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U.S. Airport Nasal Swabbing Expanding to Chicago and Miami

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NEW YORK (AP) — The nation’s top public health agency is expanding a program that tests international travelers for COVID-19 and other infectious diseases.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention program asks arriving international passengers to volunteer to have their noses swabbed and answer questions about their travel. The program operates at six airports and on Tuesday, the CDC said it was adding two more — Chicago’s O’Hare and Miami.

Those locations should provide more information about respiratory infections coming out of South America, Africa and Asia, particularly, CDC officials said.

“Miami and Chicago enable us to collect samples coming from areas of the world where global surveillance is not as strong as it used to be,” said the CDC’s Allison Taylor Walker. “What we really need is a good view of what’s happening in the world so we’re prepared for the next thing.”

The program began in 2021, and has been credited with detecting coronavirus variants faster than other systems. The genomic testing of traveler’s nasal swabs has mainly been focused on COVID-19, but testing also is being done for two other respiratory viruses — flu and RSV.

Participants are not notified of their results. But they are given a COVID-19 home test kit to take with them, CDC officials say.

Samples have come from more than 475,000 air travelers coming off flights from more than 135 countries, officials said.

Health officials also have been sampling wastewater that comes off international flights at a few airports. That testing is for COVID-19, but CDC officials are evaluating the possibility of monitoring wastewater for other things, Walker said.

The CDC program has a current budget of about $37 million. The agency pays two companies, Ginkgo Bioworks and XWell, to do sample collection and testing. The companies are working with CDC to grow the program to check for more than 30 different disease-causing germs.

Source: VosIzNeias

Report: Your Car Is Secretly Spying On You and Driving Your Insurance Rates Through The Roof

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Drivers of vehicles produced by major companies such as General Motors, Ford, and Honda have reported increases in their insurance premiums following the transmission of driving data to insurers without their explicit consent.

One example is Kenn Dahl, a businessman from Seattle, who disclosed to The New York Times that his insurance expenses surged by 21% in 2022 after the OnStar Smart Driver system, installed in his Chevy Bolt by GM, gathered data about his driving patterns.

Dahl recounted that his insurance agent attributed the rise in premiums to data provided by LexisNexis, which generated a detailed report monitoring every trip he and his spouse took in their Chevy Bolt over six months. This extensive report included information on trip durations, distances covered, and potential instances of speeding, abrupt braking, and rapid accelerations.

Within the report, two instances of sudden acceleration and two cases of hard braking were recorded during Dahl’s trips. This data was extracted from OnStar Smart Driver, a subscription service owned by GM, designed to monitor driving behavior such as total mileage, incidents of hard braking, and other driving habits.

Despite OnStar Smart Driver’s assertion on its website that it offers insights to improve driving safety and rewards users for good habits, Dahl felt betrayed by the unauthorized sharing of his data, expressing his discontent with how it affected their insurance rates.

Complaints extend beyond electric vehicle owners. A Cadillac driver in Palm Beach County, Florida, expressed intentions to sue GM after being rejected by seven insurance companies in December. Frustrated, he plans to sell his Cadillac and vows never to purchase another GM vehicle due to the negative impact of the shared driving data on his insurance eligibility.

This Cadillac owner’s decision was influenced by a LexisNexis report detailing six months of his driving behavior, highlighting instances of abrupt braking, rapid acceleration, and speeding. He questioned the criteria used to define these behaviors, emphasizing that he does not perceive his driving as aggressive or dangerous.

The issue isn’t exclusive to GM. Several other car manufacturers, including Subaru, Mitsubishi, Honda, Kia, and Hyundai, offer similar data-sharing features to insurers, often without the drivers’ explicit awareness.

Verisk, a data analytics company, acknowledged accessing driver data from millions of vehicles, including those manufactured by Ford, Honda, and Hyundai. However, Ford denied transmitting connected vehicle data to partners like Verisk and LexisNexis, indicating that driver behavior data is shared with insurers only upon explicit consent via in-vehicle touchscreens.

While some manufacturers like Kia, Mitsubishi, Hyundai, Honda, and Acura provide options to disable data collection related to driving behavior through their apps, Honda requires drivers to agree to lengthy terms and conditions specifying data sharing with Verisk.

GM defended its OnStar Smart Driver service, emphasizing that customers consent multiple times before limited data is shared with insurers through third parties. The company highlighted benefits such as insights into safe driving behaviors and vehicle performance that could be used for insurance quotes, with the option for customers to opt out of the service at any time.

LexisNexis reiterated that the data it collects from OnStar is used by insurers as one of many factors to tailor insurance coverage to individual drivers’ behaviors.

Source: {Matzav.com}

In Shift, Israel Engaging Palestinian Authority on Governing Post-War Gaza

Public • By Baruch Yedid/TPS • 13 March, 2024

 

Jerusalem, 13 March, 2024 (TPS) — Israel is holding talks with representatives of the Palestinian Authority and Fatah for the distribution of aid in the Gaza Strip and “semi-official” discussions on running Gaza after the war.

The move represents a marked shift in Israeli policy. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu previously vowed to not allow the PA to have a role in administering post-war Gaza.

The Press Service of Israel has learned that Israel is holding talks with the PA about accepting responsibility for delivering aid and checking in on its readiness to administer Gaza after the war.

“Israel has already tried the Hamas option until it smashed in its face on the seventh of October and there is no other temporary option, but the PA’s return to Gaza,” a very senior official in the Palestinian Authority told TPS-IL.

“There is a common understanding between us and the representatives of the security establishment in Israel regarding the need for the return of the Palestinian Authority to the Gaza Strip, but as far as the Israeli government is concerned, the right-wing elements in it oppose any such plan,” he said.

High-ranking Israeli officials in Jerusalem confirmed to TPS-IL that the government has engaged the PA, inquiring if it will take over the management of aid distribution and checking on its readiness to govern Gaza. TPS-IL has learned that a very senior figure in the Israeli security system met with Palestinian and Arab leaders in an Arab country.

The development comes amidst the Hamas terror group’s continued hijacking of humanitarian aid deliveries.

Ramallah Talking to Gaza Clan Leaders

Majed al Faraj, head of the PA’s General Intelligence Service and a close associate of PA President Mahmoud Abbas has been mentioned in recent days as someone proposed by Israeli officials to run Gaza, at least temporarily. Faraj is also viewed as a potential successor to the 88-year-old Abbas.

“It is natural to bring up Faraj’s name, he is one of the figures who worked with us the most against Hamas,” Israeli opposition and former prime minister Yair Lapid told Israeli radio on Tuesday.

TPS-IL has also learned that Faraj was recently promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel and is already holding talks with the leaders of several Gaza clans to see if they can become a local force capable of securing aid convoys.

Faraj’s representative ordered the heads of clans in Rafah and the southern Gaza Strip to prepare for security and to assist with local weapons issues.

“We are now dealing with everything that is required to stop the bloodshed and the destruction in the Gaza Strip and before we meet this task, there is no reason to talk about the future of Gaza,” an associate of Faraj told TPS-IL.

Clans — a social unit of extended families — hold significant importance in Palestinian society, serving as networks of support in social, economic, and political spheres and mediating disputes between families. They are especially active in Gaza’s main urban centers.

Arab sources told TPS-IL that Israel also contacted Palestinian Minister of Civil Affairs Hussein al-Sheikh, who instructed his representative in Gaza, Iyad Nasser, to select five Palestinian transportation companies.

The five companies chosen are owned by associates of Nasser and have been vetted and approved by Israel. Trucks from these companies already begun transporting food throughout the Strip. A convoy of trucks from one of these companies was involved in a deadly stampede in Gaza City at the end of February.

Other Players

The Palestinian Authority isn’t the only player using aid to jockey for power.

Muhammad Dahlan, an exiled Fatah figure, also operates local security forces to protect the trucks that deliver aid from the United Arab Emirates, even though a large part of the aid purchased by the Emirates goes through companies and trucks from Egypt.

Dahlan, once a high-level figure within Fatah, was the Palestinian Authority’s strongman in Gaza when Hamas violently seized control of the Strip in 2007. As Dahlan regained influence within Fatah, he had a falling out with Abbas and was expelled from the party in 2011. He was later tried in absentia in Ramallah on charges of corruption, charges which Dahlan denies.

Since October 7, Dahlan has invested more than $400 million in Gaza projects such as water desalination stations, hospital treatment for burn victims, and deliveries of items for shelter and heat. Dahlan’s work has been working in alignment with an Emirati aid initiative.

And as TPS-IL recently reported, Iran is making in-roads into Gaza with aid.

Only 25% of Iranian aid has reached the Strip due to Israel’s refusal to allow the remaining aid to enter.

Reports indicate that Israel requested Egypt to prevent the transfer of Iranian aid, but street kitchens and food distribution stations operated by the Iranian Red Crescent can now be seen in the Gaza Strip.

At least 1,200 people were killed and 240 Israelis and foreigners were taken hostage in Hamas’s attacks on Israeli communities near the Gaza border on October 7. Of the remaining 134 hostages, Israel recently declared 31 of them dead.

BUYING AN ELECTRIC CAR? Amid Explosive Demand, America Is Running Out Of Power

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Vast swaths of the United States are at risk of running short of power as electricity-hungry data centers and clean-technology factories proliferate around the country, leaving utilities and regulators grasping for credible plans to expand the nation’s creaking power grid.

In Georgia, demand for industrial power is surging to record highs, with the projection of new electricity use for the next decade now 17 times what it was only recently. Arizona Public Service, the largest utility in that state, is also struggling to keep up, projecting it will be out of transmission capacity before the end of the decade absent major upgrades.

Northern Virginia needs the equivalent of several large nuclear power plants to serve all the new data centers planned and under construction. Texas, where electricity shortages are already routine on hot summer days, faces the same dilemma.

“When you look at the numbers, it is staggering,” said Jason Shaw, chairman of the Georgia Public Service Commission, which regulates electricity. “It makes you scratch your head and wonder how we ended up in this situation. How were the projections that far off? This has created a challenge like we have never seen before.”

A major factor behind the skyrocketing demand is the rapid innovation in artificial intelligence, which is driving the construction of large warehouses of computing infrastructure that require exponentially more power than traditional data centers. AI is also part of a huge scale-up of cloud computing. Tech firms like Amazon, Apple, Google, Meta and Microsoft are scouring the nation for sites for new data centers, and many lesser-known firms are also on the hunt.

The proliferation of crypto-mining, in which currencies like bitcoin are transacted and minted, is also driving data center growth. It is all putting new pressures on an overtaxed grid — the network of transmission lines and power stations that move electricity around the country. Bottlenecks are mounting, leaving both new generators of energy, particularly clean energy, and large consumers facing growing wait times for hookups.

The situation is sparking battles across the nation over who will pay for new power supplies, with regulators worrying that residential ratepayers could be stuck with the bill for costly upgrades. It also threatens to stifle the transition to cleaner energy, as utility executives lobby to delay the retirement of fossil fuel plants and bring more online. The power crunch imperils their ability to supply the energy that will be needed to charge the millions of electric cars and household appliances required to meet state and federal climate goals.

The nation’s 2,700 data centers sapped more than 4 percent of the country’s total electricity in 2022, according to the International Energy Agency. Its projections show that by 2026, they will consume 6 percent. Industry forecasts show the centers eating up a larger share of U.S. electricity in the years that follow, as demand from residential and smaller commercial facilities stays relatively flat thanks to steadily increasing efficiencies in appliances and heating and cooling systems.

Data center operators are clamoring to hook up to regional electricity grids at the same time the Biden administration’s industrial policy is luring companies to build factories in the United States at a pace not seen in decades. That includes manufacturers of “clean tech,” such as solar panels and electric car batteries, which are being enticed by lucrative federal incentives. Companies announced plans to build or expand more than 155 factories in this country during the first half of the Biden administration, according to the Electric Power Research Institute, a research and development organization. Not since the early 1990s has factory-building accounted for such a large share of U.S. construction spending, according to the group.

Utility projections for the amount of power they will need over the next five years have nearly doubled and are expected to grow, according to a review of regulatory filings by the research firm Grid Strategies.

Chasing power

In the past, companies tried to site their data centers in areas with major internet infrastructure, a large pool of tech talent, and attractive government incentives. But these locations are getting tapped out.

Communities that had little connection to the computing industry now find themselves in the middle of a land rush, with data center developers flooding their markets with requests for grid hookups. Officials in Columbus, Ohio; Altoona, Iowa; and Fort Wayne, Ind. are being aggressively courted by data center developers. But power supply in some of these second-choice markets is already running low, pushing developers ever farther out, in some cases into cornfields, according to JLL, a commercial real estate firm that serves the tech industry.

Grid Strategies warns in its report that “there are real risks some regions may miss out on economic development opportunities because the grid can’t keep up.”

“Across the board, we are seeing power companies say, ‘We don’t know if we can handle this; we have to audit our system; we’ve never dealt with this kind of influx before,’” said Andy Cvengros, managing director of data center markets at JLL. “Everyone is now chasing power. They are willing to look everywhere for it.”

“We saw a quadrupling of land values in some parts of Columbus, and a tripling in areas of Chicago,” he said. “It’s not about the land. It is about access to power.” Some developers, he said, have had to sell the property they bought at inflated prices at a loss, after utilities became overwhelmed by the rush for grid hookups.

Rethinking incentives

It is all happening at the same time the energy transition is steering large numbers of Americans to rely on the power grid to fuel vehicles, heat pumps, induction stoves and all manner of other household appliances that previously ran on fossil fuels. A huge amount of clean energy is also needed to create the green hydrogen championed by the White House, as developers rush to build plants that can produce the powerful zero-emissions fuel, lured by generous federal subsidies.

Planners are increasingly concerned that the grid won’t be green enough or powerful enough to meet these demands.

Already, soaring power consumption is delaying coal plant closures in KansasNebraskaWisconsin and South Carolina.

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In Georgia, the state’s major power company, Georgia Power, stunned regulators when it revealed recently how wildly off its projections were, pointing to data centers as the main culprit.

The demand has Georgia officials rethinking the state’s policy of offering incentives to lure computing operations, which generate few jobs but can boost community budgets through the hefty property taxes they pay. The top leaders of Georgia’s House and Senate, both Republicans, are championing a pause in data center incentives.

Georgia regulators, meanwhile, are exploring how to protect ratepayers while ensuring there is enough power to meet the needs of the state’s most-prized new tenants: clean-technology companies. Factories supplying the electric vehicle and green-energy markets have been rushing to locate in Georgia in large part on promises of cheap, reliable electricity.

When the data center industry began looking for new hubs, “Atlanta was like, ‘Bring it on,’” said Pat Lynch, who leads the Data Center Solutions team at real estate giant CBRE. “Now Georgia Power is warning of limitations. … Utility shortages in the face of these data center demands are happening in almost every market.”

A similar dynamic is playing out in a very different region: the Pacific Northwest. In Oregon, Portland General Electric recently doubled its forecast for new electricity demand over the next five years, citing data centers and “rapid industrial growth” as the drivers.

That power crunch threw a wrench into the plans of Michael Halaburda and Arman Khalili, longtime data center developers whose latest project involves converting a mothballed tile factory in the Portland area. The two were under the impression only a couple of months ago that they would have no problem getting the electricity they needed to run the place. Then the power company alerted them that it would need to do a “line and load study” to assess whether it could supply the facility with 60 megawatts of electricity — roughly the amount needed to power 45,000 homes.

Halaburda sees the growth as good for the country and the economy. “But no one took into consideration where this is all going,” he said. “In the next couple of years, unless there is a real focus on expanding the grid and making it more robust, we are going to see opportunities fall by the wayside because we can’t get power to where it is needed.”

Companies are increasingly turning to such off-the-grid experiments as their frustration with the logjam in the nation’s traditional electricity network mounts. Microsoft and Google are among the firms hoping that energy-intensive industrial operations can ultimately be powered by small nuclear plants on-site, with Microsoft even putting AI to work trying to streamline the burdensome process of getting plants approved. Microsoft has also inked a deal to buy power from a company trying to develop zero-emissions fusion power. But going off the grid brings its own big regulatory and land acquisition challenges. The type of nuclear plants envisioned, for example, are not yet even operational in the United States. Fusion power does not yet exist.

The big tech companies are also exploring ways AI can help make the grid operate more efficiently. And they are developing platforms that during times of peak power demand “can shift compute tasks and their associated energy consumption to the times and places where carbon-free energy is available on the grid,” according to Google. But meeting both their zero-emissions pledges and their AI innovation ambitions is becoming increasingly complicated as the energy needs of their data centers grow.

“These problems are not going to go away,” said Michael Ortiz, CEO of Layer 9 Data Centers, a U.S. company that is looking to avoid the logjam here by building in Mexico. “Data centers are going to have to become more efficient, and we need to be using more clean sources of efficient energy, like nuclear.”

Officials at Equinix, one of the world’s largest data center companies, said they have been experimenting with fuel cells as backup power, but they remain hopeful they can keep the power grid as their main source of electricity for new projects.

The logjam is already pushing officials overseeing the clean-energy transition at some of the nation’s largest airports to look beyond the grid. The amount of energy they will need to charge fleets of electric rental vehicles and ground maintenance trucks alone is immense. An analysis shows electricity demand doubling by 2030 at both the Denver and Minneapolis airports. By 2040, they will need more than triple the electricity they are using now, according to the study, commissioned by car rental giant Enterprise, Xcel Energy and Jacobs, a consulting firm.

“Utilities are not going to be able to move quickly enough to provide all this capacity,” said Christine Weydig, vice president of transportation at AlphaStruxure, which designs and operates clean-energy projects. “The infrastructure is not there. Different solutions will be needed.” Airports, she said, are looking into dramatically expanding the use of clean-power “microgrids” they can build on-site.

The Biden administration has made easing the grid bottleneck a priority, but it is a politically fraught process, and federal powers are limited. Building the transmission lines and transfer stations needed involves huge land acquisitions, exhaustive environmental reviews and negotiations to determine who should pay what costs.

The process runs through state regulatory agencies, and fights between states over who gets stuck with the bill and where power lines should go routinely sink and delay proposed projects. The amount of new transmission line installed in the United States has dropped sharply since 2013, when 4,000 miles were added. Now, the nation struggles to bring online even 1,000 new miles a year. The slowdown has real consequences not just for companies but for the climate. A group of scientists led by Princeton University professor Jesse Jenkins warned in a report that by 2030 the United States risks losing out on 80 percent of the potential emission reductions from President Biden’s signature climate law, the Inflation Reduction Act, if the pace of transmission construction does not pick up dramatically now.

While the proliferation of data centers puts more pressure on states to approve new transmission lines, it also complicates the task. Officials in Maryland, for example, are protesting a plan for $5.2 billion in infrastructure that would transmit power to huge data centers in Loudoun County, Va. The Maryland Office of People’s Council, a government agency that advocates for ratepayers, called grid operator PJM’s plan “fundamentally unfair,” arguing it could leave Maryland utility customers paying for power transmission to data centers that Virginia aggressively courted and is leveraging for a windfall in tax revenue.

Tensions over who gets power from the grid and how it gets to them are only going to intensify as the supply becomes scarcer.

In Texas, a dramatic increase in data centers for crypto mining is touching off a debate over whether they are a costly drain on an overtaxed grid. An analysis by the consulting firm Wood Mackenzie found that the energy needed by crypto operations aiming to link to the grid would equal a quarter of the electricity used in the state at peak demand. Unlike data centers operated by big tech companies such as Google and Meta, crypto miners generally don’t build renewable-energy projects with the aim of supplying enough zero-emissions energy to the grid to cover their operations.

The result, said Ben Hertz-Shargel, who authored the Wood Mackenzie analysis, is that crypto’s drain on the grid threatens to inhibit the ability of Texas to power other energy-hungry operations that could drive innovation and economic growth, such as factories that produce zero-emissions green hydrogen fuel or industrial charging depots that enable electrification of truck and bus fleets.

But after decades in which power was readily available, regulators and utility executives across the country generally are not empowered to prioritize which projects get connected. It is first come, first served. And the line is growing longer. To answer the call, some states have passed laws to protect crypto mining’s access to huge amounts of power.

“Lawmakers need to think about this,” Hertz-Shargel said of allocating an increasingly limited supply of power. “There is a risk that strategic industries they want in their states are going to have a challenging time setting up in those places.

Source: Matzav

Russia Foils Attack Planned on Moscow Shul

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On Thursday, Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) announced the prevention of an attack on a shul in Moscow planned by an Islamic State cell, as reported by Russian state news agencies.

The FSB revealed that the organization’s members had plotted “to commit a terrorist act against one of the Jewish religious institutions in Moscow,” according to statements quoted by the RIA news agency.

Further investigative activities uncovered that terrorists from the international terrorist organization were preparing an attack using firearms on people at the shul. The FSB reported that during the arrest, the terrorists resisted with arms, resulting in their neutralization by return fire from Russian FSB officers.

Source: Hamodia

 

On Eve of Ramadan, Analysts Warn Hamas Will Spark Temple Mount Violence

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By Sveta Listratov • 10 March, 2024

Jerusalem, 10 March, 2024 (TPS) — Analysts warned on Sunday, the eve of Ramadan, that Hamas will spark Temple Mount violence during the Muslim holy month.

“Hamas wants the ‘interior’ forces to join its struggle,” Brig. Gen. (Res.) Amir Avivi told the Tazpit Press Service, referring to the Israeli-Arab community.

“When it launched the attack on October 7th, it believed that its success would immediately drag the Israeli Arabs, and the Arab residents of Judea and Samaria in the war,”  said Avivi, founder and chairman of Israel Defense and Security Forum. “No one joined them, Hamas was left alone. Now, Hamas attempts to motivate them to join them, pressing on the Al-Aqsa issue.”

Israeli security forces are beefing up their presence in Jerusalem, but the government is not imposing new restrictions on access to the Temple Mount. Instead, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has instructed police to allow a similar number of worshippers to the holy site as in previous years.

“The chance of terrorist attacks is high, so the main question is – how to preserve the possible peace. The State of Israel should act with a carrot and stick method: invest significantly in security reinforcement to prevent riots and on the other hand, for a balance let freedom of worship on the Temple Mount, to create a controlled reality,” Avivi said.

Hopes for a ceasefire ahead of Ramadan were dashed when talks in Cairo collapsed on Friday.

“At this stage, Hamas is fortifying its position as if it is not interested in a deal, and it strives to ignite the region during Ramadan at the expense of the Palestinian population of the Gaza Strip,” the Mossad said in a statement.

In a video statement released on the terror group’s Telegram channel on Friday, Hamas spokesperson Abu Obeida called Ramadan “the month of victory, the month of jihad” and called for Palestinians and Israel’s Arab citizens to march en masse to Jerusalem to “defend” the Al-Aqsa Mosque.

Palestinian terror attacks traditionally surge ahead of and during Ramadan.

Arnon Segal, a veteran Israeli journalist and Temple Mount researcher was concerned by how the decision to not impose some restrictions would be perceived by Hamas.

“We give the neighborhood bully what he demands in exchange for peace, but why would the bully think that peace pays off in this case?” Arnon Segal, the Temple Mount researcher told TPS. “The state of Israel has allowed the Temple Mount to become a small Palestinian state, so now the enemies of Israel are trying to expand the situation and enlarge it.”

Segal, the author of the book titled “Habayit” which can be translated as either the Temple or The Home, is a frequent visitor to holy site.

“The day before the October 7 massacre, a sign was hung in the Al-Aqsa compound, saying, ‘The road to Jerusalem is lined with the blood of martyrs,’” he recalled. “Freedom of worship is important, but this kind of violent public shouldn’t be allowed to incite at this site.”

He told TPS that if the government chooses not to restrict Muslim worshippers from the Temple Mount, then Jewish visitors should not be restricted either.

“Democratic principles must allow everyone to enter holy sites, without discrimination,” Segal stressed. ”Certainly, it is important to limit the violence at the holy sites, but in the long-term it makes sense allowing entry for everyone equally, Jews and Muslims alike.”

Meanwhile, the Israeli Police said on Sunday that they arrested 20 residents of eastern Jerusalem over the last two weeks accused of inciting and supporting terror.

“From past experience, there are those who want to use the month of Ramadan to spread rumors and ‘fake news,’ while publishing a distorted version of reality on social networks,” the police said in a statement. “Among them are terrorist organizations and terrorist elements, who take advantage of the holiday to incite and spread false information regarding the reality in Jerusalem, the Old City and in particular the Temple Mount.”

The Temple Mount, where the First and Second Jewish Temples were built, is the overall holiest site in Judaism. The Western Wall is the only remnant of a retaining wall encircling the Temple Mount built by Herod the Great in the first century and is the holiest site where Jews can freely pray.

Rabbis are increasingly divided over Jews ascending to the Temple Mount. For centuries, the widespread rabbinic consensus was that the laws of ritual purity still apply to the site. But in recent years, a growing number of rabbis have argued that ritual purity laws don’t apply to all sections of the Temple Mount and encourage visits to permitted areas to maintain Jewish connections to the Mount.

The delicate status quo governing the Temple Mount goes back to 1967, when Israel liberated the Old City of Jerusalem from Jordan during the Six Day War. Fearing a religious war, then-defense minister Moshe Dayan agreed to let the Islamic Waqf, a Muslim trusteeship, continue managing the holy site’s day-to-day affairs, while Israel would maintain overall sovereignty and be responsible for security. The Waqf is overseen by Jordan.

According to the status quo, Jews and non-Muslims would be allowed to visit the Temple Mount, but not pray there.

According to figures released by Beyadenu, 50,098 Jews visited the Temple Mount in 2023, a dip from the record-breaking 51,483 Jewish visits in 2022.

Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks zt”l – God’s Shadow VAYAKHEL • 5771 5784

In Vayakhel we meet, for the second time, the man who became the symbol of the artist in Judaism, a man by the name of Betzalel.

Then Moses said to the Israelites, “Know that the Lord has chosen Betzalel son of Uri, the son of Hur, of the tribe of Judah, and has filled him with a Divine spirit of wisdom, understanding, and knowledge in every craft, to make artistic designs for work in gold, silver, and bronze, as well as cutting stones for setting, carving wood, engaging in every other craft. He has also given him the ability to teach others, together with Oholiav, son of Achisamach of the tribe of Dan. He has filled them with the skill to do all kinds of work as engravers, designers, embroiderers in sky-blue, purple, or scarlet wool or fine linen, and as weavers. They will be able to carry out all the necessary work and design.

Ex. 35:30-35

It would be Betzalel (together with Ohaliab) who would make the Tabernacle and its furnishings and be celebrated through the centuries as the inspired craftsman who used his skills for the greater glory of God.

The aesthetic dimension of Judaism has tended to be downplayed, at least until the modern era, for obvious reasons. The Israelites worshipped the invisible God who transcended the universe. Other than the human person, God has no image. Even when He revealed Himself to the people at Sinai:

“You heard the sound of words but saw no image; there was only a Voice.”

Deut. 4:12

Given the intense connection – until around the eighteenth century – between art and religion, image-making was seen as potentially idolatrous. Hence the second of the Ten Commandments:

“Do not make for yourself any carved image or likeness of in the form of any creature in heaven above or the earth beneath or in the waters below.”

Ex. 20:4

This concern continued long after the biblical era. The Greeks, who achieved unrivalled excellence in the visual arts, were, in the religious sphere, still a pagan people of myth and mystery, while the Romans had a disturbing tendency to turn Caesars into gods and erect statues to them.

However, the visual dimension was not wholly missing from Judaism. There are visible symbols, like tzitzit and tefillin. There is, according to the Sages, a meta-mitzvah known as hiddur mitzvah – “beautifying the command” – to try to ensure that all objects used in the performance of a command are as beautiful as possible.

The most significant intrusion of the aesthetic dimension was the in Tabernacle itself, its framework and hangings, its furniture, the cherubim above the ark, the menorah, and the vestments of the priests and the High Priest, lekavod uletifaret, “for dignity and beauty” (Ex. 28:2).

Maimonides in The Guide for the Perplexed (III:45) says that most people are influenced by aesthetic considerations, which is why the Sanctuary was designed to inspire admiration and awe; why a continual light burned there; why the priestly robes were so impressive; why there was music in the form of the Levitical choir; and why incense was burned to cover the smell of the sacrifices.

Maimonides himself, in the work known as The Eight Chapters – the introduction to his commentary on Mishnah Avot – speaks about the therapeutic power of beauty and its importance in counteracting depression:

Someone afflicted with melancholy may dispel it by listening to music and various kinds of song, by strolling in gardens, by experiencing beautiful buildings, by associating with beautiful pictures, and similar sorts of things that broaden the soul…

The Eight Chapters, chapter 5

Art, in short, is balm to the soul. In modern times, the thinker who spoke most eloquently about aesthetics was Rav Kook. In his Commentary to the Siddur, he wrote:

“Literature, painting, and sculpture give material expression to all the spiritual concepts implanted in the depths of the human soul, and as long as even one single line hidden in the depth of the soul has not been given outward expression, it is the task of art [avodat ha-umanut] to bring it out.”

Olat Re-ayah, II, 3

Evidently these remarks were considered controversial, so in later editions of the Commentary the phrase “Literature, painting, and sculpture” was removed and in its place was written, “Literature, its design and tapestry.”

The name Betzalel was adopted by the artist Boris Schatz for the School of Arts and Crafts he founded in Israel in 1906, and Rav Kook wrote a touching letter in support of its creation. He saw the renaissance of art in the Holy Land as a symbol of the regeneration of the Jewish People in its own land, landscape and birthplace. Judaism in the Diaspora, removed from a natural connection with its own historic environment, was inevitably cerebral and spiritual, “alienated.” Only in Israel would an authentic Jewish aesthetic emerge, strengthened by and in turn strengthening Jewish spirituality.

Perhaps the most moving of all remarks Rav Kook made about art came in the course of a conversation he had with a Jewish sculptor:

“When I lived in London I used to visit the National Gallery, and my favourite pictures were those of Rembrandt. I really think that Rembrandt was a tzaddik. Do you know that when I first saw Rembrandt’s works, they reminded me of the rabbinic statement about the creation of light?

We are told that when God created light [on the first day of Creation, as opposed to the natural light of the sun on the fourth day], it was so strong and pellucid that one could see from one end of the world to the other, but God was afraid that the wicked might abuse it. What did He do? He reserved that light for the righteous in the World to Come. But now and then there are great men who are blessed and privileged to see it. I think that Rembrandt was one of them, and the light in his pictures is the very light that God created on Genesis day.”[1]

I have often wondered what it was about Rembrandt’s paintings that so enthralled the Rav. Rembrandt lived in the Jewish quarter of Amsterdam, knew Jews and painted them, as well as painting many biblical scenes, though the closeness or otherwise of his connection with Jews has been the subject of controversy. Rav Kook’s admiration for the artist had, I suspect, nothing to do with this and everything to do with the light Rembrandt saw in the faces of ordinary people, without any attempt to beautify them. His work let us see the transcendental quality of the human, the only thing in the universe on which God set His image.

Art in Hebrew – omanut – has a semantic connection with emunah, “faith” or “faithfulness.” A true artist is faithful both to his materials and to the task, teaching us:

To see a world in a grain of sand,
And a heaven in a wild flower,
Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
And eternity in an hour.[2]

The name Betzalel means, “in the shadow of God.” Art is the shadow cast by the radiance of God that suffuses all things:

The world is charged with the grandeur of God.
It will flame out, like shining from shook foil.[3]

And as Goethe said: “Where there is much light, the shadow is deep.”[4] When art lets us see the wonder of creation as God’s work and the human person as God’s image, it becomes a powerful part of the religious life, with one proviso. The Greeks believed in the holiness of beauty. Jews believe in hadrat kodesh, the beauty of holiness: not art for art’s sake but art as a disclosure of the ultimate artistry of the Creator. That is how omanut enhances emunah, how art adds wonder to faith.


  1. Rav Avraham Kook, article in The Jewish Chronicle; London; 13 September 1935, p. 21.
  2. From Auguries of Innocence by William Blake.
  3. From God’s Grandeur by Gerard Manley Hopkins.
  4. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Götz von Berlichingen with the Iron Hand, translated by Walter Scott, London; 1799.

Dr. Mindy Boxer – What Japanese Acupuncture Can Do for You

If Acupuncture is new to you, you might not know that there are different forms of acupuncture. While Chinese acupuncture is a bit more mainstream here in the West, Japanese acupuncture is becoming renowned for its effectiveness.

Traditional Japanese acupuncture (which includes Meridian Therapy) is defined as “an imbalance in qi and blood flowing in the meridians which is considered to be the cause of disease.” The aim is to regulate the flow of both qi and blood.

Its roots are in Chinese acupuncture but there are some differences. Read on to learn what those are so you can see if Japanese acupuncture is right for you.

Needles

The first difference involves the types of needles used. Both Chinese and Japanese needles are often made from the highest grade surgical stainless steel, however Japanese needles are typically much finer than their Chinese counterparts. This is great news for patients who experience minimal pain or discomfort.

Depth

In the Japanese style of acupuncture, needles are inserted at a shallower depth than in Chinese acupuncture. This is due to a difference in philosophy as Chinese practitioners’ believer the body’s energy (or qi) is reached through deeper insertion and stimulation, where Japanese practitioners believe this same energy is found closer to the surface.

Tailored Treatment

Often, in Chinese acupuncture, a practitioner will place needles in certain channels of the body and leave them there for a desired amount of time, depending on what is being treated and the severity. The practitioner may leave the room and begin work on another patient.

However, in Japanese acupuncture, importance is placed on the correct dosage for each patient. What this means is that diagnostic indicators are constantly monitored to make sure the desired changes are occurring within the body. This means the practitioner is present and working with the patient for most of the session to make sure the desired outcome is achieved.

“Alive Points”

Perhaps the biggest difference between the two types of acupuncture is in the treatment of what Japanese acupuncturists term, “alive points.” Unlike Chinese acupuncture where a fixed anatomical location on the body is treated, Japanese practitioners will use palpation along the meridian to find an “alive point” requiring treatment.

Two Styles

There are two main styles of Japanese acupuncture. The Toyo Hari involves palpation of the pulse, stomach (Hara) and channels along certain areas of the body to determine what needs to be re-balanced. Then, gold, silver stainless steel and/or Moxa are used to stimulate the flow of energy at active or “alive” points on the body. Sometimes, with this style of Japanese acupuncture, there is no insertion of needles at all.

Manaka involves the use of polarity devices and magnets to stimulate deeper channels. This style is often helpful in treating liver conditions.

There are other different techniques used including contact needling, simple insertion, sparrow pecking (once the needle reaches a certain depth it is repeatedly moved up and down by a few millimeters), twisting, flicking, and electro acupuncture just to name a few.

If you are considering Japanese acupuncture, talk to me about your health goals. I can answer your questions and will do a full health history to determine the best course of treatment for you.   I have been practicing Japanese Sryle Acupuncture for over 25 years!

 

Dr. Mindy Boxer is a holistic practitioner who has grown into her specialties in an organic way. Understanding a range of disciplines allows her to integrate the wisdom of Ancient healing in combination with the most recent innovations in Scientific research. This dynamic blend has enabled Dr. Boxer to help patients in the prevention and treatment of disease for over 25 years.
At age 15, Dr. Boxer began her lifelong practice of Yoga & Meditation, read many Nutrition books, began Juicing her Vegetables, and explored and all Raw Diet.  Recognizing the importance of Nutrition in overall health, she earned her Ph.D. in 1986 in Nutrition and Human Behavior, providing her with a solid foundation to counsel and educate patients on how to attain health and vitality.
Her informative Lectures and appetizing Cooking Classes were the perfect forum to educate the community about the effects of food on Mood and Behavior, as well as in innovative ways to balance Body Chemistry in order to achieve overall well being.
Sensing a need to expand her training and understanding of the human body as a whole system, Dr. Boxer continued her studies in Acupuncture & Chinese Herbal Medicine,  and in 1993 earned a Masters Degree in Traditional Oriental Medicine. She is licensed by the Medical Board of the State of California in Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine and is also licensed by the National Certification Commission for Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine.
These diverse disciplines give Dr. Boxer a unique view of the human body and how to keep it functioning in an optimal manner. Her practice of Acupuncture, Chinese Herbs and Functional Nutrition have a profound effect on Hormonal balance, Rejuvenation, and Immune system enhancement.

Dr. Boxer has a particularly keen understanding of Women’s Health issues including Gynecological irregularity, PMS, Fertility, IUI & UVF support, Healthy Pregnancy & Delivery, and Menopausal issues. Her interest in the human body as a dynamic system has given her the understanding to deal with such problems as improper Digestion and elimination, Cancer Support, Allergies, back pain, tight neck and shoulders, carpal tunnel syndrome, respiratory distress, chronic fatigue, Insomnia, Stress, Anxiety and Depression.
She has also studied the art and science of Homeopathy, earning her Diplomate in Homeopathy from the Hahnemann College of Homeopathy in 1995. This allows her to treat the whole person — physically, mentally, emotionally.

Phyllis Shallman – America’s Financial Literacy Crisis By The Numbers

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America’s financial understanding is faltering, and the implications are concerning. It’s true that many people harbor the desire to manage their finances effectively. Still, the disturbing statistics paint a picture of a nation struggling with basic financial concepts and skills.

As the economic turmoil exacerbated by the pandemic continues, it’s essential to recognize the financial knowledge gaps that existed even before the crisis hit. Look at these alarming figures to truly grasp America’s financial literacy challenges.

Financial Anxiety Consumes 56% of Adults

A chilling revelation by a 2022 FINRA study: more than half of adults become anxious even thinking about their finances. Alarmingly, 42% are consumed by financial thoughts daily. The most distressed? Young adults aged 18-34, with 69% experiencing high levels of financial stress.

Source: https://finrafoundation.org/sites/finrafoundation/files/NFCS-Report-Fifth-Edition-July-2022.pdf

An Emergency Fund? 22% of Americans Don’t Have One

Less than half of the U.S. population can cover three months of expenses. This grim stat underscores the weakness of many Americans’ financial standing. With no emergency savings, a single unforeseen cost could spell disaster.

Source: https://www.bankrate.com/banking/savings/emergency-savings-report/

A Staggering 61% of Americans are Living Paycheck to Paycheck

LendingClub’s 2023 report drives home a sobering truth: most Americans are trapped in a cycle of barely making ends meet, with no safety net in sight.

Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2023/07/31/61percent-of-americans-live-paycheck-to-paycheck-even-as-inflation-cools.html

Budgeting Practices: 74% Adhere, But 16% Overshoot Regularly

While most Americans maintain and abide by a budget, the 16% that consistently exceed their limits raises concerns about financial discipline and its long-term ramifications.

Source: https://www.nerdwallet.com/article/finance/data-2023-budgeting-report#:~:text=Nearly

Financial Literacy? 52% of Youths (15-18) Can’t Pass the Test

A troubling testament to the state of financial education among youth is that over half cannot pass a basic financial literacy test intended for their age group.

Source: https://www.financialeducatorscouncil.org/national-financial-literacy-test/

Most States Receive a Failing Grade for High School Financial Education

In a glaring disparity, 35 states were slapped with C, D, or F grades for their financial literacy education in high schools. While there’s a push for improved standards, we’ve yet to see universal adoption of essential financial coursework.

Source: https://www.thenationsreportcard.org/

Debt’s Stranglehold: 90% of Millennials Are Under Its Weight

With the student loan debt skyrocketing to $1.75 trillion, 25% of millennials grapple with an average debt of $56,538. The weight of this financial obligation shapes their perception of financial success and challenges their future prospects.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/zackfriedman/2020/02/03/student-loan-debt-statistics/#53375034281f

Credit Card Debt: 60% of Adults Fell Victim in the Last Year

A record $1 trillion in credit card debt looms large, with young adults bearing the brunt. The vicious cycle of high interest and debt ensnares many, particularly those with delinquencies exceeding 90 days.

Source: https://www.cnn.com/2023/08/08/economy/us-household-credit-card-debt/index.html

The Elusive American Dream: 50% Face Homeownership Barriers

From soaring home prices and mortgage rates to insurmountable debts, half of American adults find homeownership – once a hallmark of the American dream – out of reach.

Source: https://credit.org/blog/the-top-4-barriers-to-homeownership/#

Retirement Security Eludes Many: Less Than 1 in 3 Are Confident

Shocking data reveals over 40% of those aged 55-64 have zero retirement savings. As the majority juggle immediate financial pressures, long-term retirement planning is compromised, leaving many in dire straits for their golden years.

Source: https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/personalfinance/retirement/2022/06/01/retirement-31-percent-expect-savings-to-last/50304673/

The raw numbers paint a bleak picture. America’s financial literacy is on shaky ground. The urgent need for sweeping changes in financial education and empowerment cannot be overstated. We must act now.

We stand at a critical juncture in our nation’s financial future. The numbers are more than just statistics—they’re a cry for help, echoing from every corner of America. From young adults just stepping into the world to senior citizens on the verge of retirement, financial distress is a common thread weaving through the fabric of our society. It’s not enough to acknowledge the problem; it’s time to confront it head-on.

This financial dilemma isn’t just an individual’s battle—it’s America’s collective challenge. When the majority of our populace is trapped in debt, living on the financial brink and unprepared for future uncertainties, it erodes the very foundation of our economy. How can a nation thrive when its people are drowning in economic uncertainty?

The call to action is clear. Financial institutions, schools, community organizations, and policymakers must rally together, championing a nationwide push for financial education.

WealthWave reimagines an America where financial literacy isn’t a privilege but a fundamental right.

A country where every individual, regardless of their socio-economic background, has the tools, knowledge, and resources to navigate the complexities of personal finance.

It’s more than just about numbers; it’s about reclaiming our financial freedom, securing our nation’s economic future, and passing on a legacy of fiscal responsibility to the next generation. We must rise to the occasion—failure is not an option. The future of our nation depends on it.

Delta Is Hiking Checked-Baggage Fees 17% Following Similar Moves By United And American

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In case you needed yet another incentive to cram all your travel items into a carry-on, Delta Airlines just boosted the cost of your first checked bag by 17%. The increase adds $5 to the previous, and not-exactly-insignificant, $30 fee for domestic flights.

Delta is the third major U.S. carrier to hike bag fees in the past several weeks. Its move follows similar increases that American Airlines and United Airlines announced in February, three days apart; those high fees themselves followed fee hikes by smaller carriers Alaska Airlines and JetBlue Airways. Major U.S. carriers often copy one another’s pricing changes, a move that behavior analysts sometimes refer to as herd instinct.

Delta said Tuesday that the first bag checked on a domestic flight will now incur a $35 fee. The charge for a second bag rose from $40 to $45.

Delta last raised bag fees for domestic flights in 2018. The airline said the increase will help it keep up with unspecified rising industry costs. Customers with status perks can still check their first bag for free; those with first class tickets can check two free bags.

Bag fees have become a dependable source of revenue for airlines since American introduced them in 2008, when jet fuel prices were surging. In 2022, the last full year for which statistics are available, U.S. airlines took in $6.8 billion in checked-bag fees, led by American at $1.4 billion and United at $1.1 billion. Delta was in third place with $979.4 million.

(AP)

Source: The Yeshiva World

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