Concise Preface

The Seder

A Kaddish

Father's Final Kabballah

Adolf the Jew

The First Telling

My Mother

Questioning

My Jesuit Training

Rabbi's Role

The Wicked Son

The Wise Son

Enter the Promised Land

Letter to My Daughter

Letter to My Son

The ALPERN Seders

Letter to My Son 2

Letter to My Son 3

In Prison With Adolf

The Binding of Isaac's Anxiety

Isaac Unbound

See Isaac Run

Letter to My Son Joseph Israel

Just Say Yes to Questioning,

Question and define the terms of existence.

The beginning of wisdom is fear of the pat answer.

Question.

Are you a democrat or republican?

Conservative or liberal?

Are you able to define Life? Liberty? Happiness?

If we define our state of being by religion, how do we separate this from our politics?

The format of an answer to the above follows this poem:

Either/or
In an old desk drawer.

I believe in democracy so I am a democrat.

I believe in the Republic, with liberty and justice for all, so I am a Republican.

I believe in conserving all that is essential from the past, making me a conservative; and I accept the notion of progress, making me a liberal.

Discernment means moving beyond either/or thinking. The path of the golden mean runs in the middle of extremes.

A question remains.

How do we choose that which is right? The question is loaded. Is right right and left wrong? We have no concept of leftousness. Right? Wisdom is found in every question.

Are you a libertarian or libertine?

Words and what they mean are the building blocks of thinking.

When you advocate liberty you are a libertarian. If your liberty is a license to indulge, you are a libertine.

May we sanction the pursuit of happiness of a libertine?

Is truth self-evident? Are rights inalienable?

Again we ask, what is happiness?

One persons bliss is another’s boredom.

Is the Puritan heaven the libertine’s hell?

If liberty means the freedom to do actions that injure no one else, why have prohibitionists prevailed throughout our history, first with alcohol, and now with drugs?

Does the teaching of the greatest commandment that we are to love our neighbor as we love ourself teach an obligation to love yourself? The Talmud defines a righteous person as one who does not damage their neighbor in any way. Are we ethically and morally obligated to pass laws that we not harm ourselves?

Do laws defining suicide a crime prevent suicide? Is “Just say no to suicide” prevention? What substances require control so that we do no harm to ourselves? Is any “war” against drugs winnable? Should we pass laws limiting or outlawing martinis knowing some will drink too much and harm themselves and others? One person’s happiness is another’s addiction.

What are the terms of my moral universe?

Call me Democrat. Call me Republican. Call me Independent.

Call me Conservative when I know what laws to conserve.

Call me Liberal or Libertarian, for I know unwise laws lead to lawlessness, and that the war on drugs is unjust in concept and execution, and unwinnable.

Without the right questions answers are not to the point.

Wisdom is discovered in questioning.

Continue to My Jesuit Training

The R.E.A.L. - What Is This?

Concise Autobiography

Letter to Family

Comments

Dear Brother

As a child it was hard for me to understand dads roof shaking rage, from Adolf to Abraham to Adolf. Thank you for the insights. Did you know we were one of a hand full of families from Karlshrue Germany who survived Hitler?

Love, your sister, Jodine

Hebrew Text