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Prince Edward Island
Rabbi Shmuley gives a brief overview of his visit to Prince Edward Island with his family
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Prince Edward Island
Prince Edward Island
Rabbi Shmuley gives a brief overview of his visit to Prince Edward Island with his family
Click title to download! - 06/28/10
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Israel Under Fire
Israel Under Fire
Hugo Chavez calls Israel a “genocidal state”. Rabbi Shmuley discusses the state of Israel’s relationships with the rest of the world, as well as Obama’s lack of support for Israel.
Click title to download! - 06/23/10
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General McChrystal should Not be Fired
General McChrystal should Not be Fired
Rabbi Shmuley, conferencing in from a vacation with his family, discusses why he feels it is a grave error to have fired Gen. McChrystal.
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Monday, December 28, 2009
The Alternate-Reality Decade
If you would have invested one hundred dollars in the stock market in January of 2000, by December of 2009 it would be worth just ninety. This has led some writers to describe the past ten years as the lost decade. I disagree. Loss assumes an unconscious act of forgetfulness. This, by contrast, was a decade of deliberate escape, an era in time when America chose to enter an alternate reality. A ten year interval where otherwise responsible citizens decided that the best way to deal with their problems was to simply ignore them.
This decade saw the advent of reality TV, launched by Fox in February, 2000 with ‘Who Wants to Marry a Multi-Millionaire,’ ushering in an era where people became so unenamored of their own reality that they chose to escape to someone else’s. It was a time where we developed an insatiable appetite for fame and learned to live vicariously through Hollywood glamour and celebrity trainwrecks. It was a decade that ended with us watching an average of 5 hours of TV per day and where Hollywood broke all previous records as people saw ten bucks to escape problems as the ultimate bargain. It was also a decade that saw the advent of texting, allowing people to forego the immersion of emotion-filled conversation and escape to dry, robotic discourse. Most of all, it was a decade where we shopped until the economy dropped, using consumption as the ultimate escape from unhappiness and dissatisfaction.
The tragedy of having escaped to an alternate reality this past decade is that our problems have only gotten worse. After 9/11 we delegated the fight against terror to a warrior class of just two percent of the population and refused to even watch their dead bodies come home for burial, busy as we were watching Dancing with the Stars. We then refused to even pay for our wars and just added it on to a national debt that at the end of the decade reached the staggering sum of twelve trillion dollars. Having not been content to nearly destroy our entire economy through a truly reckless government and personal spending binge, we added one further escape in the form of internet porn which by the end of the decade had grown, by some reports, to an hour a day for men.
In the meantime our relationships got worse as, for the first time in American history, singles became the majority population in the country. Our country became more politically divided between liberal and conservative since incessant tension and conflict create a diversionary reality of their own.
And as we escaped and escaped, we scarcely asked ourselves what were escaping from. What was so uninviting about our lives that we were constantly running from them? What was inadequate about our marriages that we spent much of the decade discussing Brad and Angelina’s non-marriage? What was so boring about our kids that we ended up obsessed with Madonna’s adopted kids? And what gaping hole had opened inside us that required shoving an endless number of electronics, cars, and jewelry just to fill that cavernous space? A year after the collapse our bankers are just as greedy, our shopping patterns nearly as voracious, our politician’s spending patterns even more reckless.
Some would say that 9/11 was the cause behind the decade of escape. After an end was brought to a lengthy cold war we thought that danger was finally behind us. So when death rained down from the heavens we responded by checking out. I don’t buy it. Americans have always responded to military crises by deeper engagement rather than mindless escape.
No, the real reason for our escape was the loss of Godly meaning from our lives. The material plenty of the eighties and the nineties brought about a gradual spiritual corrosion. We began to lust for objects rather than purpose. We allowed our careers to take the place of a genuine life calling. Friends came to supplant family. Relationships based on common interests stood in for commitments based on common purpose.
In the process we allowed shallowness and laziness to creep into our souls. Escaping was so much easier than engaging. Coming home from work it was a lot easier to pop on the TV than talk to our kids. Taking our spouses out for a weekly movie stood in for having raw and honest conversations. And when all this emptiness depressed us and made us feel lonely, we turned to the impulse purchase as the solution. We went to the mall rather than to the Church, to the Cineplex rather than the Synagogue.
I was born in the United States and lived here for the first sixteen years of my life before studying in Israel and Australia and then serving as Rabbi at Oxford for what amounted, in total, to seventeen years abroad. I returned with my family just as this decade was beginning. I love America, but I’d have to conclude that for all the technological advances of the past decade, we’ve stagnated socially. We are ending the decade poorer, more ignorant, and more alone.
I am therefore not surprised that an obsession with Michael Jackson is what closed the decade for Michael became the very symbol of American escape. Rather than confront his mounting debt he just spent more money to distract himself from looming financial oblivion. Rather than seeking to build inner self-esteem, he turned to plastic surgery to feel better about the man he saw in the mirror. And rather than address the pain that was consuming him, he turned to prescription drugs to medicate it away.
We would be wise to reflect on how tragically his story turned out.
Our country needs new direction and now more than ever there is hope for optimism. We have seen how unfulfilling rampant materialism and greed are. We have learned that mindless escapes foster even greater problems. Let this therefore make this coming decade one of re-engagement. Let’s fill the emptiness in our lives not with more shopping but with more communal volunteering. Let’s watch less TV and read more books. Let’s text a little less and open up a whole lot more. Let this be the decade of deeper reflection and self-awareness. And over the next ten years let’s learn to be content with our material blessings and pursue instead the riches of the spirit – wisdom, virtue, character, and enlightenment.
After a decade of mindless escapes its time we reached for a higher reality.
Rabbi Shmuley Boteach’s most recent books are ‘The Michael Jackson Tapes: A Tragic Icon Reveals His Soul in Intimate Conversation’ and ‘The Blessing of Enough: Rejecting Material Greed, Embracing Spiritual Hunger. http://www.shmuley.com.
Comments
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Monday, December 28, 2009
kats101
Interesting article, and I’m glad you addressed this issue. It does appear that many Americans have purposely tried to ignore much of reality. However, I do belive that 9/11 has exacerbated this. I can relate the situation to my own personal awareness. I have been a born-again Christian since 1976. I studied much end-of-the age prophecies in those years. I’m ashamed to say that I basically “fell asleep” in 1981-82 regarding the depth of the relationship I shared with God in those early years. When 9/11 happened, I finally “woke” back up. I realized that everything the Bible relates regarding the end of the age is very literal and is true and may well be happening in my human lifetime. Through the grace of God, my walk with Him again became intense, and this relationship grew. I have talked with many people about life in the US after 9/11. Interesting, many of my friends who are born-again Christians seem more acutely aware of our external environment and world issues that are in the process of development. On the other hand, many others (especially those I know who are not active Christians)do actively seek an escape by ignoring financial realities, human relationship issues, etc. It makes me think that there is a collective subconciousness around the world (not just the US)that knows what will be coming on the world, and this is much more than a military crisis.
Regarding Mr. Michael Jackson (peace be upon him), I see him as such a symbol of Americana. I don’t think that all the people who contemplate his situation are trying to escape reality. At least for myself, who happens to be in his age group, I grew up with him. I remember him as a child, as a young man, and climbs he made in his career. This man took on so much at such a young age. I doubt that anyone ever thought about the toll or the cost this might take on him eventually. I remember how generous he was with so many charities and people in the 1980’s and early 90’s. I think it is a tragic statement for our times that when he hit “hard times” (for him), who was actually there for him? I’m not trying to be sarcastic, but it does appear to me that sometimes this guy got the short end of the stick compared to what he put out. For some of us our thought about him is “How could this have ever happened to someone who had so much going for himself?“ or “Something has gone tragically wrong- this was never supposed to happen.“ So, in a sense he has actually inspired a greater depth of emotion and reflection for some of us despite the outward appearances of superficiality. And isn’t that a major point of your article? -
Monday, December 28, 2009
yoni
It is. And what Rabbi Shmuley needs to remember is that negativity will never help anything. One needs to react positively to everything, accept it as it is. Movies can also be a way to convey social messages. The fact that more Americans are indulging in movies and TV means that the ones who aren’t doing so aren’t doing their job.
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Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Grizzly Bear Mom
I’ve heard it said that humankind lives for its passion, pleasure and power (a-musements-without thought) unless directed by a higher calling. Let’s all plug into that higher calling and work on the spirutal, emotional, intellectual, physical and financial (eliminating debt/shopping and investing in our futures) this year.
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Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Christie311
I am totally inspired! Thanks Rabbi!

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