The cops are afraid to stop Black motorists who routinely play their boom box radios extra loud in traffic, and while parked; yet, the Jewish motorists are fair game for them!
Kvetch
4 months ago
#2122218
Curious: if your Moslem neighbor started a weekly prayer group in his house, causing your street to be all parked up and congested, you saw multitudes of Moslem congregants entering and exiting robbing the residential feel of your street, plus you could even hear their prayers (we all hear neighbors noise) albeit not excessively loud and you grew tired of it all, would you call police to complain of parking violations etc whatever would discourage its continuance?
YupYup
4 months ago
#2122266
I was taught 2 things growing up.
1. America is a big country. Why move where you’re not wanted?
2. Never cry “Antisemitism” if your doing wrong. The Rabbi said the cars in front of the Shul were ticketed (for doing something wrong) while down the block they were not. If you’re doing wrong don’t play the Victim about how your wrong should also be ignored.
I was a democrat until I saw the light
4 months ago
#2122199
First LA isn’t a small town secondly people start a Shul close to were they live for convenes and possibly because they don’t like rabbis speech or different nusach and usually that attracts more people
Mmj
4 months ago
#2122223
When we first went into Galus the Navi Yirmiyah told us to be good neighbors. This still applies. If the law, by technicality, allows you to be a bad neighbor – you are still a bad neighbor. You create anti-Semitism for all of us. You might have a din Rodeif.
Rabbi Kolakowski
4 months ago
#2122144
When there is already a shul in town, and people who are too lazy to walk to shul start minyan in the house, it hurts the frum community. We suffer from this in our small town.
The cops are afraid to stop Black motorists who routinely play their boom box radios extra loud in traffic, and while parked; yet, the Jewish motorists are fair game for them!
Curious: if your Moslem neighbor started a weekly prayer group in his house, causing your street to be all parked up and congested, you saw multitudes of Moslem congregants entering and exiting robbing the residential feel of your street, plus you could even hear their prayers (we all hear neighbors noise) albeit not excessively loud and you grew tired of it all, would you call police to complain of parking violations etc whatever would discourage its continuance?
I was taught 2 things growing up.
1. America is a big country. Why move where you’re not wanted?
2. Never cry “Antisemitism” if your doing wrong. The Rabbi said the cars in front of the Shul were ticketed (for doing something wrong) while down the block they were not. If you’re doing wrong don’t play the Victim about how your wrong should also be ignored.
First LA isn’t a small town secondly people start a Shul close to were they live for convenes and possibly because they don’t like rabbis speech or different nusach and usually that attracts more people
When we first went into Galus the Navi Yirmiyah told us to be good neighbors. This still applies. If the law, by technicality, allows you to be a bad neighbor – you are still a bad neighbor. You create anti-Semitism for all of us. You might have a din Rodeif.
When there is already a shul in town, and people who are too lazy to walk to shul start minyan in the house, it hurts the frum community. We suffer from this in our small town.