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Caroline Glick, who has written so well about the imperative for political and governmental change in Israel, has a problem.
Her problem seems to be an inability to take a leap of faith, a leap towards emunah in Our Creator, the leap which she, herself, again and again and again in her previous writings deems essential, imperative to Israel’s continued security and well-being.
Time and again, Ms. Glick regales us with prose like this;
Rather than direct our attention at Olmert, Israelis must turn our attention to his enablers. Yisrael Beiteinu head and Minister of Non-Existent Strategy Avigdor Lieberman and his buddy, Shas leader and Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Something or Other Eli Yishai, as well as Shas’s religious leader Rabbi Ovadia Yosef should become the objects of public pressure. They must be made to understand that if they desire a political future of any kind, they must abandon Olmert and allow the nation to elect a new government.
But to quote from this author’s previous post to this blog regarding Ms Glick’s piece; Olmert’s Plan for Jerusalem dated June, 2006;
“Caroline Glick… addresses politics, but not the apparent anti-religious, anti-Torah bias and agenda laying beneath the politics and not the Biblical, historical Jewish connection with the Jewish land, when she states that ‘Olmert is giving up all of Jerusalem.’”
There seems to be a lack of faith which brings her to make the absurd analogy which groups Moshe Feiglin with Barak and Olmert and to claim that “Whereas in Olmert and Barak’s leftist visions Israel has no enemies, in Feiglin’s vision, there is no outside world at all.” And this lack of faith seems coupled with a blind spot for a previous failed prime minister, seemingly based primarily on his stylish, western, anglo erudition.
It seems axiomatic that with Bibi Netanyahu at the helm, we are doomed, by consequence of continuance of secular, unJewishly connected values, to another round of surrenders, another round of vicious cycles leading to more and more corruption, graft, bureaucracy of the type that our Gush Katif brethren have faced for two years, as well as good-old-boy protexia; all of which would inevitably result in a further round of elections and more of the same as Israel finds herself in an ever-weakened position, dwindling in size and accepting more of what Ms. Glick herself deems as unacceptable.
For the first time we have, embedded in a major political party an individual and a movement in Moshe Feiglin and the Manhigut Yehudit, a movement set with the purpose of altering political, governmental, diplomatic and Judicial Israeli norms to norms of a Jewish ideal, a Jewish standard and morality — “Tzedek, Tzedik, Ti’erdof” — With righteousness, righteousness shall you judge.
It seems evident from Ms. Glick’s current piece that she is engaged in a personal struggle; a struggle between realities; determining which one is perceived and which one real. Can she not realize and internalize that “this is our land and it’s our G’d given right to be here?”
Can she not realize that by Bibi Netanyahu’s record as prime minister, is every bit as guilty of appeasement and surrender as Olmert, Livni, Barak, etc? Does she not realize that once Bibi was elected in 1996 by the people who were sick and tired of Oslo and all its terrible ramifications, he continually betrayed his loyal right-wing supporters by embracing Arafat, giving away Hebron, handing more guns to the “Palestinian(sic)” Arab Islamic murderers, and not declaring the horrendous Oslo process null and void.
Moshe Feiglin and the Manhigut Yehudit movement, rather than as Ms. Glick characterizes them as envisioning “no outside world at all…,”
represents the embodiment of Ms. Glick’s quote from Natan Sharansky as well as her own summation;
“As a Jewish nation state, we have the will power of a people that returned to Zion and built a free country. These are powerful foundations for a national strategy.”
But to bring these strengths to bear, the nation must understand that it must defend itself from poor leaders. “Democracy isn’t only leaders. It is also the willingness of the people to protect democracy. We can’t expect for the prime minister to just get up and resign. The public needs to pressure government ministers and members of Knesset. Today they do no feel that they will pay a particularly heavy price for their support of this terribly unpopular government.”
Democracy is based on people making choices. The success of democracies is ensured only when people choose wisely and embrace their power and responsibility as citizens.
MB
Column One: Sharansky’s Democracy Lesson, by Caroline Glick (Jerusalem Post)
Excerpts;
Olmert’s government looks more stable than ever. As former minister Natan Sharansky, who now heads the Shalem Center’s Institute for National Strategies, notes, “With nine percent approval ratings, Olmert’s government is more stable than Binyamin Netanyahu’s government was with 45-65 percent approval ratings.”
Indifferent to public rejection, Olmert and his ministers pursue diplomatic and security goals that bear no relation to the regional and global realities facing Israel.
Today Olmert has one overriding policy objective: He wants to get his picture taken with the Saudis.
Since US President George W. Bush announced his intention to organize a regional conference of Arab leaders to pressure Israel to give land to the Fatah terrorist organization, the most urgent order of business for Olmert and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni has been to convince the Saudis to come to the conference. To achieve this goal they are ready to give up Judea, Samaria and Jerusalem. To achieve this goal they are willing to cut Israel in two to enable the Palestinians to have “territorial contiguity” between Gaza and Judea.
Furthermore, over the opposition of the defense establishment, Olmert and his ministers are willing to end their opposition to the US plan to supply Saudi Arabia with JDAM precision bombs. That Israel has no way of defending itself against JDAM assault. That the Saudi regime and military are crawling from head to tail with al-Qaida operatives is immaterial.
So excited are they at the prospect of meeting the Saudis, Olmert and his colleagues never seem to have considered the idea of demanding that the Saudis pay for the honor of meeting Israelis. They have made no demand that Saudi Arabia stop financing and distributing genocidal anti-Semitic propaganda worldwide. They have not demanded that the Saudis end their economic boycott of Israel. They just want the Saudis to say “cheese.”
The Saudi photo-op policy is not the only delusional policy the Olmert government is advancing. There is also Defense Minister Ehud Barak’s new missile defense plan. This week Barak announced that within three years, he wishes to develop and deploy a missile shield that will block everything from Palestinian Kassam rockets to Iranian Shihab ballistic missiles.
Although Israel needs a missile defense system, the plan that Barak outlines is sheer fantasy. First, there is no chance that Israel will be able to build and deploy a comprehensive missile defense within three years. Second, there is no chance than any system will be able to defend Israel in the eminently foreseeable event that it is attacked by thousands of missiles in a joint Palestinian, Lebanese, Syrian and Iranian missile offensive.
A COMMON thread runs through Olmert and Barak’s fairytales. The Israeli public has no role to play in either of them. Both policies start from the assumption that the interests and opinions of the public are irrelevant and its participation in crafting and implementing national policies is undesirable. For Olmert and Barak, the citizens of Israel are mere spectators in their government- produced reality TV shows.
Many factors contribute to the fact that Olmert’s unpopular government is able to cling to power and behave as if there is nothing wrong. But the main cause for the government’s longevity is the deep crisis which plagues Israel’s democratic system.
In Sharansky’s view, there are two causes for the current crisis: Political leaders perceive their positions as career opportunities rather than opportunities to serve the public; and the public doesn’t demand that its elected leaders reassess their perception.
This state of affairs is disastrous because the main strength of democratic societies is their ability to embrace the individual strengths of their citizens to advance the national interest. As Sharansky explains, “A national strategy must be based on the values of its nation. Israel is predicated on two core values: the fact that it is a Jewish state and the fact that it is a free society.”
For the past generation, Israel’s leaders have underrated the strength of the county’s core values. “Already back in the 1980s, Shimon Peres was saying that the nation is weak. Barak said the same thing before he went to the Camp David summit [in 2000]. Ariel Sharon said the same thing before the withdrawal from Gaza. But during last summer’s war we saw that the opposite was true. The nation is strong. Our leaders are weak. And today our leaders continue to base their policies on the same mistaken perception that the nation has no strength.”
It is no doubt true that the Israeli public’s repeated willingness to elect weak leaders contributes to our leaders’ low estimation of our strength. For democracies to work, the people must choose leaders capable of advancing their national interests. And such leaders are not men and women who promise the public utopias. Such leaders are men and women who look reality in the face and ask the nation to work with them in advancing national goals in accordance with the reality on the ground.
In the next general elections, Israeli voters will be asked to choose between three alternative leaders – Olmert, Barak and Netanyahu. As Sharansky sees it, Netanyahu is the only one with a realistic understanding of global realities and a true appreciation for the strength of Israeli democracy. Netanyahu’s economic reforms, which fuelled Israel’s prosperity, were predicated on the liberal view that national wealth is created by a nation’s citizenry, not by the government. Unlike Barak and Olmert, Netanyahu grasps that the key to national strength is the empowerment of the nation.
WHILE NATIONAL elections seem light years away, in 10 days, Netanyahu will stand for reelection as the leader of Likud. He is facing off in the Likud primaries against Moshe Feiglin, who heads the Jewish Leadership faction.
What is striking about these primaries is the similarity between Feiglin and Barak and Olmert. Although Feiglin comes from the post-Zionist Right rather than the post-Zionist Left, like Barak and Olmert, he bases his post-Zionist vision for the country on fantasy. Whereas in Olmert and Barak’s leftist visions Israel has no enemies, in Feiglin’s vision, there is no outside world at all. There is no US administration. There is no European Union. There is no United Nations. There is no media. There is nothing. No worries. Feiglin will just tell the West and the Arabs to leave us alone because this is our land and it’s our God given right to be here, and everyone will understand and no one will bother us anymore.
Sharansky’s main problem with Feiglin’s candidacy is that if he makes a strong showing he will frighten away disaffected Kadima, Yisrael Beitenu and Shas voters who do not ascribe to his post-Zionist, religious worldview. While this is true enough, it is not the central problem with Feiglin.
The Zionist ideal which Feiglin, like Olmert and Barak, insists on replacing is the only viable path to ensure the survivability of the State of Israel. It is the Zionist vision, which postulates a free Jewish nation state, where the sum total of creativity and wisdom of both democratic institutions and the Jewish traditions of faith in human freedom can build on one another, which guarantees that the core values and inherent strengths of the nation will be brought to bear in moving the country forward.
Sharansky himself believes strongly that Zionism is the core of Israeli strength. As he puts it, “As a Jewish nation state, we have the will power of a people that returned to Zion and built a free country. These are powerful foundations for a national strategy.”
But to bring these strengths to bear, the nation must understand that it must defend itself from poor leaders. “Democracy isn’t only leaders. It is also the willingness of the people to protect democracy. We can’t expect for the prime minister to just get up and resign. The public needs to pressure government ministers and members of Knesset. Today they do no feel that they will pay a particularly heavy price for their support of this terribly unpopular government.”
Democracy is based on people making choices. The success of democracies is ensured only when people choose wisely and embrace their power and responsibility as citizens.
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