חדש באתר: מיכי-בוט. עוזר חכם על כתבי הרב מיכאל אברהם.

There is an obligation to respect guidelines if I have come to the conclusion that the officials stole my vote.

שו”תCategory: generalThere is an obligation to respect guidelines if I have come to the conclusion that the officials stole my vote.
asked 5 months ago

If I have come to the conclusion that time and time again the people who voted for something are maliciously neutering and in fact sterilizing my vote, especially for the areas for which I voted, don’t run away in your response, Eli, why did you come to this conclusion, because it will waste both of us (especially me) time. This is how I came to the true conclusion for me, like all truths, through intuition. Is there anything conscientious that I need to consider when I come to violate instructions and when I come to evade taxes? And that’s the way for me. The officials denied the people’s choice and they are robbers, so why should I consider any of their instructions???


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0 Answers
מיכי Staff answered 5 months ago
Since you state that you are Haredi, you have no right to argue at all in these areas. So I will leave your decisions to you. Beyond the fact that the question is general and stupid, in any case there is probably no connection between the decision you will make and logic and morality, so what is the point of a logical and moral discussion?!

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חרדי replied 5 months ago

And because I am Haredi, I have no right to claim that I am Haredi, perhaps you will also determine that I am Haredi and use matzos that are mixed with blood.

מיכי Staff replied 5 months ago

Not just logic. Reading comprehension too. The situation is lost. Blood libels are a useful tool against those against whom we have no justified claims. From the perspective of the Haredim, this problem does not exist in God.

חרדי replied 5 months ago

Also, making an anti-Semitic claim that because I testify that I am Haredi I have no right to claim anything in these areas is an unjustified claim.

שמואל replied 5 months ago

Rabbi Michi,
It is completely understandable why you think the Haredim *as a whole* in light of their conduct – there is no opening here in these matters.
But a specific Haredi is addressing you here, he is in his own name, and perhaps this is a guy who completed permanent service as a fighter, and today he is a high-tech executive who imports startups around the world and the economy in Israel, all while volunteering in the MDA and brothers in arms, and planting trees in the Negev.
The fact that he identifies as Haredi, because perhaps he belongs to a sector. In the sense: communal, family, educational institutions, voting in elections.
There are Haredim like that. True, when you look at the Haredim as a whole, it is clear that there is no reason to attribute these to them because of anecdotal cases,
But here a person is addressing you, privately, why attribute stereotypes to him?

י.ד. replied 5 months ago

Let him identify himself by name or nickname. Anyone who identifies as Haredi is presumed to have come to tease.

חרדי replied 5 months ago

This is the least obscure nickname than just saying that I am called by a pseudonym. In this case, you are right, Shmuel. Not only did I serve, I had the highest classification currently available in the army (and from here you will understand why I am mentioning my name completely), and I not only gave my young years the most significant contribution that can be made today in the army (I will only imply that part of the successful opening operation that took place in Iran is connected in a courageous way to the revolution that I brought to the Air Force (which is related, among other things, to the concepts of the theory of constraints and the bottleneck, which there is no room to detail when before you I changed it in the American Air Force and after that here in Israel and many other actions that my father did not know about until the day he died). And not only that, after finishing his years of service, I volunteered for free (not as a soldier in the regular army, God forbid, I am short of money). For over 20 years, the main thing was to throw mud and muck, what we do is what we have.

דוד ש. replied 5 months ago

It's impressive that you managed to do all this with such low intelligence. I mean, you could be a mechanic by profession, but revolutionize the American animal and then change it in Israel, when according to you your role is related to engineering, industrial management and information systems. I would have expected clearer wording, fewer spelling and syntax errors, and a basic understanding of data. Strange.
In essence, could Bennett's voters in those days when he became prime minister, in your opinion, have ignored the law? What nonsense…
If your house committee decides by majority on yellow lighting in the lobby, when you have declared all your life how much you hate yellow lighting, does that exempt you from paying house committee fees? Move or pay like everyone else.

חרדי replied 5 months ago

I have no idea about your high intelligence (if you do have it as you are trying to imply, you could have reached an insight in the following direction). In any case, I am Australian by origin and my Hebrew is from interaction with my students in the Air Force and not from studies in an ulpan or the like.

מיכי Staff replied 5 months ago

Friends, I suggest not entering into an in-depth discussion of people's intelligence here.

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