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Culture War Roundup for the week of March 13, 2023

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Well, the way Jewish religious law works, a lot of things are derived and not spelled out specifically and explicitly, that's just how the system works.

Yes, we all know how the system works - first profess to follow absurd and nonsensical law, and then find a smart reason why the law does not mean what it says. This is the reason why God gave Jews their stratospheric IQ.

There's also a significant disagreement about this question in the Talmud: https://shulchanaruchharav.com/halacha/castration-sterilization-to-humans-and-animals/ and the resolution for non-Jews seems to be along the lines of "unclear, but better to think it's prohibited just in case" (which is a common case in Jewish law in general to go this way if there's a possibility something might be prohibited but no clear resolution either way). For Jews, of course, it's a strong definite "no".

So, oxen are not kosher and Jewish peasants in old times before tractors were supposed to use bulls to plough their fields? As everyone with experience with cattle will tell you, castration of animals was invented for very good reason.

It seems to be just another impractical and unworkable law written by priests who had no idea about agriculture, law designed to be avoided by some clever roundabouts.

(Ouch! I let my gentile neighbor to borrow my pair of bulls, and he returned them without balls! What can I do? Let him borrow more bulls!)

See for example this. Jews are supposed to leave all land fallow every seventh year and live of locusts (Yes I know the lore - in bygone times when Jews were truely pious and observant, the sixth year harvest was double that usual, wouldn't rot or spoil and rats or mice wouldn't touch it). Nevertheless, Jews in Israel today find a way to get around this commandment.