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January 18, 2013

b>Rabbi Nathan Lopes Cardozo: Jewish Self-Loathing and denial

Clifford D. May: Osama and the Two Nazirs
Smartphone touted as 'remote for your life'
Kerri-Ann Jennings, M.S., R.D.: The diet mistake even nutritionists make: 5 tips to outsmart your appetite
Michael Hogan, M.D. : Mayo Clinic Medical Edge: Awake at night? Here's one cause you may not have thought
Chris Gaylord: Tiny creatures with hip names
The Kosher Gourmet by Diane Rossen Worthington PEACH CROSTATA, a free-form tart, is easy as pie and a crowd-pleaser
George Friedman of Stratfor: Avoiding the Wars That Never End
Fred Weir: 'Red October' malware found snooping on Russian state networks
Kerri-Ann Jennings, M.S., R.D.: 3 healthy reasons to cook with cast iron
Jerry Brewer, M.D.: Mayo Clinic Medical Edge: Treatment for varicose veins
G. Jeffrey MacDonald: Is that online review a fake?
Tech world crawling into the crib
The Kosher Gourmet by Kathryn Hill: Delectable, and deceptively simple, chicken and artichokes in wine sauce
January 14, 2013

Mark Clayton: Cyber Security Awakening in 2013: How vulnerable to attack is US now?

Jeffrey Fleishman and Reem Abdellatif: Egyptian court orders new trial for Mubarak
Insulin study could see end to needles: researchers
Sharon Palmer, R.D. : Fiber for digestive health is just the start
Harvard Health Letters: Pain relief without drugs or surgery
Jonathan Zimmerman: US colleges need affirmative action for conservative professors
Mary Shanklin Condo tower to track DNA in crackdown on wayward pet feces
The Kosher Gourmet by Faith Durand: Faith Durand
January 11, 2013

Jonathan Rosenblum: The Religious Mindset

David G. Savage: Obama advisor who had decried 'war on terror' now defends drones
Schoolgirl loses ID locator chip battle
Harvard Health Letters: How sleep loss destroys your health
Hara Estroff Marano: The vanishing mineral: The more essential magnesium proves for well-being, the harder it is to consume enough
Fred Weir: Does Depardieu herald Russia as a new tax haven?
Patrick Kevin Day Life on Mars? Dutch company to offer one-way trips to the Red Planet
The Kosher Gourmet by Diane Rossen Worthington: Whole grain salads: Healthy eating was never so delicious
January 9, 2013

John Rosemond: Children need courage, not self-confidence

Jonathan Tobin: Hagel Backers Trying to Redefine Pro-Israel
Nat Hentoff: More of our doctors are losing independence
Kimberly Lankford: Know the rules for new health care investment surtax
Michael Doyle: Supreme Court weighs case of disabled child, medical malpractice award
Harvard Health Letters: Surviving cancer: What happens next?
7 year-old murdered by Muslim mathematician mom
The Kosher Gourmet by Faith Durand: How To Make a Better Side Salad
Matea Gold: GOPers to defend Israel from one of their own
Ancient Afghan papers shed light on Jewish life
Hitler statue unveiled in Warsaw ghetto
Brierly Wright, M.S., R.D.: The pros and cons of 4 trendy diets
R. Houston Thompson, M.D.: Mayo Clinic Medical Edge: Don't ignore early, noticeable signs of testicular cancer
Cat brings daily gifts to late master's tomb
The Kosher Gourmet by Mario Batali: The famed chef's ITALIAN TWIST ON CHEESECAKE is simply tantalizing
January 4, 2013

Rabbis Abraham Cooper and Yitzchok Adlerstein: The Divine is for all people, religious or not

Jonathan Tobin: Sotomayor's Blow to Religious Liberty
Clifford D. May: Beyond 'Toxic Nationalism'
David Lightman: Sen. Joe Lieberman made history but retired without a party
Carol Rosenberg: Obama signs defense bill, but denounces the Guantanamo prison it pays for
Ken Dilanian and Steven Zeitchik: 'Zero Dark Thirty's' torture implication prompts Senate inquiry
Scott Powers: NASA is quietly holding a going-out-of-business sale
The Kosher Gourmet: This BAKED CUSTARD is surprisingly light, smooth, and its flavor --- subtly sweet
January 2, 2013

Andrew Silow-Carroll: But is it good for the chews?

Mark Clayton: Cybersecurity: Where do Republicans and Democrats stand on threats?
Kathleen Hennessey and David Lauter: Obama 'fiscal cliff' Victory? Not exactly
Larry Gordon: New college application questions encourage creative thinking
Howard LeWine, M.D. : Ask the Harvard Experts: On herbal therapy and successful healing
Dawn Davis, M.D.: Mayo Clinic Medical Edge: Hemangiomas
Dried squash holds headless French king's blood
The Kosher Gourmet: 7 principles for making better soup in a slow cooker
December 31, 2012

Jina Moore: Progress watch: 2012 wasn't as bad as many think

15 Christians die in gruesome murders after Islamic rampage
Jeff Jacoby: Kerry's 'realism' slips into callousness
Frances Robles: Parents on both sides of Zimmerman case cope with aftermath of Sanford saga
Howard LeWine, M.D. : Ask the Harvard Experts: No longer be intimidated. You can save a life!
Lindsay Wise: New rule puts cloak of privacy on children's apps
Is that ME in a 450-year-old painting?
The Kosher Gourmet: A sweet ending to the year: Chocolate-Peppermint Shortbread
December 28, 2012

Jonathan Rosenblum: Becoming glory conscious --- of Him, not us

Abbas: If no peace talks, I'll disband Palestinian Authority and give Israel the West Bank
It's Muslim v. Muslim in Mali
Kimberly Lankford: Can you keep health coverage when changing jobs?
Sharon Palmer, R.D. : Go nuts for health!
Marc Garnick, M.D.: The Medicine Cabinet-Ask the Harvard Experts: Stopping prostate medicine
South Africa prez says country facing new race problem: Blacks acting 'too white':
The Kosher Gourmet: Dense, rich oatmeal cake that might be too good to share
December 26, 2012

Rabbis Abraham Cooper and Yitzchok Adlerstein and Rev. John Huffman: The Most Persecuted Religion

Human Rights Watch: Israelis are human; deserve rights
'Lost tribe' members migrate from India to Israel
Chris Gaylord: How to 'tether' your PC to your phone
Susan B. Garland: Health care premiums could drop for older adults
Alan Yu: Food without fear
Harvard Health Letters: Quench the fire: Stomach-soothing steps for heartburn The Kosher Gourmeti: High-heat roasting gives unique flavor to a colorful side dish
December 24, 2012

Fredrick Nzwili: Kenyan Christians fear former brethren are attacking churches

Maura Dolan: Legal hold put on gay conversion ban
Romney didn't want to run for president, son says
Scott Dance: 14 years after amputation, woman gets new arm without operation
Harvard Health Letters: How not to cure a cold
China researchers link obesity to bacteria
Obama asked to retaliate over Russia adoption ban The Kosher Gourmet by Mario Batali: Ciambella, a simple, delectable cake fit for a holiday table
December 21, 2012

Rabbi Avi Shafran: My accidental epiphany

Suzanne Fields: Illumination From Medieval Manuscripts
Clifford D. May: Jews in the Judean Desert?
Paul Greenberg: Let Your People go!
Maura Dolan: Boy Scouts win case against gays, agnostics
Woman to wed twin sister's convicted killer
Earthlings head to nearest bunker, or bar, at 'world's end'
The Kosher Gourmet : A hearty winter soup with layers of flavors
December 19, 2012

Justin Salhani: Can a dying language revive Lebanon's Christian population?

Fred Weir: Moscow joins choir of those using Newtown shooting to push agendas
Boy, 11, brings gun to class after massacre
Thomas Boyce, M.D., and W. Charles Huskins, M.D. : Mayo Clinic Medical Edge: Resurgence of whooping cough makes vaccination important for people of all ages
New computing devices will allow touch, smell
Never mind the Mayans: US 'preppers' ready for anything
The Kosher Gourmet : Punch up your lunchtime wrap with a combo of sweet and savory
December 17, 2012

Mark Clayton: Cyberjihad on US banks

Michael Doyle : Court to decide whether religious challenge to health care law may proceed
21st Century's gold rush is on!
Howard LeWine, M.D.: Ask the Harvard Experts: How to reverse pain with simple changes
Nicci Micco, M.S. : 6 easy ways to help your immune system
Paul Rogers: He's Kryptonite for the world's conspiracy craziness
The Kosher Gourmet : This must be chocolate chip heaven (Includes techniques)
December 14, 2012

Rabbi B. Shafier: Resolved: How to grasp the incomprehensible

Wesley Pruden: Another low bow to radical Islam
Warren Richey: European court holding American allies liable for role in CIA operation
Mark Clayton: 'Project Blitzkrieg': Are Russian cybercriminals about to invade US banks?
Holly Pevzner: 10 ways to reduce inflammation
Lori Zanteson: The best healthy 100-calorie snacks
Moon phases and stag's bladders: Wacky wine-making
The Kosher Gourmet : A sweet sweet potato treat
December 12, 2012

Reva Bhalla of StratFor: The Israeli Periphery

How to stop a revolution
Jewish ritual fueled by Muslim manufacturers?
Warren Richey How Ernest Hemingway's cats became a federal case
Sharon Palmer, R.D. : Green tea is popular. Should it be?
Jennifer Tessmer-Tuck, M.D. : Mayo Clinic Medical Edge: Elective induction can lead to unnecessary complications for mom and baby
Police chief sends gangsters Christmas cards
The Kosher Gourmet : A light, surprisingly satisfying MUSHROOM SUPPER
December 10, 2012

Rabbi Avi Shafran: The original spin on Chanukah

Michael Smerconish: United Airlines' post-9/11 commitment to security rescinded?
Heather Hottle: T cell modification curbs girl's leukemia
Anna Mulrine: Pentagon's Plan X: how it could change cyberwarfare
Harvard Health Letters : Do food sources trump calcium supplements?
Belize archeologist sues over Indiana Jones skull
Husband, wife and dog have lived in sewer for two decades
The Kosher Gourmet A lighter latke with a hint of sweetness cooked in
December 7, 2012

Rabbi Y.Y. Rubinstein: Dream on! A GLIMPSE OF TRUTH: Why we have dreams and what they really mean

Germany moves closer to ban on neo-Nazi party
Greek schools 'fertile ground for neo-Nazis' 10 Medicare must-knows
Brierley Wright, M.S., R.D. : Rise and shine: The best breakfast foods for weight loss
Michael Hogan, M.D.: Mayo Clinic Medical Edge: Resistant hypertension has several possible causes
Tortoiseshell craftsmen adapt to new century
The Kosher Gourmet CHICKPEA CASSEROLE WITH LEMON, HERBS AND SHALLOTS has fresh flavors, lighter dairy and -- the best part -- no pasta
December 5, 2012

Patrick McGreevy: Fate of ban on gay-conversion therapy is uncertain

Richard. Z. Chesnoff: How the Palestinians got here
Fred Weir: Vladimir Putin 2.0: A harder, eastward-looking presidency
Kiplinger's Retirement Report: 10 Medicare must-knows
Sharon Palmer, R.D.: Aaahhh!: The best thirst-quenching drinks
Breath test points to colorectal cancer
Urban sparrows find new use for cigarette butts
The Kosher Gourmet Red Chili-Spiked Chocolate Mousse is a combination of flavors that's complex and memorable
December 3, 2012

Mark Magnier: In crisis, Israel keeps a shtick upper lip

Following 'Palestinian' move at U.N., Israel reclaims $209.7 million it was stiffed . . .
Kimberly Lankford: The Best Resource for Comparing Medicare Plans
Andre Terzic, M.D., Ph.D.: Mayo Clinic Medical Edge: Regenerative medicine poised to revolutionize disease management
Supreme Court to rule if companies can patent genes
Renee Schoof: Want a better idea of college costs? Schools, Congress are trying to help
The Kosher Gourmet by Emma Christensen NORWEGIAN POTATO LEFSE is a thin and soft flatbread that's more substantial than a crepe but more delicate than a flour tortilla
November 30, 2012

Rabbi Berel Wein: The survival of society

Jonathan Tobin: What the upgrading of the 'Palestinians' status at the UN is really about
'A little paranoia' keeps US vigilant: FBI official
Kimberly Lankford: How to get a better deal on a medigap policy
Jill Weisenberger, M.S., R.D., C.D.E.: How dairy products play a key role in many aspect of overall good health
Robert Shmerling, M.D. : Ask the Harvard Experts: Something to cry about
US Senate panel passes email privacy measure
The Kosher Gourmet by Mollie Katzen RICOTTA-BERRY CREPES make for a de-light-ful brunch
November 28, 2012

Jonathan Rosenblum: Beware the Goodists

Paul Greenberg: The land of pharaohs: The more Egypt changes ...
Mark Guarino: Can people record police officers? Illinois ban gets no help at Supreme Court
David Grant: Five reasons America won't fall off the 'fiscal cliff'
Clinton sued over 'Palestinian' aid
Japan firm offers 3D model of foetus
Sharon Palmer, R.D. Beware organic junk food
Germany to toughen bestiality laws
Obese traveler dies awaiting plane big enough to fly home
The Kosher Gourmet by Emily Ho This pasta is a carb-lover's dream
November 26, 2012

Sheera Frenkel:: Hamas' sense of empowerment is justified
Jonathan Tobin: Obama and the Morsi Dictatorship
New haven for terrorists to attack Europe and Africa feared
Kimberly Lankford: What to know about flex account contribution limits
Paralyzed dog study offers hope for humans
Harvard Health Letters: Tired of feeling tired?
Global toy chain offers 'gender neutral' Christmas
UK codebreakers still stumped by secret WWII pigeon message
The Kosher Gourmet by Nealey Dozier This pasta is a carb-lover's dream
November 23, 2012

Rabbi Dr. Nathan Lopes Cardozo:: Religiosity: The Greatest Chess Game on Earth

Caroline B. Glick: The trap that Ariel Sharon built
Jeffrey Fleishman and Reem Abdellatif : Egyptian president called 'new pharaoh' after startling power grab
David Lightman: Behind the scenes, some budget cuts may not be that hard
Jon Ebbert, M.D. : Mayo Clinic Medical Edge: Eliminating these four white foods may make it easier to eat less, lose weight
Harvard Health Letter: Hearing loss: Millions may be suffering needlessly
1.3 million overdiagnosed for breast cancer in US: study
Whale worship a way of life for Vietnam fishermen
The Kosher Gourmet By Chef Mario Batali Walnut Sbrisolona with Blackberries, a crumbly confection from Lombardy with an American touch
November 21, 2012

Steven Emerson:: Little Lives and Big Lies

Hannah Allam: US approach to Gaza-Israel talks shows new reluctance to referee Mideast conflicts
Hara Estroff Marano: Brace yourself: The high art of handling problem people
Ban 'killer robots,' rights group urges
Bonnie Miller Rubin: Parents hire own researchers to tackle rare, fatal disease
Nicci Micco, M.S., and Kerri-Ann Jennings, M.S., R.D: 7 simple ways to detox your diet and your home
New law to ban India's 'untouchable' toilet cleaners
The Kosher Gourmet By Diane Rossen Worthington Smashed Cherries with Amaretti and Ricotta is simple dessert with a sophisticated taste
November 19, 2012

Paul Greenberg:: The gathering storm

Steven Emerson: SURPRISE, SURPRISE! 'Mainstream' Muslim groups back Hamas in latest Mideast mayhem
Kristen Chick & Ahmed Aldabba: Did Egypt inadvertenly aid Israel before the war in Gaza broke out?
McCain suggests Bill Clinton as Gaza truce negotiator
Todd Miller, M.D. : Mayo Clinic Medical Edge: For many, treadmill stress test is a thing of the past
Thousands more anti-homosexual marriage protesters fill France streets, this time in Paris
Kimberly Lankford Make the most of health insurance changes for 2013
Lisa D'Agrosa, R.D.: A buyer's guide to natural sweeteners
The Kosher Gourmet By Joseph Erdos:SPAGHETTI SQUASH SALAD WITH DRIED CRANBERRIES AND HAZELNUTS


Jewish World Review

Vladimir Putin 2.0: A harder, eastward-looking presidency

By Fred Weir


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Vladimir Putin, once again in the Kremlin's top post, faces a far more divided Russia than he did during his first stint, and he's taking a more authoritarian line to match


JewishWorldReview.com |

mOSCOW — (TCSM) It's been just over a year since Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and President Dmitry Medvedev took the stage at a conference of the ruling United Russia party and announced that they had decided "years ago" to trade places after Mr. Medvedev's first presidential term and send Mr. Putin back to the Kremlin for six more years as Russia's supreme ruler.

The 10,000 party delegates leapt to their feet and gave this stunning piece of news a thundering ovation. At that moment, Putin appeared at the height of his powers. After eight highly successful years in the Kremlin in the past decade, he had easily engineered his own replacement by Medvedev in 2008, in order to evade a constitutional ban on more than two consecutive presidential terms, and seems to have believed there would be no difficulty about performing another such switch.

But around the country reactions were more muted, and few seemed to be celebrating. Supporters of Medvedev's modest liberal rhetoric expressed open disappointment. Russia's new social media, such as Facebook, LiveJournal, and the Russian-language VKontakte, erupted in confusion, derision, even outrage.


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In retrospect, that moment may have been a critical watershed in Russia, where the country's traditionalists and new creative class began to part ways. Russia under Putin's second coming has since taken a sharp turn rightward, driving the creation of a permanent opposition that's trapped outside the system and drifting in dangerously radical directions.

"It was a very painful signal to the public that said politics is just a game played by a couple guys at the top, the impression of choice is only an illusion, and they've decided that we're going to have Putin forever," says Boris Nemtsov, a former deputy prime minister who is now a leader of the anti-Kremlin liberal opposition.

"Even some very loyal people were appalled by the cynicism of this maneuver. There is no doubt that it changed public perceptions, by creating this hopeless picture of Putin in power forever, and it was a trigger for the protest movement that was to come," he says.

PUTIN LEADERSHIP NO LONGER UNCHALLENGED
A year on, Putin — who turned 60 on Oct. 7 — has achieved his goal of returning to supreme power, but it is hardly the triumphant Kremlin lap he may have been expecting.

His domain is racked with unexpected political turmoil, and his leadership, though still strong, no longer looks unchallenged. Enormous street protests that broke out last December, propelled by evidence of massive electoral fraud on behalf of United Russia in Duma polls, have continued, and may now be mutating into a permanent and intransigent opposition movement.

The new Duma, established by that deeply flawed and disputed election, has passed a wave of draconian new legislation that appears as much aimed at exacting revenge against the protesters as it is at sharply raising the future penalties for any kind of dissent.

Four years of the Medvedev-Putin "tandem" may have changed Russia in important ways that are only now coming into focus, in part by creating an impression of pluralism at the top. As president, Medvedev had cultivated a more liberal and pro-Western vision of Russia's future, which resonated with many in the country's educated elite and seemed to speak directly to the aspirations of the emerging urban middle class. Putin, the rough-tongued old KGB hand with a very real track record of bringing Russia back from the brink of economic and social collapse in the 1990s, enjoyed stratospheric approval ratings across the country's vast conservative and working-class hinterland.

During the Medvedev years, few complained that the appointed prime minister, Putin, clearly continued to have a strong say — many even believed he maintained full control — over the affairs of state. But when the tandem ended, and its two principals admitted it had been largely a charade, society was set for a split.

"If in 2008 the population was ready to accept anything from the authorities, this was no longer true in 2011," says Alexei Grazhdankin, deputy director of the Levada Center, an independent Moscow-based public opinion agency. "Society has grown, become more sophisticated," he says. "There is a significant middle class that no longer feels economic desperation as its No. 1 priority, but wants to have a voice, feel [like] a respected part of the country. This is a very deep shift, which the authorities failed to notice."

It was largely this educated, prosperous urban middle class that took to the streets last December to protest against electoral fraud and express a full range of grievances they had been harboring against the autocratic political system — which Putin's self-willed return to power symbolized so dramatically — the rampant official corruption, lack of equality before the law, and infuriating privileges enjoyed by the arrogant, almost aristocratic Russian bureaucratic caste.

"The years of the 'tandem' saw some of the most rapid social change in Russian history. There emerged a generation of young Russians who had come of age during the Medvedev years, who took easily to all the very new electronic devices and social networks, and who were not afraid to speak out," says Masha Lipman, editor of the Moscow Carnegie Center's Pro et Contra journal.

Mr. Grazhdankin says that if the authorities had initially chosen dialogue with street protesters, and perhaps addressed some of the most egregious evidence of electoral fraud that had been collected, pressure might have abated.

A HARD TACK TO THE RIGHT
But Putin, claiming the protests were inspired and perhaps even directed from abroad, ran for president by inciting resentment of the prosperous Moscow creative class and by whipping up suspicion of the West among his far-flung conservative base. He also cultivated a much closer relationship with the Russian Orthodox Church, the czarist state's traditional ideological watchdog. At the height of the election campaign, Patriarch Kirill embraced Putin and publicly described the former KGB agent as "a miracle from G0d."

Since Putin's inauguration last May, the impression of a church-state compact has grown with the lengthy trial and harsh two-year prison sentence meted out to three young women from the band Pussy Riot, accused of hurting the religious feelings of believers by performing a "punk prayer" in a nearly empty church. Last month the Duma introduced a new bill that will effectively criminalize blasphemy for the first time since the 19th century.

"The ideological outlines of the new Putin era are becoming clear. I don't think it's Putin's intention to split society, but he's openly trying to please his base ... the most traditional and conservative elements of society," says Andrei Kolesnikov, opinion editor of the opposition weekly Novaya Gazeta. "Putin feels the rejection of the creative class, and because of his character, and perhaps his KGB background, he finds it impossible to reach out to them, to compromise. But the growing influence of the church, and the increasingly conservative tone of governance, makes the alienation of the middle classes a permanent problem," he adds.

LOOKING EASTWARD
The new Putin era may also witness a decisive foreign-policy shift away from integration with the European Union and "reset" with the United States and toward closer political and economic cooperation with China and other Asian countries. Some part of that is clearly logical and inevitable; Russia, with two-thirds of its territory in Asia, is probably wise to pivot away from crisis-riddenEurope and embrace the dynamic economies of the Far East.

But another part may be driven by domestic politics and Putin's abiding suspicions that the West, particularly the US, may lie behind the anti-Kremlin protests. Early in his new term, Putin canceled a visit to the US without explanation, even though President Obama had moved the scheduled Group of Eight meeting to Camp David to accommodate Putin. Last month the Kremlin ordered the US Agency for International Development to close its office in Moscow because it was allegedly meddling in internal Russian politics.

"Putin seems to believe that these protest groups are supported by the West," says Fyodor Lukyanov, editor of Russia in Global Affairs, a Moscow foreign-policy journal. "Even if they are sincere, Putin thinks they are wrong. He thinks they don't understand how fragile everything is, that they will bring on a catastrophe.... You may say this is an age-old Russian conservative point of view, but it's definitely a factor here."

Even some Putin supporters are worried.

"Putin wasn't wrong to come back; he is this country's most popular politician," says Sergei Markov, vice rector of the Plekhanov Economic University and a Putin adviser. "But he is wrong in failing to move quickly to frame a new agenda. He needs to address the new educated middle class as well as the moral majority....

"The irony here is that Vladimir Putin is a hostage to his own success. His policies created a vastly more stable and sophisticated society, and now he has to overcome his inertia and find a way to refresh himself. If he does, he can repeat his past successes. If he fails, I fear he will face a growing wave of problems."

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© 2012, The Christian Science Monitor