Good morning, Stroock's Books commune.
Here we are at the coffeeshop again, drinking mediocre coffee, just so we can get the hell out of the house for a couple of hours. The music is set to light adult-contemporary. Could be worse.
We hit the weights yesterday for our third weights only gym session in ten days. We feel fine and the shoulder feels a lot better with the work. The act of lifting will cause us to put on weight, no? Something we noticed since we began our work with light dumbbells about 6 weeks ago. So much for that 235 lbs goal. Whatevs. Right now lifting feels good and we're seeing results.
Related: we have an appointment with our cardiologist today. We'll see what he says. Let's keep our fingers crossed for pretty nurses.
We want to wake up in the morning, make our coffee, tell Oldest Daughter to have a nice day at school, open our computer, go to the Times of Israel, and read a headline like the following, 'Commandos rescue several hostages.' We're frustrated that this has not yet happened. Israeli intelligence estimates that as many as 50 of the remaining hostages are dead. This blog wonders if they're all dead, and that's why the IDF hasn't rescued them.
The Times of Israel says, 'Israel is open to allowing Hamas leader and October 7 mastermind Yahya Sinwar to go into exile in exchange for the release of all hostages and the end of Hamas rule in the Gaza Strip, NBC reports.' Stroock's Books finds this deal acceptable. And then the Israelis can just kill them later. You know what the imams say. Mossad: it's never and accident.
An excellent article in foreign affairs by one Colin P. Clarke, Israel's Counterinsurgency Trap. Clarke argues Israel doesn't want to get bogged in Gaza rebuilding and running COIN operations there for the next decade. He quotes retired General David Petraeus, 'Repeating the slogan that defined the U.S. counterinsurgency effort that he oversaw in Iraq, Petraeus drove home a simple message: “Clear, hold, and build.”' Build what? Open a school, dig a well and make friends? How did that work in Iraq and Afghanistan?
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