The biggest Fraud Perpetrated on The Global Kosher Consumer In Recent Memory!
Kosher Crisis Hits $19 Billion Market With Rabbis Stuck at Home
Rabbi Eli Lando, executive manager at Brooklyn-based OK Kosher Certification. |
In an ordinary year, Rabbi David Moskowitz would have spent the weeks before Rosh Hashanah, the holiday that celebrates the start of the Jewish New Year, working in China. For more than a decade, the native of New York’s Rockland County has run Shatz Kosher Services, which verifies that ingredients made in Chinese factories don’t contain pork or otherwise violate Jewish dietary laws. Late summer is usually a busy season, with companies gearing up to make products for Passover the following spring.
Rosh Hashanah starts on Sept. 18, but Moskowitz hasn’t been to China in months. The Chinese government closed its borders to most foreigners early in the Covid-19 pandemic, and the 53-year-old is in Ashdod, an Israeli city about 20 miles south of Tel Aviv. From there, he tries to do his job via videoconferences linked to cameras at Chinese factories showing him everything from the office to the factory floor to the warehouse. “It’s not the traditional way, but what is traditional in corona?” he asks. “Everything has been thrown out the window. We find ways to do the job.”
There’s a lot more to the kosher food industry than Hebrew National hot dogs and Manischewitz wine. Kosher food was a $19.1 billion industry in 2018, according to Allied Market Research, which projects it will grow to $25.6 billion by 2026. Many ordinary products in U.S. supermarkets are certified kosher, with everything from Ben & Jerry’s ice cream to McCormick spices having kashrut symbols, and those labels can provide assurance not just for observant Jews but also for gentiles who are vegan or have other dietary restrictions.
Empty shelves in the kosher meat section of a Best Market food store in Great Neck, N.Y. |
While China doesn’t have many Jews, it’s nonetheless an important part of the kosher food industry: Chinese factories produce canned fruit and other packaged goods and also play a critical role in the production of artificial flavorings, amino acids, and other ingredients that make their way into the diets of observant Jews. “Anything you pick up in a supermarket or a drugstore, there are most probably between two and six ingredients from China,” Moskowitz says.
All of those need to be certified, and usually dozens of mashgihim (kashrut inspectors) working for competing agencies crisscross the Asian nation to do factory visits that can be as short as a few hours or last for several days.
Now the pandemic has crushed that business, with inspectors unable to do on-the-ground vetting. That’s forcing industry heavyweights such as Baltimore-based Star-K Certification Inc., which inspects more than 500 facilities in China, to deploy seven mashgihim in Israel and the U.S. to conduct remote inspections, with Chinese staffers providing them with video evidence of the production lines. “They are online with them, going every step of the way,” says Star-K President Avrom Pollak.
“It’s not the traditional way, but what is traditional in corona?”
China is not the only country with travel restriction headaches. In July, Star-K sent four rabbis via private jet to a fish-gelatin facility in Uganda, where they quarantined for 14 days to supervise production. Kenover Marketing Corp., the closely held company in Bayonne, N.J., that owns Manischewitz and other major kosher brands, struggled to get inspectors to facilities making instant noodles in Singapore. “For a few weeks we were really in a nail-biting session,” says Charles Herzog, Kenover’s vice president for new products and procurement. “It was a game of chess, putting it all together.”
The pandemic hasn’t hurt supply for now, but people in the industry are warning about possible shortages during Passover in late March and early April, when the rules are stricter and virtual inspections often cannot suffice. Most Passover products are certified with full-time rabbinical supervision, according to Rabbi Moshe Elefant, chief operating officer of the New York-based Orthodox Union’s kosher division, which has about 600 clients in China. “For us, Passover is now,” he says. “We are going to have a real challenge: There’s no cutting corners, and we can’t get into the facilities.”
Companies may need to shift production to the U.S. and other countries with large Jewish populations and plenty of resident mashgihim who don’t need to struggle with international travel restrictions. That should help large agencies that conduct inspections in the U.S., such as the Orthodox Union, weather the coronavirus storm. Smaller players like Rabbi Moskowitz’s Shatz Kosher Services that are more focused on international markets will have a tougher time. Revenue since the start of the pandemic has dropped 85%, he says, but the company hasn’t laid off any of its 10 office workers in the northeastern city of Qingdao. “I’m trying to keep them on for when things get back to normal,” Moskowitz says.
While Covid-19 may lead to long-term changes in the way many people work from home, most adjustments in the kosher industry will be temporary, says Rabbi Eli Lando, executive manager at Brooklyn, N.Y.-based OK Kosher Certification, which is conducting virtual inspections for many of its 700 facilities in China. Mashgihim still need to be able to make unannounced visits to factories, he says, something that can’t be done as well online.
“If you can’t surprise the company to make sure they are not doing something behind your back, that puts the whole kosher program in jeopardy,” Lando says. “It is very important to emphasize as soon as the pandemic is over, we will not allow any virtual visits.”
Belsky would've been proud!
ReplyDeletehttps://www.ratecoviddashboard.com/ratings
ReplyDeleteAmong universities, Yeshiva gets an “F” for keeping their community in the dark on their coronavirus cases, a group of public health experts says.
The Web site “We Rate COVID Dashboards’’ — founded by researchers from Yale & Harvard universities — has been issuing “report cards’’ based on whether colleges have COVID information dashboards, how frequently they report related data & how detailed the information may be, such as breakdowns between students & staffers.
Yeshiva flunked for not having an adequate or even existing dashboard, the site says.
“We’re rating schools on transparency, the quality of the data & how they convey the information,” said Dr. Howard Forman, a Yale professor of health policy & radiology who co-founded the rating site.
Ayotomiwa Ojo, a Harvard University medical student & chief researcher for “We Rate COVID Dashboards,” added, “It’s important institutions are held accountable.
“Students, parents, college employees & communities have a stake in information about COVID. Thousands of students are coming into their communities.”
Ojo said positive cases and infection rates should be updated every 48 hours.
Yeshiva did not respond to e-mail inquiries from The NY Post.
Coronavirus-specific information about infections at Yeshiva University also could not be found on its own website.
150+ schools have been rated so far.
“People recognize the importance of this information,” Forman said.
Rapid disclosure of infections is particularly crucial at campuses in NY, the early epicenter of the pandemic with by far the most fatalities of any state in the country.
Forman said colleges have a duty to provide comprehensive information about COVID cases because students & staff interact in the surrounding neighborhoods, which lead to large outbreaks.
I can't open the original article. This is an edited version from an anti-Semite, so how much of this is true?:
ReplyDeleteBeth Medrash Govoha, the largest yeshiva in North America, qualified for $2 million to $5 million in PPP loans, while a separate BMG organization that donates to local nonprofits qualified for $350,000 to $1 million, the loan records show.
BMG President Rabbi Aaron Kotler said the school faced the possibility of layoffs due to the pandemic, but the PPP loans severely limited the impact to a “small number that didn't have functions and went on furlough."
"We're not only a higher education institution — we're an employer," Kotler said. “We've been in this community for 75 years, and you have long-term staff and try to take the long-term view with your people, who have been devoted to the mission for so many years.
“Being able to provide reassurance for families that they're not going to be out of work, that they're going to be able to pay their mortgages and their bills … I can't overstate the value of that.”
Kotler, who recently announced that he was resigning his position at BMG, is receiving a buyout upwards of $13 million, $3 million of which was federal aid earmarked for student assistance during covid19 but instead has found its way into Aaron's pocket with the blessing of his brother Malkiel as an incentive to go away.
I love it!
ReplyDeleteFirst our beloved Agudah Fressers demanded to check with their ra-bonim first if you think a so called "molester" must be reported to police.
Now the Fressers are ordering that no one should be tested for coronavirus unless your local neighborhood Fresser-affiliated yeshiva or Bais Yaakov deems it "appropriate" and "helpful". The mosdos are repeating this as their marching orders that were issued from the latest secret Fresser meeting.
I just checked with R' Shmuel who insists this is a gezeirah shovoh that just like molesters should never be reported, so too there should never be a confirmed infection that doctors must report to the State, so that Governors cannot use the data to shut down mosdos. That would be mamash geferlach, bifrat before the virus has had a chance to use the packed building to infect everyone else!
It gets worse! They are actually advising them, only if absolutely necessary if they are feeling ill, that New Yorkers should test in New Jersey with a bogus NJ address, and without naming a school.
ReplyDeleteWow! I was wondering why NJ residents are driving to NY to get tested!
ReplyDeleteA chutzpah!
ReplyDeleteWho changed the upmach behind my back that those who are mamash sick may see a doctor?
You are not to see any doctor even if mamash sick! Without exception!
Especially at a time like this when the new Rosh Hashanah infections from gepakteh shuls are about to explode through the roof, I need as many of you virus spreaders that I can muster inside the koslei yeshivos!
No ifs, ands or buts!
Just read one of the letters as dictated to a yeshiva by the Fressers.
ReplyDeleteThere is an implied guilt trip that if you don't let the Fressers override all medical prudence & common sense, you are hereby a mashchiss who is sabotaging kol Torah from reverberating from yeshivos.
The old crackpots in Philly are slipping. Why didn't they think of this guilt trip earlier during the measles outbreak?
Even Margo was still on the ball enough to use a version of this guilt trip when terrorizing victims to keep quiet about Kolko. And Margo got away with making a mockery of the Agudah largely thanks to Shmuel Kaminetzky.
The huge yeshiva-BY system in town keeps having infections spin out of control but they are absolutely refusing to close down. They are using every cover up trick even with the government now poking around inside.
ReplyDeleteShould've figured this would happen with the rosh yeshiva falling ill, who they are hiding details from him too, and appointing the Yekkishe nudnik Marcel Schloss as Chief Cover Up Officer.
Sheker vechuzev!
ReplyDeleteIn alla heimishe geggen, gantze "infection" hachrrruzos mit a trrruck:
https://abc7ny.com/covid-19-nyc-news-coronavirus-update-new-york/6501984/
Mayor de Blasio said the city is targeting 6 neighborhoods that've seen recent upticks in coronavirus cases, with an emphasis on expanded testing & contact tracing.
As part of its "Get Tested Tuesday" initiative, the city is now focusing hyperlocal response on Boro Park, Kew Gardens, Midwood, Far Rockaway, Flatbush, Bensonhurst & Williamsburg.
The neighborhoods will have increased robocalls & WhatsApp, communication with houses of worship, distribution of sanitizer & more testing.
Sound trucks will broadcast messages in the neighborhoods, as well.
"We're launching a targeted approach that applies more pressure where there's growth in COVID," Health Commissioner Dr. David Chokshi said, "We're doing this to communicate the urgency to prevent spread of COVID & to protect one another."
According to NYC DOH, the south of Brooklyn has seen a cluster they call the Ocean Parkway Cluster.
The 4 areas that saw a large increase from week ending Aug 1 to week ending Sept 19:
- 3 of 4 areas have tripled (Ocean Parkway, Far Rockaway & Williamsburg)
- 1 of 4 has doubled (Kew Gardens)
- This increase has led to the 4 areas above making up 20% of all cases citywide as of Sept 19
"These increases could evolve into widespread community transmission & spread to other neighborhoods unless action is taken," the NYC DOH said.
- Large indoor gatherings must be avoided.
- State law requires face coverings worn by everyone older than 2 if unable to maintain 6' distance from others. Hands must be washed frequently & anyone ill must stay home. Anyone exposed to COVID must safely separate from others. Anyone who can't safely separate at home is to receive accommodations from the city.
- All New Yorkers should get tested for COVID. Find a testing site or call 311. Please answer the phone if you get a call from NYC Test+Trace.
- New Yorkers should not use antibody test results to determine whether to return to school or work. Past infection does not guarantee protection from being infected again. In addition, a test should not be used to stop quarantine. If someone is a contact of a case of COVID, they must stay home for 14 days, regardless of negative diagnostic or antibody test.
https://wildhunt.org/2019/11/a-statue-of-moloch-unveiled-in-rome-along-with-controversy.html
ReplyDeleteAyleh elohecha Philly veAgudas Fressers of America.
But Rabbeinu Shmuel says just keep your kids physically in yeshiva classes while the Rosh Hashanah virus spurt plays out, and then you are pottur from making this pilgrimage to Rome.
Just days after Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis won a court victory to keep felons from voting, Democrat billionaire Michael Bloomberg has stepped in.
ReplyDeleteBloomberg is part of an effort that raised $20+ million dollars to help felons vote. That's in addition to $100 million he pledged to help Joe Biden win Florida, a crucial state with 29 electoral college votes that President Trump hopes will keep him in the White House.
A federal court ruled that in addition to serving their sentences, Florida felons must pay all fines, restitution & legal fees before they can vote. The case could have broad implications for the November elections.
Under Amendment 4, which Florida voters passed in 2018, felons who complete their sentences would have voting rights restored. Republican lawmakers then moved to define what it means to complete a sentence.
In addition to prison time served, lawmakers directed all legal obligations, including unpaid fines & restitution, be settled before a felon could vote.
With Bloomberg's help, the Florida Rights Restitution Council is trying to get this accomplished. The group raised $5 million before Bloomberg made calls to raise $17 million more, according to Bloomberg advisers.
The money is targeted for felons who owe $1,500 or less. That accounts for 31,100 people. In a state that decided the 2000 presidential election by 537 votes, it could be critical in a year when polls show Trump & Joe Biden in a dead heat.
The Florida Rights Restitution Council said other donors include John Legend, LeBron James, Michael Jordan, MTV, Comedy Central, VH1, Ben & Jerry’s, Levi Strauss, the Miami Dolphins, the Orlando Magic, the Miami Heat & Stephen Spielberg.
(One Dolphins owner is an Open Orthodox type guy in Lawrence)
Yippeeeeeee!
ReplyDeletehttps://thehill.com/changing-america/well-being/longevity/516887-us-hits-coronavirus-death-toll-of-200000
All bochurim get doubles by lunch tomorrow & a schnapps glezel with 30 year mashkeh!
Oif a veg! Oif a veg!
ReplyDeletehttps://thehill.com/changing-america/enrichment/education/517631-there-are-now-more-than-40000-cases-of-covid-19-at
A new tally reveals that across U.S. universities & colleges, 40,000 coronavirus cases have been confirmed among students, faculty & staff.
With academic semesters well underway, schools have tinkered with different approaches. Some schools, like Harvard & Johns Hopkins, are completely remote for 2020.
Other schools decided to reopen while adopting measures from infectious diseases experts & the CDC. University of Georgia, for instance, announced mandatory mask-wearing among students & faculty.
Despite such preventative measures, college towns are erupting into hotspots for COVID transmission. The Texas Tribune reports multiple counties that house large 4 year universities report outbreaks since reopening. The next step for officials is to prevent those outbreaks from expanding outside the school.
One key component that enables virus transmission among students is shared living spaces. In August, several universities in North Carolina, including University of North Carolina @ Chapel Hill & North Carolina State U, shut down their campuses & shifted online as virus cases multiplied.
Colleges & universities are “where we’re starting to see a lot of spread,” Stephen Kissler, an infectious disease researcher at Harvard U, said. “Of course, diseases don’t stay isolated where they start. That’s the big concern, trying to make sure the virus doesn’t spread into the surrounding community.”
In response, White House virus Task Force member Deborah Birx encouraged governors to accommodate infected students on campus so they don't spread the virus outside campus.
“Sending them home in asymptomatic state to spread the virus in their hometown or vulnerable households could really re-create what we experienced over June in the South,” Birx reportedly explained. “Every university president should have a plan for not only testing but caring for students that need to isolate.”
Fest!
ReplyDeletehttps://thehill.com/changing-america/well-being/longevity/517400-top-epidemiologists-warn-america-is-headed-for-an
Top epidemiologists warn America could be headed for an 'apocalyptic' COVID-19 fall
Health experts have been warning over several months that the U.S. could be overwhelmed by a “twindemic” of coronavirus & seasonal flu.
By Joseph Guzman
Sept. 21, 2020
Top health experts warn the country could be headed into dangerous territory in the fall.
“We may be in for a very apocalyptic fall, I’m sorry to say,” Peter Hotez, co-director of Texas Children’s Hospital Center for Vaccine Development, told CNN on Monday.
Our country is in a historic fight against the virus.
“It's happening because we force schools to reopen in areas of high transmission. We force colleges to reopen & we don't have leadership telling people to wear masks & do all the things we need to do. It’s literally killing Americans,” Hotez said.
Hotez notes the US recorded 66,000+ new cases a day at the end of July & beginning of August. He said cases fell as people “finally” started getting the message about masks & other measures, but daily new infections are now creeping up to 40,000 as fall approaches.
Jeanne Marrazzo, director of Infectious Disease at University of Alabama @ Birmingham, agreed with Hotez that the coming months “could be apocalyptic.”
Marazzo said there are several reasons the US is experiencing a rise in new infections.
“There's fatigue. People are tired. Then contradictory messages, not just misinformation, but also confusion about how things are spread."
Experts warn about a cold-weather surge of coronavirus that coincides with flu season. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy & Infectious Disease (NIAID), said earlier this month he'd like to see new cases below 10,000 per day before flu season kicks off in October.
CDC Director Robert Redfield said the country could be in for “the worst fall, from a public health perspective, we ever had,” as the likelihood of a “twindemic” of coronavirus & seasonal flu overwhelms hospitals & drain resources, threatening lives.
The Yek Schloss in Passaic is in all likelihood just a puppet of his machshayfeh who wears the pants at home. She is limudei chol principal of the girls elementary. Probably Anti-Vaxxer & definitely Never-Trumper.
ReplyDeleteOne of the shrinks in the community calls her the Textbook Narcissist.
She is a very treacherous woman who has committed all kinds of evils long before the pandemic was on the horizon.
https://thecollegepost.com/marshall-professor-hoping-trump-supporters-die/
ReplyDeleteWhere's Hillary when you need her? Just who are the "deplorables"?
Conniving Schloss in the hoyzen is also a megalomaniac. And she has hurt many people acting as if she is invincible.
ReplyDeleteWow is she intoxicated with power! Makes you want to puke when she talks as if R' Heshie Hirth is her underling which she was doing already before he had the stroke. She is virtually unstoppable now that junior kisses up to them like they are the boss.
Unbelievable how many sick animals are in the chinuch industry tormenting the kids & parents, who have no business entering chinuch to begin with.
ReplyDeletehttps://nypost.com/2020/09/23/rep-gaetz-bloomberg-may-face-criminal-probe-for-paying-felons-fines/
ReplyDeleteRep. Matt Gaetz warned billionaire Michael Bloomberg that he may be facing a criminal probe for paying outstanding fines of 32,000 convicted felons in Florida so they could vote in the November election.
Speaking to Fox News’ “Hannity” Tuesday evening, Gaetz said he spoke to Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody prior to the show about Bloomberg’s voter effort.
The former NYC mayor raised over $16 million for & donated $5 million to, the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition.
Bloomberg’s push benefits ex-cons as part of a 2018 state constitutional amendment allowing felons to vote.
Before they regain that right however, they need to pay any fines, fees or restitution.
In a statement, a rep for Bloomberg said, “The right to vote is fundamental to democracy & no American should be denied that right. We're determined to end disenfranchisement & the discrimination that's always driven it.”
To Gaetz & Moody, there are legal concerns regarding Bloomberg’s political spending in this specific case.
“I believe there may be a criminal investigation already underway of Bloomberg-connected activities in Florida,” Gaetz told Sean Hannity.
“Under Florida law it’s a felony for someone to directly or indirectly provide something of value to impact votes. So the question is whether paying off fines & legal obligations counts as something of value, and it clearly does. If Bloomberg pays off credit card debts, you obviously see value in that.
“When you improve someone’s net worth by eliminating their liabilities, that’s something of value. Normally, it's very difficult to prove that that was directly linked to impacting whether or not someone votes. But they literally wrote their own admission,” the Florida Republican argued, referencing a Washington Post report.
A memo from Bloomberg obtained by the newspaper, explained the billionaire saw the effort as “a more cost-effective way of adding votes to the Democrat column than investing money to persuade voters who already have the right to vote.”
“We identified a significant vote share that requires nominal investment. The data shows in Florida, Black voters are a unique universe unlike any other voting bloc, where the Democrat support rate tends to be 90%-95%,” the memo read.
Gaetz argued the memo proves this could be bribery.
“The law is clear, this is something of value. I'm encouraged after my conversation with the attorney general. I hope we have law enforcement all over the country looking for cheating & tricks these Democrats are going to try in this election,” he told the network.
In addition to the millions Bloomberg delivered to help felons vote, the one-time presidential candidate announced a $100 million push for Democrat presidential nominee Joe Biden.
When announcing the move, Bloomberg adviser Kevin Sheekey argued it's beneficial to other swing states as well.
Never knew mini-Mike was such a petty person, squandering all that money just because he hates Trump. So he goes all out for a mental invalid instead who is controlled by anti-Semites.
ReplyDeletehttps://matzav.com/bmg-shuk-called-off-due-to-covid-alternatives-in-the-works/
ReplyDeleteWhat are they paying Shafran for? Where is the good for nothing when he's supposed to be queuing me if there is a heimishe oylam I'm addressing or nisht fun unzerra? I need to know if I'm whooping it up besimcha rabba or pretending to be ungezetzt & tzebrochen when laining these headlines!:
ReplyDelete"In light of the 'frightening' (sic) rise in the coronavirus infection rate and the growing number of 'seriously' (sic) ill patients, Israel’s Chevrei Kaddisha are preparing for a high number of niftarim, 'lo aleinu' (sic). The Chevra Kadisha in Haifa has acquired a refrigerated shipping container that can hold hundreds of bodies, Channel 13 News reported.
Similiar containers will be set up around Israel, the report said."
So how is it exactly that the Philly-led Agudah Fressers have hijacked the entire agenda of Klal Yisroel when no one agrees with their insane death wish except the Satmar-led Hungarians & tiny Peleg?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.theyeshivaworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/01-10.jpg
The Moetzes of Shas has just come out against the Fressers too