17 thoughts on “Landau Advocates Boycotting Knesset – Tikun Olam תיקון עולם إصلاح العالم
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  1. RE: “I call on parliaments throughout the democratic world, and interparliamentary associations, to boycott Israel’s parliament, once the pride of the Jewish people” – Landau

    SEE: World parliaments criticize Israel, Cambodia | AP News, Antiwar Newswire, 07/15/10
    (excerpts) Representatives of world parliaments on Thursday criticized Israel, Cambodia and 19 other countries for their treatment of lawmakers. The chair of the Inter-Parliamentary Union’s human rights committee, Rosario Green, urged Israel not to deport Palestinian lawmakers Mohammed Abu Teir, Mohammed Totah and Ahmed Abu Atoun after they were recently released from prison.
    The three were ordered expelled from Jerusalem for links to Hamas. But Green, a former Mexican foreign minister, said the expulsion violates the lawmakers’ human rights…
    …IPU brings together lawmakers from 155 countries. The U.S. Congress isn’t a member.
    ENTIRE ARTICLE – http://wire.antiwar.com/2010/07/15/world-parliaments-criticize-israel-cambodia-2/

    1. P.S. The rape comment was really boneheaded. “Loose lips sink editorships.” I think what Landau meant to say is that the U.S. should administer a little ‘tough love’ to Israel by imposing a peace settlement on it against its (conscious) wishes. How’s that for “revisionism”?

    2. The three were ordered expelled from Jerusalem for links to Hamas.

      Not quite – they had been Hamas members long before they were detained. They were arrested only after they won the 2006 election.

  2. Frankly,I think Landou, Gordon, et al., are aiming at the wrong target. The boycotts should be directed to the real culprit, the USA!!

    1. RE: Jewish Terrorist…‘Outs’ Chief of Shin Bet’s Jewish Terror Department
      MY COMMENT: I wonder where he got the idea to do such a thing. Oddly though, I’m having a vague feeling of déjà vu. Something about a yellow cake, a forged letter and a flame…no, it’s not a flame – it seems to be a “plame” (whatever that is).

    2. RE: “The boycotts should be directed to the real culprit, the USA” – undisclosed commenter (certainly not me!)
      MY CONCERN: Be careful now, that might be sufficient grounds for declaring someone an “unlawful enemy combatant”. Even after all these years, it’s still probably best to heed the ominous post-9/11 admonition that “nowadays you have to be careful what you say and do”.

      1. That commenter is certainly not “undisclosed.” My name is boldly printed above.
        That is the point: I am very careful about what I say and do. Therefore, when I say it, it matters.

        Re “unlawful enemy combatants,” we have met the enemy and he is us (Pogo). I repeat, the real culprit is the USA!

  3. Given the many legislatures of many countries in the world which are nothing more than rubber stamps for dictators is Landau (or anyone else) advocating boycotting them?

    I remember during the Cold War, a series of programs on ABC-TV that hooked up the US Congress with the Supreme Soviet.

    I don’t recall anyone calling even for the boycott of that program.

    1. I care about Israel more than I care about Nagorno Karabakh or Moldova & whether or not they’re run by dictators. I’ll leave the latter to you since you apparently care about the issue so intensely.

    2. Given the many legislatures of many countries in the world which are nothing more than rubber stamps for dictators is Landau (or anyone else) advocating boycotting them?

      Do you prefer that Israel be judged at the same level as Zimbabwe? Don’t demand the respect due to a democracy*, then whine when you receive criticism for conduct unbecoming of one.

      *Particularly apt due to Israel and its supporter’s penchant for using the “Only Democracy In the Middle East” label.

      1. As I pointed out in my post-I didn’t call for a boycotting of the Supreme Soviet when it was around, so why should I boycott any other legislature.

        PS I noticed in reading the Lanadau article that he advocates boycotting the Knesset-but explicitly does NOT advocate boycotting the settlements.

        Any other person in the world taking that stance?

  4. Even a single day of boycott from the Israeli press of all news involving the Knesset would work wonders to bring home the point.

    That reminds me of a comment from an American expat who lived in Thailand for a while about how the press there reacted to attempted censorship by the Thai government. The newspapers responded by printing large blank spaces in the midst of their sheets to represent the censorship, until the government backed down.

    If only Haaretz and other papers would try something similar.

    1. Would most Israelis notice if Haaretz did? Check its very low circulation numbers.

      Maybe it does already.

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