What Happened Today: March 31, 2023
Trump indicted; American life expectancy plummets; Las Vegas killer was upset with casinos; Sugarcubes on Gerhard Richter
The Big Story
After years of rumors that former president and current Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump would be indicted for any number of charges, a Manhattan grand jury voted on Thursday to do just that. While the charges won’t be revealed until Trump appears in court, they are likely to stem from the accusation that he asked his lawyer Michael Cohen to pay $130,000 in “hush money” to cover up an alleged affair with former porn star Stormy Daniels just before the 2016 presidential election.
George Mason law professor Eugene Kontorovich told The Scroll that while any former president can be legally indicted, the move against a “leading presidential candidate does raise questions about interference with the democratic process.” Kontorovich added that this has never happened before in the United States, likely because prosecutors have had “[an] understanding on the effect it will have on our culture. Like the independent counsel unleashed in the wake of Watergate, such indictments will become regular features of American politics and haunt Bidens and Trumps alike, and due to our federal system, no cease-fire can be easily negotiated.”
Trump has apparently agreed to surrender to the Manhattan District Attorney on Tuesday, April 4, when he will be photographed, fingerprinted, and arrested before appearing in court to hear the charges. While his lawyer says Trump will never make a deal and that “there’s no crime,” the former president wrote on his social media platform, Truth Social, “The Judge ‘assigned’ to my Witch Hunt Case, a ‘Case’ that has NEVER BEEN CHARGED BEFORE, HATES ME.”
Read More: https://www.wsj.com/articles/trump-lawyer-hits-airwaves-to-attack-new-york-indictment-9fb00702
In The Back Pages: The Four Children
The Rest
→ On Tuesday, China’s Alibaba announced that it is splitting into six smaller units, a move that some have told reporters was orchestrated by former chairman Jack Ma, the man who disappeared after Chinese officials pumped the brakes on his attempt to take the company public in 2020. Ma hasn’t spent much time in China since the episode surrounding the failed IPO, and China analysts believe that this announcement, which coincides with Ma’s highly visible return visit to the country, reflects a détente of sorts between the Chinese government and the private sector.
→ Voting with your feet has taken on a whole new meaning in the United States’ major cities in recent years. In 2022, Los Angeles County lost 90,704 residents, the most of any U.S. county. Cook County, where Chicago is located, lost 68,314 in the year between July 2021 and July 2022, and New York State saw the largest exodus of any state by percentage of population. We at The Scroll have no idea why people would want to leave New York, Illinois, or California for tax-friendly states with better-functioning social services. We are agnostic.
→ A new PhD thesis by a member of the U.S. Space Force, Major Jason Lowery, has caught the attention of both the national security community and the wacky, wonderful world of cryptocurrency philosophers.
The thesis, titled “Softwar: A Novel Theory on Power Projection and the National Strategic Significance of Bitcoin,” proposes that the accumulation of Bitcoin by the United States is not merely a potential route to national wealth but also a way to fight future great power wars without resorting to nuclear weapons.
By competing for influence on the platform through the use of miners—supercomputers that attempt to solve questions on the protocol in exchange for rewards—the United States could be a leading power in the cyber “trade routes” of the future.
Lowery argues that the technology has a huge role to play in cybersecurity as well and that it should be protected under the Second Amendment as a weapon of self-defense, even as many inside the government, he contends, want Bitcoin to fail. Lowery has warned on Twitter that “I don’t know how else I can be more explicitly clear with the public without getting in trouble.”
→ Graph of the Day:
America’s life expectancy continues to plummet, especially for the youngest Americans. While the average American is much richer, for example, than the average Briton, the average U.S. life expectancy now matches that of the English town of Blackpool, where life expectancy is the lowest in the nation. To put it another way, 1 in 25 American 5-year-olds will not reach the age of 40, a sad state of affairs driven by medical issues related to obesity, drug overdoses, and other deaths of despair. As of 2021, children in the United States are also more likely to be killed by guns than in a car accident, making gun-related deaths the highest cause of mortality among Americans up to 18 years old.
→ The FBI finally released a cache of documents last week describing in greater detail the mindset of Las Vegas mass shooter Stephen Paddock, who in 2017 killed 58 attendees of the Route 91 Harvest music festival, the most deaths of any mass shooting in U.S. history. The heavily redacted documents, which were obtained by The Wall Street Journal in a lengthy request process for public records, suggest that Paddock was upset at the casinos for slowly rolling back the VIP perks he’d received for years as a high-stakes gambler; a fellow gambler suspected this was what led him to “snap.” Previously, the FBI report on the incident said there was “no clear single motivating factor” for the killings, and the FBI declined to comment on the release of the new documents.
→ Quote of the Day:
I’ve had parents ask me if we have a water filter, which we do. … Can you imagine in the ’90s if a parent called up and was like, ‘I just want to make sure you guys have a water filter. What type of water are the kids drinking, and is there going to be gluten?’
That’s Deborah Pagani, a Manhattan mother explaining to The Wall Street Journal what it’s like as a parent hosting sleepovers for other kids whose parents worry about everything from TikTok to sugar and guns in the house. And we wonder why these kids get to college and scream at their professors over “trigger” words in literature?
Read More: https://www.wsj.com/articles/sleepovers-divide-parents-allow-or-not-d9b8072c
→ Scientists have shown for the first time that plants can talk. Tel Aviv University researchers Lilach Hadany and Yossi Yovel used ultrasonic listening devices to show for the first time that plants can communicate with each other. Hadany told The Times of Israel that the plants communicate “information … about water scarcity or injury” by using clicking sounds that cannot be heard by the human ear. What remains to be seen is if animals and insects, who are capable of hearing sounds at that frequency, are interacting with plants on that basis. It’s already been proven, for example, that plants will increase their sugar levels if they “hear” pollinators nearby. Baruch Ha’shem.
Gerhard Richter at the David Zwirner Gallery, New York
On view March 16 - April 29
Past the enormous canvases that made Gerhard Richter famous—the scraped works that the artist peeled into being, a process documented in the wonderful Gerhard Richter Painting—and past the forgettable drawings and sculpture, is a room full of 31 small prints, each titled “mood,” blooming off the walls.
Richter, born in 1932 in Dresden, Germany, has long been interested in chance. Those famous paintings at the front of the gallery are produced using squeegees, which layer and unlayer paint from the canvas, the colors sometimes mixing into clean, monochromatic bands and sometimes becoming mottled striations of pigment that are genuinely surprising as they emerge, abstractly and indescribably beautiful.
Mood, too, is a matter of chance. “My moods don’t believe in each other,” Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote, a lesson he passed along to Martin Heidegger, a philosopher of mood and an important influence for Richter. These 31 “mood” prints, identically titled but visually distinct, invite the viewer to think of mood beyond the bounded borders of language—sad, happy, anxious, bored—and instead think of moods as fields of mixed, billowing colors, sometimes loose and mauvey, sometimes dotted black, sometimes deeply green. I feel pink and yellow about it.
TODAY IN TABLET:
America’s Favorite Prophet by Stuart Halpern
Elijah. He’s not just for Passover anymore.
Rock the Bush by David Meir Grossman
‘Live at Bush Hall’ is post-Brexit new wave with a punch from Black Country, New Road
SCROLL TIP LINE: Have a lead on a story or something going on in your workplace, school, congregation, or social scene that you want to tell us about? Send your tips, comments, questions, and suggestions to scroll@tabletmag.com.
The Four Children
A new survey captures the changing landscape of American Judaism
By Sean Cooper
A new large-scale survey has found American Jews are splitting along new lines, confirming some previously reported trends and upending others.
Sponsored by the Keren Keshet Foundation, the follow-up to the widely cited 2020 Pew Research study of American Jewry asked 1,500 U.S. Jews many of the same questions, while also throwing into the mix additional, more detailed prompts about Jewish upbringing, communal involvement, and views on politics. The results reveal a community that, as ever, is rife with contradictions and evolving ideas about what it means to be Jewish. (Keren Keshet is a supporter of Tablet Magazine.)
“The number of self-identifying Jews is up, ” the survey finds, “but so many of these are barely active and only nominally committed Jews. ” Though intermarriage between Jews and non-Jewish spouses continues to drive down Jewish communal engagement outside the Orthodox community, the composition of Jewish households is but one of several factors diminishing the number of American Jews actively involved in communal life. The ongoing contraction of both Reform and Conservative congregations and the intensifying politicalization of formerly apolitical Jewish social organizations are sharpening the decline.
Several numbers stood out: 41% of American Jews believe religious organizations in America “do more harm than good,” and a considerable percentage of American Jews—roughly a sixth—found the cost of community engagement to be a barrier.
There were other notable findings that reflected significant preoccupations across American Jewry, regardless of age or degree of affiliation. 70% of American Jews believe there is more anti-semitism today than there was five years ago. And the kitchen is emerging as a sacred space, with 64% of American Jews saying they make or consume traditional Jewish recipes as a way of connecting with being Jewish.
In their orientation toward Jewish identity and established communal life, respondents appear to break down into four new descriptive categories: Active, Affiliated, Ambivalent and Alienated.
Active Jews, some 16% of the American Jewish population, are those who center Jewish communal and religious life; Affiliated Jews, constituting 34%, have strong Jewish identities even if traditional or communal practice plays a less central role in their lives; Ambivalent Jews, again 34% of the American Jewish community, straddle the line between interest and avoidance; Alienated Jews, representing 16% of respondents, are those with little Jewish connection at all.
It’s a breakdown reminiscent of one of the iconic sections of the Passover Haggadah, “The Four Sons,” which presents four archetypical children, each embodying a different way one might approach the Seder—and questions of faith more generally. Labeling ourselves (and others) is a cherished pastime, as is chafing at and resisting the reductive categories. As with the Four Sons, it’s not hard to perceive the archetypes presented in the new survey as fluid both within the categories and even in individuals. (Many Jews are, at times, both active or alienated, ambivalent as well as affiliated.)
In many ways, the new survey results mirror Pew’s core findings. For example, in 2020, being Jewish was either very or somewhat important to 75% of Jews; in 2023, that number was roughly the same at 72%. The 2023 finding that 81% of Jews feel either some or a great deal of belonging to the Jewish people likewise follows closely to the more than 80% of Jews who told Pew they have at least a sense of belonging as well.
Indeed a central takeaway from the Keren Keshet survey is that the trends captured by Pew in 2020 have deepened, and become clearer. Respondents evince an ongoing attachment to their Jewish identity and sense of belonging, while also saying that they are increasingly disconnected from both religious and cultural institutions. 52% of Jews were seldom if ever showing up to religious services in 2020; 56% of Jews said the same in 2023. Shabbat, too, was not a meaningful event for 61% of Jews in 2020; in 2023 that number climbed to 75%.
Some Jewish institutional leaders might attribute this ongoing decline in communal engagement to the growing number of Jews who no longer count themselves as Conservative or Reform, or any branch at all. For Orthodox Jews, however, this hasn’t been a problem. Along with an otherwise sustained and atypically high engagement in communal activities, Orthodox Jews have steadily remained 10% of the Jewish community; it was 10% of Jews who said they were Orthodox when Pew asked about denominations in 2013, 9% when they asked again in 2020, and back up to 10% in the 2023 Keshet inquiry. Other denominations could only hope for such consistency. For the 54% of Jews who belonged to the dominant branches of Reform (37%) and Conservative (17%) in 2020, that total has dropped, in less than three years, to 42%. Now, only 28% say they are Reform and 14% Conservative. That change in affiliation hasn’t led to a bump for Reconstructionist or other smaller branches, either. Instead, the 32% of those in 2020 who said they have no affiliation at all has grown today, up to 43%.
So can we say, then, that the disengagement within the American Jewish community is simply the byproduct of living in a secularized nation where, according to a recent American Enterprise Institute (AEI) survey, one in every four Americans has no religious affiliation? The time between the 2020 Pew survey and the Keren Keshet survey was also the period of COVID-19, and it stands to reason that years of lockdowns and masking would have profound effects on our houses of worship. As that same AEI survey found, of the 25% of respondents that had never attended a religious service before the pandemic, that number grew to 33% afterwards. The decline was most signicant for Americans 30 and younger, which tracks with a previous AEI poll that found four out of every ten young adults between 18 and 29 have never attended a religious service.
In his 2000 bestseller Bowling Alone, Robert Putnam noted the decline across most every civic group, with attendance at Elks lodges and Rotary clubs, for example, having by then dropped by 57% compared to 25 years earlier. The number of those showing up to the same clubs would only continue to decline in the two decades after the book’s publication; Freemasons saw a 76% drop in membership between 2000 and 2016, and the Elks Club, which boasts no fewer than six U.S. Presidents as alumni, has witnessed a similar drop, with the 1.6 million members of 1980 cut almost in half by 2012.
Indeed, American Jewish institutional leaders often describe the decline in membership and attendance as merely the latest chapter in a decades-long American problem. In 2000, the median congregation membership was 137; that number fell by more than half over the next two decades, to 65 in 2020.
But just because American Jews are less likely to attend services or belong to congregations doesn’t mean they’re not searching for religious or spiritual meaning—or that they are uninterested in finding a Jewish community unlike the ones on offer. While only 21% of the Keshet responders have attended synagogue in the past 3 months, 46% have prayed to God. 55% of respondents feel very or moderately spiritual, and 62% of American Jews are at least somewhat religious. The gap signals not a lack of religiosity but rather a lack of interest and engagement in existing Jewish institutions. According to this latest survey’s results, a large percentage of American Jews are searching for spiritual and religious meaning, but cannot seem to find compelling or effective addresses for these sentiments.
By choice or circumstance, Americans are spending much more time alone. Between 2014 and 2019, the amount of time Americans spent with friends dropped by a stunning 37%. In 2014, the year when time spent with friends really began to drop in earnest, more than half of American consumers had smartphones. By 2019, smartphones had penetrated 71% of the American market. Notably, even if you expand the circle of friends to colleagues and neighbors, Americans who once spent 15 hours every week with this larger cohort in 2012 only gave 12 hours a week to the same group in 2019, and 10 hours weekly in 2021. Regardless of class, race, or ethnicity, Americans didn’t use those extra hours to spend time with their kids or significant others; they simply spent more time alone.
Outside of the internet, the only social entities that appear to be drawing in large numbers of new members—or users, as we might call them—are social clubs offering luxurious amenities to affluent clientele. The selective Soho House, which tends to reject applicants from the world of finance and banking while charging creative types between $2,100 and $3,200 a year for access, grew their membership by 44% between 2021 and 2022. Co-working spaces that boast similarly social-centric offerings in premium urban neighborhoods have witnessed comparable growth in recent years, the pandemic notwithstanding. In 2022, some 1.1 million Americans were working in 6,200 co-work spaces nationwide—a 55% increase to the number of spaces from five years prior.
What’s perhaps most interesting—or worrisome—for Jewish organizations is that communal engagement continues to contract despite herculean efforts by well-funded organizations to reverse the trend. Since its launch in 1999, for example, Birthright Israel has sent more than 800,000 young Jews to Israel, a cohort that accounts for 20% of all American Jews between the ages of 25 and 34. And while 85% of those Birthright participants report being more likely to be somewhat or even very attached to Israel, 46% of all Jews today told Keshet they’re either not too attached to Israel or not attached at all.
Pessimism about the future of Jewish engagement, to say nothing of basic civic participation or the cultivation of friends on the internet, would seem well earned given all of this. And the implications are no less dire. As Alexis de Tocqueville observed on his jaunt through 1830s America, democratic citizens are independent and weak by themselves, and can “achieve almost nothing …. if they do not learn to help each other voluntarily.” Perhaps this is why, despite their own ambivalence about religion and communal life, some 65% of American Jews report wanting their children and grandchildren to be engaged with Judaism.
It’s possible that the problem for Jewish communal institutions is not a lack of interest, but rather that peoples’ problems are larger than the frames being applied to them. When 63% of American Jews say they feel America is on the wrong track, it suggests that the challenges they are having with their civic and religious affiliations go hand in hand with a growing sense of instability in American life and society.
Should be category that captures lazy ass Jews like me; Never go to synagogue, no in person Jewish activities, but stay in touch with Jewish world via internet reading and donating $ to multiple J orgs...
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What’s Jewish about “Jewish communal organizations.”? It seems that my JCC is gym/healthcare facility decorated by a Center for Loving Kindness whose idea of Jewish programming is to invite three non-Jews to lecture about social issues on Yom Kippur. My Jewish Federation funds social services that largely serve non-Jewish communities. Though it also funds Jewish day schools, it seems to be blissfully unaware of the poorly educated children in the community beyond those schools, indifferent to the fact that we are sending those children unprepared to proudly define their Judaism , much less Zionism, when they enter the hostile area s of higher - and even lower level - education. Am I “unattached”? Yes, if that means being supportive of the likes of the ADL, AmericanJewish Committee, and Federation. Yes, if that means “belonging” to a congregation whose rabbis themselves seem to have a weak attachment to Israel and serious Jewish ideas and values. Do I keep kosher? Yes. Do I light Shabbos candles and refrain from shopping and traveling on Shabbat? Yes. Do I read Jewish books and articles and spend hours on the phone with my friend grappling with Jewish ideas? Yes. Am I “affiliated”? No. How do you define the likes of someone like me?