joe Biden is locked in to win in cosmic fashion.

Voting by mail, while controversial, has been a popular choice amongst American voters this election. Over ten times the amount of votes have already been cast than this time in 2016, surpassing 5.6 million, according to Newsweek. Democrat voters have requested absentee ballots at a much higher rate than Republicans, while conservatives are hoping for a sweeping Election Day voter turnout.

In a Quinnipiac poll, 94 percent already know who they are going to vote for. Donald Trump has had almost four years to convince people that he deserves a second term. He has fans who see him as an underdog, taking on the government establishment and often being politically incorrect. Those opposed see him as lacking the skills to lead the country and an inadequate compassion for marginalized communities, including African-Americans and immigrants. Trumps main selling point, a strong economy, has been wrecked by the coronavirus. The question for the few undecided may be whether they think Trump can turn that around if given another term.

This election, like most, is a referendum on the incumbent. And when it comes to Donald Trump, everyone has their opinion.

Read this article:
The Election is Decided, Just Not Announced Yet - The Journal

Posted in Politically Incorrect | Comments Off on The Election is Decided, Just Not Announced Yet – The Journal

Rewind: As Good as It Gets (1997) – The Medium

Posted: at 6:26 pm

Starting out bitter and then becoming sweet, the romantic comedy is a tired genre, but directorJames L. Brooksrefuses to let it derail his film. Instead, he exposes the genres vulnerabilities, taking us on a journey of self-discovery.As Good as It Getsis about fighting for love and acceptance from even the harshest of big-screen characters.

Bigoted, ill-tempered, and homophobic, Melvin Udall (Jack Nicholson) is an obsessive-compulsive novelist devoted to writing romance novels, a feeling he ironically doesnt subscribe to nor believe in. Asked by a fawning fan how he writes his female characters so convincingly, Melvin replies, I think of a man. And I take away reason and accountability.

This pavement-crevice-avoidingcurmudgeon despises everyone in his apartment, and the movie opens with him slam-dunking his neighbours dogdown the trash chute, bellowing, This is New York. If you can make it here, you can make it anywhere.

The first half-hour of the film is both hilarious and hard to watch, as Melvin spews venom at all unsuspecting New Yorkers in his path, including the kind-hearted waitress Carol (Helen Hunt), who serves him daily, just the way he wants. Carola single mother bound by her own stressful circumstancegood-heartedly tolerates Melvins diatribes. But she draws the line when Melvin mocks her childs severe asthma attacks, demanding he apologizes. Albeit small, its Melvins first sign of vulnerability, which is monumental for a character as cynical as he.

Later on, Melvins neighbour, Simon(Greg Kinnear), is hospitalized after a botched robbery. This leaves Simon unable to care for his dog, Verdell, and leads Frank, his agent and love interest (Cuba Gooding Jr.), to convince dog-hating Melvin to take care of him. After unwillingly agreeing, Melvin, to his amazement (but not ours), develops a grudging affection for the ugly but endearing pooch that wags its way into his corroded heart.

Now, Melvin is a sinner on the road to redemption, kicking and screaming along the way. His reluctant good deedscovering Carols sons medical bills and caring for his neighbours dogreveal a different, more hospitable side of him.

Eventually, the three main characters converge on a road trip to Simons estranged parents house. Along the way, Melvin forms an unlikely friendship with his neighbour and falls in love with the caring waitress. Amid the troubled waters that they all seem to share, they begin to mend their scattered selves, sparking the films iconic, tear-inducing line: You make me want to be a better man.

This politically incorrectmovie depicts a love thats transformative, exploring traditional romantic elements and a fresh-spin on thechanged mantrope. Meanwhile, the music parallels Melvins progression, from abrupt violin squealsin the opening to softer instrumentals by the end credits. Change is imminent for everyone willing to pursue it.

As Good as It Getsreveals our need for companionship. While Melvin flirts with abandonment, the other characters, those he insults most, help divulge his dormant humanityall done in a believable fashion.

As one of only seven films in history to earn Oscars for both Best Actor and Best Actress,As Good as It Getsenraptures us through its leading roles. Both Nicholson and Hunt embody complex characters as we rummage through this refreshingly raw storyline. Under the influence of love, Melvin becomes a man who, while still brash, finds warmth and optimism in life. Its a testament to whyAs Good as It Getsremains a superior piece of sentimentality. One thats uncompromisingly human and true.

See original here:
Rewind: As Good as It Gets (1997) - The Medium

Posted in Politically Incorrect | Comments Off on Rewind: As Good as It Gets (1997) – The Medium

Herd immunity vs herd mentality: pandemic fatigue and the toll on society – The Jerusalem Post

Posted: at 6:26 pm

One of the unexpected side effects of the novel coronavirus and it affects almost everyone is that it has broadened our knowledge while narrowing our minds.

Over the last few months which have felt like about a decade weve turned into amateur epidemiologists, learning new terms and concepts. Medically-wise, its probably about as valuable as believing youre a lawyer because youve watched a lot of Law & Order.

Each on their own this is the age of social isolation after all now and again panics that the pandemic will never end and simple pleasures we once took for granted a hug, a meal with friends, large family celebrations will remain a thing of the past.

We also reach out toward the glimmer of hope, whenever it appears on the horizon: news of a promising treatment; a possible vaccine; reports that Vitamin D can help mitigate the risks.

Sadly, the further we progress in our knowledge of the virus, the further apart we grow.

Among the new terms that have popped up lately is pandemic fatigue. This is not the debilitating tiredness suffered by many who have been hit with the virus itself, it refers to the overwhelming exhaustion from the measures taken to prevent its spread.

Corona is a virus with an attitude and the public is beginning to respond in kind.

If the first closure was an imposition that we could somehow live with or needed in order to live the second closure is much harder. Weve reached our mental capacity to deal with the disease and the uncertainty, insecurity and tension that goes with it.

Different countries are responding in different ways and this, too, is being analyzed again and again as things are when the public has a lot of spare time on its hands.

Once upon a time, the words Swedish model conjured up a politically-incorrect image of a leggy, Scandinavian blonde. Now, the term triggers discussions about the cost of trying to create herd immunity (some 6,000 Swedes died out of a population of 10 million) while keeping the economy running.

The German model is researched by amateur economists and their epidemiologist counterparts alike: The value of testing and tracing and the best exit strategy from lockdown.

At least Taiwan is finally getting the global attention and admiration it deserves: The Republic of China remains a flourishing democracy and an economic powerhouse and has witnessed the deaths of just seven people due to coronavirus (out of a population of close to 24 million).

Israelis, in general, have responded as Israelis do, by being creative. We are a nation that takes rules as guidelines and a starting point for negotiations rather than as something mandatory and binding.

Part of the problem is that we dont really understand the rules. Why are we stuck indoors when it seems healthier to go outside wearing masks and maintaining a safe distance, of course and get some of that free Vitamin D?

Yisrablof, the peculiarly Israeli style of bluffing, or pretense, is flourishing. Israelis are taking the interpretation of the law into their own hands. What can be more Israeli than falafel stalls? For some reason, restaurants and stalls are allowed only to do deliveries, but not takeaways. Hence, falafel stall owners across the country have come up with the idea of setting up a stand a few meters from the kitchen.

Customers whatsapp their orders which are delivered minutes later to where they are waiting in surprisingly orderly lines. Dont worry, Ill whatsapp myself, a falafel guy cheerfully told me last week. He was wearing a mask and gloves. I went along with the pretense. Surviving the economic crisis is already hard enough.

An even bigger bluff is taking place in the local sporting scene: Officially permitted to practice and play only if participating in a European tournament, several Israeli basketball teams registered with the Balkan League and are now holding games among themselves close to home a net profit as far as theyre concerned. Beitar Jerusalem soccer club realized its goal equally inventively, registering for a six-a-side foreign tournament.

BUT THE pandemic is taking a huge toll on society.

Perhaps it has caused us to collectively go through a grieving process. We mourn not only loved ones who have been lost to the virus, but also the lives we had. I suspect that many who managed to move on from the denial phase of bereavement are now stuck in the anger phase.

And here it is exploding on the streets and social media. From the outset of the coronavirus in Israel in March, there has been an open battle between the demonstrators and the prayer-goers. And were not talking about six people per side, but thousands.

With synagogues closed, religious Jews are praying in street minyans, or from balconies and in parks. The numbers have been limited sometimes to only the minimal prayer quorum of 10. Demonstrators, on the other hand, were free to gather in tens of thousands free to protest their perceived lack of freedom; free to protest the alleged crimes of the prime minister and demand his removal without trial; free to demonstrate against the collapse of the economy and the loss of jobs.

Those watching the demonstrators wonder why they consider themselves immune to the virus. Is self-righteousness a more effective protection than prayer? The mass entourage of mourners at the funeral of a haredi religious leader is clearly a danger, but no more than mass protests in a pandemic.

The protests are popular in part, I suspect, because with all other places of entertainment closed, this is the place to be. And most Israeli media encourage it. Live broadcasts from the protests on all the main channels ensure that they have ratings and status.

But here, the herd mentality kicks in: Where are you? my left-leaning friends ask each other as they gather on traffic circles, bridges and at junctions abiding by the rule of staying to within 1,000 meters of home.

Everyone supports us, they assure themselves on social media, while at the same time expressing shock at being verbally abused. Clearly, not everyone in the country is with the protesters. Some citizens believe that democracy means apart from the right to demonstrate the need to change governments via elections, and to determine criminal status in a court of law, not a kangaroo court.

Social media fosters the divide. People exist in echo chambers, hearing only the views of their friends who express the same opinions or risk being unliked, unfollowed, unfriended. A social media death.

I refuse to follow either side or any leader blindly. Id rather remain outside the herd mentality than give up my basic freedom to make up my own mind and change my opinion when circumstances change.

I urge everyone, the prayer-goers and the protesters, people of all political and religious persuasions, to realize were all in the same boat. No one has the right to drill a hole in it. Who are you kidding? can too easily turn into Who are you killing?

liat@jpost.com

Go here to read the rest:
Herd immunity vs herd mentality: pandemic fatigue and the toll on society - The Jerusalem Post

Posted in Politically Incorrect | Comments Off on Herd immunity vs herd mentality: pandemic fatigue and the toll on society – The Jerusalem Post