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Israeli

(4,299 posts)
Tue May 14, 2024, 05:24 AM May 2024

This Independence Day, Israel Has Split Into Two Incompatible Jewish States

The confluence of the catastrophe of October 7 and Israel's 76th anniversary may blunt the political debate for a while, but it cannot hide the reality: There are now two states here – Israel and Judea – with contrasting visions of what the nation should be

There is an elephant in the Israeli room – and no, it's not occupation, though that is its main cause.
The elephant in the room is Israel gradually but inexorably being divided into the State of Israel – a high-tech, secular, outward-looking, imperfect but liberal state – and the Kingdom of Judea, a Jewish-supremacist, ultranationalist theocracy with messianic, antidemocratic tendencies that encourage isolation.

This is what happened between (roughly) 796 B.C.E. and the destruction of the First Temple by the Babylonians in 586 B.C.E., and again from 140 B.C.E. to 63 B.C.E. when the Hasmoneans ruled until the Roman conquest. The divisions were most acute during the First Jewish Revolt of 66 C.E., leading to the destruction of the Second Temple in 70, resulting in exile and statelessness until 1948.

It is no longer "Tel Aviv versus Jerusalem" but increasingly "Tel Aviv versus Masada." The modern day versus the extremist, messianic Sicarii cult in Masada in 73. In recent years, Israel has been ruled by a modern-day version of those Jewish Zealots.

Zionism, the national liberation movement of the Jewish people, designed as a political tool to redress a 2,000-year anomaly of statelessness, has in Judea and inside the current government morphed and mutated through the settler movement and extreme right-wing zealots into a Masada-like political culture, based on the concept of the redemption of the ancient kingdom in the ancestral land.

For years, there was a division between Israel and the occupied territories. Now, those occupied territories have taken over the government in Jerusalem under the tutelage and active encouragement of Judea's self-ordained king: Benjamin Netanyahu.


Source : Haaretz

Continued @ : https://archive.md/03Bzt
12 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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This Independence Day, Israel Has Split Into Two Incompatible Jewish States (Original Post) Israeli May 2024 OP
Hillary Clinton was right all along.... Think. Again. May 2024 #1
I see a lot of similarities between Israel and the US. Lonestarblue May 2024 #2
A compelling analogy, but another one may be more accurate Beastly Boy May 2024 #3
I hope you are right about this Israeli May 2024 #4
There is some wishful thinking involved in my post, but I honestly don't see Beastly Boy May 2024 #5
Thats a misconception Israeli May 2024 #7
My apology. Beastly Boy May 2024 #9
May 20, 2024 Israeli May 2024 #11
There was a sabbat hunter May 2024 #6
To be absolutely honest with you Israeli May 2024 #8
Kevin Spacey sabbat hunter May 2024 #10
55 is not old !!! Israeli May 2024 #12

Lonestarblue

(11,827 posts)
2. I see a lot of similarities between Israel and the US.
Tue May 14, 2024, 07:33 AM
May 2024

We are both divided countries, with one political party aiming for authoritarian government and the other tacking into the wind to address real issues like climate warming. Israel has ignored their major issue for decades and allowed the divisions of the right wing to gain the upper hand. We are in danger of doing the same thing if you can believe polls.

ISRARL’s right-wing settlers are our Proud Boys, Patriot Front, Boogaloo Boys, etc. They are violent, armed, and ready to kill because they see no one else having any rights. In the case of the Israeli settlers, they have killed many Palestinians in the West Bank.

We have a past leader who is like Netanyahu in his pursuit of vengeance against others. Netanyahu has used his power to try to dismantle the power of the Israeli Courts. Trump used his power to appoint judges by contaminating the federal judiciary with right-wing religious judges willing to help him and push Republican policies, and this includes his appointments to the Supreme Court. The difference here is that the Israeli Supreme Court has so far fought off Netanyahu’s attempts to weaken it, while our Supreme Court is destroying itself from the inside.

I think both countries are facing a reckoning. Israel because it has garnered the world’s anger at its continued treatment of Palestinians and refusal to negotiate for a separate state, and the US because another Trump term means the end of democracy as we know it. It also means the alienation of our traditional allies, the decimation of NATO, and the embrace of our enemies. We can only hope that the forces of evil do not prevail in either country.

Beastly Boy

(11,137 posts)
3. A compelling analogy, but another one may be more accurate
Tue May 14, 2024, 11:07 AM
May 2024

I see a greater resemblance between Israel today and Judea just before the fall of the Second Temple, which the article has eluded to but did not, in my opinion, sufficiently appreciate.

There is Jerusalem, full of radicals, zealots, sicaris, each sect being small in numbers but big on rhetoric, claiming divine right to murder the other, and little Messiah wannabes ruling over them, each claiming to be ordained by God to grant absolution and possession of the Holy Land to their followers.

And then there is the rest of Judea and Samaria, pleading before the motley collection of the lunatics behind the thick walls of Jerusalem, like Josephus Flavius did in his days, to come to their senses for the sake of the nation.

Netanyahu is nowhere close to being the king of Jerusalem. He is the prisoner of the little messiah wannabes. He managed to temporarily unite them to keep him in power for selfish reasons, but now he is completely beholden to them and their whims: if just one of them leaves his coalition, Netanyahu is finished, both personally and politically. As obscene as it sounds, he is the left wing of his coalition, and he pander to its right wing.

I don't see this government being sustainable, let alone the division of Israel, as it is presented in the article, being permanent. Netanyahu is the peg that is holding the current government together, but he is a rotten peg. He will break under pressure, and then, as it happened in 70 AD, Jerusalem will fall.

But this time it will not fall to the foreign invader but to the "high-tech, secular, outward-looking, imperfect but liberal state" just outside of today's entrenched Jerusalem. There is no other force to fill in the vacuum in post-Netanyahu Israel. The right wingers are too small in numbers and are too compromised to retain their malignant influence on the country as they have done in the last few years. Even a small move to the left will bring about big changes.

BTW, thank you for taking a small but meaningful part in making the difference.

Israeli

(4,299 posts)
4. I hope you are right about this
Wed May 15, 2024, 03:57 AM
May 2024
But this time it will not fall to the foreign invader but to the "high-tech, secular, outward-looking, imperfect but liberal state" just outside of today's entrenched Jerusalem. There is no other force to fill in the vacuum in post-Netanyahu Israel. The right wingers are too small in numbers and are too compromised to retain their malignant influence on the country as they have done in the last few years. Even a small move to the left will bring about big changes.


But I am not so sure as you .

First we need elections .
Then the Centralists will have to unite with the Left and include the Arab parties .

The religious Right are beginning to outnumber us , we have 2.2 children to their average of 6 .
Plus secular Israelis are leaving the country in droves , anyone that can get a foreign passport has already applied for
one .

Before Oct 7th we were on the verge of civil war ......Hamas put an end to that .
Bibi will keep this war ongoing for as long as he can .....if he pays no heed to Biden what makes
you think he will care how many of us are out screaming on the streets for him to resign ???

BTW its the Likudniks that call him Bibi King of Israel .


Beastly Boy

(11,137 posts)
5. There is some wishful thinking involved in my post, but I honestly don't see
Wed May 15, 2024, 09:35 AM
May 2024

Last edited Wed May 15, 2024, 11:29 AM - Edit history (1)

how Bibi can sustain the status quo. None of the dynamics of the wartime politics in Israel favor Bibi - his political position, both in Israel and abroad, weakens with each passing day. I can see several likely factors that would contribute to Bibi's government falling before the elections, and none, with the possible exception of Trump becoming US President, favoring Bibi.

Bibi is an incompetent wartime leader, and several IDF generals openly criticized him for it. If the Haredis begin serving in IDF, and even if they don't, most Israeli voters are also Israeli soldiers. I believe the IDF gets consistently higher ratings than Bibi's government in polls. I am not talking about anything like a military coup, but Israeli voters, both right and left leaning, listen to what their commanders have to say.

As I mentioned before, Bibi is the left wing of his right wing government. He is ideologically unacceptable to his right wing ministers, they only tolerate him inasmuch as he gives them power, but no more. As Bibi's political position weakens, so does support within his cabinet. It only takes one of the ministers to drop out of the coalition for the government to fall.

The pressure on Bibi from Israel's allies is mounting. Specifically, in the US, the likelihood of his ally Trump becoming President is diminishing. Bibi can probably last until the US elections are over, but if Trump doesn't become President (if he does, the consequences for the entire world become dire and totally unpredictable), Bibi's prospects of remaining relevant as a politician are over. Without Trump, he will not be able to deliver much to his right wing ministers, and then, we already covered what is likely to happen.

I always thought of Jewish Diaspora as an added strong backbone for Israel. The secular techies leaving Israel are therefore, in my view, a positive development, not a negative one. Not only do they reinforce cultural and economic ties between their new localities and Israel, they become indispensable, especially in the traditionally antisemitic cultures of Europe and Latin America, as role models and ambassadors of good will for Israel. AND they vote. When Israelis leave the country, their votes still count.

The Saudis and other Sunni states can't wait to sign treaties for military and economic cooperation with Israel. They are being destabilized and threatened by the same Iran-backed terrorist proxies as Israel, but unlike Israel, they are defenseless against these enemies. While in the past they did their damnedest to wipe out Israel, today they themselves can't survive without it. This is a radical existential shift in the Middle Eastern balance of powers, involving multiple players beyond Israeli borders, and Netanyahu, not Israel, is in their way way.

It only takes a small movement to the left to radically change Israel's domestic and foreign policies. Netanyahu as prime minister is becoming prohibitively unacceptable to too many interests, both within and outside of Israel. The pressure is mounting on him to bow out, one way or another, and the straws he is grasping onto are becoming fewer and weaker. I don't see a way out of this situation for Bibi. He can delay, as he has done until now, but he cannot escape this.

Israeli

(4,299 posts)
7. Thats a misconception
Thu May 16, 2024, 01:46 PM
May 2024
As Bibi's political position weakens, so does support within his cabinet. It only takes one of the ministers to drop out of the coalition for the government to fall.


If Benny Gantz and Gadi Eisenkot quit tomorrow this gov wont fall .

Beastly Boy

(11,137 posts)
9. My apology.
Fri May 17, 2024, 12:15 PM
May 2024

When I referred to Bibi as the left wing of his right wing government, I was referring to the government prior to National Unity joining it, and my comment above is only relevant to members of that government.

If Gantz and Eisenkot drop out of the current government, it will not fall right away. However, in this event it is almost certain that a vote of no confidence will be brought up in the Knesset, and not necessarily by the members of National Unity party (I am not sure, but I think any member of the Knesset can call for a vote of no confidence). Given the dropping popularity of Likud across the political spectrum, Bibi is unlikely to survive the vote.

I believe that in this event, Isaac Herzog will have to either call for a party other than Likud to form a new government, or call for new elections.

sabbat hunter

(6,893 posts)
6. There was a
Wed May 15, 2024, 01:13 PM
May 2024

brief Anti-Bibi government from June 2021 to December 2022, first with Bennett, then with Lapid. Why did that coalition collapse. It included Blue/white, Labor, Meretz, United Arab list, Yesh Atid among others. Plus it included Yamina, and a couple of other parties. If that broad of a coalition failed after just 18 months, what more can be done to oust Bibi?

Do more left/centrists just need to get out to vote? Do compromises need to be made again with right wing parties to oust Bibi?

Israeli

(4,299 posts)
8. To be absolutely honest with you
Thu May 16, 2024, 02:51 PM
May 2024

I don't remember .
Im getting old sabbat hunter and its difficult enough to keep up to date with todays political
landscape never mind what happened then .

I will share a story with you tho .
My son was wounded in Gaza , he is okay but not mobile yet , so has been watching to much
Netflix .
He just finished watching House of Cards and said that Kevin Spacey's character is Bibi
personified


sabbat hunter

(6,893 posts)
10. Kevin Spacey
Sun May 19, 2024, 04:36 PM
May 2024

is creepy and icky, and I can no longer enjoy that show.
I am going to be 55 this year, so i know how you feel about getting old.

I hope your son recovers fully soon.

Israeli

(4,299 posts)
12. 55 is not old !!!
Wed May 22, 2024, 04:18 AM
May 2024

Physically he will be okay , just going to take time , mentally I not so sure of .
His unit were amongst the first to arrive by helicopter at Kibbutz Be'eri......
5 members of the unit were killed and one injured on the first day .
They continued fighting until the whole of the area was terrorist free .
You can imagine what he saw .
They were then sent into Gaza to clean out the tunnels .
Almost six months in the reserves from day one !!!!
Its a blessing he was wounded , so many of his friends never got to see their families again .

https://www.iaf.org.il/9701-61384-en/IAF.aspx

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