Showing posts with label Jewish ethics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jewish ethics. Show all posts

Thursday, June 19, 2025

In my last post on my secularized Jewish ethics project I proposed a pluralistic model where different communities, with different values, can fit under a Jewish ethical framework, 

But I am also trying to position Jewish ethics as a universal grammar where communities who have different values can intelligently debate each others' ideas. If a community defines their values radically differently than another, how can they respect each other when their values are radically different?

Stepping back, I realized that even the definition of "values" is not so clear. 

In Aristotelian virtue ethics, moral virtues include courage, wittiness and patience.  But are those values moral? A suicide bomber shows courage. A terrorist can show much patience while planning an attack. The best con artists are very witty.

Perhaps we need to distinguish between ethics and morality. Ethics, as I understand it, can be any self-consistent, cohesive decision making framework. That is why Marxism, revolutionary ethics and even Mafia codes of conduct are ethical - they are consistent and cohesive systems.

But they are not moral. 

Morality is an ethical system that is objectively good - that promotes human dignity, justice, and life, 

Aristotle's virtue ethics is certainly ethical - but it is not necessarily moral. His virtues are attributes that can be used for good or bad. Having those attributes does not make a person virtuous, in the sense that the word is used today.

So I would argue that those virtues are not real moral values.

Similarly, I excluded from my secular Jewish ethics framework ostensibly positive ideas like "peace" and "love." They may be nice sentiments, but they are not really actionable or practical as means to help a person make decisions. Sometimes war is necessary for peace and love can be manifested by sternness. 

So what, exactly, is a value?

Using Jewish thinking as my guide, I came up with this definition: 

A true moral value must result in an ethically meaningful transformation - of the self, of relationships, or of the world. If a claimed value does not catalyze change in alignment with structured moral responsibility, it is not a value at all.

Vague terms like "authenticity," "empowerment" and "strength" are not moral values because they are not tied to moral good. But beyond that, values must be tied to responsibility. 

Transformation is not enough. A moral value must also impose responsibility. That’s what distinguishes it from raw preference or sentiment.

In Jewish ethics, nearly every moral value is expressed through obligation:

  • Pikuach nefesh (preserving life) isn’t an ideal—it’s a duty to act.

  • Emet (truth) isn’t just being honest—it’s a binding obligation to seek and uphold truth, even when inconvenient.

  • Teshuvah (repentance) is moral not because it “feels right,” but because it transforms one into becoming a better person, which is in fact an obligation everyone has to themselves.

Even internal transformation counts—as long as it binds the self in covenantal responsibility. You are obligated to become someone better. That’s the core of teshuvah, repentance. Jewish ethics values not just what you do, but who you are becoming—and how that transformation enables you to better serve others.

This definition is important because we live in a time where moral language has become a weapon, Words like “freedom,” “equity,” or “justice” are invoked without serious definition, without structure, without accountability, and without clarity.

My framework offers a grammar - a set of criteria - to ask: 

  • Does this “value” produce ethical transformation?

  • Does it impose responsibility on someone to act or become better?

  • Is it embedded in a moral structure that prioritizes life, dignity, and justice?

If not, it’s not a moral value.

It might be a feeling, a branding strategy, or a political posture. But it is not morality.

It is interesting to read Rambam (Maimonides) as he describes Aristotelian values. He describes virtues and the golden mean, but he doesn't stop there - he ties these attributes to acting like God,  imitaio Dei.  They are not moral values without being connected to the source of all moral good. And of course Rambam's Mishneh Torah is oriented around real obligations - mitzvot - not cultivation of character traits. Those traits are precursors to action and positive transformational change.

It is not unreasonable to ask other systems to translate their values into this structure. We don’t have to demand conformity—but we can demand clarity. Maybe “rights” isn’t a value—but states and communities are obligated to protect dignity and freedom. That’s the translation. That’s the grammar.

The goal of ethics is not self-expression.
The goal of ethics is transformation for the good.

Everything else is commentary.




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Wednesday, June 18, 2025



We've already discussed the idea of community as an essential concept in building a moral society. A community can give people the incentive to act responsibly, as part of a covenant between them and others, in a practical and non-abstract way.

But community is also a pillar of a universal ethical system in another essential way. It can provide an answer to the basic philosophical  question of how to have an ethical system while respecting autonomy and pluralism.

Pluralism is not merely the reality of difference. It is the challenge of living with difference ethically. we live in a world where cultures, religions, and ideological tribes hold radically different views of right and wrong. We need a way to preserve those distinct ways of life without descending into either relativism or authoritarianism. 

Most modern ethical frameworks fail at this task. They either flatten all traditions into interchangeable preferences, or they impose a rigid universalism that denies communal identity.

Jewish ethics offers an alternative: a framework that honors the moral agency of communities while preserving universal ethical boundaries. 

Here's how it works: A community - whether religious, cultural, national, or ideological - may define obligations for its members. These obligations and priorities may, and inevitably will, not be identical to the triage rules and priorities we've defined in the Jewish ethical framework project. Each community will have its own customs, standards and priorities. But, crucially, these community standards must not violate what we've defined as the universal Tier 1 ethical values: life (Pikuach Nefesh), dignity (Kavod HaBriyot), communal responsibility (Areivut) and justice (Tzedek). These values serve as a kind of moral firewall: they do not dictate outcomes, but they delineate the space within which moral diversity can operate.

This boundary applies both across communities and within them. Communities are allowed to enforce internal norms, like rituals, roles, customs, so long as they do not cross the moral firewall. But they must also allow room for legitimate sub-communities or dissenting voices within. A community that demands total agreement and suppresses all variation ceases to be morally defensible. It cannot demand community autonomy while being intolerant of individual autonomy. It can provide communal pressure to conform, but it cannot coerce. Individuals who disagree with specific community standards but who do not want to secede from the community at large may create their own sub-communities: no one should be deprived of the enormous benefits of belonging to a community. 

In this model, "community"  is not a rigid, top-down unit. It is dynamic, overlapping, and contextual. Individuals are not members of a single moral collective - they inhabit many at once. A person may belong simultaneously to a religious community, a profession, a family, a nation, and a culture. Each of these may exert moral claims on them, and at times those claims will conflict.

This moral complexity does not have to result in chaos. It requires structure. This framework responds by offering a consistent process for evaluating competing communal obligations: one that begins by honoring community autonomy but draws clear boundaries around what communities may not do. A person who needs the Internet for work but does not want it in their home can navigate a solution to work from home with a minimum of violating community standards. We make these sorts of decisions every day; this system makes it easier to define the issues at stake and therefore to find the best solutions.

Critically, this framework does not prescribe coercive enforcement against communities that cross the line. It is not a court of law. Instead, it prescribes clarity: moral violations should be named, public accountability asserted, and complicity avoided. Intervention, if warranted, should be rare and proportional, focused on egregious harm, not normative difference. The goal is not control, but conscience and transparency. If a community can defend its own moral standards, let it - but it should use the universal grammar this framework provides so everyone can understand and debate the issues fairly and not talk past one another. 

In this way, Jewish ethics affirms that communities are the laboratories of moral diversity. But they are not moral kingdoms. Communities are responsible to their members, to each other, and to shared ethical values that apply across all communal lines.

Handling Conflict and Dissent

If individuals belong to multiple communities at once, then dissent is not only possible: it is inevitable. A person may find that their professional ethics contradict a religious expectation. Or that their national duty clashes with a communal norm. Or that their conscience diverges from a family tradition.

The question is not whether communities should have norms. They must. The question is how they treat those who live within them but do not fully conform.

A community that preserves dignity allows disagreement. It offers space for sub-communities to evolve, for members to question, and for roles to be negotiated. It does not resort to coercion, humiliation, or excommunication as the price of staying. Community identity is not brittle; it can stretch to accommodate diversity without losing integrity. And it invariably changes over time. 

This principle is deeply rooted in Jewish tradition. The Talmud records minority opinions with care. Prophets rebuke kings and priests in the name of justice. Halachic disputes remain preserved for future generations to study. The Jewish people has always contained internal plurality, not as a weakness but as a sign of moral seriousness. 

This universal ethical framework builds on this tradition. It asserts that a moral community is defined not just by what it expects of members, but by how it handles dissent. It allows communities to maintain standards - even strong ones - but only if they are enforced without degrading human dignity or suppressing moral conscience.

When internal dissent becomes widespread, it may catalyze a transformation. Sometimes a sub-community becomes the new center; sometimes the community divides into branches; sometimes it evolves. The framework does not fear this. It recognizes that ethical evolution, when conducted transparently and with respect for life, dignity, and justice, is not fragmentation. It is growth.

Belonging is not conditional on total agreement. It is conditional on mutual responsibility, respect, and an open structure of moral reasoning. A community that makes no room for principled difference is not a strong community. It is a brittle one.

In a world where individuals live in multiple moral spaces - between work and home, prayer and politics, culture and conscience - this system does not ask them to be morally seamless. It asks them to be morally honest. And it gives them the tools to weigh those obligations with integrity and with a clear ethical prism to navigate these different obligations. 

Case study: Modesty

Few communal norms are as emotionally charged as modesty. In many traditional societies, expectations around dress, behavior, and gender separation are seen as essential expressions of identity, reverence, or sanctity. For outsiders, however, these same norms can appear restrictive, coercive, or degrading.

This makes modesty an ideal case study for how to balance morality with pluralism. It is a genuine communal value, but one that frequently intersects with questions of autonomy, dignity, and inclusion. The question is not whether modesty can be a legitimate moral norm: it certainly can. The question is how it is taught, enforced, and negotiated.

The Jewish ethical system permits communities to uphold standards of modesty as internal expressions of sacred value. A house of worship may require covered shoulders; a school may have a dress code aligned with its ethos. These are legitimate within the boundaries of community autonomy.

But the moment modesty is used as a weapon - to shame, to exclude, to dominate - it crosses the line. A woman who wears red is not inviting exile. A man who wears jeans is not rejecting tradition. Enforcement that humiliates or silences violates human dignity, even if done in the name of religion.

Additionally, this distinction between universal dignity and community standards can help clarify even issues even within religious communities. Modesty is seen in religious communities as a means for protecting dignity, but each religious tradition also emphasizes human dignity as a separate standalone obligation. Modesty in principle can protect dignity, when it is enforced by using humiliation or public denigration as enforcement mechanisms, the claim to protect dignity becomes hypocritical. 

A community that values modesty must also uphold dignity. The tension between them is not a weakness in religious systems  - it is the essence of ethical judgment. This ethical framework provides a language and tools for competing values to be surfaced and debated even within communities, and it can act as a powerful tool against those who use religion to give themselves power.

Case study:  Polygamy and Child Marriage

Some of the hardest ethical tensions arise from ancient traditions that communities insist are normative. Marriage norms are one of the clearest examples. While Western liberal societies treat monogamy and adulthood as unquestioned prerequisites, other cultures maintain different traditions: polygamy, child marriage, and patriarchal household structures. 

Can these be morally acceptable under a pluralistic framework? Or are they violations in disguise?

The Jewish ethical framework does not begin by assuming that unfamiliar customs are wrong. But it also does not excuse serious harm just because it is wrapped in tradition. The key question is always the same: Does this structure uphold or undermine the top values of life, dignity, responsibility and justice?

Polygamy, for instance, is not inherently immoral. In certain historic or resource-scarce contexts, it may even have served a protective function. While it appears to Western eyes - correctly - as being difficult to implement fairly and with respect to all parties, it is certainly possible that the wives prefer this arrangement to alternatives available to them. But when polygamy becomes a tool of control, emotional harm, or coercion - especially toward women who have no say in the arrangement - it violates dignity and justice. Polygamy isn't the issue - it is the way power and choice are structured. 

The same principle applies to child marriage. A culture may claim that early marriage is traditional, or that it is voluntary. But if the girl lacks meaningful choice, access to education, or power to refuse, the practice violates justice and dignity, even if her community deems it normative. Consent must be real, not performative. Tradition cannot shield harm. As with polygamy, context is crucial:  a 20 year old forced into a marriage she is not prepared for is ethically more problematic than a physically and emotionally mature 16 year old who enthusiastically wants to get married to her beau.

Even well-meaning communities can uphold unjust structures without realizing it. Norms may be internalized. Roles may be reinforced by theology or law. But none of that excuses ethical evaluation. The moment a structure degrades dignity, suppresses justice, or risks life, it becomes subject to moral scrutiny, no matter how longstanding or sacred it may be.

That scrutiny does not require violence, sanctions, or conversion. It requires naming the harm, refusing to enable it, and supporting those who resist it. If a woman trapped in a coercive polygamous marriage seeks support, the ethical system demands she receive it. If a tradition silences dissent by invoking holiness, the ethical system must protect the dissenter.

The Jewish ethical framework we are presenting does not flatten cultures. It does not demand universal sameness. But it names injustice wherever it hides - even inside sacred institutions and even inside Jewish communities. 

Case study: Circumcision and female genital cutting

Of all culturally charged practices, bodily rituals involving children test the limits of ethical pluralism most acutely. Circumcision, celebrated in many Jewish and Muslim communities, is viewed by others as a violation of bodily autonomy. Female genital cutting (FGC), practiced in some parts of Africa and the Middle East, is widely condemned in liberal societies as inherently harmful. Can a pluralistic moral framework accommodate such practices? Where do we draw the line between tradition and harm, between identity and integrity?

This framework navigates this terrain. It does not begin by assuming that all bodily rituals are equal. Nor does it dismiss cultural meaning as irrelevant. Instead, it asks: Does the practice violate Tier 1 values? Does it degrade dignity, endanger life, or subvert justice? And how does consent factor into the picture, especially when the subject is a child?

Take male circumcision. In the Jewish tradition, it is not merely a custom but a covenantal act—one that links generations, sanctifies the body, and expresses belonging. Medically, it involves minor and well-studied risks, and the child typically suffers no long-term harm. While the child cannot consent, the act is framed by communal responsibility and love. Not to mention, most Jewish adults would prefer to have been circumcised when they were very young to making that choice in adulthood. In this framework, this is a case of legitimate intra-community practice. It may be questioned, but it does not clearly violate Tier 1 ethics.

Female genital cutting, by contrast, involves greater harm: pain, medical complications, long-term trauma, and reduced bodily function. Even where culturally accepted, it raises serious questions of coercion and silence.  The procedure typically aims not at covenant, but at controlling sexuality. In the Jewish ethical framework, this violates both dignity and justice. It may be culturally meaningful, but that meaning cannot outweigh the harm.

The distinction, then, is not purely anatomical. It is ethical. It rests on purpose, harm, agency, and context. A ritual that causes minor physical change for profound communal meaning may be permitted. One that imposes significant and irreversible harm - especially to restrict freedom - must be challenged. (Incidentally, ear piercing babies for purely cosmetic reasons must be evaluated under the same ethical standards.) 

This analysis gives religious communities a test they can apply to themselves. Not: Is this sacred to us? But: Does this uphold the dignity of the person undergoing it? Is harm minimized? Is the act consistent with our own highest moral claims? Grappling with these questions with honesty and integrity is itself a moral obligation. A tradition that refuses ethical scrutiny will eventually lose both its authority and its adherents. A tradition that asks hard questions about its practices is not weakened. It is purified.

And for the broader society, this framework provides a way to intervene without imposing. When FGC is clearly harmful, it may be restricted. But male circumcision, where harm is minor and meaning is deep, should be respected. The standard is not cultural preference. It is universal dignity.

This is what principled pluralism looks like: not avoiding controversy, but engaging it—openly, rigorously, and with the moral clarity that only a structured framework can provide.

Case study: Abortion

Few moral disagreements cut as deeply across communal lines as abortion. But when looked at through this framework, it is a different type of issue than what we have been discussing so far.

All major moral traditions agree with the sanctity of human life. In the case of abortion, the question is not this sanctity but the very definition of life itself. 

For some communities, life begins at conception, and any termination is tantamount to murder. For others, fetal life is a continuum - biologically real but morally emergent, gaining weight as gestation progresses. For still others, the moral agent is not the fetus but the woman, whose bodily autonomy and lived experience take ethical priority.

This framework does not aim to resolve the metaphysical question of when life begins. Instead, it offers a structure for navigating communities with different answers to that question. And it insists that moral pluralism must still respect Tier 1 values: life, dignity, and justice.

If a community defines life as beginning at conception, it may restrict abortion among its members, treat the fetus as full human being, and uphold a culture of life. But it may not enforce those views beyond its own borders through coercion, shame, or violence. Nor may it treat miscarriage or contraception as criminal acts if doing so undermines dignity and justice.

Conversely, if a community views abortion as permissible until birth, it may support reproductive autonomy. But it must still account for the moral complexity of fetal life. Late-term abortion, while it may be legally justified, must still pass the test of justice and compassion. The fetus is not a nullity. This  framework does not require it be treated as fully human, but it cannot allow it to be treated as worthless, either. A decision for an abortion should be at least as weighty as a decision for amputation or putting down a beloved pet. 

The ethical system permits deep disagreement on the definition of life, but not on the ethical process for weighing competing values. A pregnancy involves two morally significant realities: a developing life and a human in full possession of her own. Ethical clarity does not come from pretending only one exists. It comes from acknowledging both and balancing them with rigor.

Judaism provides a model of this complexity. The fetus is not a person, but it is not nothing. It has potential. Its destruction is tragic, even if sometimes necessary. Jewish law places the life of the mother first, but not without sorrow for what is lost. This middle ground—this refusal to absolutize either side—is not a compromise. It is a moral stance.

Moral pluralism allows communities to adopt different abortion standards. But it requires them to be consistent, compassionate, and transparent in their logic. A community that criminalizes day-after pills while ignoring maternal mortality violates justice. A community that celebrates unrestricted abortion without reflection violates dignity.

In this way, the Jewish ethical system transforms abortion from a binary battlefield into an ethical case study. It asks: What do you believe life is? Why? And how does that belief guide - not override - your commitment to justice and compassion? This is not a dodge. It is moral adulthood.

Conclusion: A Framework for Pluralism Without Relativism

This article has traced some of the most ethically contentious issues of our time - modesty and gender, polygamy and child marriage, circumcision and bodily autonomy, abortion and the moral status of life - and shown how a single ethical framework can hold them all. Not by reducing them to sameness, and not by imposing uniformity, but by offering a method: a way of reasoning that respects community, protects dignity, and navigates difference without surrendering to chaos or coercion.

The strength of this system lies in its refusal to retreat into either pole of the modern moral trap and of falsely defining everything in terms of stark moral binaries.  It does not dissolve all norms into relativism, nor does it enforce a brittle universalism that flattens cultural meaning. Instead, it honors pluralism with structure. It draws a boundary - life, dignity, responsibility, justice - and permits moral diversity within that space. It acknowledges conflict without panic, tension without collapse.

While those Tier 1 values provide a non-negotiable ethical floor, different communities will inevitably prioritize other values - such as modesty, tradition, or equality - based on their own identities. This framework allows for that internal variation, but expects each community to develop a coherent and transparent way of adjudicating and prioritizing those competing values. The Jewish ethical triage system can serve as a model: it has evolved over centuries to balance sacred priorities through structured reasoning. Other communities are invited - not forced - to do the same, and to explain their logic using a shared ethical grammar. 

What emerges is a system strong enough to handle complexity. It can tolerate disagreement on definitions, like when life begins or what modesty requires. It can even tolerate disagreement on prioritization of values or adding additional values.  The reason is because the system is anchored in a deeper agreement on process. That agreement is not abstract - it is functional. It allows communities to govern themselves, to evolve, and to diverge, but it requires them to take moral responsibility for the consequences of their norms and to be consistent in how they apply their own versions of the values and rules. It does not tell them what to think. It requires them to think ethically.

Importantly, this framework recognizes that the moral landscape is not clean. It is human. People belong to overlapping communities. we face real tradeoffs. We  live in gray areas. This system does not pretend to offer perfect clarity. It offers honest tools.

Possibly even more importantly, this system provides a universal moral language that allows ethical debate using a consistent framework where people can engage honestly and without rancor. 

And that is what a working moral operating system must do. Not command, not collapse, but clarify. It gives people and communities the means to speak to one another across difference = not just with passion, but with reason. Not just with identity, but with integrity.

In an age of ideological tribalism and moral exhaustion, this is more than a method. It is a lifeline. It is the beginning of a better conversation. And  while there will always be disagreements, the system allows and even encourages respectful argument based on a shared moral grammar.







Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Thursday, June 12, 2025



When I started this project of secularizing and universalizing Jewish ethics, I thought that all I needed to do is omit anything that was dependent on God and specific mitzvot, and stick with just ethical behavior.

For the most part, I was right. The system I built works for all people, everywhere. 

But as I've been veering from defining the framework into musing how such a system could be adopted by non-Jews, I came up with some challenges: some parts of Jewish ethics work well because of particular attributes of the Jewish people specifically. 

I have mentioned a few of these, and suggested how secular people might be able to substitute the Jewish attributes with their own. So for example, the Jewish prohibition of chilul Hashem - desecrating God's Name, by acting in a way that reflects badly on all Jews -  could be somewhat generalized for any minority group, many professions and other categories like nationalities. I also said that since so much of Jewish ethics assumes that everyone is a member of a tight-knit community, secular people can create their own meaningful communities to have that same sense of unity and solidarity that make it easier to take responsibility for your fellow. 

But how many of these attributes that make it more difficult to port Jewish ethics to a secular context are there?

More than I thought.

I asked an AI to generate a list. 

Pillar Core Jewish Form Secular Challenge
1. God as Moral Anchor Infinite reference point for ethics What anchors ultimate values?
2. Covenantal Community Inherited mutual obligation Can secular communities bond this thickly?
3. Mitzvah Sacred, commanded duty How to make ethics feel obligatory without divine command?
4. Halachic Discipline Ethics practiced daily Can habits replace law?
5. Teshuvah Eternal soul enables moral return What underwrites deep moral change?
6. Sacred Time Calendar and memory encode values Can “moral time” exist without holidays?
7. Sacred Disagreement Dissent is holy, not merely tolerated Can pluralism avoid relativism?
8. Pikuach Nefesh Life overrides nearly all else What’s strong enough to trump all values?
9. Tzniut / Anavah Humility and restraint Can this thrive in a culture of performance?
10. Din / Rachamim Law and mercy must coexist How to balance this without faith?
11. Redemption History bends toward moral meaning Can secular systems sustain moral hope?
12. Tzelem Elokim Absolute dignity for every person Can dignity survive without soul?
13. Safek / Teiku Uncertainty is protected How to build reverent ambiguity into secular systems?
14. Embodied Ethics Physical life is morally infused Can ethics guide bodily practice without theology?
15. Intergenerational Duty Past and future are moral actors Can individualist cultures embed legacy?
16. Symbolic Ethics Actions carry layered meaning Can secular rituals be ethically saturated?
17. Chillul/Kiddush Hashem Behavior reflects on collective identity Can moral visibility work without covenantal belonging?

No other secular system, as far as I can tell, even reaches the stage of asking “how can this be realistically implemented?” Most remain philosophical thought experiments - not lived and tested systems. Even without these challenges, the secularized Jewish ethics model is ahead in maturity, testability, traceability, scalability, and practical usability.

But my goal isn’t to design something for an ivory tower. I want to create a system that could genuinely change and improve the world, even if that might never happen in my lifetime.

Secular ethics originally arose during the Enlightenment as an attempt to build a moral system independent of God or religion, one grounded in pure reason. Ironically, every Jewish ethical principle in this framework is logical and does not, on its own, require belief. Yet the structure and guardrails of religious community make it much easier for people to live by these values.

That’s not an attack on freedom.
Self-help books routinely encourage us to set constraints and rituals for any goal, whether it is fitness, learning, or personal growth. Setting aside time for exercise, for music practice, or for family meals doesn’t limit our freedom; it enables us to achieve what matters. The same is true for moral growth.

After all, we already have secular rituals: Thanksgiving turkey, Independence Day fireworks, watching the Super Bowl or World Cup with friends, class reunions, block parties. Who can object to creating new ones imbued with meaning?

Secular people (and everyone else) can voluntarily create habits, rituals, and structures to strengthen their own ethical lives:

  • Make a habit of giving charity weekly, even a token amount.

  • Set aside regular time to study ethical writings, say, works by Rabbi Jonathan Sacks.

  • Create an annual day of reflection to review mistakes and plan for growth.

  • Join or form a community devoted to kindness and mutual aid, like visiting the sick, volunteering, or supporting neighbors.

  • Prioritize family rituals - shared meals, screen-free evenings, family game nights.

It may be true that morality doesn’t require faith. But like any skill, moral character doesn’t appear by magic. It takes hard work - and, in a secular world without built-in rituals or community, perhaps even harder work than in a traditional setting.

But the rewards are spectacular, here and now.




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Tuesday, June 10, 2025


As I have been working on creating a secularized Jewish ethical system, I've been noticing that some basic facts that apply to the Jewish people, to Judaism or even to religion altogether are difficult to port over or universalize. There are some specific features of Judaism that makes applying the ethical components more challenging- for example, ethical decisions in the secular world do not have the same obligatory nature that commandments from God do. 

While I believe, based on my testing with my AskHillel AI chatbot, that the secularized system I created so far already far outperforms any secular system out there, I want to identify the gaps and see how the Jewish particularism can be most effectively universalized.  This also helps surface features of both the Jewish and secular systems that are not often discussed.

One example that I've been thinking about is humility. Not humility as a human value, but humility as a building block for ethical philosophy itself. 

Humility is more foundational in Judaism than you might think. Moses was the greatest prophet because he was the most humble person. Hebrew scripture is filled with stories of how the greatest Jewish figures like Aaron and King David made mistakes. The Talmud is the antithesis of Plato's Cave - instead of positioning the rabbis as being on a higher intellectual plane than everyone else, the Talmud is filled with stories where rabbis learn wisdom from their wives, children, slaves and non-Jews. This is explicit in Pirkei Avot: "Who is wise, one who learns from all people." Everyone, from great to small, must identify and repent from their sins and mistakes every year. 

This is reflected in Jewish law. A basic assumption in Jewish law is that sometimes we cannot know the answer. The legal system builds in structures to handle this uncertainty - for example, safek - things that are indeterminate, like whether twilight is halachically considered day or night. 

Many schools of secular philosophy have hubris built in rather than humility. (Not all - in recent decades the idea of uncertainty has become more mainstream.)  The simplistic rules behind utilitarianism and duty-based ethics include an assumption of certainty - that they understand how the world works. Some will confidently misapply the rules of logic or mathematics or physics to metaphysics and ethics, as if different domains are all the same. Even today, philosophy forums online are characterized with at least as much of a sneering superiority and smug condescension as any political forum is. 

The reason for this, I believe, is the secular nature of modern philosophy itself. Talmudic rabbis were humble because they had a constant awareness of the infinite intelligence of God, and the absolute knowledge that compared to God, the difference between their own intelligence and that of the shoemaker is infinitesimal. Rabbinic humility isn’t about low self-esteem - it’s about accurate self-location in a world filled with mystery and inhabited by God.

Secularists keep thinking that science will answer everything and that they are on the cusp of finally understanding the world fully. They have been on this cusp for centuries, and new riddles keep arising. Yet their misplaced confidence remains. Believers, on the other hand, are keenly and constantly aware that they can never know everything, and they approach everything with the sense that seeking knowledge is a never ending quest and we are barely starting. 

Some of history’s worst moral wrongs, like communism, came not from ethical confusion  - but from ethical certainty without humility. 

Jewish ethics has this humility built in. Don't throw out an answer with confidence - there can always be additional factors we are unaware of that can change the ethical decision. Jewish ethics has baked-in epistemic humility.  Humility is not the absence of conviction, rather it it is the refusal to pretend omniscience. It is not just a personal or societal value: humility must be put in the architecture of ethical reasoning itself.

Humility is not incompatible with secularism. But it comes more naturally with faith. If secularists want to be ethical, it means they have to redouble their efforts to understand that they don't know everything - and use that as an impetus to always learn more. 

Maybe if science classes emphasized  more of what we don't know than what we know, it will result not only in increased secular humility but also in more incentive to learn more about the mysteries of the universe. 




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Monday, June 09, 2025

For centuries, the dominant language of Western morality has been rights: the right to life, liberty, property, pursuit of happiness, speech, education, healthcare, and more. I've discussed this in previous essays. 

Upon further thought, I suggest that the entire idea of rights is a fiction, and Jewish ethics shows this to be the case. Moreover, the discourse of rights is damaging to society. 

Firstly, without even invoking Jewish ethics, a little thought shows that while rights discourse assumes that rights are universal and even unalienable, it is not true. The best example is the one right everyone would agree on: the right to life. Does a soldier in a (legal) war have the right to life? No, he is expected to risk his life, and his very job is to do dangerous things - perhaps even missions that are tantamount to suicidal. If the opposing army has the right to kill the soldier, then what does "right to life" mean? Partial or provisional rights are not rights.

Furthermore, as we've discussed, , the idea of rights makes people feel a sense of entitlement. It makes people think in terms what they are owed, not what they can contribute. Each person's rights can clash which makes everyone potential adversaries - free speech vs. privacy, for example. When rights are absolute, how do you decide between competing rights? 

Moreover, the very language of rights makes no distinction between what is allowed and what is ethical. For right-based moral systems, anything that is a "right" is also moral by definition. This means that there is no ethical barrier to speaking ruinous gossip for no positive purpose, for example.

I’m not the first to question the idea of rights. Jeremy Bentham, a prime architect of utilitarianism, called natural rights “nonsense upon stilts.” Hannah Arendt noted that rights are dependent on being a citizen, which means that there are no universal rights at all.  Alasdair MacIntyre, who recently passed away, ridiculed the entire concept of rights, saying “there are no such rights and belief in them is one with belief in witches and in unicorns.”

Jewish ethics offers not only a critique of the rights-based model, but something richer: a system rooted in relationships, responsibility, shared obligations and covenant. It reframes the moral conversation not around what we are owed, but what we owe each other. What looks like a "right" in Jewish thought is often the visible result of others’ duties.

In this framework, what we call "rights" are the shadows cast by others' obligations. You have a "right" not to be stolen from because others are forbidden to steal. You have a "right" to safety because the community is obligated to protect you. These are not abstract entitlements but the byproduct of relational duties.

There is no “right” to life in a vacuum. But murder is categorically forbidden—except in edge cases like self-defense or war. And there is no contradiction because the priorities and triage principles are defined.

Instead of total, inalienable rights, Jewish ethics offers instead a layered structure of moral obligations - personal, communal, national - that interact to protect dignity, preserve justice, and respond to human need.

If there is any “right” in Jewish ethics, it is this: the moral freedom to act within the bounds of ethical obligation. That’s it. You are free to do anything that doesn’t violate what you owe to others.

This is not license—it is liberty with responsibility. And it’s enough.

So what about education, healthcare, wages, safety? 

These aren’t rights in Jewish ethics. They are obligations - duties the state or community owes when individuals or families can’t fulfill them. 

The state is obligated to provide a court system. It must support the poor. It must provide healthcare for those who cannot afford it. Workers must be paid and protected from being abused. Public infrastructure must be built. These are all community or state-level obligations to the people in exchange for the covenantal agreement of following the law, and of paying taxes. 

The question of who is responsible for providing essential services is an interesting one. The answer goes beyond pure ethics into political theory,. It is worth thinking about it in terms of Jewish ethics principles we have already discussed. After all, if Jewish ethics are universal, and can apply to every imaginable situation - which is my thesis - then it should have something to say about how a government is built and run, at least as an aspirational model.

Ideas for a democratic government that is centered on Jewish ethics

Consider the following paragraphs a trial balloon describing one way that a democratically elected government can adhere to Jewish ethical standards. It is not complete but it is aspirational. There may be other models, but this is a thought experiment to see how truly universal the Jewish ethical framework is. Most other secular ethical systems do not get close to even thinking  about these sorts of issues.

It seems to me that the obligations of government to citizens follow the same tiered structure of obligations of citizens to others. In short, the concentric circles of responsibility that everyone has - to themselves, to their families, to their community, to their nation, and to the world - applies in the obverse: the state should only step in and provide services when the smaller units like family and community cannot do them for any reason. 

The state is the safety net when the other systems fail. 

This means that the primary responsibility of care belongs to the individual. But some things, like infrastructure or self defense, cannot easily be done by all but the wealthy, and that is where the government steps in. Similarly, if caring for orphans or the chronically ill is too onerous for the family or community, only then should the state subsidize or provide the care. People should always think of themselves as the primary responsible party and the state as a backup. 

This is similar but not identical to the Catholic concept of ethical subsidiarity, but instead of defining which group has authority to act, the Jewish system describes who has the obligation to act and when. Each actor fulfills what they can in an outward direction of concentric community circles, and the state steps in precisely where failure occurs.

Interestingly, this also means that the person most responsible for themselves as individuals is themselves. Personal responsibility is the default, as opposed to modern society where everyone blames everyone else (their parents, their boss, their spouse) for their own perceived shortcomings. 

This is how to build a better society.

There are still practical problems that would need to be solved, but this framework gives us a refreshing prism to view old problems anew. 

One major question relates to changing government roles in response to new needs that it must provide for logistical, financial or practical reasons. Whenever the government is needed to provide a new service, there is always a cost which typically is seen in new taxes. But is this a new covenant between the people and the government? What happens if people don't want this new program? How, in a democratic government, can we keep the spirit of the covenant alive when it changes often?

Jewish tradition offers possible ways to solve this. 

One is the idea of takkanot and g'zeirot, new laws enacted by the leaders to handle new situations. (Takkanot would be new positive laws, g'zeirot are new protections around existing ethical concepts, "fences" around laws, termed as "negative" laws.) Takkanot (as a generalized term for both) were only issued for exceptional circumstances. But crucially, these laws were given along with the reasons they are enacted, with the idea that when the circumstances change, the new law can and should be canceled. So new laws and services should be a last resort when necessary.  

Another, more novel idea for negotiating new laws and services without holding a referendum for each one is a twist on the idea of representatives. In Jewish law, a "shaliach" is an agent who is empowered to act on behalf of an individual. Perhaps the representatives should have formal roles as shlichim,  agents, who can decide on behalf of their own (local) communities which laws and services make sense to them. These agents are not lawmakers, they are not the government, and their only power is to decide on behalf of their people what laws are worthwhile knowing the tradeoff of increased taxes or other additional responsibilities. 

But how do we protect minorities in such a system? How can the representatives who are representing their people ensure that everyone is treated fairly?  Because legislation cannot override ethical principles. Major values like value of life, human dignity and freedom from persecution are basic functions of society and any proposed law that violates these would not be allowed at the outset. There is no concept of a "mandate" by a government elected with 53% or so of the vote to do whatever they want - every law must adhere to the basic ethical principles. 

New laws and new services would be, by default, temporary unless a supermajority supports a permanent new service. Each one would have a mandatory periodic review to see whether it should continue. New organizations should not build new buildings but lease or rent; employees should typically not expect a job for life but be contractors. 

This is a curious combination of libertarian and social centered government. Some services to help those most in need are not negotiable because they fulfill basic ethical requirements and the community level cannot pay for them. But the default behavior is that any new program is considered temporary except under exceptional circumstances. 

The very existence of a Jewish ethical framework often shows how the current partisan divides between right/left or libertarian/socialist are not necessarily accurate reflections of the choices one can make. If you think that some parts of the liberal ideology makes sense and some parts of conservative thinking makes sense, it is nice to see that there are more than two choices in how to look at issues. Very possibly, the Jewish framework can provide a way out of the binary thinking that dominate American political life today and show that you can care for the needy, minimize government and still be consistent in your ideology. 

This obligation-based framework:

  • Protects dignity without flattening context.

  • Allows for compassion without collapsing into relativism.

  • Encourages moral creativity without moral chaos.

Jewish ethics isn’t stingier than rights-based models; it’s deeper and more real. By asking, ‘What do I owe?’ instead of ‘What am I owed?’ it binds us together in ways no list of rights ever could

That’s not just more realistic. It’s more human.




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Sunday, June 08, 2025

In a recent post, I explored one of Judaism’s most overlooked moral strengths: compromise. Where secular ethical systems often treat compromise as a concession - or worse, a failure - Jewish tradition elevates it to a mitzvah, a tool for peace, dignity, and community trust. In the real world, the goal shouldn't be to find a single right answer in a binary ethical choice, but to find the optimal solution that respects not only abstract ethical rules but real people, real circumstances and real ramifications. 

Compromise is not a moral detour. It’s a signpost. It reveals the deeper logic of Jewish ethics—a system not built on rigid principle or mathematical justice, but on relationships.

Here’s the (latest) radical idea: Jewish ethics doesn’t start with rules or outcomes. It starts with people and their relationships. 

Jewish ethics' fundamental moral units aren’t issues or actors. They’re relationships.  Jewish tradition does not categorizes ethical responsibility as "private vs public" or "individual vs collective." Instead, there are three categories:

  • Between me and God

  • Between me and you

  • Between me and myself

These are relational vectors. They frame obligation not as burden but as connection.

You might think that "between me and myself" is not relational, but in Jewish thinking, it really is. There are the metaphysical concepts of one's good and evil inclinations ("yetzer hara" and "yetzer hatov"), or in terms of repentance, between myself as I was and myself as I aspire to be, the physical self and the spiritual self. When we talk to ourselves, it is still a dialogue. 

Ethics, at its core, is about how we relate to others as well as ourselves. And the Jewish focus on relationships feels much more grounded than the Enlightenment-era secular systems. Jewish ethics is not about achieving moral purity. It’s about sustaining covenantal belonging. That changes everything.

A Kantian ethic might say, "Tell the truth, even if it hurts the other person." Jewish ethics asks, "Is this truth a betrayal of our bond? Will it cause pain that can’t be repaired?"

Utilitarianism might calculate happiness across a population. Jewish ethics asks, "Who is in my circle of obligation right now? What do I owe this person, in this moment, to sustain their dignity?"

This is why compromise is not just allowed but preferred. It lets us act ethically without tearing the social fabric. It invites people to stay at the table - to stay in relationship.

Halacha -the Jewish legal system - is often framed as rigid. In reality, it’s a finely tuned system for nurturing trust. Compromise before judgment isn’t a workaround. It’s the model. Peace (shalom) is a higher goal than victory. 

Secular systems talk about rights. Judaism talks about promises. Rights are protective walls. Covenants are bridges.

Rights say, “You can’t do that to me.” Covenants say, “We owe each other more than the minimum.”

This doesn’t mean rights don’t matter. It means they rest on something deeper: shared responsibility.

In an age of partisanship, polarization, abstraction, and distrust, Jewish ethics offers something rare: a moral system that feels like home. Not because it’s soft, but because it’s grounded in real relationships, with all their complexity, compromise, and possibility. 

If we start from the perspective of belonging - not the squishy "we are the world" utopian fantasies but real belonging with our families, communities and beyond - we can build an ethic that holds together not just ideas, but people.

That’s what Jewish ethics does best.

----

I need to give credit for this post to my own AI ethical chatbot, AskHillel.com . I've been keeping track of novel ideas ("chiddushim") throughout this project; most of them putting implicit Jewish ethical ideas into words but nevertheless concepts that are foreign to traditional ethical philosophy. I've been using AI as my study partner ("chavruta") in refining these concepts, as well as to challenge them. 

I've mentioned previously how AskHillel has blown me away multiple times with its ability to go way beyond the "advice column" proof of concept type of function I had envisioned it to be.  This idea of Jewish ethics being relational is not my "chiddush" but AskHillel's. This astounded me. As with any chavruta, I pushed back, and it defended its position. (Yes, sometimes I win our arguments, believe it or not.)  I asked it to draft this essay, and I edited it.

Even though any output from a chat session are not copyrighted and I do not legally have to credit AskHillel for this insight nor this essay, I have to act ethically. I cannot take the major credit for this post. My creation created it. And already, today, we need to create a framework for ethical relationships between humans and intelligent machines. 




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Thursday, June 05, 2025

Previously, I described the major difference between Jewish ethics and Western political concepts of liberty. In the West, the concept of "rights" has become the prism through which we view political morality. This is a 17th century invention; beforehand ethical systems, including Judaism, looked at obligations and not rights - rights are a secondary result of everyone doing their duties.

It may sound sacrilegious to say so, but the modern emphasis on rights has had a negative effect on humanity. Today, people are no longer asking how they can help make the world a better place - what their obligations are - but rather, “What does the world owe me? What are my rights?” And the list of “rights” being claimed as natural has grown to almost absurd extremes. Instead of life, liberty, and property, as John Locke described, now we see demands for rights to free college, abortion, paid vacation, parental leave, Internet access - even the “right not to be offended.”

But it doesn’t take much thought to realize that every right implicitly places responsibility on someone else to provide or protect that right. We have gone from a society of givers to one of demanders.

Jewish ethics is based on the idea of covenant—the agreement between God and the Jewish people, each with responsibilities toward the other. There are very few “rights” in Jewish philosophy. The phrase “all Jews have a portion in the World to Come” is the closest I can think of, and even that is contingent on fulfilling one’s side of the covenant.

Covenant means responsibility.

More recently, I floated the idea of using community as a means to extend this covenantal concept to the secular world. People who belong to communities have an unwritten contract to help everyone else out, to pitch in when needed. When a neighborhood has a natural disaster, everyone helps; whether by offering food or shelter or clothing or equipment. 

Community is a necessary component of morality. 

Necessary, yes, but not sufficient.

For generations, moral philosophers have searched for a universal code: a framework that could reconcile individual virtue with social justice, particular loyalties with global responsibility, and the needs of today with the obligations to tomorrow. Jewish ethics already has this built in for Jews , with the emphasis on responsibility towards the rest of the Jewish people. The concept of brit, of a covenant, is much more flexible and scalable to make the secular Jewish ethical system I am proposing to be universal. 

It turns out that the concept of covenant is scalable. Jewish ethics does not see morality as a flat plane of universal rules. Instead, it is organized as nested spheres of responsibility, each with its own tools, priorities, and forms of moral agency - but all governed by a unified set of core values.

Starting with the individual, Judaism teaches teshuva (repentance) - a difficult and personal journey involving recognizing faults, admitting them, and crucially, making a promise to improve. This is a covenant with oneself. We all experience this in daily life: to lose weight, get healthy, or break a bad habit, we don’t invoke “rights.” We make promises to ourselves, and we try to keep them.

At the personal level, this is the promise you make to yourself: to live by your own highest values, to pursue teshuvah (growth), and to hold yourself accountable.

At the communal level, as we have seen, brit binds families, synagogues, and neighborhoods to mutual responsibility and moral vigilance (areivut).
At the national level, brit grounds the loyalty of citizens and leaders - not just to the state, but to the ideal of just governance and collective purpose.
At the global level, brit is the missing logic behind lasting cooperation: real alliances, not mere treaties - explicit, values-based pledges to uphold humanity’s shared responsibilities, often seen as treaties and conventions. 


LayerActorEthical ToolsGlobal Impact
PersonalIndividualMiddot (Virtues), Teshuvah (repentance), Core ValuesTrustworthiness, moral clarity, role model
CommunalFamily, School, Synagogue, LocalAreivut (responsibility,) Chesed (kindness), Shalom Bayit (intrafamily peace), Derech Eretz (respect.)Resilience, ethical micro-networks
NationalGovernments, Corporations, CourtsPolitical Ethics Matrix, Ethical Sovereignty, BritJustice, public trust, national destiny
GlobalAlliances, NGOs, Faith NetworksBal Tashchit (not wasting resources), Kavod HaBriyot (respect for all people(, Brit (International)Climate, AI, migration, pandemics, war

At every scale, brit - covenantal logic - is what binds actors into genuine communities of trust and obligation.

Rights are not unalienable. They are earned by being a responsible citizen of one's family, community and country.

When rights are divorced from responsibility, they devolve into endless, conflicting entitlements, each demanding priority. A society built on responsibilities, on the other hand, creates an ecosystem of trust, humility, and practical universality.

Modern challenges are not local or simple. Climate change, artificial intelligence, pandemics, migration, economic injustice - none of these can be solved by personal virtue alone, or by well-meaning protest. They require action and trust at the scale of nations and global alliances.

When we are guided by obligations rather than rights, we will want leaders who are guided by the same sense of purpose and responsibility. Without brit, all that remains is transactional agreement, subject to collapse the moment self-interest shifts. With brit, there is a logic of loyalty and shared destiny that can sustain sacrifice, compromise, and aspiration from within us to the entire world. 

A core Jewish principle is: Ethical responsibility grows with moral capacity. The more power an individual or group holds, the greater their obligation to others:

ActorUnique Obligation
ParentShalom Bayit, Mishpacha (peace, family)
Local leaderTzedek (justice), Areivut (mutual responsibility)
National leaderDin (law), Pikuach Nefesh (life), Brit (protection)
CEO/NGO headLifnei Iver (preventing harm), Kavod HaBriyot
Global actorsBrit (covenantal pledges), Bal Tashchit (do no harm)

This isn’t abstract. It means global justice is the sum of all actors keeping their covenants at every scale. Local groups can become national and international groups, and when they get larger they can offer ways to help at a national and international level. 

Demanding rights makes people selfish. Demanding covenant makes people better.

Jewish ethics has both personal and political values, but they are interdependent - and they flow in both directions. 

Self-improvement leads to demands for institutional accountability, but national laws should also help promote personal ethics. Public servants should exhibit and model humility. Emet, truth, should be the value behind policy and journalism. Corporations must work not to deceive just as people do. Public apologies can model how one should own up to their own interpersonal slights. Saving human lives and promoting human dignity are the most important values for individuals, communities, corporations, governments and international agencies. 

Human nature being what it is, one may wonder: what incentive do politicians have to act in a responsible, covenantal way in a secular world?  What can stop them from prioritizing partisan politics and personal aggrandizement over the needs of their constituents?

Again, Jewish tradition provides a potential answer.

Politicians, and anyone in a public position of power (journalists, CEOs, NGO leaders) should be encouraged to have a personal, public "Yom Kippur" - we can call it "Covenant Day"  On this day, once a year, they should write down or speak in their own words everything they believe they did wrong during the previous year in their official capacities, and what they plan to do in order to improve themselves in the coming year. The message cannot be one of self-congratulation - only confession, regret and asking forgiveness from the people they serve as well as a pledge with specific steps to do better. (This is not a place to confess personal sins.)

This way, the public can see whether they are being honest about their faults, and serious about the future. Because next year the public, the press, and political opponents will have a clear record by which to measure whether the leader lived up to their promises - or failed to follow through. This moves the standard of evaluation from rumor and innuendo to a documented, honest reckoning.

Those who refuse to participate, or who issue only vague or boastful statements, will be judged accordingly - by voters, the media, and history. The absence of confession will itself become a confession of arrogance or avoidance

After the confession, they should renew their oath of office, again publicly, to impress the importance of their covenantal responsibilities to their people, as well as to themselves.

This makes the covenant itself an integral part of their missions, one that they cannot as easily escape. Over time, the most trusted leaders will be those who model humility, candor, and genuine self-correction. Covenant Day, by design, creates positive competition for who can be most honest, not who can cover up best. People naturally forgive those who give heartfelt apologies and distrust those who try to shift responsibility. Any politician who chooses not to engage in this ceremony will automatically be put at a disadvantage. Moreover, the ceremonial part reiterates to both the politician and the people the importance of covenant. 

This ceremony mirrors Yom Kippur - admitting mistakes, regretting sin, vowing to improve, and culminating in a public expression of unity and covenant.

We all can take part in building a covenantal world, as long as we know what is appropriate at our level and ensure everyone does their part. 

  • Don’t moralize when organizing is needed: Personal virtue matters, but only policy, law, and shared pledges can meet systemic challenges.

  • Don’t despair at the scale of problems: Right action at every level, from self to city to global, sustains the whole.

  • Don’t universalize prematurely: Covenantal community precedes universal obligation; belonging is the foundation of trust.

  • Forge brit as moral diplomacy: Ethical alliances, rooted in mutual, explicit commitment, are stronger than treaties or markets.

From self, to community, to covenantal nations - ethics scales when responsibility does.

The great promise of Jewish ethics is not that it offers a few interesting rules or rituals, but that it contains the architecture - the universal grammar - for building societies of trust, humility, resilience, and hope. Covenant, rightly understood, is not just for Jews. It is a scalable, practical, and profound solution to the failures of both rights-only liberalism and coercive utopianism.

A world of covenants is a world where rights, dignity, and purpose are generated and protected, not by force or luck but by shared commitment. This is the ethical revolution the 21st century needs.
And it starts not with an abstract ideal, but with a promise.




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

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This blog may be a labor of love for me, but it takes a lot of effort, time and money. For 20 years and 40,000 articles I have been providing accurate, original news that would have remained unnoticed. I've written hundreds of scoops and sometimes my reporting ends up making a real difference. I appreciate any donations you can give to keep this blog going.

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