ardvarcus

Makes sense when you consider that the Jews invented international Communism.

glennvtx

This is not even the meaning of tikkun olam, which means and is always translated as, " healing the world". This article is crap.

sore_ass_losers

Yeah, but ‘healing the world’ in whose perspective? Unfortunately it just comes down to ‘what’s good for the JewS’.

glennvtx

It does not. Strictly speaking, it is what is good from the persepecrive of what is in line with the god of the torah, which has informed every single advancement of mankind since inception, including all of western culture. There are good and bad people of all cultures, do not let the rich and powerful trick you into believing the jews are your enemy, your enemy are kings, government, and those that blindly follow them.

sore_ass_losers

And Jews uniquely know what God wants? After all God reads the Talmud for advice.

It’s my world too, and I was not consulted.

I find in the US tikkun olam is all about minority rights, especially their pet Negroes, since Jews are a minority here. In Israel, 180 degrees opposite.

There are some good Jews, but not the majority.

There are no Kings here, by the way.

glennvtx

there are kings, just not by name. Any time you have a person asserting authority over another, arbitrarily, you have a problem. Here it is "democratic", but that is just a fallacy, an appeal to the polulace. Unless a person has demonstrably, materially harmed another, rhey should be left alone.

mememeyou

From the headline : David Horowitz’s memoir Radical Son, in which he ponders how and why his Jewish parents became members of the Communist Party U.S.A., and thus idolators in the totalitarian personality cult of a mass murderer named Josef Stalin. Horowitz recognized the cultural roots of this and discussed it in the context of tikkun olam. As I wrote in February 2011:

Tikkun olam is a rabbinical concept that might properly be translated as “for the public good,” but which in the modern era has been politicized by many on the Left, so that it is indistinguishable in their interpretation from “social justice.” Most famously, Michael Lerner — a 1960s anti-war radical who once led an SDS splinter group called the Seattle Liberation Front — named his magazine Tikkun.