Wednesday, July 11, 2007

What Has Israel Produced? What Have Hamas and Hezbollah Produced?

The coin pictured above is a "High Tech in Israel" commemorative coin issued by the Bank of Israel. It depicts a growing tree with binary leaves.

Along those lines, Rabbi Aryeh Markman of Aish HaTorah, Los Angeles, reports:

ISRAEL’S RECENT ACHIEVEMENTS IN THE FIRST MONTH OF 2007

Despite the second Lebanon war, the divestments, and the boycotts, Israel’s economy enjoyed the largest growth in its GNP of any Western country at 8% for the last quarter of 2006. Foreign investment hit a remarkable high of over US$13 billion and the budget deficit was under 1%. Industrial exports, excluding diamonds, rose 11% to $29.3 billion in 2006 with the hi-tech sector leading the surge, according to the Manufacturers Association of Israel. Israel’s hi-tech industry exported $14.1 billion in goods last year, growing 20% from 2005. What follows is a selection of Israel’s achievements in the first month of 2007 [Editor's note--we are talking here about one month, January 2007]:

1. Scientists in Israel found that the brackish water drilled from underground desert aquifers hundreds of feet deep could be used to raise warm-water fish. The geothermal water, less than one-tenth as saline as sea water, free of pollutants, and a toasty 98 degrees on average proves an ideal environment.

2. Israeli-developed designer eyeglasses promise mobile phone and iPod users a personalized, high-tech video display. Available to US consumers next year, Lumus-Opitcal’s lightweight and fashionable video eyeglasses feature a large transparent screen floating in front of the viewer’s face that projects their choice of movie, TV show, or video game.

3. When Stephen Hawkings visited Israel recently, he shared his wisdom with scientists, students, and even the prime minister. But the world’s most renowned victim of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig’s disease, also learned something – due to the Israeli Association for ALS’ advanced work in embryonic and adult stem cell research, as well as its proven track record with neurodegenerative diseases, the Israeli research community is well on its way to finding a treatment for this fatal disease which affects 30,000 Americans.

4. Israeli start-up Veterix has developed an innovative new electronic capsule that sits in the stomach of a cow, sheep, or goat, sending out real-time information on the health of the herd to the farmer via email or cell phone. The e-capsule, which also sends out alerts if animals are distressed, injured, or lost, is now being tested on a herd of cows in the hopes that the device will lead to tastier and healthier meat and milk supplies.

5. The millions of Skype users worldwide will soon have access to the newly developed KishKish lie-detector. This free Internet service, based on voice stress analysis (a technique commonly used in criminal investigations), will be able to measure just how truthful that person on the other end of the line really is.

6. Beating cardiac tissue has been created in a lab from human embryonic stem cells by researchers at the Rappaport Medical Facility and the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology’s biomedical engineering facility. The work of Dr. Shulamit Levenberg and Prof. Lior Gepstein has also led to the creation of tiny blood vessels within the tissue making possible its implantation in a human heart.

7. Israel’s Magal Security Systems is a worldwide leader in computerized security systems with products used in more than 70 countries around the world protecting anything from national borders to nuclear facilities refineries, and airports. The company's latest product, DreamBox, a state-of-the-art security system that includes intelligent video, audio and sensor management, is now being used by a major water authority on the US Ease Coast to safeguard the utility’s sites.

8. It’s common knowledge that dogs have better night vision than humans and a vastly superior sense of smell and hearing. Israel’s Bio-Sense Technologies recently delved further and electronically analyzed 350 different barks. Finding that dogs of all breeds and sizes bark the same alarm when they sense a threat, the firm has designed the dog bark-reader, a sensor that can pick up a dog’s alarm bark and alert the human operators. This is just one of a batch of innovative security systems to emerge from Israel, which Forbes calls “the go-to-country for anti-terrorism technologies.”

9. Israeli company BioControl Medical sold its first electrical stimulator to treat urinary incontinence to a US company for $50 million. Now it is working on CardioFit, which uses electrical nerve stimulation to treat congestive heart failure. With nearly five million American presently affected by heart failure and more than 400,000 new cases diagnosed yearly, the CardioFit is already generating a great deal of excitement as the first device with the potential to halt this deadly disease.

10. One year after Norway’s Socialist Left Party launched its boycott of Israel, the importing of Israeli goods has increased by 15%, the strongest increase in many years, reported by Norway Statistics.

In contrast to the efforts of tiny Israel to make contributions to the world so as to better mankind, one has to ask what have those who have strived to eliminate Israel from the face of the earth done other than to create hate and bloodshed?


Amplifying on what Rabbi Markman wrote above, I would note that the West Coast Office of the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America sends out a weekly bulletin, one section of which is always devoted to the latest news of scientific, medical and high tech developments from Israel. Every week brings word of more amazing achievements comparable to those discussed by Rabbi Markman. As God promised Abraham (Gen. 12:3), "And I will bless them that bless you, and him that curses you will I curse; and in you all the nations of the earth shall be blessed." As for the British academics and trade unionists, Norwegian Socialists, American leftists and others who call for boycotts against Israel, they might want to look to the experience of the Egyptians who oppressed the Children of Israel (Exodus 1:12): "But the more they [the Egyptians] afflicted them, the more they [the Children of Israel] multiplied and the more they spread."

1 Comments:

Blogger Michael said...

Looks like the question, "What has Israel produced?" is a hot blog topic these days.

Here's my contribution:
http://olehmichael.blogspot.com/2007/07/drawn-borders-and-fruit-orders.html

Thursday, July 12, 2007 5:42:00 AM  

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