I'm one week away from the bar exam. My strongest area is constitutional law. My weakest area is everything else.
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Soccer clubs often break along broader cultural and national faultlines, and certain clubs are typically identified with various political movements. In Israel, for example, Hapoel Tel Aviv is identified with the Israeli left, and Beitar Jerusalem representing the nationalist right. Two liberal American Jews have now bought the team; hopefully, they'll help clean up its act (an interesting fact for folks not privy to how Israeli society divides -- Beitar supporters hail overwhelmingly from Israel's large Mizrachi [Arab] Jewish population).
Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman called Yesh Din a "terrorist organization". Board member Shlomo Gazit notes it's a label he's borne before.
That far-right Iowa "marriage" petition also calls for "robust childbearing". How exactly does one birth "robustly"?
Good post by Ta-Nehisi Coates on people feeling a connection to where they're from, even it is a place that is considered a "problem".
A Columbia professor writes a book on how to resolve (or at least ameliorate) intractable conflicts. One notes that his advice could succinctly be summarized as "the opposite of what anti-Israel BDS campaigners propose".
Hussein Ibish underestimates the proportion of the BDS movement which targets Israel as a whole (the UCU academic boycott being perhaps the most prominent case), but he's absolutely right that the Israeli anti-boycott law itself is not designed to protect Israel but protect its settlements.
Rep. Allen West (R-FL) flips out at fellow Floridian Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D). Lest we forget, West is a war criminal.
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
One Week Out Roundup
Labels:
Allen West,
Avigdor Lieberman,
boycott,
Debbie Wasserman Schultz,
Israel,
Jews,
pregnancy,
soccer,
Terrorism
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1 comment:
"My strongest area is constitutional law. My weakest area is everything else."
Oh, how I feel you on that. And according to Barbri, Con Law is the least frequently tested in NY, where I'm taking it. Ah, well.
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