To Gary Cohn: As a fellow Jew I implore you to search your moral conscience and, in doing so, the direction of your further participation in Trump’s White House as director of the National Economic Council.
I took a few moments to read your bio on Wikipedia and noted that your grandparents fled Poland to seek a “freer” life in America. Your family was fortunate. My parents are also Polish Jews who were not so fortunate. My parents spent their youth being terrorized in Auschwitz while the world simply stood by.
President Trump’s words and actions since his initial forays onto the political scene reveal a man deeply flawed and prone to malice, hate and bullying. As you can understand, images from the torch-lit alt-right demonstration in Charlottesville brought to the surface dormant fears I had hoped to never confront. The scenes of the alt-right battling the antifa are all too reminiscent of similar street battles in 1930s Europe.
Jewish tradition teaches that respect for all people is fundamental to each person’s duty to God: “What is hateful to you, do not do to your neighbor” (Babylonian Talmud, Shabbat 31a). Equality is based on the concept that all of God’s children are “created in the image of God” (Genesis 1:27).
I hope you heed the words of our prophet Micah 6:8: To act justly, love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.
Ellen Tafeen,
Portola Valley
Cohen is so in love with the idea of
cutting taxes on the wealthy, that he’s sacrificed any credibility he
might ever have had as a Jew or even as a human being.
Sacrificing
his principles for his politics shows that those principles were there
only for the speeches at major Jewish organizations’ dinners; when he’s
in his tux, he’s a great man. When he’s back in his $2800 business suit,
he’s just Donald Trump’s shmatte.
Tax cuts for the wealthy trump principle for Cohen and his sidekick, Mnuchin.
If he were a Democrat, would you still say the things you’re saying?