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Posts Tagged ‘hilltop youth’

Curse Like a Settler

Friday, November 5th, 2010
israeli settlers resist evacuation

Israeli settlers shout curses while resisting evacuation

Back in the 1980s there was a catchy girl band hit, Walk Like an Egyptian.  Today, Yediot Achronot reports the Hilltop Youth are teaching Israel to curse like a settler, strongly but cleanly, and even in code.  Instead of “Nazi scum,” you can now expect to hear the mellifluous “son of perverse rebellion,” or even more succinctly “son of Rahab” [whore].

Some sensitive souls among the extremist settlers must’ve been distressed to hear some of the foul language out of the mouths of the Hilltop Youth when faced with IDF soldiers pulling them from their illegal outposts.  So they’ve published a new booklet with more appropriate language to use in cursing the authorities.  This should go down as part of a longer essay entitled, Rhetoric of Occupation:

Upon…the start of the settlement outpost demolition season, here is the newest hit in [extremist settlements] Ramat Migron and Shvut Ami: the phrasebook for spoken curses.  In a manner similar to the [phrases used on the] IDF two-way radio network, people in the Judea and Samaria hilltops will also start to talk in uniform curses.

A new booklet currently being distributed among the hilltop youth contains rules of behavior for the demolition of settlement outposts, and curses recommended for use in response to…police officers.  From now on, the young people will use cleaner language and curses that incorporate Biblical themes, with more contemporary and sophisticated curses.  “Garbage” and “scumbag”—out, “vinegar from wine” [phrase traditionally used to denote the wicked son of a righteous father] and “Indian”—in.

The “phrasebook” is very up to date, and so, for example, if a policeman acts without using judgment, he should be asked: “Who sent you, Ehud Barak the moron?” following the statements made by Histadrut Chairman Ofer Eini this past Wednesday about Barak.  A policeman wearing a kippa will be called a “Mafdalnik” [i.e., supporter of the defunct moderate religious party]; a patrolman who reneges on his promises will be called “Bibi,” and if a leftist policeman comes to a settlement outpost, he should be called “Son of Rahab” [i.e., son of a whore, cf. Joshua 2:1].

…The introduction to the booklet…states: “There are no words to describe the feelings of a young man who encounters an ambush of policemen who knock the stuffing out of him, or a young woman who is beaten by violent Border Policemen…It is necessary to respond to policemen who crudely use foul language.”

…From now on the soundtrack of the evacuations will sound different…Right wing activist Itamar Ben Gvir said to Yedioth Ahronoth: “This booklet should lead to soul-searching among the policemen who participate in demolishing settlement outposts.  We should not, of course, generalize about all policemen, many of them try to maintain restraint, but there are also policemen who do not, and they are the ones for whom the curses are intended.”

The phrasebook

The event: “A policeman who scalps people and uses a club”

The curse: “Indian”

The event: “A policeman who acts without sense and without judgment”

The curse: “Who sent you, Ehud Barak the moron?”

The event: “A policeman who hits and hurts girls”

The curse: “Do you beat your wife, too? Pedophile!”

The event: “A policeman from a good right wing family who strays from the path and becomes an enemy of Israel”

The curse: “Vinegar from wine”

The event: “A policeman with a kippa who participates in demolishing homes”

The curse: “Mafdalnik”

The event: “A policeman from an extreme left wing background who puts into practice the views that he brought from home”

The curse: “Son of perverse rebellion” [see 1 Samuel 20:30], “Son of Rahab”

If the Hilltop Youth think this will undermine the resolve of the IDF they must be smoking a powerful drug.  But an even more critical question is whether the IDF commanders and defense minister have the will to uproot illegal settlements.  They are the key to this process and no amount of clean cursing or euphemisms will change that.

Kahane Grandson Arrested in Torching of Yasuf Mosque

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

Arutz Sheva, the settler’s news portal, reveals that Meir Kahane’s grandson, Meir David Kahane (which was also his grandfather’s full name), 17, was arrested and is a suspect in the arson attack on a West Bank mosque in the village of Yasuf.  The latter neighbors the radical Israeli settlement of Kfar Tapuach, where the young Kahane lives.  Both his grandfather and parents were murdered by Arab militants in separate incidents.

The Israeli police refused to name the suspect, though the Jerusalem Post identified him as a Kahane “relative.”  But Arutz Sheva seems less bound by such pledges of privacy and revealed the boy’s identity.

I should also remind readers that this is the same Kfar Tapuach where Kahane-wannabe Jewish terrorist, Ephraim Khantsis, was hanging out for the past four months telling anyone within earshot that Jack Teitel, another Israeli-American terrorist on trial for several acts of murder and maiming, was a good Jewish boy and the Palis only got what they deserved, etc., etc.  The IDF recently issued an order expelling Khantsis from the West Bank for six months.

Eden Natan Zenda, another Israeli Jewish terrorist who shot up an Israeli Arab bus and killed four, also lived in Kfar Tapuach after deserting from the IDF.  That place is a regular font of brotherly love.

Can we anticipate even bigger and better acts of hatred from the Kahane clan in the future?  Perhaps graduating from arson to murder to avenge their own parents’ murders?  Where will it all end?

H/t to Eileen Read.

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Ephraim Khantsis: Portrait of KahanaWannabe American-Jewish Settler Terrorist

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

Ephraim Khantsis, Kahanawanna-be settler terrorist

Haaretz is reporting that an American born-again Orthodox Jew, Ephraim Khantsis, has received a military order expelling him from the West Bank for six months for expressing solidarity with Jack Teitel and his terrorist acts against Palestinians.  Though he was enrolled in the Machon Meir Yeshiva, he spent most of his time since making aliyah to Israel four months ago at the Kfar Tapuach settlement, a hotbed of Kahanist extremism.  It was there that residents reported him.

With some key help from the intrepid Sol Salbe, I’ve learned quite a bit about our Kahane-wannabe.  He recently graduated from SUNY Stony Brook with a degree in computer science.  He grew up in Bensonhurst, known as a tough  neighborhood filled with Syrian and Russian Jews.

He was profiled back in September in quite an unlikely place, Conde Nast’s Details Magazine, where he made the rather startling confession, even before becoming an Israeli citizen, that he would shoot IDF soldiers who came to remove him from the extremist enclave where he intended to make his home:

…There’s a pledge Khantsis makes, one that it’s also possible to hear from Americans already living in settlements, that might be more troubling to Israeli authorities: If the Israeli military comes to remove him from his new home—and many in Israel believe such an event is likely—he will not leave peacefully.“I would fight against it with all my strength, and I would leave nothing back to try to stop it,” says the slim young man wearing a black yarmulke. He speaks so softly that at times it’s hard to hear him. “If they use violence, then we’re justified doing the same.” Would that include using a gun? “Yes,” he says. Is he absolutely sure that he would use a weapon against Israeli soldiers? “That’s right. I strongly hope it would never come to that,” he says. But “if they’re already shooting us, I’d have no option. I don’t think the right thing to do is turn the other cheek. It’s not a Jewish thing to do.”

The entire story is a real eye-opener as it chronicles other hard-core Hilltop Youth and their forays into violent insurrection against the secular Israeli state.  I got a dark laugh from the thought that the Shin Bet can do some of its best intelligence work by reading glossy American men’s magazines. In this day and age, even wannabe terrorists maintain social networking profiles.  He has a Facebook account, where his political views are listed as “Kach” and religious views are listed as “fundamentalist.”  One thing you have to hand to him: at least he’s honest.  He lists his hometown as “Belgorod Dnestrovskiy, Ukraine.”

I am sorry to say that Khantsis’ Ukrainian origin fits with the fact that many former Soviet Jews came to Israel and America with hardline anti-Communist views which translated into hardline nationalist political views supporting the Likud (in Israel) and parties even farther to the right (like Kach for one).  When Avigdor Lieberman first made aliyah he too made common cause with Kach.

Among the Facebook pages he features are those of Nadia Matar, the Women in Green settler extremist who called for Mahmoud Abbas assassination at a Manhattan synagogue; and Ketzeleh Katz, settler Knesset member featured here in a YouTube video foaming at the mouth against the Israeli TV satire program, Eretz Nehederet; Kahane Tzadak (“Kahane was right”); Mike Huckabee, darling of the settler extremists; and the settler news portal, Arutz Sheva.

He lists his profession as “web designer,” which somehow seems fitting in this age of internet terrorism. He has a Twitter account aptly named, Doom7777.  Seems to have had a fantatical devotion to Gilad Shalit (“Kidnapping, terrorizing, fanatical monsters will not succeed to subdue the Zionist State!”) and his freedom, though he pretty much stopped tweeting once he made aliya.

So this is the cream of American Jewish youth, our latter-day Zionist chalutzim who, like our European grandparents, came to build the land and make it bloom–with settlements, barbed wire, attack dogs, M-16s and hate.  When are we going to wake up and realize this isn’t a Zionist dream, it is a nightmare.  And in order to prevent the nightmare from turning into a cataclysm, we must crack down on this aberrant form of Jewishness and Zionism.  We must destroy these movements and ideas. If neither the Israeli nor American governments takes firmer action they will have only themselves to blame for the consequences.  We have seen what the Jack Teitels can do even with his solo reign of terror.  Imagine what an entire movement of Teitels can do with some ingenuity and intestinal fortitude.  All they have to do is think a little bigger, get someone with the vision of an Osama bin Laden.  That would be all it would take for some real mayhem.

Haaretz notes that this military expulsion order is one of the most severe measures at the disposal of the military authorities in dealing with extremist settlers.  There are currently three such orders in effect against residents of Yitzhar.

The actions taken against Khantsis bring home once again the necessity for the U.S. government to do a better job of monitoring the radical pro-settler movement in this country and the necessity for clamping down on fundraising here on behalf of extremist settlements like Yitzhar and Kfar Tapuach among many others.

For some odd reason Haaretz English omitted Khantsis’ name from its English language report, but not from the Hebrew edition.

Rabbi Wolpe, Insurrectionist Settler Rabbi: Evacuating Settlements Worse Sin Than Eating Chametz

Monday, December 21st, 2009


Note: before playing the video, click on lower right-hand corner button and the “cc” (closed-caption) setting in order to see the English-language translation

An Israeli blogger, Ami Kaufman, has done a great service by uploading an Israeli TV talk-show interview with Rabbi Dov Wolpe, founder of the far-right settler group, SOS-Israel, who I’ve blogged about here along with his illegal U.S. fiscal conduit, Machanaim (about whom the Forward published an expose this week). Kaufman has translated and captioned the interview to give you a real taste for the loopy politics and religious stew that simmers inside these Jewish wingnuts.

Wolpe’s views are not only anti-democratic, but as the interviewer notes, they are insurrectionist in calling for IDF soldiers to refuse to obey lawful military orders. The TV show host also notes that the logic of Wolpe’s views would lead to civil war between the secular state and the religous zealots the rabbi represents.

Here, the interviewer asks for short replies to one-word questions:

Interviewer: The Palestinians.
Wolpe: I don’t recognize such a nation.
I: Democracy.
W: To a point.
I: Olmert, Livni, Barak.
W: Heretics of our generation.
I: Hilltop Youth.
W: Maccabbes of our generation.
I: Netanyahu.
W: He has been warned.
I: The left.
W: Emissaries of the enemy.
I: The messiah.
W: The only solution.

Later in the interview Wolpe strangely denies that his group pays soliders who refuse military orders to evacuate settlements and go to prison as has been reported in all Israel’s major newspapers. After the denial, he adds:

We said that every soldier who will sit in prison for the love of the Land of Israel, then we will give money to the family that raised such a child who is willing to suffer for it.

According to such sophistry, he isn’t paying the family a bounty for a specific act of insubordination, but rather is offering the funds as a gift for raising such a wonderful child–as if this severs the connection between the illegal act and payment. This may pass muster for Talmudic analysis, but it certainly won’t pass muster in a court of secular law. But I don’t suppose this interests Wolpe a whit since he’s preparing for the imminent arrival of the messiah, the deceased Chabad leader Rabbi Schneerson, who presumably will rule this settler Kingdom of God and strike mortal blows against heretics like yours truly and other trespassing Jews.

During the interview, Wolpe articulates his views with the utmost clarity when he says that Israeli soldiers swear an oath of allegiance to the State on a Tanach (Bible) to protect and defend the homeland. “How can a soldier obey an order to evacuate a settlement thus destroying the homeland?” There you have it in a nutshell: every inch of the Territories is not just sacred, God-given ground, but land the Israeli government must defend with its last ounce of blood. Can there be any starker elucidation of the chasm between radical settlers and the secular State than this?

According to Wolpe’s view, the democratic majority of Israelis has neither the right nor the ability to evacuate these settlements. We’ve heard of the concept of jury nullification, whereby jurors are urged to find minority defendants regardless of the merits of the case due to the suffering and discrimination inflicted on them by American society. Well, this is an example of national nullification. For Wolpe, the State of Israel is essentially null and void.

How else can he say he supports democracy “to a point?” For me, supporting democracy to a point is like saying you’re half-pregnant. It can’t be done. Democracy is an inviolate principle. There are no half-measures or conditions when it comes to democracy. To use a poker term, you’re either ‘all in’ or you’re all out. Clearly, Wolpe is neither a gambling man nor an advocate of liberal values when it comes to the State of Israel.

Later in the interview, Wolpe likens a military order to evacuate settlements to eating chametz (unleavened bread forbidden during Passover). I kid you not.

And when the interviewer attempts to remind his subject that the international community and Barack Obama are pressuring Israel for concessions, the latter responds with derision:

The nations [world community] are laughing at us, they mock us. We’re nothing but a laughingstock to them. Show me another country that would freeze building on their territory? Who’s ever heard of such a thing? We’re a bannana republic. You say we’re in charge. They’re in charge.

At another point, Wolpe calls the decision by the Netanyahu right-wing government to accept a temporary settlement freeze, “a dictatorship.” The rabbi, who doesn’t appear to have studied the principles of liberal democracy, claims that no democratic government can force a minority to accept the will of the majority when it comes to a decision like evicting 8,000 settlers from Gush Katif. Now, here I always thought that this was one of the principles of democracy–that the minority accepted the will of the majority even when former opposed it. Apparently, Rabbi Wolpe studied this subject at the feet of that other settler democrat, Meir Kahane. He certainly didn’t study in the yeshiva of John Locke or Thomas Jefferson.

H/t to Didi Remez.

Anatomy of Settler Land Theft

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

The AP has done us a tremendous journalistic service (easily deserving of Pulitzer consideration) with a probing investigation of one particular instance of settler fraud that involved stealing privately owned Palestinian land for the illegal outpost of Migron:

Israeli soldiers guard illegal outpost on stolen land (Getty Images)

Israeli soldiers guard illegal outpost on stolen land (Getty Images)

The transformation of a piece of West Bank land from a Palestinian field into a Jewish settlement has roots in an unlikely place – Orange County, California – and in a document that a [Palestinian landowner] supposedly signed more than four decades after the date of his death.

Unfolding from the West Bank’s terraced olive groves to a strip mall in a Los Angeles suburb, the story of this posthumous deal offers a rare glimpse into the underworld of straw companies and middlemen through which chunks of land move from Palestinian to Israeli hands. Each transaction further complicates an Israeli withdrawal that would be key to any peace agreement.

Such property deals are driven by the settlers’ belief the land is their God-given right; the cooperation of Israel’s governments…and cash from wealthy donors, many of them American Jews.

Here’s how the fraud unfolded:

…A 2004 document shows a Palestinian farmer named Abdel Latif Sumarin sold a plot long tended by his family near the village of Burqa, east of the city of Ramallah, to a company with an Arabic name. The paper contains Sumarin’s signature in clear English script and that of a California notary.

But an Associated Press investigation that made use of court papers, public records and interviews in the West Bank, Israel and the U.S., shows that the document is a poorly executed forgery.

Sumarin [n]ever visited America, his family says he couldn’t write English, and public records show he died in 1961. The notary in California says he did not sign the paper either.

Palestinian landowner prays at grave of grandfather who 'sold' land 40 years after his death (AP)

Palestinian landowner prays at grave of grandfather who 'sold' land 40 years after death (AP)

One of the ironies of this case is that the real Abdel Latif Sumarin, whose fraudulent signature graces a transfer deed, was buried in 1961 on a hilltop overlooking what has since become Migron.  If his spirit were there, he could see the very land that Jewish settlers have stolen from his family.

The fraudulent transaction actually occurred after the settlers had physically taken control of the land and created a settlement now containing 45 young families.  It appears the fraud was like a backdated check meant to “cover” the physical theft of the property from the Palestinian owners.  The six acres of stolen Palestinian land are caught up in two Israeli court cases and also under investigation by the FBI because several elements of the fraud transpired here in the U.S.

It is unfortunately common to find this type of land fraud in cases involving settlements:

Documents signed in strange places – and crooked deals – are not unusual in the lucrative and clandestine trade in Palestinian-owned land. Another recent challenge to a settler land deal in the town of Hebron involved forged documents, and a third revolved around Israeli businessmen who set up a notary with a prostitute, filmed their encounter, and then blackmailed the man into signing a sales document in Cyprus.

It is common these days to single out the Hilltop Youth for their violent extremism and repudiation of the secular State of Israel.  Journalists note that the new breed rejects the “go along to get along” passivity of their settler leader elders.  But in this case it is that very supposedly more moderate elder generation, embodied by Pinhas Wallerstein, which created and sanctioned this fraud.  And listen to the lies spill out of his mouth–lies from the mouth of a Torah-true Jew:

The El-Watan company [which allegedly "purchased" this land] was set up by an Israeli local government in the West Bank that was headed until recently by Pinhas Wallerstein, a prominent settler leader.

“The person who sold us the land was very much alive at the time, and living in the United States,” said Wallerstein, adding that the settlers had paid millions of dollars for the small plot. He said the document transferring ownership was genuine to the best of my knowledge.

“If anyone was guilty of fraud,” Wallerstein said, “it was the seller, who may have tricked the settlers into believing he was the Palestinian owner. He did not present evidence for that claim, which if true would mean the settlers spent millions without verifying the seller’s identity.”

The company has a photocopy of the seller’s California ID and a videotape of him, Wallerstein said. But he would not make them available to the AP, saying they would eventually be introduced as evidence in court.

One of the points I find especially laughable is Wallerstein’s attempt to blame the imaginary “seller” for the fraud.  His settler cronies devised this fraud and the so-called non-existent seller and now try to blame the chimera for the fraud.  Besides, the alleged “millions of dollars” which changed hands are also figments of Wallerstein’s imagination.

No doubt, to the settlers who devised this game it all appeared a clever charade.  They’d exploit Israel’s willingness to look the other way at such chicanery and put one over on the legitimate owners and get what they wanted to begin with, which was the land.  What they didn’t bargain for was a change in the political climate in which fraud involving acts in the U.S. might actually be taken more seriously by U.S. (and hopefully Israeli) authorities.

The piece de la resistance in the Ship of Fools comedy is this statement from a Migron resident which perfectly exemplifies not only the raging racism of the settlers, but the theological-mystical mania which fuels their delusional political attitudes.  Note that a historical event 1,000 years old trumps such petty niceties as property ownership and legal process:

Itay Harel, a social worker who lives on the Sumarin plot in Migron, insisted the sale was legitimate, although he refused to discuss it in detail. He also made clear that from the settlers’ perspective, the sale was beside the point.

“This land belongs to the people of Israel, who were driven off it by force,” Harel said, referring to the defeat and exile of the Jews by Rome in A.D. 70. He said no Palestinian had a rightful claim to any part of the West Bank.

“Anyone who claims the land is his is lying, and it is said that if you lie enough times, you start believing it,” he said.

This article perfectly encapsulates the potent toxic brew represented by the settler movement.  And as I said above, whether we’re talking about the most extreme Hilltop Youth or the supposedly more “responsible” older settler generation, everything in their enterprise is based on fraud and violence.  Once again, it is essential that U.S. authorities revoke the tax-deductible status of any Jewish organization which raises funds to support settlements.  It is also imperative that the FBI fully investigate potential criminal acts undertaken in support of settler conspiracies like the one outlined in this article.

Rise of Radical Settler Movement

Friday, September 26th, 2008

Well, it only took the N.Y. TImes a whole week to acknowledge that settler assassins attempted to murder one of Israel’s most distinguished academic figures and winner of this year’s Israel Prize.  Better late than never.  But even in covering the story the reporter seems to minimize its significance:

…[It] created only a minor stir in a nation that routinely experiences violence on a much larger scale.

Another example of the sterling editorial choices made by the Times new correspondent, Ethan Bronner.  What could’ve induced Bronner to cover the bombing in a more timely fashion?  Should Zeev Sternhell have been killed to warrant coverage?  Another serious deficiency in the story was no background on Sternhell’s politics and why he would be a target for the crazies.

After getting that off my chest, let me add that Isabel Kershner, who wrote the story, actually penned a very telling and chilling piece about the rise of a new, even more violent and ideologically extreme settler youth movement in the Territories.  Those of us who go back far enough always thought the Yesha Council and the racist leaders it spawned were the devils of Israeli politics.  Who’d have thought that it could be worse?  That the next generation could be even more homicidal?

…The bombing may be the latest sign that elements of Israel’s settler movement are resorting to extremist tactics to protect their homes in the occupied West Bank against not only Palestinians, but also Jews who some settlers argue are betraying them. Radical settlers say they are determined to show that their settlements and outposts cannot be dismantled, either by law or by force.

Now…the militants seem to have spawned a broader, more defined strategy of resistance designed to intimidate the state.

This aggressive doctrine, according to Akiva HaCohen, 24, who is considered to be one of its architects, calls on settlers and their supporters to respond “whenever, wherever and however” they wish to any attempt by the Israeli Army or the police to lay a finger on property in illegally built outposts scheduled by the government for removal. In settler circles the policy is called “price tag” or “mutual concern.”

Besides exacting a price for army and police actions, the policy also encourages settlers to avenge Palestinian acts of violence by taking the law into their own hands — an approach that has the potential to set the tinderbox of the West Bank ablaze.

Hard-core right-wing settlers have responded to limited army operations in recent weeks by blocking roads, rioting spontaneously, throwing stones at Palestinian vehicles and burning Palestinian orchards and fields all over the West Bank, a territory that Israel has occupied since 1967.

…In Jewish settlements like Yitzhar, an extremist bastion on the hilltops commanding the Palestinian city of Nablus…a local war is already being waged. One Saturday in mid-September…scores of men from Yitzhar rampaged through the Palestinian village, hurling rocks and firing guns, in what the prime minister of Israel, Ehud Olmert, described as a “pogrom.” Several Palestinians were hospitalized with gunshot wounds.

“To us, deterrence is more important than catching the specific terrorist. We’re fighting against a nation,” Mr. Ben Shochat said.

…Those on the extremist fringe — like Mr. Ben Shochat, who belong to the so-called hilltop youth — are increasingly rejecting any allegiance to the state

I was quite shocked by a N.Y. Times reporter actually using the settler name for part of the West Bank:

In Samaria, the biblical name for the northern West Bank…

Someone ought to tell Kershner that there is a political-rhetorical war going on in Israel and that she has just played, inadvertently one hopes, into the settler’s hands by adopting their name for this territory known to the vast majority of the rest of Israel and the world as the West Bank.

In the following passage the hilltop youth leader illustrates the anti-democratic, seditious nature of his enterprise:

“Amona [another forced settlement withdrawal] pretty much divided this public into two parts, the more militant activist part and the more passive part,” said Mr. HaCohen, an Orthodox hilltop youth pioneer and a founder of Shalhevet Ya. The people, he said, “have to decide whether they are on the side of the Torah or the state.”

When will the Israeli political and intelligence apparatus recognize this movement as an imminent danger not just to Israeli democracy, but to the state itself.  What would any other state do with citizens who seek to overthrow it by violent means?  And why isn’t Israel doing this?  Will we have to see a successful assassination of Zeev Sternhell before real, vigorous action is taken?

The problem is that the state is schizophrenic when it comes to this movement.  It views it with some nostalgia since at one time the settlements were viewed favorably by many Israelis.  The government is wracked by indecisiveness in the face of the enormity of the challenge presented by the Jewish terrorists.  To truly eradicate them would require not just a legal and police campaign–it would also require a real resolution of the conflict with the Palestinians.

The following passage illustrates yet again that this movement rejects the forms and authority of the Israeli state:

“To go out and assault soldiers is wrong,” said David Ha’ivri, who handles foreign relations for the Samaria council. But, he said, “It is to be expected that when force is used, there will be counterforce.”

When parsing settler statements you have to cut through the polite chatter to get to the meat of the matter.  Above, Ha-Ivri is not saying that assaulting soldiers is wrong.  He is saying that it is entirely justified when soldiers attempt to impose the state’s will on them.  That, once again, is sedition.

The state’s inadequacy in the face of such at threat is perfectly exemplified in this passage:

The army refused to comment on the effects of the price-tag doctrine, saying it was too sensitive.

When faced with the opportunity to tell the readers of the N.Y. Times what it thought of the hilltop youth and their violent extremism, the IDF punted.  How telling.  It reminds me of Yeats phrase: “The center cannot hold.”  The settlers are the rough beast slouching toward Bethlehem (or Hebron) to be born.  The beast must be slain, but there is simply not enough resolve or conviction among those in government or the military to do so.

Sometimes, one wants to throw up one’s hands and say that if Israelis cannot take their own fate into their own hands and make the bold decisions and compromises necessary to ensure their survival, then perhaps they deserve whatever fate holds in store for them.  I fear that their fate, barring the type of decisiveness I’ve called for, will not be pretty.

As a child of Rockland County, N.Y., I find it highly ironic that hilltop youth “chief ideologist” HaCohen was born and raised in Monsey, a few minutes away from the town in which I grew up.  To think that while I was growing up such hate was spawning only a few miles away…

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