Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Israel has no Jewish law constitution and is opposed by Politician Livini and late St Patrick day joke




Grow Ever Higher


A person constantly goes from one level to the next. If you're not going up, you're going down. It is impossible to remain on one level.

In what ways can you go up today?
Love Yehuda Lave


An Irish priest is driving down to New York and gets stopped for speeding in Connecticut. The state trooper smells alcohol on the priest's breath and then sees an empty wine bottle on the floor of the car.

He says, "Sir, have you been drinking?"

"Just water," says the priest.

The trooper says, "Then why do I smell wine?"

The priest looks at the bottle and says, "Good Lord! He's done it again!"


Believe it or not, but, after 65 years, Israel still does not have a constitution fully realizing its being a Jewish state.
By: Yori Yanover
Published: March 16th, 2013
New Justice Minister Tzipi Livn.
New Justice Minister Tzipi Livn.
Photo Credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90
MK Tzipi Livni, Israel's newest Justice Minister, stressed on Saturday that she would not support the basic law bill "Israel is the national state of the Jewish people," whose promotion is part of the new coalition agreements with the Jewish Home party.
In the absence of a constitution, The Basic Laws of Israel (Chukei Hayesod) deal with the formation and role of the principal state's institutions, and the relations between the state's authorities.
Some of the basic laws also protect civil rights.
These laws were originally intended as draft chapters of a future Israeli constitution, but since over the past 65 years the Knesset has yet to come up with a final, all-encompassing constitution, these laws are being used by the courts as a de facto constitution.
As of today, the Basic Laws do not cover all constitutional issues, and there is no deadline set to the completion of the process of merging them into one comprehensive constitution. There is no clear rule determining the precedence of Basic Rules over regular legislation, and in many cases this issue is left to the interpretation of the judicial system.
The new bill, endorsed so far by at least 40 MKs, many of them Likud members, opens with a paraphrasing of the original Israeli Declaration of Independence:
The State of Israel is the national home of the Jewish nation, where it fulfills its desire for self-determination according to its cultural and historical heritage.
The right for the realization of national self-determination in the State of Israel belongs exclusively to the Jewish nation.
The provisions of this Basic Law or any other legislation will hence be interpreted in light of what is prescribed in this section.
The rest of the proposal includes references to Israel's democratic system of government, its official language (only one – Hebrew), the law of return, the national calendar, Jewish law as the final arbiter of judicial conflicts, and the preservation of the holy sites.
In short, there's much in there to upset a lefty. Indeed, a think tank named The Israeli Institute for Democracy, has been warning against it for several years, saying it would disrupt the delicate balance between Israel's being a Jewish state and a democracy.
Justice Minister Livni told interviewer Nadav Peri: "I'm against the law and will act to make sure it doesn't pass."
Livni added that she is also about to serve as chair of the ministerial legislative committee, which sends up government laws for Knesset approval, a new role she took up especially in order "to prevent legislation that would harm the Democrats values of the State of Israel."

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