Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Any takers?

Another Shas update:

The shas is now down to $500. Doesn't seem like there are any takers. I guess everyone else out there also has a barely used shas collecting dust at home.
LAST CHANCE FOR THE SHAS

drastically reduced to $500...
I'm waiting until he throws in a free, also barely used, set of chumashim.

Friday, May 26, 2006

Eager Beaver

Update to previous post.

This was in today's e-mail:
BH a lot of people have responded and requested pictures. I am dropping the price to $550. First come first serve.
Wow. He's really eager to dump this set.

Eager Beaver

Update to previous post.

This was in today's e-mail:
BH a lot of people have responded and requested pictures. I am dropping the price to $550. First come first serve.
Wow. He's really eager to dump this set.

Eager Beaver

Update to previous post.

This was in today's e-mail:
BH a lot of people have responded and requested pictures. I am dropping the price to $550. First come first serve.
Wow. He's really eager to dump this set.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

At least he's honest

Once again the local e-mail list provides a little laugh.
Shas for Sale
I have a beautiful set for sale. It was bought as a gift 5 years back, and was NEVER used. All volumes are in perfect condition. Perfect for a chosson shas.
No indication if this was a first or second set, but if it was the first, I suspect we have a disppointed father-in-law somewhere. I hope he doesn't subscribe to this list.

Thursday, May 18, 2006

Kids - Laugh or Cry?


You gotta love 3 year olds. This was posted on our community e-mail distribution list and it just cracked me up.
Hello. If you shopped at Brachs Wednesday night after 7PM, PLEASE check your grocery bags. It is very possible that my 3 year old put my keys in your cart. If you find them, I will be soo grateful.
I think every one of us can come up with a story or two about their child totally screwing them over, and yet, when you think back you just laugh. I remember how my son once locked the babysitter out of the house. She was hysterical and tried kicking in the back door (which I ultimately had to replace). Eventually the neighbor used his 20 foor ladder to climb into the 2nd floor.

Let's hear your stories.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Lag B'Omer Mini-Meme

I've been tagged by Orthomom & Still Wonderin' with the latest meme. While I didn't really 'actively' listen to music during sefirah (only talk-radio in the car, no mp3 player...), I didn't run away from it either. Here at the office we're all pretty much on top of each other and there's always music playing on someone's PC, so my first 'muttar music' would have been Tuesday night at the Aish Kodesh Hillula.

I don't remember which was the first song I heard since when I showed up, the Rabbi was speaking, I was squished and stuck on my feet and it was BOILING hot; I was just relieved the speech was over and I could move around again. Suffice it to say that the music performers were Eitan Katz and Nochie Krohn and everything they played was absolutely awesome. It also didn't hurt that the crowd rocked too.

So I can't remember what song it was, but it was Jewish, it was live and it rocked.

Friday, May 12, 2006

Uh oh




















I realize that the 5-Towns is the in-place for rebbe's to visit, but are the 5-Towns now officially 'Zalmi's"? Should we now expect to see the Aaroni camp pitch a tent on Central Avenue next Shabbos? Do we need to hire extra security, put away our fire extinguishers?

A concerned citizen wants to know.

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Go East young man

Seems that the Onion may not be so sarcastic after all. A couple of posts back I posted an article spoofing the current immigrant 'crisis', "Illegal Immigrants Returning to Mexico For American Jobs". I thought it was a funny read (judging from comments around here lately, it seems I'm the only one who thought so). Now I just came across an article on MSNBC that shows just how on the mark the Onion really is.

Americans make reverse commute — to India
Cutting-edge jobs, early-career experience draw the tech-savvy

BANGALORE, India - Nate Linkon graduated from college last year with a business degree and a lot of offers. But he made an unusual choice: to pack his bags and move 9,000 miles away from corporate America to Bangalore. In his view, there’s no better place to beef up his résumé — even though the pay is much lower.

“Yeah, I kind of look at it like a career trajectory,” said Linkon, 22, of Milwaukee. “You do this and you set yourself up for bigger things than you would making four times what I make now in Chicago or New York.”

U.S. companies have been sending jobs overseas for years — 130,000 already in 2006, according to Forrester Research, which analyzes the technology market. It projects that the number will rise to more than 3.5 million by 2015.

But now there’s a twist — U.S. workers are taking jobs in India for what they see as a long-term investment in their future. And Indian companies are recruiting them.

A mutually beneficial arrangement

“We don’t think doing things in India is a loss to the U.S.,” said N.R. Narayana Murthy, co-founder and chairman of Infosys Technologies Ltd., an industry leader in outsourced software services. Nor, he said, does he think doing things in the United States is a loss for India. Almost two-thirds of Infosys’ revenue is generated in the U.S. market.

Murthy, 59, is lobbying students at the Stanford Business School, where he is a member of the advisory council, to come east — way east — to Bangalore, India’s Silicon Valley. With its Microsoft-like campus, Infosys provides support to big U.S. companies like Best Buy, Circuit City and even Microsoft. (Microsoft is a parent company of MSNBC.com.)

“To add significant value to corporations from a country like India is an exciting opportunity,” Murthy said, “and to be part of that opportunity is one of a kind.”

Infosys’ profits are three times those of its U.S. competitors. One of the main reasons is salaries. The employees here — the software engineers — make about a quarter of the salary of someone doing the same job in the United States.

Still, a growing number of Americans are looking to Bangalore, where their money goes a lot further. This summer, 100 new U.S. graduates will start as full-time engineers at Infosys, with 200 more to arrive by the end of the year, part of a total staff expansion the company projects to top 50 percent this year.

Like Linkon, they are willing to take lower pay to get the hands-on experience they believe will make them more marketable when they return to a job in the United States.

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Rabbis get woman-free flight


Niiice. Why does reading this article give me the creeps? And why is it that every trip by the "Leading Gedolei Yisroel" needs to be 'historic'?? If I recall correctly, R' Steiman was here just a few years ago (and I have a commemorative picture to prove it).

Let me get this straight. Strings were pulled and there will be no female stewardesses on the flight. They also purchased every seat in the first class section in order to prevent any women from sitting in the same section. Yet one item on their agenda will be to "raise funds for married yeshiva students...". How many students could have used the thousands of dollars spent on first-class-female-prevention?? How do I know that any funds I donate will not be used on further silly expenses like mechitzah's on all airplanes? How do they know that none of these stewardesses have a husband in kollel they need to support? (Ok, I admit that was a little tongue-in-cheek.) I really loved the touch of the private jet too. I realize it was probably donated, but still. What's the image being projected here?
"The journey has been exciting the ultra-Orthodox public for six months as it involves the rare cooperation of the two spiritual leaders. "
Yeah. There's a point we want to point out. We normally don't get along, but now we going together. Historic!

I realize that these are gedolei yisrael and require respect, In fact, I'd put my money on the fact that they had nothing to do with it but it was their 'aids' and askanim that choreographed this spectacle. As time goes on and I see more and more silliness, I just don't know what to think.

Two leading rabbis buy all first class tickets, ask El Al to only post male stewards on flight so they do not have to see women on way to America
Haim Levinson at ynet news

A modest first class flight:
Two leading rabbis set to fly to the United States concluded an agreement with El Al that would see them enjoy a woman-free and movie-free flight.

The Gerrer Rebbe, a Hassidic leader who will fly abroad on Sunday, asked El Al that no air stewardesses be aboard the flight.


El Al complied with the rabbi's request and on Sunday's flight to the
United States only males will look after passengers.

The Gerrer Rebbe and Rabbi Aharon Leib Steinman, 93, another leading rabbi, will fly in a historic journey to visit American Jewish communities.


The journey has been exciting the ultra-Orthodox public for six months as it involves the rare cooperation of the two spiritual leaders.


During the visit the rabbis will seek to raise funds for married yeshiva students attending advanced Judaic studies programs.


United Torah Judaism enlisted its six MKs to bid goodbye to the two leaders at
Ben-Gurion International Airport on Sunday.

The rabbis will land in Los Angles where the Jewish community is eagerly awaiting their arrival. The rabbis will visit Jewish communities along the west coast.


The visit's highlight is an event that will be attended by 10,000 people. A private jet will fly the rabbis to
Montreal and Toronto.

The Gerrer Rebbe will fly to
Israel from Canada, while Steinman will visit Central and South America before returning to Israel.

The rabbis asked that the flight from
Israel adhere to the strictest standards of modesty. Their aides agreed with El Al officials that they will not have to see women during flight.

The rabbis bought all first class tickets on the flight to make sure no businesswomen are on board.


It was also decided that no films will be screened during the flight. Moreover, the backs of first class seats will be covered with plastic so that the rabbis won't even have to see the television screens.


Responding to the report, El Al said: "We do not report on our costumers out of respect for their privacy."
(Hat-Tip)

Monday, May 08, 2006

Like father like son?





We have a new budding blogstar! MoC's son, or MoC Jr. has entered the blogsphere with a great post "These are the People in the Mikveh Neighborhood". He's obviously inherited his dad's sarcasm and passion for acronym's. The question is, can he ride? We look forward to seeing more.



Thursday, May 04, 2006

Illegal Immigrants Returning To Mexico For American Jobs

Courtesy of the Onion. Friggin' halarious

Illegal Immigrants Returning To Mexico For American Jobs

MEXICO CITY—As dozens of major American corporations continue to move their manufacturing operations to Mexico, waves of job-seeking Mexican immigrants to the United States have begun making the deadly journey back across the border in search of better-paying Mexican-based American jobs.

"I came to this country seeking the job I sought when I first left this country," said Anuncio Reyes, 22, an undocumented worker who recrossed the U.S. border into Mexico last month, three years after leaving Mexico for the United States to work as an agricultural day laborer. "I spent everything I had to get back here. Yes, it was dangerous, and I miss my home. But as much as I love America, I have to go where the best American jobs are."

Reyes now works as a spot-welder on the assembly line of a Maytag large-appliance plant and earns $22 a day, most of which he sends back to his family in the U.S., who in turn send a portion of that back to the original family they left in Mexico. Like many former Mexican-Americans forced by circumstance to become American-Mexicans, Reyes dreams of one day bringing his relatives to Mexico so that they, too, may secure American employment in Mexico.

Despite the considerable risk illegal immigrants face in returning across the border, many find the lure of large U.S. factory salaries hard to resist—at 15 percent of the pay of corresponding jobs in America, these positions pay three times what Mexican jobs do.

Still, the danger is very real. When 31-year-old illegal Arizona resident Ignacio Jimenez sought employment at an American plant in Mexico, he was shot at by Mexican border guards as he attempted to illegally enter the country of his citizenship, pursued by U.S. immigration officials who thought he might be entering the country illegally, and fired upon again by a second group of U.S. Border Patrol agents charged with keeping valuable table-busing and food-delivery personnel inside American borders.

"It was a nightmare," Jimenez said. "Many became disoriented and panicked, and some were mixed in with immigrants going the other way across the Rio Grande and ended up swimming to the wrong country."

He added: "My cousin almost drowned. They fished him out and sent him back to wash dishes at T.G.I. Friday's."

Many say the trip across the border as illegal Mexican-American emigrants offers them a chance to land the American jobs in Mexico they never have been able to get as illegal Mexican-American immigrants in the U.S.

"It has always been my goal to have a good American job," Johnson Controls technician Camilla Torres, 27, said. "Many Mexicans now see Mexico as the land of opportunity. Mexicans will not stop trying to get here, no matter how much the Mexicans wish we would not."

Indeed, the trend of illegal re-emigration is causing great resentment among the local Mexican population, and tension between Mexicans and illegally re-entered Mexicans—dubbed repatriados—continues to build.

"I hate these Mexicans, always coming back here to Mexico from America and taking American jobs from the Mexicans who stayed in Mexico," said 55-year-old former Goodyear factory manager Juan-Miguel Diaz, who lost his job to a better-trained repatriado last March. "Why don't they go back to where they went to?"

Still, Jimenez, Reyes, and hundreds of others say they have no choice.

"The American Dream is alive and well in Mexico," Reyes said. "If I work hard, save my money, and plan well, I will be able to send my children to a good school—and who knows? If they study hard, perhaps they will get jobs someday at the new plant General Motors is building in China."

Monday, May 01, 2006

Matisyahu

This is funny. (Hat tip Life of Rubin)

Reminds me of something that happened to me a couple of weeks ago. I was getting off the subway when a group of African American 'Yout's' get on. They're in mid-conversation and one of them goes:

"...and you know who's really good? You know that Jamaican guy? No wait, he not really Jamican. He's like JEWISH Jamaican. You know that guy?..."

Heshy who??

So Heshy's gone and it seems no one's really noticed. A shame, he was really entertaining. Maybe I'll go over for a Shabbos meal one day.

I have one request Heshy: rather than "smash your $ 3,000 toy (presumably your computer) at your next BBQ party", can't you just donate it to me??