https://www.ted.com/talks/melissa_j_moore_the_breakthrough_science_of_mrna_medicine
Friday, April 29, 2022
Efsher maybe der greduates from meny yeshivos who kent read vell, ken listen to der vidyo fun der frau (farmach der oigen), and listen to vat she sez - es iz nisht kol isha - she zingt nisht -- uber give a freg tzu derr Villy poisek anyvey!
Thursday, April 28, 2022
"Beginning just weeks after his bar mitzvah in 1968 — he was sexually abused for two years by the director of Camp Ella Fohs, located outside New Milford, Conn. Mills then recounts his decades-long trail of misdemeanors, trauma and wrecked relationships, followed by a dramatic attempt to bring his abuser to justice."
At a Place Where He Was Supposed to Be Safe, He Was Molested
In his memoir, “Chosen,” Stephen Mills recalls summers at a Connecticut camp led by a director who abused him while befriending his family.
By Bruce Feiler
Chosen: A Memoir of Stolen Boyhood, by Stephen Mills
Four centuries after arriving in America, Jews still worry about their place in this country; they pore over demographic surveys like Talmudic texts, looking for clues on how to forestall intermarriage and apathy. But in recent years, they’ve settled on an unlikely savior: Jewish summer camps. A 2011 study found that attendance at Jewish camps was one of the best predictors of increased engagement and religiosity.
This year that consensus faces serious threat. One volley came this winter when the governing body of Reform Judaism, the URJ, released a report identifying 72 incidents of sexual misconduct at URJ summer camps going back five decades, including 33 involving minors.
Another arrives this spring with the release of a searing, haunting, urgent cri de coeur from Stephen Mills called “Chosen: A Memoir of Stolen Boyhood.” Mills, the co-author with Roger Fouts of “Next of Kin,” describes in astute, stomach-turning prose how — beginning just weeks after his bar mitzvah in 1968 — he was sexually abused for two years by the director of Camp Ella Fohs, located outside New Milford, Conn. Mills then recounts his decades-long trail of misdemeanors, trauma and wrecked relationships, followed by a dramatic attempt to bring his abuser to justice.
“Chosen” opens with Mills, an only child, sitting on the lap of his father, a World War II veteran and aspiring writer who uses a wheelchair because he has multiple sclerosis. A lonely boy, Mills becomes even lonelier at age 5 when his father dies. Mills’s mother, the dispassionate daughter of a Talmudic scholar, quickly remarries and insists that her son call his stepfather “Dad.” Mills responds in part by sneaking down to the basement, where he turns the dials of his father’s shortwave radio, trying to find his voice.
By junior high school, a girl-besotted Mills is sent to a coed summer camp funded by the UJA-Federation, a Jewish philanthropic organization. The director, Dan Farinella, with his “big shoulders, powerful arms and broad chest,” “a pack of cigarettes rolled up in his left shirtsleeve,” likes to horse around with male campers.
One night, after a sex-ed film, Farinella summons Mills, saying, “Don’t worry, you didn’t do anything. I just like to get to know my campers.” He then proceeds to test and groom Mills, taking him for long walks, quizzing him about masturbation, preying on his isolation. Mills is flattered, as are his parents when Farinella shows up in the off-season, bringing a box of cannoli when he whisks Mills away for a weekend of “projects” at camp.
Once on their beds in the infirmary, Mills says, Farinella tosses him a pornographic magazine, pushes him down on a mattress and fellates him. “I closed my eyes and prayed,” Mills writes. “I’m not here. I’m not here.” When he opens his eyes, “I was floating, looking down at my body, as if it belonged to someone else.”
Anyone who’s listened to accounts of abuse survivors will recognize certain characteristics — the disassociation, the shame, the self-flagellation. But Mills has his father’s instincts as a writer. He fills his story with indelible details — the Brylcreem in his predator’s hair, the cloying compliment Farinella pays Mills’s stepfather when he arrives to invite Mills to the Bahamas for Christmas. And Mills does a nuanced job of capturing his own emotions, how he blames himself for getting aroused, how he delights when Farinella gives him a Led Zeppelin album, how he imagines the glowing letter of recommendation his abuser will write to colleges.
That commitment to honesty continues in the book’s second section, “Flight,” as Mills opens up about his descent into “drugs, petty crimes and paranoia.” He sabotages promising relationships with women, joins a yeshiva in Jerusalem, drops out of grad school, then volunteers at a refugee camp in Thailand, where he becomes ill. When a doctor tells him he’s suffering from post-traumatic stress, Mills returns to New York to seek help.
The book’s final section, “Reckoning,” is in many ways the most riveting — and the most disheartening. Once Mills connects his behavior to his abuse, he craves justice. He painstakingly identifies dozens of other victims of the same man. The F.B.I. of the 1980s, though, refuses to prosecute, and when authorities tip off Farinella’s new employer, the Jewish Community Center in Pittsburgh, those employers “hustle Farinella out the door in the dead of night” while apparently doing nothing to stop future predation. The task falls to Mills to make a confrontation. As he puts it, “Who was left to speak for the children?”
“Chosen” is a timely and important book. It can be difficult to read; I had to finish it during the day to avoid nightmares. But looking away is even worse. The book is a stark reminder that the widespread sexual abuse scandals that began with the Catholic Church are still spreading to other institutions.
Four centuries after Jews arrived in America, they still long for a place where they can feel safe. As Mills’s brave account makes clear, none of us can allow our longing for acceptance to permit us to stifle the cries of those we’re most called on to protect.
Wednesday, April 27, 2022
Hast Thou Escaped and Also Taken Possession? The Responses of the Satmar Rebbe – Rabbi Yoel Teitelbaum – and his Followers to Criticism of his Conduct During and After the Holocaust
Rabbi Yoel covers his beard with a kerchief during the Holocaust |
Hero or Villain? Or Both?
“The true test of a man’s character is what he does when no one is watching.”
Rabbi Yoel Teitelbaum – the Satmar Rebbe was among the most known rabbinical figures after the Holocaust. He became known for establishing a large and prosperous Hasidic court while at the same time maintaining ultra-conservative, extreme orthodox and anti-Zionist views. His unique theological interpretation of the Holocaust asserted that the severe sins committed by Zionism forced God to punish the People of Israel by the harshest of punishments – the Holocaust. This article will explore the assumption that Rabbi Yoel’s views on that matter were influenced by his own experiences and by his need to explain his acts, or lack of them, before, during and after the Holocaust. The first section will describe the Rabbi’s life and actions during the Holocaust, both at personal and public levels, as reflected in his biographies, the local press, memoirs written by his Hasidim and archival sources. The second section will evaluate Rabbi Yoel’s dubious conduct, both as an individual person and in his capacity as a leaders of a large community. The latter part of this section will reveal how Rabbi Yoel himself, followed by his biographers, attempted to explicate, whitewash and cover up, post factum, decisions he made and actions that he took or avoided.
VIEW PDF - CORRECTED LINK:
Tuesday, April 26, 2022
What is most galling, however, is the false binary that the Agudah and its like-minded entities promote: that by introducing secular learning, Hasidic children will be deprived of the birthright of their Judaic heritage. What utter nonsense.
My early yeshiva education was an institutional betrayal - From an Illiterate Kid - To Emergency Room Physician
In her latest book Atlas of the Heart, Brene Brown writes about Institutional Betrayal. This describes a situation where a trusted institution causes harm by action or inaction to a vulnerable individual. I can think of no better example of institutional betrayal than the systemic denial of education to nearly 100,000 children attending ultra-Orthodox and Hasidic schools, and the failure of the New York State Education Department to stop it.
Within this culture, the values that are prized in contemporary society – curiosity, the quest for knowledge, intellectual entrepreneurship, engagement with the world at large – are shunned in favor of a narrow, tightly-controlled environment where only religious studies are permitted. And while Judaism has produced a rich history of scholarship and sacred books, a school curriculum that fails to offer English, science, math, social studies, history and the like is failing its students.
I am a product of this broken school system. In order to receive the secular education I craved I had to rebel against my parents, my teachers, my rabbis and my former community. I didn’t feel supported in my arranged marriage and it ended in divorce. I have a strained relationship with my two sons, both of whom have “graduated” from Hasidic high schools without a secular education (despite all my efforts to prevent that). Whatever I have achieved has been through tremendous struggle and at a terrible cost.
As a result, I cannot stand idly by as an entire generation of Jewish schoolchildren are denied the rudiments of education that is guaranteed them by law. I cannot bear to think that even one child might be demonized for dreaming of pursuing higher education, as I did. To channel my angst into activism, in 2017.
Our work has borne some fruit. The New York State Education Department heeded our calls and, in recent weeks, released new regulations for non-public schools. And if enforced properly, it would reduce the likelihood of other children experiencing what I and tens of thousands of children have experienced. It would once and for all spell the end of institutional betrayal.
Unsurprisingly, the institution wants to maintain the status quo at all costs. Agudah, the organization representing these Yeshivas, has launched a campaign against the regulations. Imagine a “religious” organization opposing the teaching of basic literacy skills. The arguments employed by Agudah are dishonest, flimsy and self-serving: “Nowhere in the proposed regulations is there any mention of the need to take into account the educational value of religious studies,” the group wrote in a statement. “By ignoring this essential component of yeshiva education, the proposed new regulations may result in yeshivas having to make major changes to their school day schedules … this is entirely unacceptable.”
This statement is as flawed as it is absurd. It implies that Hasidic schools ought to be exempt from complying with the law of providing minimum educational standards. Oddly, it admits that they currently aren’t meeting the minimum standards, but cannot deal with change because it would require such a major overhaul. According to this logic, there could never be any standards for any industry because the process of improvement or even meeting an acceptable baseline of safety “would require such a major overhaul.”
What is most galling, however, is the false binary that the Agudah and its like-minded entities promote: that by introducing secular learning, Hasidic children will be deprived of the birthright of their Judaic heritage. What utter nonsense.
Throughout history, Jews have prided themselves on their literacy, both religious and secular. It is through the pursuit of knowledge and academic excellence that Jews have risen to the top of every field in a manner that is disproportionate with their minority status in the general population.
The deliberate withholding of the rudiments of secular knowledge to an entire generation of American Jewish schoolchildren is troubling. It hints of fundamentalism, thought control, and authoritarianism.
We know what happens in societies where access to information is severely policed and restricted.
The new NYSED regulations are built on an important foundation. Private schools in NY have long been mandated by state law to provide students with a substantially equivalent education. Students attending these schools trust and depend on these institutions to provide them with a well-rounded education. An education that includes secular studies alongside a religious curricula would give young Yeshiva graduates dignity and enable them to become contributing members of society, able to provide for their families on their own. Currently, without secular education, most young yeshiva graduates end up living in poverty. Unfortunately most depend on government aid programs for survival.
The crippling of human potential is not a Jewish value, indeed, it is antithetical to the Jewish penchant for self-reliance and resourcefulness. Yet Hasidic institutions have been violating their students’ trust for many years by deliberately neglecting their secular education; worse, by demonizing secular knowledge.
My experience is far from unique, there are untold thousands like me. Most are just afraid to speak out. I used to be afraid of that myself. When one is called to tell a terrible truth about one’s community or family it feels like betrayal.
And yet it is the students of these schools who are the victims of a terrible institutional betrayal.
This cannot go on anymore and it is incumbent upon all of us to act. Elected officials and society at large cannot turn a blind eye to the intellectual theft that is taking place. Nor can leaders of important nonprofits in the Jewish community.
This issue belongs to all of us.
Monday, April 25, 2022
Cleveland rabbi arrested for soliciting an investigator who posed as an underage boy online Rabbi Stephen Weiss, 60, posted bond on Tuesday and is required to wear an ankle monitor.
Stephen Weiss Courtesy of Cuyahoga County Prosecutor’s Office |
(Cleveland Jewish News via JTA) – A Cleveland-area rabbi was arrested and suspended from his congregation after allegedly engaging in explicit online conversations and attempting to meet with an undercover investigator posing as a 15-year-old boy.
Rabbi Stephen Weiss, who has served as senior rabbi at B’nai Jeshurun Congregation in Pepper Pike, Ohio, since 2001, was arrested Monday evening by law enforcement officers with the Ohio Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force.
The 60-year-old had traveled to a pre-arranged location to allegedly engage in sexual activity with the purported child, after communicating on a social networking app.
According to the prosecutor’s office, the vehicle he was driving was searched and law enforcement officers found a box of condoms and two bottles of lubricant. Weiss was charged with one count of attempted unlawful sexual conduct with a minor, one count of importuning (soliciting sexual services) and one count of possessing criminal tools, according to the prosecutor’s office.
Court records show Weiss posted a $50,000 bond. According to the court docket, as a condition of his jail release, he is required to wear a GPS standard monitoring device.
The day after Weiss’s arrest, his congregation announced in an email to congregants that it had suspended him from his position and barred him from the premises. B’nai Jeshurun President Rebekah Dorman and Senior Rabbi Hal Rudin-Luria, newly appointed to his position following Weiss’s suspension, also wrote that the synagogue was “unaware of any other alleged criminal incidents involving Rabbi Weiss.”
The synagogue said it would make confidential counseling available to congregants.
“Our synagogue has been strong and vibrant for 156 years and faced many challenges along the way,” Dorman and Rudin-Luria wrote. “We will continue on in that tradition as a synagogue family that supports and cares for each other in challenging times.”
Neither Weiss nor his attorney returned a Cleveland Jewish News request for comment.
The arrest comes amid a spate of recent revelations about misdeeds by rabbis in Ohio. In the Toledo area last month, Rabbi David Kaufman was arrested after being accused of rape; he was fired by his synagogue, which said in a statement that the accusation did not involve a member of the congregation. And in Canton, Rabbi Jon Adland was named in a Reform movement report as having previously been engaged in misconduct involving a 14-year-old girl.
In the latter case, congregants did not learn about the rabbi’s alleged misdeeds while he served them. The community severed ties to Adland after the release of the national report.
This story was originally reported in the Cleveland Jewish News. It is adapted here with permission.
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The post Cleveland rabbi arrested for soliciting an investigator who posed as an underage boy online appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
Friday, April 15, 2022
Thursday, April 14, 2022
And I Thought at Some Point The Craziness Stops! Washington Post ditches “pregnant women” for “pregnant people”
Washington Post ditches “pregnant women” for “pregnant people”
As I’ve always said, I don’t mind using whatever pronouns someone wants to be known by, but the buck stops for me when transgender women are considered as full biological women—and by that I mean women who produce (or have the potential to produce) large and immobile gametes. It’s not the word “woman” I object to; it’s the implicit conflation of biological women with transsexual women in every possible way: the equation of biological women with biological males who consider their gender to be female and may or may not take action to change their bodies. (I don’t care if they “transition” physically or not; I’ll be glad to use their pronouns.) In this case the Post uses “people” instead of “women” because they want to go along with the mantra that “transmen are men”, though transmen who can get pregnant are actually biological women, which is the only reason they can get pregnant.
But the Washington Post has caved to this tendency by issuing the following headline.
In her piece about feminism at Weiss’s site, Zoe Strimpel said this:
“Pregnant people at much higher risk of breakthrough Covid,” The Washington Post recently declared. This was in keeping with the newspaper’s official new language policy: “If we say pregnant women, we exclude those who are transgender and nonbinary.”
That is explicitly obeisance of the mantra “trans men are men” (or “trans women are women”) which is correct in terms of moral or legal treatment, but isn’t biologically true, and is arguably untrue, at least to me, when it comes to sports participation and certain other areas like rape counseling. Ergo, the Post has caved to the language police. In fact, the word “woman” appears only once in the article:
The researchers measured the risk by analyzing the records of pairs of fully vaccinated patients from the same part of the country. In each pair, one patient had the condition that was being measured, and the other did not. The patients were not matched by age, and the pregnant people could have been matched in the analysis with a man or a woman.
Why are they even admitting that there’s a dichotomy between men and women? (Indeed, there must be, for the very concept of “transsexual women” recognizes that there are classes of “men” and “women”.) But of course there is a dichotomy—biologically. For all practical purposes, biological sex is a binary. The words “pregnant people“, however, appear six times. They can’t say “women” because transsexual men can sometimes get pregnant, and trans activists consider that this is the case of a man getting pregnant.
As I said, I’m happy to recognize someone’s self-assignment of gender, but I’m not willing to say that a transsexual male is a “woman” in the biological sense—and getting pregnant is something that only biological women can do. If this continues, so that language is tweaked to conform to the wishes of “progressive” activists, will we eventually lose the words “man” and “woman” altogether? Why not, if the Post‘s policy be sensible? It’s no wonder that Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson was reluctant to answer the question “What is a woman?” (She punted, but I think she should have answered as I would have, drawing a distinction between women as a biological class and women as a gender group).
I was sent the Post link by a woman reader who had enough of the paper when she read this headline and of the Post’s new policy. As she wrote me:
I knew my subscription to the Post could only last so long once I was forced to cancel the New York Times, and this is it. I told them if women don’t exist, neither do I–and if I don’t exist, I can’t possibly subscribe to The Washington Post.
https://whyevolutionistrue.com/2022/04/13/washington-post-ditches-pregnant-women-for-pregnant-people/
Wednesday, April 13, 2022
Amulets aka Segulas --- to Protect from Coronavirus? A Scandal of Our Time! - It is time, well past time, for thinking Orthodox Jews to stand up forcefully against the corruption and denigration of our religion. If we do not do so, we are betraying the God of truth and the Torah of truth. If not us, who? If not now, when?
The Jerusalem Post reported that the Jewish Agency has launched a unique global project that will allow Jews from across the world to send in notes that will be inserted in the Western Wall's ancient stones ahead of Yom Kippur. This is another example of treating religion as a manner of superstition.
You can pray to God directly. You don't need to mail a note to a wall. Below is a re-posting of an article by Rabbi Marc Angel on the general topic of the degradation of true religion by seemingly well-intentioned Jews:
A recent article in the Times of Israel reports that an Israeli charity affiliated with a prominent Hareidi rabbi has been promising donors who pay 3000 shekels ($836) that they will thereby gain immunity from the coronavirus for themselves and their families. The Kupat Ha’Ir website states that donors will receive an amulet as well as an assurance from the rabbi that there will not be anyone sick in the donor’s home. Since launching this campaign, the charity is reported to have raised over 280,000 shekels ($77,990).
This charity campaign is an example of how our religion is being cheapened; how seemingly “religious” individuals seek to exploit a gullible public; how magic and superstition are dressed in the garb of religiosity. If indeed the prominent Hareidi rabbi has the power to protect people from coronavirus, then why doesn’t he do so for everyone, not just for those ready to shell out 3000 shekels? And is it appropriate for any rabbi to be so certain that he can control the spread of a virus by issuing prayers and amulets? People who foolishly trust in the efficacy of these amulets may behave in risky ways that bring them into proximity of those who have the virus. In spite of the amulets, they may get sick and die. Will the Hareidi rabbi and his charity partners take responsibility for the pain, suffering and death of those who put their faith in their promises?
One of the reasons I (Rabbi Angel) founded the Institute for Jewish Ideas and Ideals (in 2007) was because I was increasingly unhappy with the “Hareidization” of Judaism. Orthodoxy was becoming more authoritarian, narrow-minded, obscurantist. It was choking off freedom of thought and freedom of discussion. At its worst, it was becoming more of a superstition-ridden sect rather than a world religion. Our Institute has been a steady voice for an intellectually vibrant, compassionate and inclusive Orthodox Judaism, a Judaism that fosters diversity, creativity, personal autonomy. Each of our supporters is a partner in our work to bring Torah Judaism back to a position of honor and respectability.
Some years ago, I wrote an article that dealt with the same charity that is now offering immunity to coronavirus. Here’s what I wrote then…and it remains true (unfortunately) to this day.
I (along with many others) periodically receive a brochure from an organization that provides charity to needy individuals and families. The brochure includes abundant pictures of saintly-looking men with long white beards, engaged in Torah study and prayer, and signing their names on behalf of this charity. The brochure promises us that "the Gedolei Hador are the official members of the organization." One of the Gedolei Hador is quoted to say: "All who contribute to [this charity] merit to see open miracles." We are asked to contribute to this cause so that the Gedolei Hador will pray on our behalf. We even are given choices of what merit we would like to receive from these prayers: to have nahat from our children; to have children; to find a worthy mate; to earn an easy livelihood. "Urgent requests are immediately forwarded to the home of the Gedolei Hador." If we are willing to contribute so much per name, we are guaranteed that a minyan of outstanding talmidei hakhamim will pray for us at the Kotel. If we contribute a lesser amount, we only will have the prayer recited by one outstanding talmid hakham. We are also told that we can write our request as a kvitel and it will be placed in the Kotel for forty days; we can even transmit our prayer requests by telephone hotline, after we have made a contribution via credit card.
This charity purports not only to be Torah-true, but to have the involvement and backing of the Gedolei Hador. Anyone looking at the brochure would see this as an Orthodox Jewish charity operated by highly religious individuals.
Let us grant that this is indeed a worthy charity that provides assistance to needy Jews. Let us grant that the people who operate this charity see themselves as pious Jews of the highest caliber, literally linked to the Gedolei Hador. Yet, the brochure is not an example of true religion at all, but of something far more akin to superstition.
Is it appropriate for a Gadol Hador to assure contributors that they will be worthy of open miracles? Can anyone rightfully speak on behalf of the Almighty's decisions relating to doing open miracles? Doesn't this statement reflect a belief that prayers uttered by so-called sages (similar to incantations uttered by shamans?!) can control God's actions, even to the extent of making Him do miracles?
Moreover, why should people be made to feel that they are not qualified to pray to God directly? Why should "religious leaders" promote the notion that if people will pay money, some pious individual will recite a prayer at the Kotel-and that the prayer uttered by such an individual at the Kotel is more efficacious than one's own prayers? How tasteless and contrary to religious values is the notion that a minyan of outstanding talmidei hakhamim will pray if you pay enough; but only one will pray for you if you choose to contribute less than the recommended sum?
In this brochure, dressed as it is in the garb of Torah-true religion, we have a blatant example of superstition-tainted Judaism. The leaders of this organization assume: 1) Gedolei Hador (we are not told who decides who is a Gadol Hador, nor why any Gadol Hador would want to run to the Kotel to pray every time a donor called in an "urgent request") have greater powers to pray than anyone else. 2) A Gadol Hador can promise us open miracles if we send in a donation. 3) A prayer uttered at the holy site of the Kotel has more value than a prayer uttered elsewhere i.e. the Kotel is treated as a sacred, magical entity. 4) A kvitel placed in a crevice in the Kotel has religious value and efficacy. This brochure relies on the public's gullible belief in the supernatural powers of Gedolei Hador and the Kotel.
It is time, well past time, for thinking Orthodox Jews to stand up forcefully against the corruption and denigration of our religion. If we do not do so, we are betraying the God of truth and the Torah of truth. If not us, who? If not now, when?
Tuesday, April 12, 2022
מעשי סדום בבני ברק------ "A man is allowed, when the woman is pure a man can do whatever he wants."
Monday, April 11, 2022
“What the Bible is telling us is that the human race is unalterably flawed. It’s not a matter of doing away with the ‘haters’ or with this group or that group. We have to deal with our own mind.”
David Mamet Is a Defiant Scribe in the Age of Conformity
The playwright won’t play along with woke signaling, talismanic masking or deference to petty tyrants.
Back in the 1980s and ’90s, innumerable films, TV documentaries and history textbooks instructed us that the 1950s were years of conformity and conventionalism: “The Donna Reed Show,” McCarthyism, “The Organization Man,” TV dinners. In fact, the ’50s were a time of extraordinary artistic creativity, boundless technological innovation, original thinking in politics, intellectual diversity in journalism and higher education, new energy in religion, and enormous progress in race relations. What the ’80s and ’90s mistook for conformity was a naturally evolved cultural solidarity—something nearly everybody, on the left and the right, longs for now.
An informed observer of present-day America might reasonably conclude that our own decade—at least among the educated and advantaged classes—is far more imbued with the spirit of conformism than the ’50s were. Corporate managers and military leaders parrot nostrums about diversity, inclusion and sustainability that few of them believe. Museums and orchestras studiously avoid programming that might offend ideologues. Reporters and producers in the mainstream press seize on stories—or ignore them—solely because that’s what everybody else in the press is doing. Large majorities in wealthy cities dutifully comply with public-health restrictions they know to be largely ineffective, mainly because refusing to do so would invite the ire of friends and neighbors complying with those restrictions for the same reason.
Maybe America’s deciders and describers (to use Nicholas Eberstadt’s phrase) aren’t the independent-minded lot they think themselves to be.
These and related ironies were on my mind in February when I received a galley copy of the playwright David Mamet’s “Recessional: The Death of Free Speech and the Cost of Free Lunch,” published Tuesday. The book is a collection of essays written over the past two years on an array of cultural and political topics: pandemic zealotry, Donald Trump, terrorism, California’s punitive tax code, Christianity and Judaism, Broadway and the movies. The essays are by turns witty, insightful, affecting and cryptic. What struck me most about the book, though, was how superbly out of place its author must be in the eminent environs of his chosen industry.
In March I visited Mr. Mamet’s home in Santa Monica and asked him about, for lack of a more original term, the Age of Conformity. What is the source of this sudden impulse to go along with the crowd that we see at high levels of American society?
“It’s that time-wasting machine,” he says, pointing to the cellphone with which I’m recording the conversation. “We’re all connected. But connected for what purpose? The idea that everybody has to behave the same way is part of the breakdown of what was a cohesive society.”
He brings up the 1950s without prompting. “When I was a kid,” he says—Mr. Mamet was born in Chicago in 1947—“people went to different churches, they were from different ethnic backgrounds, their parents came from different countries, but somehow they managed to have a collective life. All of their self-worth didn’t come from belonging and staying connected to this one uber-group.”
Mr. Mamet’s works include the Pulitzer-winning play “Glengarry Glen Ross” (1984) and the screenplays for “The Untouchables” (1987), “Hoffa” (1992) and “Heist” (2001). He speaks the way he writes: in short, forceful sentences and with constant recourse to wild anecdotes, uproarious jokes and literary quotations bent to his purpose.
Do people in the entertainment industry censor themselves? “They do not walk around saying things that are dangerous to express, no. People whisper out here. They have to. To say, ‘Well maybe Trump did some good things’—you can’t do that. You’d risk your home, your job, your family, your friends.”
Mr. Mamet is convinced that the “woke agenda” (his term) is basically an act, so in some ways it works well in Hollywood. “Nobody really believes it,” he says. “Nobody really believes boys turn into girls and girls turn into boys—no one does. But it’s put into a different category, so that it becomes dangerous to question it. If you question it, you’re out.”
Are the young buying it? My own observation suggests some substantial minority do not. Academics and college students I’ve spoken to since 2017 indicate that social pressure to signal assent to a rotating series of orthodoxies, from public health to race and gender theories, has sparked a quiet revolt. Post a black square on Instagram to show that America is systemically racist, even if you don’t think that’s true; wear a mask even though you know it doesn’t work and you’re 20 and vaccinated; share your pronouns whether you accept or reject gender ideology—a reaction seems almost guaranteed.
“People of that generation,” Mr. Mamet agrees, “a lot of them just aren’t scared anymore.”
Not that he expects anybody among our institutional leaders to admit they were wrong, on Covid or crime or anything else. He mentions Stacy Schiff’s “Witches,” a 2015 history of the Salem trials. “The delusion ran for about 18 months,” Mr. Mamet says, summarizing the book, “and after that, since they couldn’t explain it, they just forgot it. It never happened.” The phenomenon by which authorities and experts make a hash of things and then move on as if nothing happened is one attentive readers will recognize. Mr. Mamet offers some encouragement. “The thing about history,” he says, “is not that people change. People don’t change. But people die. So a new generation comes up and says, ‘Yeah, I get it, that’s stupid, I’m not gonna do that.’ ”
As if to demonstrate noncompliance, one of Mr. Mamet’s poodles, Ruby, jumps on the couch and sniffs my face. “Manners!” he shouts. “Come on, you’re embarrassing me in front of my guest. Sit!” The dog pays little attention. Made at last to submit, Ruby reluctantly goes elsewhere.
On the coffee table between us are several books by and about James Joyce, and an oversized edition of the Torah. “It’s all there,” Mr. Mamet says, pointing to the holy book. “Everything we’ve been living through.” The habit among America’s wealthy, privileged influencers of reviling the country that gave them privilege and influence, Mr. Mamet says, is in various way a re-enactment of biblical events. He refers to the narrative in which God provides manna for the Israelites in the wilderness: “The people are hungry, there’s nothing to eat in the desert, so God says, I’ll give ’em manna. They say, What does manna taste like? Answer: It tastes like whatever your favorite food is. They say, I don’t want whatever my favorite food is. And so they stage another rebellion.”
That is a heavily abridged version of the accounts in Exodus and Numbers, but he is right about the biblical pattern: Prosperity, particularly unearned prosperity, tends to generate folly and vice. “When do violent revolutions happen?” he asks. “They happen when things get too good.” We live in the “most prosperous country in the history of the world, and so what’s our response?” Mr. Mamet waits for me to answer, but I keep silent. “The response is: We don’t need God. We don’t need the Constitution. We don’t need anything. Go study semiotics. Go become an energy therapist, whatever. Someone will take care of you and tell you what to do.”
Mr. Mamet announced a turn to the political right in a 2008 essay for the Village Voice, “Why I Am No Longer a ‘Brain-Dead Liberal,’ ” but he was a black sheep long before then. His 1992 play “Oleanna,” for instance, features a male academic whose life and career are ruined by a calculating female student’s spurious accusation of sexual harassment.
Was there a moment when he decided to break ranks altogether? “I met a guy at my synagogue here maybe 20 years ago,” he says. “He was talking about Milton Friedman and [Friedrich] Hayek and Thomas Sowell. It didn’t make any sense to me, but I was impressed by his attitude. He wasn’t strident or arrogant. It was that guy’s attitude that impressed me.”
The man lent Mr. Mamet some books by these authors. “I said to him, ‘Good, I’ll read them. But,’ I said, ‘when my friends come over, I’ll have to hide them.’ He said: ‘I don’t.’ And that changed my life. What was I saying? Did I really think I had to hide books from my friends? How sick was I? It was a Road to Damascus moment.”
(Mr. Mamet, an observant Jew, freely uses Christian imagery, as in this reference to the Apostle Paul’s conversion. In “Recessional” he remarks, apropos of Billy Graham’s oratory, that he “would be thrilled to accept the Christian tradition and Christ as my Savior” but that “I am prohibited from doing so by my own religion.” Here, at least, he conforms.)
He recalls another incident around the same time, not long after he bought his house in Santa Monica. The house was, and still is, surrounded by enormous hedges—you can hardly see the building from the nearby street. He received a letter from the City Council demanding that he cut the hedges down to a certain height or be fined $25,000 for every day the hedges remained too high. He eventually won that wrangle, he recalls, but the episode led him to believe that many government officials simply enjoy forcing law-abiding people into compliance with arbitrary dictates.
“I thought at the time: I’ve seen these people before.” The “hedge commissioners,” as he calls them, were the theater critics he’d known earlier in his career. “They would come in on opening night and strut around and stand with their backs to the stage, looking at the people coming in. People used to say, and maybe they still do, that the critics just liked having the power to shut the play down. And the critics would say, ‘No, ha ha, we don’t have that power.’ But they did have it, and they loved it.”
Like many people who find themselves dissenting from the dominant outlook of their cultivated and post-religious peers, Mr. Mamet felt that modern conceptions of human nature had become hopelessly naive. A rosy view of human proclivities leads easily to groupthink and its invariable accompaniment, scapegoating. Since the existence of evil is undeniable, if it isn’t intrinsic to all of us, it must come from some disfavored person or group.
Which led him back to biblical religion. “The Bible starts with perfidy, and perfidy is everywhere in it. There are very few people in the Bible you want your kids to be like,” he says. We exchange our favorite bits of biblical realism. Mr. Mamet notes that the genealogies of David and other heroes don’t bother skipping over—indeed they seem to go out of their way to mention—adulterers. “What the Bible is telling us is that the human race is unalterably flawed. It’s not a matter of doing away with the ‘haters’ or with this group or that group. We have to deal with our own mind.”
A robust understanding of your own and others’ propensity to bad behavior, he seems to suggest, has a way of inoculating you against groupthink.
Woke signaling, blind compliance with public-health authoritarianism, deference to theater critics and tyrannical city officials—Mr. Mamet doesn’t play along. I’m reminded of the line spoken by Richard Roma, the aggressive and highly successful real-estate salesman in “Glengarry Glen Ross” played by Al Pacino in the 1992 film adaptation. “I subscribe to the law of contrary public opinion,” Roma says. “If everyone thinks one thing, then I say bet the other way.”