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engaging in baby killing as a hobby.......Opposition by former high officials in Israeli’s military and national security establishment and Israeli allies – France, England, and Germany – to the aimless killing of civilian families in Gaza is increasing. Media shortcomings in covering terrorist Netanyahu’s daily Gaza mass murders
The mainstream, US media has no excuse to cease its incomplete and biased reporting on the horrific genocidal mass slaughter in Gaza. Former deputy minister of economy Yair Golan called out Netanyahu for “engaging in baby killing as a hobby". These denunciations fortify the longstanding documented condemnations by 16 Israeli human rights groups, including “Breaking the Silence,” whose most recent report details how Israeli platoons in Gaza use Palestinians as “human shields". It is time to examine the shortcomings — some imposed and some self-inflicted — in the US mass media’s coverage of an out-of-control brutal Israeli regime, weaponised and funded daily first by Biden and now by Trump. 1. Start with the vast undercount of deaths in Gaza (population 2.3 million) since 7 October 2023. Curiously, the media disbelieves Hamas claims, except for its Ministry of Health report of fatalities. Hamas, the elected government of Gaza, only reports the deaths that can be confirmed by name from hospitals, clinics, and mortuaries most of which have been destroyed or gutted. So, day after day, newspapers dutifully reported Hamas’ fatality toll – now at 54,300. Nobody in the academic community, UN, and international relief world believes this low number. Their unofficial estimates range from 250,000 to 500,000 deaths. Most of these groups readily agree that almost all the survivors of the deadly bombardments of civilians and their homes, markets, hospitals, and food, fuel and other emergency infrastructures, such as destroyed water mains and electric circuits, are either sick, injured, near death or starving. The media has no hesitation in estimating the number of Syrians killed during the civil war over the Assad dictatorship (500,000), or the number of Ukrainian deaths following Russia’s invasion. Somehow, they can’t see that Hamas has an interest in undercounting to avoid greater condemnations by its people for not protecting them. The media should put their reporters to work on documenting a more realistic death toll. At 500,000 fatalities, the intensity of political, diplomatic, and civic pressure is quite different than the fictional 54,300 figure. 2. Netanyahu’s ban on all independent journalists from entering Gaza, including US and Israeli reporters, makes it difficult to get more facts and sources on the ground. The Israeli army has killed more than 300 Palestinian journalists, some with their families. Some of their apartments were targeted by US-made missiles. Last year, 75 major media organisations protested this exclusion in a full-page ad in The New York Times. Signatories included The New York Times, Washington Post, and Associated Press. Their effort to cover the carnage in Gaza was to no avail. Bibi Biden would not back them up. The censorship continues under Trump. However, these are powerful media outfits with reporters close by in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. They can do much more to get the gates to Gaza opened to tell the world the grim stories of the mass killing fields that are creating the risk of a wider Middle East War. Why the media does not press harder is itself an untold media story. 3. All this world-shaking violence started when, whether by colossal blunder or contrivance, Netanyahu’s ultra-modern border security apparatus collapsed in all its parts on 7 October 2023. He has tellingly blocked any official investigation. This is a story that must be investigated until Netanyahu’s responsibility for enabling Hamas is exposed. Earlier, he had bragged about supporting and helping to fund Hamas year after year because of Hamas’ opposition to a two-state solution. Instead, absence of a full investigation allowed Netanyahu to turn his blunder into a US-backed series of attacks against Lebanon, Syria and Yemen. As an elderly Nazi Holocaust survivor told The New York Times after 7 October, “This should never have happened.” 4. The coverage of courageous Israeli human rights groups — including soldiers, rabbis and joint Israeli and Palestinian initiatives inside Israel — is very sparse. The US media has given vastly more coverage to disputed claims by Netanyahu et. al of mass rapes on 7 October, debunked by Israeli media scrutiny, then it gives these truthful strivers for peace. Why? Moreover, what could possibly be the reason for the major US newspapers completely ignoring the Veterans for Peace’s constant street protests via its 100 Chapters in the US including its present 40 Day Fast in communion with the starving Palestinian families in Gaza? Just this week, the Washington Post had a prominent two-page spread showing adopted dogs in Ukraine since the invasion. 5. The slant in coverage is on the other side as well. The immensely powerful “Israel Government can do no wrong” domestic lobby, led by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, has escaped investigation or even an arm’s length deep feature in major newspapers. Yet in Congress, powerful AIPAC has a “minder” attached to every senator and representative and has sponsored primary challenges to lawmakers brave enough to mildly criticise it for being Netanyahu’s bullhorn. AIPAC won’t even support getting American reporters inside Gaza or allowing airlifts of horribly burned or amputated Gaza children to ready and able hospitals in the US. The slant infects words used and words suppressed. The New York Times and CBS regularly refer to Hamas’ terrorism, but Netanyahu has killed vastly greater numbers of Palestinian civilians for political purposes, and that mass slaughter is referred to as “Israeli military operations”. In repeating day after day that 1200 Israelis were killed, the press does not say, as they do for Hamas, that Israel’s Government does not differentiate between civilians and combatants. In fact, about 400 of the 1200 were Israeli soldiers and some police officers. All this mass bloodshed is getting to former elected Israelis. This week in an op-ed in Haaretz, former prime minister Ehud Olmert accused Netanyahu of “war crimes” in Gaza. Look for many more members of Israel’s political and security establishment to start speaking out and protesting. “What we are doing in Gaza now is a war of devastation: indiscriminate, limitless, cruel and criminal killing of civilians. We’re not doing this due to loss of control in any specific sector, not due to some disproportionate outburst by some soldiers in some unit. Rather, it’s the result of government policy – knowingly, evilly, maliciously, irresponsibly dictated. Yes, Israel is committing war crimes.” Shockingly, Trump is still afraid of Netanyahu who arrogantly broke the ceasefire Trump took credit for and thumbed his nose at Trump by doubling down on the deepening Palestinian holocaust and ignoring Trump’s warnings about people starving in Gaza. Month after month, Netanyahu blocks thousands of trucks with humanitarian aid, paid for by American taxpayers, on Gaza’s borders. Soon this pressure cooker will explode in ways either predicted by the Pentagon or unforeseen as a “Black Swan” event. The deadly impact of Israel’s war against a long-defeated small Hamas guerilla force on our own country’s weakening democratic institutions — from freedom of speech to Congress — is reaching the awareness of ever more Americans.
Republished from Counterpunch, 2 June 2025
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
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ali kazak....
David Spratt
Ali Kazak and the transformation of the politics of Palestine in AustraliaIt was with great sadness that we learned of the passing on 17 May of Ali Kazak, at the age of 78. Over five decades, Ali dedicated his enormous energy to building understanding and support for Palestine, the land of his birth.
As a young activist, as the PLO representative and then Palestine ambassador, and as an educator and organiser Ali Kazak was, more than any other person, at the centre of the transformation of the politics of Palestine in Australia.
This was especially the case in the transition from the early-1970s — when Palestine was an unspeakable story in Australia — through to the 1990s, with successes including the recognition of Palestinian political rights, diplomatic status for Palestinian representation in Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific, and the enormous changes in public sentiment that made such progress possible.
Ali was born on 29 March 1947 to a Palestinian father and a Syrian mother in the city of Haifa in Palestine, then under the British Mandate. With the violent establishment of the state of Israel at the expense of the Palestinians and in their place, his mother fled to Syria seeking safety, amongst 900,000 Palestinians expelled from their homes as a result of terrorism and intimidation (the Nakba). His father stayed in Haifa. Ali explained:
“For 10 years my parents attempted many times to be reunited through the International Red Cross, but to no avail. In desperation, my mother crossed the border on foot at night, believing that once back in her own country she could not be legally deported, and that the authorities would allow me to rejoin them. However, two days later, my parents’ home was surrounded by Israeli troops, my mother was arrested and handed to the Red Cross for deportation.”
So he grew up in Damascus with his mother and his aunts, far from his homeland and his father, whom he would not see for 48 years. He studied at Damascus University and in 1968 joined the Palestinian National Liberation Movement, Fatah. Ali decided to travel, and in 1970 he arrived in Australia.
In the Australia of the early 1970s, the word “Palestine” was barely known, except as a place etched into war memorials commemorating Australian soldiers killed there in 1917-18 and in 1940-43. Zionism exercised ideological mastery: Israel was the “promised land” in the shadow of the Holocaust; it was “a land without a people for a people without a land”; Palestine was “a desert” and Israel “made the desert bloom”. Former Israel prime minister Golda Meir infamously claimed in 1967 that: “There was no such thing as Palestinians. They didn’t exist.” Israel with its “socialist” kibbutzim and Histradrut trade union federation was promoted as a left-labour ideal.
But it was not an empty land, any more than Australia was terra nullius in 1788. Former Israeli defence minister Moshe Dayan’s words in Yediot Aharonot on 10 May 1973 tell the story:
“It has to be said harshly: the state of Israel was established at the expense of the Arabs – and in their place. We did not come into a void. There was an Arab settlement here. We are settling Jews in places where there were Arabs. We are turning an Arab land into a Jewish land… They sit in their refugee camps in Gaza, and before their very eyes, we turn into our homestead the land and the villages in which they and their forefathers have lived… We are a generation of settlers, and without the steel helmet and the cannon we cannot plant a tree and build a house.”
This reality of Palestinian dispossession was understood by very few Australians 50 years ago. And Arabs were not in favour: by 1974, Australia and much of the world was in recession as a consequence of an oil crisis emanating from the 1973 Arab-Israeli War, when Arab OPEC members imposed an oil embargo against the United States in retaliation for the US resupplying the Israeli military and to gain leverage in the subsequent negotiations – a sharp contrast to the role played by those same states today in the face of Israel’s genocide in Gaza and continuing annexations in the West Bank.
At that time, Palestinian voices were rarely heard in Australia. Representatives of the PLO or affiliated organisations attempting to travel to Australia were often denied entry, a practice that continued until at least 1984, when the British writer Faris Glubb was denied entry for a planned speaking tour.
It was in this environment, of almost complete ignorance of the Palestine question, that Ali Kazak, as a young man, became an Australian citizen. Activist and solidarity groups existed in the big cities, comprising Arab and Palestinian Australians and supporters of the cause, but their voices were limited. Palestinian migrants were relatively new and few in numbers, the politics of the broader Arab-Australian community was heterogeneous, and Israel’s local political dominance meant there were few other supporters.
In 1974-5, leftist student activists pushed for campus affiliates of the Australian Union of Students to debate motions on Palestine as a means of raising awareness among a cohort of future political, community, trade union and business leaders. In fiery and sharply contested debates, the resolutions were in the main soundly defeated, but that was not the point. A flame of understanding about Palestine had been lit, especially with the 1975 appearance on the ABC TV’s premier current affairs program, Monday Conference, of Eddie Zananiri, an articulate representative of the General Union of Palestinian Students in Beirut. [Unfortunately, the tape of this historic event was “lost” by ABC archives.]
Kazak understood the significance of these events and built relationships across campuses and with activists. He saw that many of those engaged by the campus debates were moving into professional and politically-influential positions, and could form the basis of a more powerful advocacy network. His view was that the initial task — in that pre-digital era — was mass education, to overcome the pro-Irael hegemony by providing clear, evidence-based materials that spoke to the centre of Australian politics. In this, critical Jewish voices had an important role.
This education task became a mainstay of his activism over five decades. It found expression in the newspaper/magazine Free Palestine that he published – 56 issues between 1979 and 1990. Free Palestine became a core campaigning tool, a journal of record, an expression of a growing solidarity movement, a voice that was pitched to the many constituencies being built: students, labour activists, churches and community organisations. And within the political parties. Later there was Background Briefing (1987-93), two editions of the book The Jerusalem Question (1997 and 2018), a book on Australia and the Arabs (in Arabic, 2012), the backgrounding of media, and a constant flow of digital updates up to May 2025, daily at times of crisis.
Ali had a clear vision of a diverse network of constituencies that could be mobilised in a coherent advocacy effort. In 1982, the Palestine Human Rights Campaign was formed, linking groups around Australia and with New Zealand, with an advocacy focus on Palestinian rights already recognised in international law and by the United Nations, and the work of human rights organisations in Israel and internationally who were documenting and campaigning on issues ranging from torture in Israeli jails, to Israel’s foundation on race-based laws, and continuing Palestinian dispossession.
In the same year, Ali officially established the Palestine Information Office in Melbourne. A year earlier he had been appointed as the PLO representative to Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific region. These moves were the basis for a step-up in campaigning for the Australian Government to recognise both the PLO and Palestinian rights. During this period, speaking tours to Australia were organised for Ibrahim Abu-Lughod, characterised by Edward Said as “Palestine’s foremost academic and intellectual”, for the prominent human rights lawyer Jonathan Kuttab, Bishop Riah Hanna Abu El-Assal, the Palestine Red Crescent director Dr Fathi Arafat and PLO foreign affairs adviser Dr Nabil Shaath, amongst others.
By 1983, Yitzhak Shamir, formerly leader of the Zionist terror group Lehi, also known as the Stern Gang, had become prime minister of Israel, a post he held for seven years over two terms. Shamir’s politics became a model for Netanyahu, who was Israel’s UN ambassador at the time: terror has a great place to play in Zionism’s goals. In 1943 Shamir wrote:
“We are very far from having any moral qualms as far as our national war goes. We have before us the command of the Torah, whose morality surpasses that of any other body of laws in the world: ‘Ye shall blot them out to the last man.’ We are particularly far from having any qualms with regard to the enemy, whose moral degradation is universally admitted here. But first and foremost, terrorism is for us a part of the political battle being conducted under the present circumstances, and it has a great part to play.”
Eighty years later in Gaza, nothing has changed.
In Australia, Palestinians and Palestinian activists were under security agency surveillance, including phone taps and listening devices. ASIO perpetuated the myth of Palestinian “terror groups” in Australia, though, when pressed, was unable to provide a single example.
In May 1987, the PIO moved to Canberra, occupying a former diplomatic building close to Parliament House, and with a substantial flagpole from which Ali flew the Palestinian flag every day. This proximity to Parliament, from which the flag could be clearly seen, sent the Israel lobby into a frenzy of complaint, including letters to MPs demanding the office be closed “to ensure that Australia did not become a target for terrorism”. And not for the first or last time: by the time the second issue of Free Palestine was published in 1979, there had been threats to the printer and suggestions that they should not be dealing with “terrorists”. The printer declined this advice. That same year the Jewish Board of deputies tried unsuccessfully to have the licence of pro-Palestinian community radio station 3CR revoked.
In Canberra, the behaviour of the Israeli lobby did not endear them to the Department of Foreign Affairs, where Ali established good relations. At the same time, he established links and gained official recognition for Palestine from a number of Pacific states, the first being the Republic of Vanuatu in 1985. In early 1982, he met Foreign Minister Warren Cooper, which was the first official meeting with a PLO official by the NZ Government, triggering events leading to New Zealand’s recognition of the PLO in 1988.
In 1989, the PIO was officially recognised by the government as the Office of the Palestine Liberation Organisation, and in 1994 it became the General Palestinian Delegation. In 1990, Governor-General Bill Hayden officially met Ali Kazak as the PLO representative. As foreign minister, Hayden had met the PLO’s UN representative in 1985 in New York, and in 1980 as opposition leader had held talks with PLO chairman Yaser Arafat.
In May 2000, Prime Minister John Howard visited Palestine, including the Commonwealth Cemetery in Gaza where Australian soldiers are buried, and met president Arafat. During this time, until his term finished in 2006, Ali served as a representative of the PLO, the commissioner-general of the State of Palestine to Australia and New Zealand, and the ambassador of the State of Palestine to the Republic of Vanuatu, the State of Papua New Guinea, and the Republic of Timor-Leste.
Changes in Palestine policy in Australia were glacial, which tested Ali’s patience, especially at times of great destruction and in the face of Israel’s creeping annexations and ever-more-cruel practices. You could predict when Australia would make a policy move, Ali quipped; it would be a week after the Americans had.
On 18 February 1987, Ali Kazak became the first Palestinian invited to address the National Press Club in Canberra. He concluded his address:
“The international community supports the Palestinian claim to self-determination, but the moral and political challenges remain. How long can the attainment of Palestinian national rights be postponed? How many more Palestinians must be imprisoned, expelled from their land or massacred before Palestinian national rights are acknowledged, and consummated in an independent and sovereign state? Unless there is a positive response to these questions, the violence and the waste in the Middle East will continue.”
These political successes over two decades were built on a number of key understandings: the first, as already noted, was Ali’s commitment to education and outreach, and to engage and challenge the mainstream media, including an adjudication on 27 August 1986 by the Australian Press Council of untrue and stereotyped reporting of Palestinians by an Australian media outlet.
The second was the enormous effort to build a diverse and influential network of organisations and sectors and public officials in support of Palestinian rights. Ali and First Nations activist Gary Foley collaborated over many decades and projects, including more recently the Black–Palestinian Solidarity Conference at the University of Melbourne in 2019. He worked with many former DFAT officials and ambassadors, with church leaders, including Anglican Archbishop of Melbourne David Penman, with Muslim and Arab-Australian organisations, with union leaders and with many university educators.
Over many years, Ali’s networks and friendships were broad and sometimes surprising, covering all sides of politics. He had a warm relationship with National Party leader and Deputy Prime Minister Tim Fishcher, reflected in this tribute. And with former Liberal ministers, including Ian McPhee. After retiring as Prime Minister, Bob Hawke — who had substantially changed his views on the Middle East — welcomed Ali to his home in Sydney. Ali had helped set up parliamentary Friends of Palestine at federal and state levels, and enjoyed productive relationships with many current and former politicians, including Bob Carr, federal Speaker Leo Macleay and Senator Margaret Reynolds, to name but a few.
The third key to Ali’s work was a clear articulation of the task at hand. The framing of the issue was one of human rights and the right to self-determination, in language accessible and persuasive across the political spectrum. Goals and demands and messages were to be simple and clear, and pursued without distraction. It was a long game, demanding consistency and political discipline.
I am sure the many people who have known and worked with Ali felt his unique capacity and unrelenting determination, the fire in the belly, and his tireless work for Palestine and for truth, freedom, justice, and peace. That commitment was so deeply embedded that Ali rarely, if ever, took a day off.
On the other hand, I spent a considerable amount of time, along with the late Frans Timmerman, working with Ali on projects over two decades, and he was a gracious host, and a great cook of Palestinian food — a skill nurtured by his mother and aunts — and he appreciated a good Australian red. And he loved the music of Pink Floyd, among a broad taste in music.
As Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour and Roger Waters sadly wrote on an album of the same name, “Wish you were here”. Farewell Ali Kazak.
Note: The Ali Kazak Collection is at the Palestine Museum Digital Archive, and some of his archives are at the National Library.
David Spratt was National Secretary of the Palestine Human Rights Campaign 1982-1990, and worked with Ali Kazak and Frans Timerman producing Free Palestine from 1979 to 1990. In 1990-91, with Antonina Gentile, he produced the first significant documentation of attacks on, discrimination towards, and media stereotyping of Arab and Muslim Australians in the leadup to the Gulf War.
https://johnmenadue.com/post/2025/06/ali-kazak-and-the-transformation-of-the-politics-of-palestine-in-australia/
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
raining bombs....
Since the October 7 butchery of Jews by Gaza’s reigning death cult, [MANY JEWS WERE ASSASSINATED BY THE IDF, UNDER THE HANNIBALO DOCTRINE] the anti-Zionist left and the antisemitic right have indulged in a masterclass of double standards and selective outrage. Social media algorithms, designed to inflame, flood our feeds with Gazan disaster porn.
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Instagram influencers are suddenly brave opponents of the Zionist “colonial-settler” state. Many of them know little of the Oslo Accords, of Yitzhak Rabin, of Ehud Olmert’s peace plan, of the savagery of the Second Intifada. They couldn’t tell you who invaded and occupied the West Bank as soon as Israel was created (hint: it wasn’t Israel, and it rhymes with “Blordan”) or who invaded and occupied Gaza (hint: it wasn’t Israel, and it rhymes with “Blegypt”). The online warriors elide the Arab states’ sterling effort at wiping out Israel in 1967 and the attempted do-over in 1973. They denounce Israel’s failure to create a Palestinian state while ignoring the repeated reluctance of Palestinians to condone a two-state solution during periods when a majority of Israelis believed it was not merely desirable but inevitable.
So Jewish Australians have found it head-spinning, since October 7, to be collectively blamed for the plight of Palestinians by anti-Zionists who don’t seem to give two stuffs about actual, real-life Palestinian people – activists who never mention the sinister coercions of Qatar, Iran or Hezbollah; who’ve never campaigned for the right of Palestinian refugees to escape Hamas’ brutality by seeking better lives in neighbouring Arab states; who remain silent about Muslims being crushed in Syria, Chechnya, Yemen and Sudan; who chant catchy slogans whose subtexts they don’t understand about rivers and seas, and globalised intifadas; who pretend that Iranian theocracy and jihadist ideology aren’t a problem in Palestine or the wider Muslim world. Many pro-Palestinian Jews who detest Netanyahu are rendered mute by a tsunami of foggy-headed anti-Zionist righteousness so selective that it smells like an anti-Jewish double standard.
Many Jews also remain wistful about a homeland for the most persecuted group in history. There’s still an allure to the Israel that my grandmother dreamt of when she fled the Holocaust; the Israel envisioned by Zionism’s early pacifist-socialist, hippy-dippy kibbutzniks, of which today’s anti-Zionists are ignorant.
But how far does the Actual Existing Israel have to stray from its founding principles and from the basic moral tenets of Jewishness – and for how long – before we stop making excuses for it?
Palestinians in the occupied West Bank endure lives of systematic dehumanisation under military law. Their Jewish neighbours, most of them in newly illegally built towns, enjoy the full rights of citizenship, sometimes with violent impunity. The settlements are an elaborate, militarised thicket of ethnic discrimination.
Meanwhile, Palestinians in Gaza have been crushed to within an inch of their lives, many of them too young to bear any responsibility for the jihadists holding them hostage. The annihilation of Gaza and the open rhetoric from senior Israeli cabinet ministers of ethnically cleansing the territory are not self-defence. Israel is no longer in an emergency, where all bets are off. It is now choosing a strategy. It is now proactively erasing the future of millions of people.
If you suspect that a fair bit of the pro-Gaza hoo-ha is motivated by bias against Israel (and some of it is), read the work of Israel’s own progressive independent media: Haaretz, +972 Magazine, and B’Tselem, and the Israeli historian Lee Mordechai’s website Witnessing the Gaza War. Listen to my recent interviewwith the world-renowned Israeli genocide expert Professor Amos Goldberg, who wrote “There’s No Auschwitz in Gaza. But It’s Still Genocide.”
The facts of Israel’s bloodshed are staggering. The IDF’s own artificial intelligence system, Habsora, generates bombing targets so fast that a former Israeli intelligence officer described it as a “mass assassination factory”. Targets have been expanded to include non-military sites such as universities, banks, government offices, infrastructure, and high-rise blocks which the army defines as “power targets” (matarot otzem).
Israel’s rules on killing Palestinian civilians have been so loosened that a former US State Department senior adviser on civilian harm, Larry Lewis, told The New York Times: “The willingness to accept this level of harm to civilians is far beyond what I have seen in operations in the past.”
Renowned American trauma surgeons with experience in other wars have returned from volunteering at Gazan hospitals horrified. One wrote in the Los Angeles Times: “I have worked in other war zones. But what I witnessed … in Gaza was not war – it was annihilation.” Another told the UN Security Council: “As surgeons, we have never seen cruelty like Israel’s genocide in Gaza.”
This can’t all be antisemitic lies. The claim that this is a just war, being prudently prosecuted, in which civilian lives are lost only regretfully is, at this stage, laughable.
To be fair, Hamas, as Israel constantly reminds us, is worse. Compared to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, to Hezbollah, to genocidal Jew-haters and to murderous Arab autocrats, Israel is the most moral actor in the Middle East. But it’s still responsible for what it does. If I kidnap a murderer and yank out his fingernails with pliers, I don’t win a morality prize because he’s a murderer, and I’m a mere fingernail-extractor. At some point, my actions need to withstand moral scrutiny on their own. “The terrorists made me do it” is neither an excuse nor a moral blank cheque the Jews of the world are required to honour. You need to innovate. You need to humanise. You need to find moral courage. That’s the Jewish way.
The Israel which my grandmother dreamt of does not exist. What exists is illegal settlement building. What exists is a discriminatory occupation. What exists is a political establishment so eager to undermine Palestinian statehood that it bolstered Hamas. What exists is the jailing of moderates like the Palestinian lawmaker Marwan Barghouti in order to keep Palestinian leadership either moribund or radical. What exists is a state that’s preparing to annex or reoccupy all the lands of the Palestinian people indefinitely. What exists is the obliteration of Gaza.
For thousands of years, Jews have preached fairness, resilience, reason, pacifism. It is the most un-Jewish thing in the world to make somebody a refugee. Hasn’t this Israeli state – this real-world government, not the idealised vision of a Yisra’el in the clouds – proven that justice and peace are not its priorities; that it is unworthy of our support? Israel, the country made to save the Jews, is now the thing that most endangers the Jewish people physically, culturally and morally.
Until Israeli politics can radically reorient itself, it’s time to construct a vision of Jewishness that’s independent of the state that pretends to act on our behalf. It’s time for Jews to reclaim the moral mantle of our ancestors. For the Palestinians, but also for the future of the Jewish people, it’s time for Jews to abandon Israel.
Josh Szeps is the host of the podcast Uncomfortable Conversations with Josh Szeps.
https://www.smh.com.au/world/middle-east/my-grandmother-fled-the-holocaust-now-it-s-time-for-jews-to-abandon-israel-20250604-p5m50l.html
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Dear faithful supporters of Israel, Jewish and non-Jewish. And dear everyone else who may – or may not – know what to think about this diabolical conflict, but is loath to say so for fear of being labelled antisemitic or, in my case, a self-hating Jew.
Time to get clearer on what antisemitism means.
According to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition, adopted in Bucharest in 2016, antisemitism includes the killing or harming of Jews in the name of a radical ideology. It includes accusing Jews of “controlling the media, economy, government or other societal institutions”; or of denying the facts of the Holocaust.
https://www.smh.com.au/world/middle-east/call-me-a-self-hating-jew-but-what-israel-is-doing-in-gaza-is-indefensible-20250515-p5lzez.html
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
SEE ALSO:
discrimination is illegal — "except" against the russians....the plague....
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zi05usSbEjs
Douglas Macgregor: Ukraine Is Being CHOKED!READ FROM TOP.
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.