 That's such a small showing man. Can they do better than that? Yeah. I mean, a dozen? And the Beverly Hills police, they don't mess around man. I mean, look at the way they've turned out. Oh yeah. Which is one of the reasons why we have to move here than LB and LA. Yeah, yeah, yeah. From what I've been hearing, the prices have gone down actually in rents. Yeah. So, maybe. Yeah. Maybe at some point I will. Oh look who's here. Is that Antifa? What's that? Who's that? I don't know, Antifa. Yeah, I think they're... Keeping people separate. They're keeping people separate. Racial. Okay man, I'll see you later. Pretty rockin' day there for Israel. About 600, 700 Jews showed up. 600, 700 people, I assume. 80%, 90% of Jewish. And about a dozen Palestinian protesters showed up. Thank you. Thank you. So, peaceful afternoon. No drama, no violence, no crime. Just don't bring you into that aspect of my life very much. I'm glad to see my friends. Had to be all ethnocentric. Didn't have to be all even-handed. I could just rebel being ethnocentric for a couple of hours. Beverly Hills, one of the few places outside of Israel that's majority Jewish. And that was fun. Ethnocentrism is fun. Nationalism is fun. You can just let your head down. Just let my head down, man. It's good being with your own kind. Feel so happy, comfortable, energised, relaxed. All good things. At ease. Nationalism is awesome. Group strategy. It's the way to go, bro. I'm Israel. I'm Israel. I'm Israel. Hi. I'm Israel. I'm Israel. I'm Israel. Hi. I'm Israel. I'm Israel. Hi. I'm Israel. Hi. I'm Israel. I'm Israel. I'm Israel. Hi. Great talk there by Dennis Prager to close off the speeches. So I've lived in Los Angeles since 1994. So I have a slight acquaintance, moderate acquaintance with hundreds of people. Probably acquainted with 100 people there today. But I'm not going to bring my friends on my YouTube channel. I like to keep a separation between my real life and my YouTube life. Yes, it's over. Wow, what a beautiful dog. What a beautiful doggy. So maybe 1% of the audience is wearing masks. Probably 75% Republican today. Or maybe 1% people of colour. Haven't seen any homeless in Beverly Hills. Haven't seen any trash. There's no trash on the streets. No crime. See all those cops out there? Nice and safe. Great place to be Jewish, man. I'm Yisrael. Hi. I'm Yisrael. Hi. I'm Yisrael. I'm Yisrael. I'm Yisrael. Hi. I'm David. Hi. Life is a narrow bridge. The important thing is not to be afraid. Even got the helicopters. We love our cops. Our law enforcement. We love our military, too. They're important. We love our banks. We even love our subprime lenders. We love our mortgage brokers, too. Because they're important. We love our merchant bankers, our stockbrokers. We love our fancy Jewish department stores. We love our car dealerships. Our classy restaurants. Our fine hotels. Our movie studios. Our TV production companies. Our book publishers and newspapers and magazines. We love Harvard and Yale and Stanford and UCLA and Berkeley. We love our nationally syndicated conservative radio hosts. Man, don't you wish you belonged to a high-intensity in-group with strong nationalist feelings, united against hatred? Able to rally support from all sorts of diverse groups? Simply by the moral probity of your arguments. Just by having moral right on your side. See those Latinos for Yisrael? And that Miss Iraq speaking there for peace. What, two Muslim speakers? Come on, doesn't this make you want to work hard? Give it a nice area with smart people. Strong police. Clean streets. Nicely kept up loans. Great infrastructure. Feeling a serenity, joy. Being with your own kind. Nationalism. In-group solidarity. The energy that comes from in-group solidarity. Hundreds of you gathering together. Rockin' and rollin', mate. Just rockin' and rollin'. Oh well, someday we'll all be together once more. And all of the ships return to the shore. I realize something I've always done. I still call Australia home. All the sons and daughters. All around the world. Hmm, hmm, hmm, hmm, hmm, hmm, hmm, hmm, hmm, hmm, hmm, hmm, hmm. I still call Australia home. I've been to cities that never are closed down. From New York to Rio to old London town. But wherever I go, whatever I do, I still call Australia home. All together now. Do do do do do do do do do do. Look mate, the only is, only is. Think I know a little bit about Judy as a mate. I think I know a little bit. Just spending my last 27 years in the tribe reading over 1,000 books and attending thousands of hours of Talmud class, spending 20,000 hours in synagogue. I think I've learned a little bit about strong ingroup identity, Mike. I think I understand the different interpretations of who is a Jew. I know what it's like to walk into a shawl, be counted in a minion, be invited back for Shabbat dinner to be set up for Shadukam. That means dating the eye to getting married, taking kids to Jewish day school, picking kids up from Jewish day school, being right in the burning hot core of Judaism. Where the streets are wide and clean, there are lots of police. Where the sun is always shining, the sky is blue, where the lawns are manicured, where the cars are expensive. That was so much fun, man. It was such a thrill for me to move to Los Angeles in March of 1994, just to explore all the different ways of being Jewish from big communal celebrations like that. I think that was one of the first things I went to in Los Angeles in 1994. Cut to meet Schwartzi, Rabbi Shlomo Schwartz, formerly of Kabard of Westwood, and got to talk to him about Hungarian Jewry, some of the great rabbis of the Hungarian Jewish tradition. And I enjoyed my time in reform synagogues and conservative synagogues, reconstructionists. I hit for the cycle, mate. It singles, doubles, triples, and sometimes I made it all the way home. Now, I know there's this stereotype that Jewish women are sexually cold. That's not being my experience. You can find every type of Judaism you want in Los Angeles. I've delvinged with the Hasidim, I've danced with the Hasidim, had meals with the Hasidim, with the Lit Vox, the modern Orthodox, with the Yeshivish crowd, with the left-wing modern Orthodox, the traditional conservatives, the centrist conservatives. I appreciate their scholarship on parts of their reform and conservative and reconstructionist traditions and enjoy the way they challenge Orthodox understandings of history. But there's nothing like the community formed by Orthodox Judaism. Just much more intense than non-Orthodox forms of Judaism. God forbid, God forbid. No, I'm not committed to any or modest behavior with the Hasidim. God forbid. I went to a very nice reconstructionist synagogue a couple of times in Malibu, been to one a couple of times in Pacific Palisades. Even went to a gay-friendly reform synagogue on Sunset Boulevard on Friday night. I didn't know it was a gay synagogue, but they were very friendly. All the guys were really friendly. In the Sinai Temple, I heard Rabbi David Walfi speak probably 50 times, so he was incredibly eloquent. Rabbi Isaiah Zodan, one of the most successful congregational reform rabbis. He created Stephen S. Wise Temple in Bel Air. I think at one point, it was the largest synagogue in the world. It was like 28,000 member families. I was a member there for a couple of years, 1994 to 1996. And then went to Rabbi Morchai Finley's synagogue for a couple of years, Orha Torah, as a traditional liberal show. The Rabbi Finley's most influential teachers had been Orthodox rabbis. He was ordained a reform rabbi. He served in the Marines. I think he got his PhD. He was known as Rabbi to the Stars. So Dustin Hoffman would come along to services out of other Hollywood royalties. So Rabbi Finley was known as Rabbi to the Stars. Best rabbinic teacher of the inner life. Best rabbinic teacher of practical Kabbalah, practical Jewish mysticism. But I spent almost all my time in Orthodox life since August of 2000. Why? Because in July of 2000, I went to Israel and I drew a single strip. And it was like the most secular two and a half weeks of my previous six years. And Israel shook me up. So I started putting on to fill in again every morning and going to Shruel to study Daphne Yomi, Peja Talmud. So that experience in Israel reignited my Jewish Neshama. So I've spent probably five to six years total in Daphne Yomi, meaning daily Talmud study. So I've been through on a very superficial level, virtually all of the Gomorrah, the Babylonian Talmud, only on a very shallow superficial level. But I have a slight, slight acquaintance. It's pretty much every Masakta in the bubbly, the Babylonian Talmud. What a lovely afternoon here in Bubbly Hills. I think we're going to go by the Riders Guild here. Riders Guild of America. They often rent out their facilities for Jewish events. Very different feeling in English Judaism because Jews are not nearly as influential or as numerous in England as they are in the United States. So English Jewry is much more buttoned down, much quieter about their Judaism. Keep things under wraps. I don't let the go emcee. But in Los Angeles and particularly New York, Jews tend to feel very comfortable at home, at ease, powerful. San Francisco is overwhelmingly highly assimilated Jews. There's very little Frumkite, very little Orthodox Judaism in San Francisco. A lot of Jews in the San Francisco Bay Area, they tend to be highly assimilated. Very rich, highly assimilated. So maybe 600, fewer than a thousand Frumkite, Orthodox, Shamir Shabbat Jews in the San Francisco Bay Area. While in Los Angeles, probably have 60,000 Shamir Shabbat Jews. And in New York City, probably have 500,000 Shamir Shabbat Jews. Melbourne, and you have about 10,000 to 20,000 Shamir Shabbat Orthodox Jews. Sydney, Australia probably have fewer than a thousand. So I think you have about 100,000 identifying Jews in Australia, which probably 30,000 max are anywhere close to Shamir Shabbat. And you probably have another 100,000 Jews in Australia who don't identify as Jewish that are assimilated. But Australia's Jewish community is well organized, well funded. They punch above their weight in terms of political, cultural influence. Generally speaking, religion on the west coast is much more assimilated than religious and ethnic ties much weaker on the west coast than on the east coast. That people generally come to California to get away from family, to get away from tradition, to get away from those kind of ties. So these used to be that you'd find many conservative Jews on the east coast northeast who are more observant than Los Angeles Orthodox Jews. So I notice I've only been in New York City for about three weeks once in 1994. Did notice that traditional ties of family, education, religion, ethnicity, much more significant in New York City. So on the west coast, you're much more judged as an individual. So there's much greater freedom on the west coast. And on the east coast, particularly in the northeast, you're much more immediately typecast as a member of a collective group. And the group has much more power and influence over you. So you have less freedom on the northeast than on the west coast. Vlog! Vlog is right. Y'all doubt vlog. She biked by. So yeah, I noticed people in New York were more serious, but felt like their options in life were narrower. That you belong to a community. The community had considerable power over you and you owed the community a great deal. While people come to the west coast to do their own thing, man. So Los Angeles is probably the best place in the world to be in recovery. More acceptance of 12 step programs, more 12 step programs. It's more culturally acceptable to be in a 12 step program in Los Angeles. Any thoughts on Ron Jeremy and his legal plight? Yeah, it seems pretty obvious to me that Ron Jeremy was way over boundary as the young people say these days. And the evidence against him seems overwhelming. So yeah, I think Ron Jeremy is as guilty as sin. It's just that what he was doing was wasn't considered as big a deal 15 years ago, even 10 years ago. Now in the Me Too era, things that were just considered gross or even rape but private still are now being made into big legal cases. Sexual norms like other norms change. Now society changes, individuals get caught up. So no, I don't think Ron Jeremy is an innocent man. But dozens of women are falsely accused of him. What is going to be the result of the Israel-Palestine conflict? Well, I think there will continue to be a conflict until one side definitively wins. So I see no escaping the war between Israel and Palestine as long as there's a Jewish state there. Because the Jews just have to lose once and it's over for the Jewish state. The Arabs can mount 150 wars and lose every single one. But if they just win one, then it's finito completo for the Jewish state. So I see no reason to believe there will be peace between the Jewish state and the Arabs, the Palestinians in my lifetime. So Israel certainly has some challenges, but I'm running low on batteries, so I better wrap this up.