Monday, 17 February 2014

Why are the Israelis so Damn Happy?




A new study shows them to be among the most contented in the Western world. What gives? 


By now everyone in Israel has read the results of the study published earlier this month that showed Israelis ranked among the happiest people among the Western nations, despite an extensive laundry list of problems in their country.
Israel ranked low in terms of income, housing, education and security for example—all things we would typical associate with contentment. As an Asian-American who hails from San Francisco, I could add a few of my own complaints to the list: lack of ethnic food, the outrageous cost of imported goods, the raging summer heat, the marginalization of minorities and refugees, and the famous Israeli frankness that has me constantly fielding questions about why I pay so much for my apartment and my (ever so subtle) fluctuation in weight (Up or down? Eating cakes or working out?), chief among them.


So then why—if they probably can't find a job or afford the apartment that they live in—are Israelis so damn happy?
War has quite a bit to do with it.
The fact is that Israel has been in a perpetual state of war—or under the threat of war—since David Ben-Gurion declared independence in May 1948, the only Western country in the world in which this is the case.


Even during periods of "peace," there still seems to exist, at a minimum, a potential intifada brewing in the West Bank, or chemical weapons making their way into the hands of Hezbollah, or rockets being lobbed into the country fromGaza.
And this has created a fascinating psychological paradox, one that has been studied extensively by Professor Zahava Solomon of Tel Aviv University. On one hand, as she told me in a recent phone interview, the culture of conflict has made Israelis constantly aware of their potential demise; on the other it has made them virtually fearless.
Think about it. 
How would you act if you woke up every morning thinking that this day could be your last? Or at least took a moment to imagine how you would be eulogized at your funeral? (An exercise that Stephen Covey recommended in his wildly popular “Seven Habits of Highly Effective People,” although admittedly “live in a war zone” did not make the list.)

The point is this: you'd enjoy the day you had.
 And if you continued to survive until the next morning, this daily exercise might develop into a mantra for how you lived your life. And you might bother to take that beach day, or spend more time with your family. You might grow a pair and launch that startup you've been thinking about (Boom: Silicon Wadi) or stop a beautiful woman on the street and insist that she have lunch with you, or park on the sidewalk if there was no other parking within a five-block radius. You might climb a mountain, or go scuba diving or backpack in South America for a year. All things that Israelis do in droves, and that, in my opinion, probably lead to a more fulfilling existence.


Why—if they probably can't find a job or afford the apartment that they live in—are Israelis so damn happy?
This brings us to the second part of the paradox: Israelis have a lot to fear. And so they've learned to fear nothing.
 A study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association suggests that Israelis recover from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) more quickly than people of other Western nations. The study compared people who experienced 18 months of terror during the Second Intifada to New Yorkers after 9/11 and found that the amount of PTSD in Israel was similar to New York immediately following the collapse of the Twin Towers. However, one and two months after the attack, PTSD was significantly higher in the U.S. than it was during the Second Intifada.
Several studies have repeatedly illustrated the rapid habituation to new conflicts by the Israeli public. And still other studies have consistently shown that while the level of anxiety in Israel is typically higher than other Western nations, the level of clinical anxiety remains very low, even during periods of immense violence.
So even though Israelis are painfully aware of the never-ending threats, they're also braver because of them. By experiencing more anxiety on a daily basis, they've become inoculated against bad things when they do occur, and habituate to them rapidly. They are able to function in spite of them. 

And if they have learned how to get on with life despite a credible threat of chemical warfare or irate threats coming out of Iran, it follows that they can probably deal well with housing and economic woes. Everything here is simply small potatoes in comparison.


Daily life in Tel Aviv is rife with examples of this: A dog bites another dog at the park. Maybe a little yelling ensues in the good Israeli way, but no one throws any punches or threatens to sue. Someone cuts in front of you in line at a chaotic grocery store on Friday afternoon. You grumble but let it pass. Apartment hunting on foot in 110 degrees all day? Should've worn layers. You can't get an office job out of the army so you wait tables for a few years? Nothing to be ashamed of.  


These experiences, I'm embarrassed to admit, have the ability to frustrate me to the point that my day (or week, or month) is ruined. And part of the struggle living here is that they often do. But to an Israeli, my thinking about these things one minute after they happen seems like overhyped drama.


And this tough Israeli psyche doesn't just manifest itself within the die-hards who’ve lived here for decades, like my 86-year-old ex-paratrooper neighbor Fishkay, who was born in Israel and says, "Nothing scares me" with such a stone-cold expression on his weathered face that you truly believe him.
 Even young people who had never experienced conflict before this last scuffle in November handled it better than I did.
I crumpled into a ball in the rocket-proof hallway of my Tel Aviv apartment building and sobbed into my dog’s fur. (Unfortunately Fishkay was on hand to witness the whole humiliating display.) 

“Why aren’t they scared?” my American friends and I uttered to each other in disbelief for the entire duration of Operation Pillar of Defense.


Being raised in Israel lends to a unique mental capacity for overcoming hardship that is unlike any other Western country in the world, a mindset which, if you’re living in a place where it's tough to find a job or pay your rent and people regularly threaten to wipe you off the map, could come in pretty darn handy.

So where does that leave me? A non-Jew who doesn't identify with the historic narrative of persecution; a non-Israeli who is unaccustomed to living under the threat of war; and an American that has come to “expect more and pay less” like the Target slogan so succinctly proclaims?


Like everyone else in this country I’ll either have to adapt and be happy or get out. And in true Israeli fashion, I'm sure the locals will be cool with it either way.

Why are the Israelis so Damn Happy?

A new study shows them to be among the most contented in the Western world. What gives?
By now everyone in Israel has read the results of the study published earlier this month that showed Israelis ranked among the happiest people among the Western nations, despite an extensive laundry list of problems in their country.
Israel ranked low in terms of income, housing, education and security for example—all things we would typical associate with contentment. As an Asian-American who hails from San Francisco, I could add a few of my own complaints to the list: lack of ethnic food, the outrageous cost of imported goods, the raging summer heat, the marginalization of minorities and refugees, and the famous Israeli frankness that has me constantly fielding questions about why I pay so much for my apartment and my (ever so subtle) fluctuation in weight (Up or down? Eating cakes or working out?), chief among them.


So then why—if they probably can't find a job or afford the apartment that they live in—are Israelis so damn happy?
War has quite a bit to do with it.
The fact is that Israel has been in a perpetual state of war—or under the threat of war—since David Ben-Gurion declared independence in May 1948, the only Western country in the world in which this is the case.


Even during periods of "peace," there still seems to exist, at a minimum, a potential intifada brewing in the West Bank, or chemical weapons making their way into the hands of Hezbollah, or rockets being lobbed into the country fromGaza.
And this has created a fascinating psychological paradox, one that has been studied extensively by Professor Zahava Solomon of Tel Aviv University. On one hand, as she told me in a recent phone interview, the culture of conflict has made Israelis constantly aware of their potential demise; on the other it has made them virtually fearless.
Think about it. 
How would you act if you woke up every morning thinking that this day could be your last? Or at least took a moment to imagine how you would be eulogized at your funeral? (An exercise that Stephen Covey recommended in his wildly popular “Seven Habits of Highly Effective People,” although admittedly “live in a war zone” did not make the list.)

The point is this: you'd enjoy the day you had.
 And if you continued to survive until the next morning, this daily exercise might develop into a mantra for how you lived your life. And you might bother to take that beach day, or spend more time with your family. You might grow a pair and launch that startup you've been thinking about (Boom: Silicon Wadi) or stop a beautiful woman on the street and insist that she have lunch with you, or park on the sidewalk if there was no other parking within a five-block radius. You might climb a mountain, or go scuba diving or backpack in South America for a year. All things that Israelis do in droves, and that, in my opinion, probably lead to a more fulfilling existence.


Why—if they probably can't find a job or afford the apartment that they live in—are Israelis so damn happy?
This brings us to the second part of the paradox: Israelis have a lot to fear. And so they've learned to fear nothing.
 A study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association suggests that Israelis recover from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) more quickly than people of other Western nations. The study compared people who experienced 18 months of terror during the Second Intifada to New Yorkers after 9/11 and found that the amount of PTSD in Israel was similar to New York immediately following the collapse of the Twin Towers. However, one and two months after the attack, PTSD was significantly higher in the U.S. than it was during the Second Intifada.
Several studies have repeatedly illustrated the rapid habituation to new conflicts by the Israeli public. And still other studies have consistently shown that while the level of anxiety in Israel is typically higher than other Western nations, the level of clinical anxiety remains very low, even during periods of immense violence.
So even though Israelis are painfully aware of the never-ending threats, they're also braver because of them. By experiencing more anxiety on a daily basis, they've become inoculated against bad things when they do occur, and habituate to them rapidly. They are able to function in spite of them. 

And if they have learned how to get on with life despite a credible threat of chemical warfare or irate threats coming out of Iran, it follows that they can probably deal well with housing and economic woes. Everything here is simply small potatoes in comparison.


Daily life in Tel Aviv is rife with examples of this: A dog bites another dog at the park. Maybe a little yelling ensues in the good Israeli way, but no one throws any punches or threatens to sue. Someone cuts in front of you in line at a chaotic grocery store on Friday afternoon. You grumble but let it pass. Apartment hunting on foot in 110 degrees all day? Should've worn layers. You can't get an office job out of the army so you wait tables for a few years? Nothing to be ashamed of.  


These experiences, I'm embarrassed to admit, have the ability to frustrate me to the point that my day (or week, or month) is ruined. And part of the struggle living here is that they often do. But to an Israeli, my thinking about these things one minute after they happen seems like overhyped drama.


And this tough Israeli psyche doesn't just manifest itself within the die-hards who’ve lived here for decades, like my 86-year-old ex-paratrooper neighbor Fishkay, who was born in Israel and says, "Nothing scares me" with such a stone-cold expression on his weathered face that you truly believe him.
 Even young people who had never experienced conflict before this last scuffle in November handled it better than I did.
I crumpled into a ball in the rocket-proof hallway of my Tel Aviv apartment building and sobbed into my dog’s fur. (Unfortunately Fishkay was on hand to witness the whole humiliating display.) 

“Why aren’t they scared?” my American friends and I uttered to each other in disbelief for the entire duration of Operation Pillar of Defense.


Being raised in Israel lends to a unique mental capacity for overcoming hardship that is unlike any other Western country in the world, a mindset which, if you’re living in a place where it's tough to find a job or pay your rent and people regularly threaten to wipe you off the map, could come in pretty darn handy.

So where does that leave me? A non-Jew who doesn't identify with the historic narrative of persecution; a non-Israeli who is unaccustomed to living under the threat of war; and an American that has come to “expect more and pay less” like the Target slogan so succinctly proclaims?


Like everyone else in this country I’ll either have to adapt and be happy or get out. And in true Israeli fashion, I'm sure the locals will be cool with it either way.

Netanyahu offers job to hot-mic UN translator who vented about NINE anti-Israel resolutions despite 'bad sh**' happening in other countries


A United Nations translator got egg on her face Thursday when a hot-mic caught her carping about a series of nine separate resolutions – 'It's a bit much, no?' she said – that sided with Palestinians in their conflict with Israel.
But by Sunday Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was offering her a job if she suddenly should need one.
The nameless and faceless woman abruptly stopped translating Spanish into English during an anti-Israel speech by Salvadoran diplomat Carlos Enrique García González, making what she thought were private comments to a colleague.
SCROLL DOWN FOR VIDEO
The UN General Assembly approved nine separate anti-Israel resolutions on Thursday, including one offered by El Salvador's Carlos Enrique García González
The UN General Assembly approved nine separate anti-Israel resolutions on Thursday, including one offered by El Salvador's Carlos Enrique García González
Lost in translation: The Spanish-to-English translator vented about the wealth of UN condemnations leveled to Israel instead of other countries, but she had no idea her microphone was open
Lost in translation: The Spanish-to-English translator vented about the wealth of UN condemnations leveled to Israel instead of other countries, but she had no idea her microphone was open
Even González had to stifle a laugh as the interpreter offered meek apologies
Even González had to stifle a laugh as the interpreter offered meek apologies
'I mean, I think when you have five statements – not five, like a total of ten resolutions on Israel and Palestine,' she's heard saying on a video feed, 'there's got to be something, c'est un peu trop, non? [It's a bit much, no?]'
'I mean, I know – there’s other really bad sh** happening' in other countries, she adds, 'but no one says anything about the other stuff.'
González, whose remarks were lost in translation, stifled a laugh while the meeting's secretary announced, 'I understand there was a problem with interpretation?'
Chuckles rang out through hall until the sheepish interpreter realized her commentary reached every delegate's headphones.
Is Bibi hiring? Netanyahu said the translator would have a job in Israel if she should find herself suddenly out of work
Is Bibi hiring? Netanyahu said the translator would have a job in Israel if she should find herself suddenly out of work
'Interpreter apologies,' she offered.
Netanyahu played the video clip during Sunday's weekly cabinet meeting, according to The Jerusalem Post.
'I hope nothing bad happens to the interpreter,' he said, 'but in order to remove all doubt I can say that a place of employment is assured her in Israel if things go in that direction.'
'Sometimes the veil of hypocrisy over the incessant attacks against us is ripped off, and this interpreter did that.'

CHUCKLES THE UN CLOWN

CHUCKLES THE UN CLOWN

Standard
PJ Talat's photo.
Anyone ever hear about Chuckles the Clown”?
“UN” apologizes for neglecting the murder of over 150,000 “?
1st: Why didn’t the UN send in CHUCKLES the UN clown to solve the problem in Syria ? When it comes to Israel the UN always sends CHUCKLES the CLOWN to condemn Israel?
So the equivalent of 10% of the entire population of Gaza gets killed in 2 years and the UN says ” OOOPS SORRY”?
Lets put things in CONTEXT! Since 1952 in all the wars between Arabs and Jews- that’s 62 years – there have been no more than 50,000 casualties which includes both Arabs and Jews combined!
Now lets break that down and add a little more CONTEXT: It would take 248 years of conflict between Arabs and Jews to do what Syria has done in 2 years!
Forget how the UN neglects the Genocide in Sudan – Black Muslims are killed by racist White Muslims led by President Bashir! Over 2000,000.
So here is the thing: The UN should have known to add at least another “nine resolutions ” against Israel in order to protest the genocide in Syria for a total of 18 in 2013.
Isn’t that why the UN was created? To lay all of the worlds troubles at the door step of the Jews?
That’s why the Jews are called the “CHOSEN PEOPLE”! They were chosen as the scape goats of the world- Israel is the worlds largest PINATA!
A United Nations translator got egg on her face Thursday when a hot-mic caught her carping about a series of nine separate resolutions – ‘It’s a bit much, no?’ she said –
‘I mean, I think when you have five statements – not five, like a total of ten resolutions on Israel and Palestine,’ she’s heard saying on a video feed, ‘there’s got to be something, c’est un peu trop, non? [It's a bit much, no?]‘
‘I mean, I know – there’s other really bad sh** happening’ in other countries, she adds, ‘but no one says anything about the other stuff.’
González, whose remarks were lost in translation, stifled a laugh while the meeting’s secretary announced, ‘I understand there was a problem with interpretation?’
“CHUCKLES ” rang out through hall until the sheepish interpreter realized her commentary reached every delegate’s headphones.”

Friday, 14 February 2014

Roy Freeman Can anyone please recommend a low-cost way to convert Euros into Shekels without paying huge amounts of commission?

Can anyone please recommend a low-cost way to convert Euros into Shekels without paying huge amounts of commission?

Tomer Hasson You go to old Tachana Mercazit, ( Old Bus Station) look for a guy wearing a black hat with te pink ostrich feather named Abu Simmons Ben  Acmid Muzarava Hajii. He will guide you to the basement - black door, underground level of an old 'falafel' shop which is now used as adult accessories wholesale outlet . You knock on the door exactly 10 times.2soft ,5 loud , 4 soft and then pound on the door until someone opens it.  Wait for 'the servant ' - he is an old Yamman y Parsi Yemenite guy with white beard and pinlk sidelocks You will need to give him 3.5 shekels . Give him a Benjamin Franklin . When he tells you he does have change for te $100 bill but if you come back on Rosh Chodesh Elul , you can get your change with interest and hatsmada ( according to the one used by the  " Honest Money Exchange Brokers association of Nablus "  . Always Trust a Parsi ( Iranian) Yemenite Jew .that top this list of the most likely people to rip of Ashkenazi's .. Tell him Joseph sent you. At the next corridor, third door on your right, after you turn left twice, and decend two floors down,there's a rose on the handle, room 55a. Svetlana the Virgin  will meed you, she has long red nails with black leather boots.If you touch her or she you by mistake be sure to wash your hands with HCL 25% . In Israel it is called Aish ( Fire)  Take the lash from her, and ask the guy laying on her service bed for 'action '.he always gives exact change. You give him the cash. Wait 3.5 min. Svetlana will make you Black Mud Coffee in the meantime. He will give you Deferred Russian Monopoly  Money and Laxerol Magnesium Hydroxide in return for drinking the coffee. Svetlana will direct you how to use the lash. FOLLOW HER PRECISE INSTRUCTIONS IN FULL!

On the wall, on your right, you will see a safe embedded to the floor. You tap it with the lash exactly 3 times ever 20 seconds for 3.12 minutes. do not tap to many times or too little .. you will ave to start again.if you do.. Once it opens, there will be a initation diamond ring there that you need to deliver to Mustafa bin 
Sheikh Ahmed Ismail Hassan Yassin  in Gaza City elite  in The Strip.
take it. AND DO NOT ASK ANY QUESTIONS.

When u get to downtown Gaza City the following day, u ask for Mustafa, do not show any signs of fear. Bring the lash. Tell him svetlana sent you. He will meet u will his daughter. You need to marry her.

After the marriage is over you transfer the EURO monies to your  common account. She will take it all and  give you can get Jordanian liras for it (no commission) .
Take the money and run for ur life if u still alive.The liras you can convert at any  bank in Mecca. Good luck. And DO NOT TELL ANYONE I TOLD YOU THIS.

May the force be with you.

Kim-Jonty Stephen Drus ( THe International Consultant to Harvards $47.8 Billion Alumni Fund) Go to one of the official Money Change Shops .... they don't charge commission and the rates they quote make them 1.25% less than banks .. the chappie in Shenkin will rip you off by giving you a lower rate of exchange.... pay the 1% ..." the shortest road is not always the quickest or the most cost effective"... with child maintenance for the 7 little Gazian's you will have during your failed marriage to Mustafa's daughter the l result iwit be that the Internal Rate of Return of the Deferred Derivative Currency Exchange from the serialisation of the Russian Money you will get for drink the Black Mud will makeTomer Hasson recommendation only slightly cheaper than what the Guy on Shenkin will offer you but still 11.42726 % cheaper than the Banks . . , . Here is a recent picture of Mustafa's daughter; Take this picture ... be sure to check that she has a Magen David 4.56 cms south of her third nipple.http://aradia.me/.../12/ap_muslim_women_nt_111213_wg1.jpgFatimahala Jehad " Kill all the Zionists" bit Mustafa bin Osama bin Mohammed bin Awad bin Laden Fatimahala is the eleventeenth one from the right in the picture wearing the red lace thong.and the Amy Wineglass Victoria Secret Black Bra with the sick green and purple polka dots straps. Be Well in Zion. Be Dead in Gaza