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2018年12月12日 星期三

Do Jews Believe in Heaven or Reincarnation (or Both)?

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Your Questions
Do Jews Believe in Heaven or Reincarnation (or Both)?

Do Jews Believe in Heaven or Reincarnation (or Both)?

Some think reincarnation is like repeating a year at school: while some souls graduate to the next world, others are sent right back down to rectify things.

By Aron Moss

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Why Do Some Jews Not Say Eulogies?

Why Do Some Jews Not Say Eulogies?

A eulogy honors the deceased and celebrates all the beautiful deeds and qualities he or she possessed. Why is this not done in Chabad?

By Menachem Mendel Wineberg

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By the Numbers
9 Jewish Works Written in Prison or Confinement

9 Jewish Works Written in Prison or Confinement

The Jewish people have never stopped studying Torah. Regardless of whether we've lived in times of prosperity or persecution . . .

by Yehuda Shurpin

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11 Facts About the Month of Tevet Every Jew Should Know

11 Facts About the Month of Tevet Every Jew Should Know

The 10th month on the Jewish calendar, Tevet occurs in the wintertime. In fact, the entire winter season is sometimes called tekufat (season of) Tevet in Jewish tradition.

By Menachem Posner

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10 Things Your Orthodox Jewish Coworker Wishes You Knew

10 Things Your Orthodox Jewish Coworker Wishes You Knew

If there is something I do that's strange, or something you read about in the news that you don't quite understand, just ask me.

By Menachem Posner

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Feature
5 Teves: The Prevailing Power of Holiness

5 Teves: The Prevailing Power of Holiness

In conventional thinking, a U.S. federal court isn't where the 250-year journey of the Chassidic movement would find a climactic peak. Then again, what about Lubavitch is conventional?

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The Smart Siddur App Suite Is on Sale

In honor of 5 Tevet, the Siddur App is marked down to half price. Click to buy now…

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Parshah
What Was Joseph Thinking?

What Was Joseph Thinking?

The story of Joseph and his brothers is confounding. What was Joseph's agenda? Why did he devise this intricate plan that included framing his younger brother?

By Levi Avtzon

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Video
Prison Reform Is a Jewish Value

Prison Reform Is a Jewish Value

Punitive incarceration robs people of their humanity and ability to be productive and live a meaningful life.

By Shalom Goodman

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What Every Jewish Community Needs

What Every Jewish Community Needs

It is imperative that in every Jewish community a library be established – a place where books of Torah can be found — simple books for those with a basic knowledge of Judaism, as well as deeper ones for those at an advanced level of Torah study.

Watch (6:32)
 

Jewish News
A Visit to Chicago’s Oldest Chabad Congregation

A Visit to Chicago's Oldest Chabad Congregation

Founded in 1875, Anshei Lubavitch lives on in a kosher nursing home.

By Menachem Posner

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Rogachover Gaon’s Enigmatic Teachings Brought to Light in New Study Program

Rogachover Gaon's Enigmatic Teachings Brought to Light in New Study Program

Early 20th-century sage described by the Rebbe as an 'unmatched scholar'

By Yehuda Sugar

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Women
The Myth of Doing and Having It All

The Myth of Doing and Having It All

We're given a message through advertising and social media that you can or should do it all. We're being sold that success is doing everything right, and, of course, doing all that as you appear beautiful and calm.

By Elana Mizrahi

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My Life Is Oh-So Ordinary!

My Life Is Oh-So Ordinary!

I can't help feeling depressed and diminished when I read articles about great people and all they have accomplished.

By Rosally Saltsman

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Story
The Wandering Storyteller

The Wandering Storyteller

To each of his disciples Rabbi Israel Baal Shem Tov revealed his task in life, and one, who is the hero of our story, he instructed to become a wandering storyteller. "You will know when your mission is achieved," the Besht added.

By Tuvia Bolton

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Lifestyle
Savory London Broil with Sweet Braised Shallots and Mushrooms

Savory London Broil with Sweet Braised Shallots and Mushrooms

By Elizabeth Kurtz

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Art: Ethereal Jerusalem

Art: Ethereal Jerusalem

By Cheryl Veiner

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On The Money: House GOP struggles to get votes for $5B in wall funds | Fallout from Oval Office clash | Dems say shutdown would affect 800K workers | House passes $867 billion farm bill

 
 
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On the Money - The Hill Finance
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Happy Wednesday and welcome back to On The Money. I'm Sylvan Lane, and here's your nightly guide to everything affecting your bills, bank account and bottom line.

See something I missed? Let me know at slane@thehill.com or tweet me @SylvanLane. And if you like your newsletter, you can subscribe to it here: http://bit.ly/1NxxW2N.

Write us with tips, suggestions and news: slane@thehill.com, vneedham@thehill.com, njagoda@thehill.com and nelis@thehill.com. Follow us on Twitter: @SylvanLane, @VickofTheHill, @NJagoda and @NivElis.

 

THE BIG DEAL--Schumer calls on McConnell to walk Trump back as partial shutdown nears: Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) on Wednesday blasted President Trump, saying he threw a "temper tantrum" in their dramatic televised White House meeting the day before and urging Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) to walk him back.

"It is difficult, if nearly impossible, to negotiate with a president in front of the press who peddles such blatant and dangerous falsehoods. And because Leader Pelosi and I simply didn't go along with him, President Trump threw a temper tantrum and promised to shut the government unless he got what he wanted," Schumer said from the Senate floor.

 

Recap: Schumer and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) battled angrily with Trump over the U.S.-Mexico border wall during the Oval Office meeting, during which the president said he would take the "mantle" for a partial government shutdown.

Both sides remain far apart over funding for the border, with Tuesday's White House showdown increasing the chances of a partial government shutdown. Trump and Republicans are demanding $5 billion for the border, while Democrats say $1.3 billion is their cap. The Hill's Jordain Carney tells us where things stand here.

 

Shutdown 'more than possible,' says top Senate appropriator: The chances of a partial government shutdown next Friday are "more than possible," according to Sen. Richard Shelby, the chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee.

"I don't think it's inevitable. It's probably more than possible right now," he told reporters in the Capitol. "It'll shut down unless we resolve some things."

Unless Congress and President Trump can reach a deal, largely centered around the president's demand to fund a wall along the southern border, seven spending bills will lapse after Dec. 21, shutting down the agencies governed in those bills. Niv Elis breaks down what's left to do here.

 

House GOP struggles to win votes for wall: House Republicans are also struggling to come up with a strategy to fulfill Trump's demands that the lower chamber pass a funding bill that includes $5 billion for his promised border wall.

By Wednesday evening, GOP leaders still had not settled on what vehicle they would use to fund the wall or if they would even take a vote this week to do so. Lawmakers in the House have until just Dec. 21 to avert a partial government shutdown, and are only scheduled to be working for four of those days.

"The president is still interested in trying to get a deal," Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) told The Hill as he emerged from a leadership meeting in Speaker Paul Ryan's ceremonial office just off the House floor.

Scott Wong and Juliegrace Brufke tell us why the House GOP is in a jam

 

Shutdown would affect 800K federal workers, Senate Dems say: A partial government shutdown would affect 800,000 federal workers, according to projections by Senate Democrats.

That would lead 380,000 workers to be furloughed, including most employees at NASA, the Department of Commerce and the National Park Service. Typically, Congress decides to pay federal employees for shutdown-related furloughs when a deal is struck to end the shutdown, but long furloughs can cause uncertainty and delays in pay.

In the event of a shutdown, staff deemed essential are required to continue working, but without pay. Democrats estimated that some 420,000 workers would fall into that category, including FBI agents, prison correctional officers and Homeland Security employees such as TSA and Customs and Border security. Niv has more here.

 

LEADING THE DAY

House passes $867 billion farm bill, sending it to Trump: The House on Wednesday passed an $867 billion farm bill to help those in the agricultural industry, sending the legislation to President Trump for a signature.

The measure easily passed the lower chamber by a 369-47 vote.

The legislation, which passed the Senate in an 87-13 vote on Tuesday, expands farm subsidies and includes language legalizing hemp production.

It also provides funding for farmers markets and programs for organic farmers, as well as authorizes funding for nutrition programs over the next five years.

 

The focal point: The measure ultimately did not include an earlier provision aimed at placing stronger work requirements for food stamps, much to the dismay of conservatives. Democrats strongly opposed the provision -- which received strong support from House Republicans and President Trump -- arguing the change would be detrimental to the safety net relied upon by low-income earners. Juliegrace Brufke tells us more about that battle here.

 

Trump signs order to help revitalize economically distressed communities: President Trump on Wednesday signed an executive order aimed at helping economically distressed communities, building off a provision in his tax-cut law.

The order creates a White House panel dubbed the Opportunity and Revitalization Council, which will be led by Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson and consist of representatives from 13 federal agencies.

At a signing ceremony at the White House, Trump called the council a "very big thing" and said that the council will help utilize government resources to rebuild "impoverished neighborhoods that have been ignored by Washington in years past." 

 

The details: The executive order is designed to supplement a piece of Trump's 2017 tax-cut law known as opportunity zones. Under the opportunity zone program, investors can receive capital-gains tax breaks if they invest in distressed areas that were certified by the Treasury Department.

More than 8,000 communities nationwide, where nearly 35 million people live, are in opportunity zones. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has said that he expects that there will be about $100 billion in private capital invested in the zones.

Naomi Jagoda has more here.

 

Consumer bureau morale plummeted under Mulvaney: report: Morale at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) plummeted under former acting chief Mick Mulvaney, according to a Wednesday report from a good-government nonprofit.

Staff sentiment at the polarizing financial regulator sunk sharply between 2017 and 2018 as Mulvaney, who served at the same time as director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, reeled in the agency's activities, according to the Partnership for Public Service's annual ranking of best places to work in the federal government.

The nonprofit ranked the staff morale at 488 organizations by analyzing employee surveys filed to the federal government between April and June. The CFPB was among several agencies that gave the nonprofit additional data from its own surveys.

The CFPB's morale score plunged from 77.9 in 2017 to 51.7 this year. The 25.2-point drop was the largest among the 27 midsize federal agencies -- with between 1,000 and 14,999 employees -- analyzed, and sunk the bureau's ranking from seventh to 26th among those groups. I'll tell you why that might have happened here.

 

GOOD TO KNOW

  • The Senate on Wednesday approved a Democratic resolution that would overturn IRS guidance reducing the amount of donor information that certain tax-exempt groups have to provide to the agency.
  • Grass-roots activists in New York have been canvassing Long Island City and other parts of Queens to organize opposition to Amazon's upcoming move there, with hundreds joining a meeting Monday night to protest against the company.
  • Politico previews the upcoming battle over Trump's pick to lead the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
  • The Wall Street Journal explores how federal regulators are asking bank examiners to "adopt a less aggressive tone when flagging risky practices."
  • Bloomberg looks into the potential consequences for Trump if he halts the extradition of Huawei's chief financial officer in order to grease a trade deal with China.

 

ODDS AND ENDS

 
 
 
 
 
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Breaking News: Pelosi agrees to term limits vote; insurgency collapses

 
 
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Pelosi agrees to term limits vote; insurgency collapses
Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) agreed to a term-limit deal on Wednesday that ensures her election to a second stint as House Speaker — but also makes it certain her Speakership will end after a maximum of four more years.

The decision secures Pelosi the backing of some of her most vocal critics, leaving a crumbled opposition.
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