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Posts Tagged ‘loyalty oath’

MK Danny Danon: Latest in Racist Legislative Fashion

Monday, December 5th, 2011
danny danon

Likud's Boy Wonder: Danny Danon

If you want to check on the pulse of Israeli fashion–that is the “fashion” of Israeli racism–you can do no better than study MK Danny Danon’s legislative agenda.  I don’t usually write about individual bills since there are so many far-right imbeciles who must have their say and they come up with more nonsense than you can shake a stick at.  But for MK Danon, for whom Matan Lurey has developed an apt moniker, ‘MKKK,’ I make an exception.

His new bill would demand that any Israeli seeking any sort of government ID whether a driver’s license, passport, graduation certificate, would have to sign a loyalty oath (Hebrew).  The provision is designed to disenfranchise Palestinian Israelis who, Danon presumes, would not do so.  One of the many lunatic aspects of this bill is that non-Jewish Israelis would have no problem signing a statement expressing loyalty to Israel.  Because they are loyal to Israel.  An Israel, that is, that is democratic and offers them rights as citizens.  This fact, that his bill would not achieve his aim, undoes all the venom Danon is attempting to inject into the social discourse with this harkening back to Nuremberg-type laws.  For Palestinian Israelis to refuse to sign, it would have to include a provision demanding loyalty to “the Jewish state, that is Israel.”  Even if such a bill with such language did pass, I doubt it could pass muster in the Supreme Court.  That is, unless new legal provisions permit a politicization of the nomination process allowing the Court to swing toward the settler outlook.

As if he hadn’t done enough to raise the volume of Jewish racism in Israel, Danon also added this zinger:

Israeli Arabs disrespect the laws of the nation having far higher rates of criminality than any other ethnic group.

Among his claims is that these Israeli citizens have voiced support for those “calling for the destruction of the State of Israel.”  Of course, he doesn’t say which Israelis did this, what they said, which group they allegedly supported, nor did he offer any support for the claim that the group mentioned supported the destruction of Israel.  Danny has a wee small problem with evidence.  He’s much better at the smear than at offering facts.

Another Likud ‘solon,’ Ofir Akunis, made the brilliant observation, in defending the Knesset’s draconian set of anti-democracy bills, that Joe McCarthy “was right in every word, the fact is -there were Soviet agents.”  This is the same distinguished advocate for free speech and democratic values who co-sponsored the bill which would outlaw foreign funding for Israeli NGOs.  In fact, in this interview he was arguing that Israeli NGOs. by accepting foreign money, are agents of foreign powers.  That makes the United Nations and European Union the equivalent of 1950s-era Communist subversives.  If you follow this argument to its proper insane conclusion you could argue that any American Jewish group that received any funding from Israel or an Israeli organization was an agent of a foreign power (i.e. Israel).  Is that really where you want to take this argument??

You have to wonder what planet these people are living on.  Akunis attempted to dig himself out of the hole he was in by claiming after the fact that McCarthy was only right in the sense that he pointed out Communists in the U.S. government.  You see, there’s a problem with idiots like this attempting to expound on subjects they know nothing about.  I’d rather him blather on about Israeli history.  At least he’d have half a chance of being accurate once in a while.  About U.S. history he’s hopeless.  McCarthy didn’t uncover a single Communist, though he sure as hell tried hard enough and ruined enough careers in the process.

H/t @OriNir_APN.

Israel’s Loyalty Oath: Let’s Drink to New Jewish Republic

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

It seems a virtual certainly that sometime in the coming weeks Israel’s rightist government will pass a law requiring new citizens to affirm Israel as a Jewish state.  As currently formulated the law would only require such an oath of non-Jewish citizens, which would effectively bar most non-Jews, especially Muslims or Arabs, from becoming citizens.  As such, the law would be racist on its face and likely rejected by the Israeli Supreme Court. Bibi Netanyahu is calling for amending the bill so that it includes all new citizens including Jews, hoping that this will pass muster with any justices who may have quibbles over the law’s diminution of democratic values.

As one of my commentators with whom I rarely agree wrote:  it’s an answer to a question no one is asking.  There are very few non-Jews seeking to become citizens of Israel.  So the oath is a political provocation by Avigdor Lieberman meant to gin up hysteria and support among his far-right nationalist base.  As I’ve written here, the only reason this bill will become law is as a quid pro quo from Bibi to his farther right allies hoping to retain their support when and if he extends a settlement freeze.

One of the very strange outcomes of this law may be to deny Israeli citizenship to Jews.  Since few Arabs seek to become citizens and mainly Jews do, it is the Haredi Jews who seek citizenship who would be barred from it, since they refuse to acknowledge that Israel is a Jewish state in pure halachic terms.  Wouldn’t that be a delicious irony?  I’m guessing that the State will find a way to create an exemption for the ultra Orthodox allowing them to circumvent the entire oath process, just as it does to exempt their children from military service (though on different grounds).

israelis demonstrate against loyalty oath

Thousands of Israelis protest against Lieberman loyalty oath (Tal Cohen)

Aux armes, citoyens!  My interest tonight is strategizing how the progressive left should respond to the eventuality of the passage of this bill.  Two days ago, Israelis held a large rally denouncing the loyalty oath.  A good start.  But I think we should prepare for a longer term campaign against this racist law.  We should prepare a series of acts of resistance.  For example, I can see a rally on the day the law is passed with a mass of Israelis proclaiming en masse an alternate oath affirming Israel as a state of all its citizens regardless of religion or ethnicity.  I’d love to see an oleh chadash (new immigrant) leading such an oath-taking as a symbolic but powerful protest.

I would begin asking American Jews to withhold whatever portion of their UJA contributions are designated for Israel.  Jewish leaders tend to avoid and ignore issues unless there are financial ramifications that harm fundraising campaigns or cause deep embarrassment.  This issue could cause both.

We must also continue to point out that such a law will reinforce a slogan that hasn’t been widely heard since the 1970s when the UN General Assembly passed a “Zionism is racism” resolution.  At the time, many of us disagreed strongly with such sentiment.  But can we honestly do so now?  Yes, there are those of us who can argue that Zionism as we express and define it is different than what passes for Zionism in arch nationalist right-wing circles in Israel.  But that may be too much subtlety for the world to bear when it sees an Israeli government prepared to use a sledge-hammer domestically and on the world stage to define itself and its interests.

At another earlier protest, an Israeli professor likened this bill to the 1935 Nuremberg Race Laws which set the stage for the Holocaust:

Israeli educational psychologist Prof. Gavriel Solomon said that “the idea of Judenrein or Arab-rein is not new… Some might say ‘how can you compare us to Nazis’. I am not talking about the death camps, but about the year 1935. There were no camps yet but there were racist laws. And we are heading forward towards these kinds of laws. The government is clearly declaring our incapacity for democracy.”

A state which needs such oaths is a state unsure of its own identity, lacking self-confidence, perhaps sensing unconscious guilt at the injustices that lie  at its foundation.  It signifies a state at war with itself.  That is why you don’t see firmly established democracies like the U.S., Britain, Germany, France racing to affirm their identities as Christian nations.  These are countries more or less comfortable in their own skins.

When it affirms this oath as law it will cease being Israel and become the Jewish Republic, as Gideon Levy writes.  And let us be very clear, they are not the same thing.  Jewish citizens should no longer be called Israelis, but rather Judeans.  At that point, Judea or whatever you want to call it might just as well have a king as a Knesset.  Let’s call him Yvette I, shall we?  Let’s rebuild the Temple and install Moshe Feiglin as High Priest.  King Yvette can reign from Jerusalem and have his winter palace at Nokdim (the settlement he calls home), just as Herod built his at the fateful Masada.

It’s at this point I seek to join the party of Rabbi Yochanan Ben Zakkai, who, according to a legend some claim to be apocryphal, could see the handwriting on the wall during the Roman siege against Jerusalem.  He escaped the city in a coffin during a period of plague, negotiated with the Roman general conducting the siege, who allowed him to flee to a little town called Yavneh.  There he established a rabbinic academy that sought to come to terms with the trauma of the destruction of the Second Temple, and hence laid the groundwork for the survival of the Jewish people as they scattered to the Diaspora.

In other words, Lieberman and even Bibi are sowing the seeds of Israel’s destruction.  It’s really plain and simple (but also horrible).  If you are prepared for this to happen you will stand and watch.  If not, you will do something to object, to resist.

We should remind Israeli and Diaspora Jewish leaders that the specter of BDS hovers over ever such Israeli act and strengthens the movement.  This reinforces the notion that Israel is its own worst enemy, and that all its opponents need to do is sit back and watch as Israel virtually destroys any credibility or sympathy it may retain on the world stage.  Indeed, such laws perfectly illustrate the Midrash which states that the Holy Temple was destroyed due to the sinat hinam (senseless hatred) of two brothers for each other.  Today, we’re looking at an Israel which destroys itself inch by inch while the rest of us (or at least some of us) look on in horror and disbelief.

To conclude, let us all say no to a state that defines itself solely in religious terms; to a state that affirms that Judaism is its dominant religion; to a state that subordinates democracy to religion; to a state that is Jewish to the exclusion of all else and all others.  Ours is a vision of an Israel that affirms and values the religions of all its citizens; that offers equal rights to all citizens; that embraces all ethnicities while derogating none (including Judaism, lest dyed-in-the-wool Zionists claim that this means the death of Israel or Zionism).

Israeli Cabinet Approves Loyalty Oath for Non-Jews: ‘Arabs Raus’

Sunday, October 10th, 2010
israeli loyalty oath

'No citizenship without loyalty'

I’m actually heartened by the formulation of the loyalty oath which the rightist Israeli cabinet approved today.  It compels only non-Jews to swear loyalty to Israel as a Jewish state and doesn’t make the same demand of new Jewish citizens.  This makes the proposal, almost guaranteed of approval in the Knesset even more racist than it was when it enjoined every new citizen to swear allegiance to the Jewish state.  This in turn almost guarantees the law will be overturned by the Supreme Court.  If the Court does not reject the law then Israel is sliding down the slippery slope to a racialist state.

I was contemplating using the term “fascist” or even stronger but thought better of it given that there are those ready to pounce on the use of such strong terms, but a sitting member of the Israeli cabinet beat me to it:

Isaac Herzog, a Labor member of the cabinet, said the amendment was one of a series of steps in recent years that “borders on fascism.  Israel is on a slippery slope.”

Even a Likud stalwart like Reuven Rivlin, Knesset speaker, sees the evil in this proposal, which he says is:

“…Provocative and [could] serve as a weapon for the enemies of Zionism.”

Gee, dya think?

Can we be far from separate water fountains and bathrooms for Arabs?  We already have separate schools, separate towns and separate political parties.  For that matter, can we be far from prohibiting anyone who isn’t Jewish from becoming a citizen?  Actually, Israel will always allow Christians to become citizens.  It’s the Muslims who are a problem.  So the next thing you know Israel will be prohibiting Muslims and Arabs from becoming citizens.  They might just as well add “Arabs raus” to the Israeli Declaration of Independence.\

And while we’re at it, can’t we add a loyalty oath for visitors, especially the undesirable ones like Norman Finkelstein, Noam Chomsky and Ivan Prado, the Spanish clown.  That should end the problem of Israel having to arrest them and send them packing when they arrive at Ben Gurion unwanted.  No more nasty ISMers either.  Just think about it.

Let’s think really big, instead of confining the oath to non-Jews who wish to become citizens, let’s apply it to leftists who already are citizens.  When they go abroad to spout their anti-Israel swill, don’t let ‘em back in the country till they swear allegiance to the Judenreich.  That will get rid of any number of Sheikh Jarrah activists, Neve Gordon, Gideon Levy, Amira Hass, and the like.  It also ought to bring down substantially the number of leftists afflicting the Israeli body politic.

Ehud Barak as usual proposed an ineffectual compromise rejected out of hand which would’ve added a reference to Israel’s Declaration of Independence in the oath, as if this somehow will kasher what is treif in it.

Bibi, for his part, in defending the oath, repeated the usual pro-Israel delusion that Israel is the region’s only democracy:

“There is no other democracy in the Middle East…

Which must mean that Lebanon, Turkey and arguably Iran don’t exist.  That’s explains why Israel does so poorly in understanding its neighbors.  It isn’t even aware of what form of government they have.

Read Gideon Levy’s eloquent denunciation:

Remember this day. It’s the day Israel changes its character. As a result, it can also change its name to the Jewish Republic of Israel, like the Islamic Republic of Iran…

From now on, we will be living in a new, officially approved, ethnocratic, theocratic, nationalistic and racist country.

…Today the loyalty oath bill, soon the loyalty oath law. The dam will overflow today, threatening to drown the remnants of democracy until we are left perhaps with a Jewish state of a character that no one really understands, but it certainly won’t be a democracy.

…The Association for Civil Rights in Israel issued a blacklist of legislation: a loyalty law for Knesset members; a loyalty law for film production; a loyalty law for non-profits; putting the Palestinian catastrophe, the Nakba, beyond the scope of the law; a ban on calls for a boycott; and a bill for the revocation of citizenship. It’s a dangerous McCarthyist dance on the part of ignorant legislators who haven’t begun to understand what democracy is all about.

…Swearing an oath to a Jewish state will decide its fate. It is liable to turn the country into a theocracy like Saudi Arabia.

…That’s what happens when the fire is still smoldering under the rug, the fire of the basic lack of faith in the justice of our path. Only such a lack of confidence can produce such distorted proposed legislation.

…[This] is being done either to provoke the Arab minority and push them into a greater lack of loyalty so one day the time will come to finally get rid of them, or it is designed to scuttle the prospect of a peace agreement…One way or another, in Basel at the First Zionist Congress in 1897, the Jewish state was founded, as Theodor Herzl said, and today the unenlightened Jewish Republic of Israel will be founded.

Knesset to Demand Loyalty Oath, Ratify Israel as Racist State

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010
lieberman no loyalty no citizenship

Lieberman campaign poster: 'No loyalty, no citizenship'

Well, they might just as well do so.  And this points to why the entire peace negotiation-settlement freeze is such a mess that it should die a sudden death.

Bibi Netanyahu pulled a fast one on his Labor coalition partners, according to Haaretz, and introduced a new Knesset law that would require all citizens to take a Jewish loyalty oath.  In effect, this means that no non-Jew could become a citizen of Israel, since none worthy of whatever their religion is would take such an oath.

Though angered, Labor is essentially toothless and can do nothing but withdraw from the government.  This would transform them from being inconsequential to irrelevant.  So it must stay as the perennially scorned second wife in Bibi’s bigamous relationship (the ultra-right wing parties are his beloved first wife).

From Bibi’s point of view, he must throw red meat to the rightist allies in his coalition in order to extract their agreement to a settlement freeze extension.  This is a political payoff (as opposed to the actual payoffs Yvette is accused of accepting from Martin Schlaff) to Lieberman, a major plank of whose platform was such a loyalty oath.  Keep in mind, it was the same Lieberman who had the chutzpah to lecture the UN General Assembly about the need to expel Israel’s Palestinian citizens from the country.

So the question becomes: is it worth throwing Israeli democracy under a bus, accepting that Israel enshrines its racist nature in law; or is it preferable to throw the entire thing in the garbage heap where it belongs?  The question is: peace at what price?  Is this any way to an equitable, just peace?  No.

This is precisely the type of amoral thinking which so disturbs me:

“I hope that Netanyahu’s support is a payoff to Lieberman, so that the prime minister will be able to extend the freeze without breaking apart his coalition,” said one Labor minister, who declined to be named.

Not a single thought given to the nature of Israel itself and whether it can be a democratic state if it forces a loyalty oath on every new citizen regardless of religion.  No reflection on what this will mean to Israel’s current non-Jewish citizens.

The last resort will be the Israeli Supreme Court which at times takes a dim notion to such legal shenanigans.  It expunged two racist laws from the books which prohibited Israeli Palestinian political parties from running in past elections.  Perhaps they will view this type of law similarly.  If not, open the floodgates of racism…

As for me,  I think the U.S.A. English movement had the right idea.  Speak English, be Christian.  That should be our motto.  Forget E Pluribus Unum.  Not “out of many, one.”  Nuts to that.  Out of many, a big fat mess.  I say, ‘Out of one, one’–and forget the rest.  If Israel can be an uber-Jewish nation despite its 1-million citizens who are not, then this country can be Christian, for Christians and the rest of you suckers be damned.

Bibi and Yvet’s Arab-Hatred: Bring It On!

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Today, an Israeli wrote to me that the Knesset’s new anti-Nakba law had her more depressed than she’s been about Israeli politics in a long time:

When authorities start attempting to regulate and control thoughts/feelings/narratives, I feel that the end is really in sight…

While I certainly share her outrage at such anti-Arab extremism, it got me to thinking that perhaps such an outrageous political agenda might be a good thing after all.  I remember during the last Israeli election campaign, Jerry Haber wrote a post in which he advocated, “Vote Bibi!“  I was shocked when I read it.  It seemed the utmost cynicism since I felt at the time that a Livni-Kadima victory might show promise for peace when combined with the prodding of our president-elect (at the time) Barack Obama.

But Jerry was right perhaps in ways he wasn’t totally aware at the time: Bibi and his rightist government are a horror show.  They put Israel in the worst possible light in the rest of the world, and most crucially in Washington, D.C. where U.S. policy is made.  The more extreme and outrageous the policies advocated by Jerusalem, the lower Bibi’s stock will sink here and everywhere outside Israel.

So I say let them vote to ban Nakba.  Let them vote to compel a loyalty oath.  Let them ban Palestinian students from studying in Israel.  Let them rant about Iran being Amalek and toppling the mad mullahs.   Let them do their worst.  I say: “Knock yourself out.”  Give it your wingnut all.

I’m tempted to write something even more radical: let Israel bomb Iran or at least do everything but bomb Iran.  An Israeli attack on Iran will unite the entire world against this Israeli government.  It will focus the mind mightily on the need for resolution of the Israeli-Arab conflict.  In fact, it will almost guarantee a peace agreement even if it has to be imposed on Israel.

While attacking Iran would be an immense tragedy and I do not wish to see people needlessly suffer for any reason–even for peace, are circumstances not so desperate that we need to exploit every possible opportunity to transform our current predicament?  Can we not turn such a catastrophe into a redemptive act?  Hey, if Herman Kahn could think the unthinkable, can’t I contemplate how to turn a horror show into a way out of the Israeli-Arab miasma?

Gideon Levy, in his latest column, says it quite well, envisioning a Tzipi Livni prime ministership:

All this [her tenure as PM] would end in tears. Time more valuable than gold would be wasted for nothing. Livni would not have taken any tangible steps – no evacuation of settlements, no release of prisoners, no lifting of the siege and no reconstruction of Gaza, all of which are much more vital than any declaration of negotiations. In contrast to the Netanyahu era, the U.S. and world would once again have allowed this masquerade ball to take place. They even would have taken part.

Thankfully, Livni was not elected. True, with her, things would have been much more pleasant, but this would be a deceptive charm. With Netanyahu and Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, the world may wake up and end the sleight of hand. Who knows, maybe some Israelis will follow its lead and wake up as well.

But even if Pres. Obama prevents Israel from a lunatic military adventure against Iran, there will still be plenty of wingnuttery possible in the Knesset.  I say, bring it on baby!

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