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audiomagnate t1_jbulv8g wrote

They're not protesting "judicial reform," they're protesting a fascist takeover of the judiciary.

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jeffyoulose t1_jbw27f7 wrote

Don't they want netanyahu to start a war with Iran to distract the public from this power grab?

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[deleted] t1_jburmxk wrote

[removed]

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GatoradeNipples t1_jbvn62w wrote

To give you an actual answer to this, the judiciary was one of the few safeguards against Bibi going full-on Reverse Hitler remaining. Bibi's group taking over the judiciary is very bad and gives them even more power to be awful than they previously had.

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lironi1111 t1_jbusyec wrote

Rich coming from an American

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CaptainPunch374 t1_jbv38ab wrote

I wasn't aware that we had to be wrong even when we know better because aspects of the government we live under are out of our individual control.

Oh wait...

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bdonvr t1_jbut5jq wrote

Oh no, we're not good either. Not by a long shot. Actually, we give a fuckton of money and weapons to Israel.

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billpalto t1_jbusyo5 wrote

Netenyahu is under indictment for corruption. He was barely able to form a government by pandering to the extreme right wing. Now he wants to be able to overrule the Courts.

Doesn't pass the smell test, and the Israeli people know it.

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slick2hold t1_jbvcypf wrote

Didn't he just get reelected?

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ILikeChangingMyMind t1_jbvs163 wrote

Sort of ... they don't elect the PM directly, they elect representatives.

Netanyahu put together a coalition of right-wing conservative reps who were all willing to vote him in as PM, so he was elected ... but by them, not the Israeli people.

Of course, the fact that that many conservative nutjobs (that were willing to join a coalition with him) were elected in the first place just speaks to Israel's future ... or lack thereof.

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verrius t1_jbwikd7 wrote

Presumably he still needs to be elected as a minister of parliament, or whatever they call their equivalent, though, to be in the running for PM, right? Does his constituency just...not care that he's been under a very public corruption investigation for a while?

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jews4beer t1_jbwkk4l wrote

People vote for parties. He is elected by his party to attempt to form a coalition. The left/center parties said "hell no we are never working with you again", so to stay out of jail he went and told the "alt-right" that "I'll give you whatever you want if you let me tear apart the courts". And the constituents for the respective parties, for lack of a better term, have gone full MAGA.

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MeatsimPD t1_jbulltv wrote

Israel has always been conflicted with it's supposed democratic identity and the "God has decreed this land is ours and no one else's" identity

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[deleted] t1_jbunpua wrote

[removed]

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IBAZERKERI t1_jbuswgr wrote

sometimes victims of abuse end up becoming abusers themselves.

and the holocaust... well i dont think theres quite anything as traumatic as that was.

its fucking tragic honestly

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Caveman108 t1_jbvbald wrote

Centuries of pograms and enslavement, perhaps? Jewish history is pretty fucked, honestly. And yet many, especially orthodox, truly see themselves as God’s chosen people and superior beings to other ethnicities. It’s an odd paradox.

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Public_Atmosphere t1_jbx3exx wrote

Egypt was for more than a hundred years under occupation. It is quite possible that the occupants were the ancestors of the Jewish people. They were not slaves there.

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Public_Atmosphere t1_jbxdplv wrote

Minuses… People believe that the religious books are something more than collections of fairy tales. But the religious fairy tales were created by other people, with vested interests. If I like reading fairy tales by Jim Butcher, it does not mean that everything described by him is real.

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Practical_Drama_7106 t1_jbxya12 wrote

Did you know nothing in life is based off nothing. There has to be an element of truth in every single fairy tale. You can name a couple and we can get your opinions out of the way. What do you believe? What have you been taught? I look forward to your answer

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Public_Atmosphere t1_jbxzzqj wrote

You are right there are grains of truth in every story. I have not been taught, I have read many sources. And my interpretation of those events looks very plausible, much better than the moving story of the Jewish slaves in ancient Egypt.

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Art-Zuron t1_jbxs3hx wrote

"The scars of persecution harden into spite."

  • The Natural Heart by Miracle of Sound
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MeatsimPD t1_jbv2qch wrote

Well you see the difference is that they have God on their side so it's okay

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Dr-P-Ossoff t1_jbymwq2 wrote

That’s why people say it’s illegal to talk about Israel.

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bulletbassman t1_jbwyzs1 wrote

Maybe their parents did. Nobody governing right now was alive to experience the holocaust except in history books

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altcntrl t1_jbxck9k wrote

Same for US. Centuries have only slightly nudged that notion.

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MeatsimPD t1_jby1j3j wrote

Yes the US also has an ugly history and it's built on tragic disregard for the lives of people who weren't considered important or were just "in the way"

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Familiar_Pea_9345 t1_jbwfcy6 wrote

Israel is a majority secular country. It’s less “God’s decree” and more of the fact that it’s their ancestral homeland, dating back many thousands of years, before Jesus allegedly existed and before Mohammad allegedly had his revelations. The main thing that Israelis focus on is never again allowing ethnic Jews to be without a homeland or subject to extermination.

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MeatsimPD t1_jbwkjek wrote

I mean "it's their ancestorial homeland" doesn't much anything. A Kingdom of Israel existed in the 700s BC sure but plenty of other people of other ethnic backgrounds lived and settled in this area before during and after the period that was dominated by people of the Jewish faith. Why don't they have a claim to the area as well as their own ancestorial homeland?

>The main thing that Israelis focus on is never again allowing ethnic Jews to be without a homeland or subject to extermination.

This kind of highlights the contradictions in the stated purpose and values of Israel. It's supposed to be a democratic state AND a Jewish state, but in order to make and preserve it as a Jewish state it's had to do some very undemocratic things. Not least of all was promoting immigration en masse to the British Mandate of Palestine before and after the Balfour Declaration. In essence an act of colonialism as the British never gave the people living there any say in the matter and the Jewish immigrants didn't care to ask either. These anti democratic actions were necessary to make the area majority Jewish

And today of course you have the conquest and settlement of the Golan Heights and West Bank, which Israel clearly intents to annex.

Whenever Israel has had to choose between it's Jewish identity and it's democratic identity it's always chosen the Jewish identity.

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Familiar_Pea_9345 t1_jbwng2d wrote

> I mean "it's their ancestorial homeland" doesn't much anything. A Kingdom of Israel existed in the 700s BC sure but plenty of other people of other ethnic backgrounds lived and settled in this area before during and after the period that was dominated by people of the Jewish faith. Why don't they have a claim to the area as well as their own ancestorial homeland?

This seems rather disingenuous since they were forced to leave.

> “The main thing that Israelis focus on is never again allowing ethnic Jews to be without a homeland or subject to extermination.” This kind of highlights the contradictions in the stated purpose and values of Israel. It's supposed to be a democratic state AND a Jewish state, but in order to make and preserve it as a Jewish state it's had to do some very undemocratic things. Not least of all was promoting immigration en masse to the British Mandate of Palestine before and after the Balfour Declaration. In essence an act of colonialism as the British never gave the people living there any say in the matter and the Jewish immigrants didn't care to ask either. These anti democratic actions were necessary to make the area majority Jewish.

More disingenuous statements. Balfour was in 1917, well before Israel gained independence. It also highlights how people love to claim, without any irony, how undemocratic Israel is while pointing to their alleged victims, who are not even close to being free, democratic states, and are also massively guilty of colonialism. Also, who has Israel colonized?

> And today of course you have the conquest and settlement of the Golan Heights and West Bank, which Israel clearly intents to annex.

What fucking conquest? Israel was attacked, gained control of those areas, which are strategically important for the security of the country, and offered them back in exchange for the simple concessions of accepting their existence.

> Whenever Israel has had to choose between it's Jewish identity and it's democratic identity it's always chosen the Jewish identity.

First of all, those things are not mutually exclusive. Second of all, when has that choice ever been made?

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MeatsimPD t1_jby49bv wrote

> This seems rather disingenuous since they were forced to leave.

I'm not going to say that the Jewish people have never suffered forced displacement in history. But so have many many many people throughout history, why is the case of Israel so special that it gets to try and undo a historical tragedy by perpetrating a modern one?

>Balfour was in 1917, well before Israel gained independence. It also highlights how people love to claim, without any irony, how undemocratic Israel is while pointing to their alleged victims, who are not even close to being free, democratic states, and are also massively guilty of colonialism

I never said Balfour was after independence, I said it was a hallmark in the colonization of Europeans (most of them Jewish) of the Mandate of Palestine and was encouraged by the colonial power of Britain. Britain never asked the people living in Palestine if they wanted an independent state or wanted mass immigration.

And I never said Israel's neighbors are democratic but two wrongs don't make a right

>What fucking conquest? Israel was attacked, gained control of those areas, which are strategically important for the security of the country, and offered them back in exchange for the simple concessions of accepting their existence.

Taking territory and annexing it through force is conquest. It doesn't matter if the conflict in which these lands were taken was defensive, the fact that they were taken and annexed without the consent of the people living there or the country it belongs to is conquest.

What your describing about offering back the land in exchange for peace is perfectly fine, and what Israel did with Egypt for example when it returned the Sinai. However Israel has made no such offer to return the Golan Heights to Syria in exchange for peace, and has in fact annexed the Golan Heights as its own (again without the consent of anyone living there)

Likewise it's occupation of the West Bank is not for the purpose of exchange for peace, it already has peace with Jordan. Instead the intent in the West Bank is clearly settlement, annexation, and displacement of the people who lived there before 1967.

The current government of Israel has explicitly called for annexation of West Bank territories on the basis that it has a "natural right" to the land https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2022-12-28/ty-article/.premium/natural-right-to-the-land-of-israel-netanyahu-lays-out-west-bank-annexation-plans/00000185-5955-dbd5-abe7-59f5c5d60000

A "natural right" which of course doesn't extend to non-Jewish people living there

>First of all, those things are not mutually exclusive. Second of all, when has that choice ever been made?

It's made every day Israel denies people that it governs representation in government. It was made when the decision that the Mandate of Palestine should be made a homeland for Jewish people and a Jewish majority state, despite the fact that the people actually living there didn't want that and weren't asked.

Ask yourself, in the Zionist movement that motivated hundreds of thousands of people to immigrant to the Palestine Mandate and then Israel was there any part of that where they said "we should do this with the consent of the people already living there?"

Did you know many Palestinians residents of the West Bank are not only under military occupation by Israel, including being tried in military courts, but are also taxed by Israel? https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israeli_Military_Order

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Familiar_Pea_9345 t1_jc00ppo wrote

I love how your response begins with excusing the Jews getting displaced from land that was theirs and ends with mischaracterizing how Jews got it back. As though it was taken by force and not given by the British, who owned it. As though the Jews who moved there didn’t purchase land. As though there weren’t any Jews still living there. Then you lament that Syria, which never made any overtures to leave Israel in peace and used the strategic high-ground that is the Golan Heights to terrorize the Israelis living below, somehow deserved to get that land back. Wouldn’t it be easier to just admit that you’re a fucking anti-Semite? You twist yourself in knots to justify Jews getting fucked when I already explained that’s never fucking going to happen again. Never forget. And if the people of the West Bank have to live in semi-occupation (1% of which are settlements) to ensure that Israelis can live in relative peace, then so-fucking-be-it.

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MeatsimPD t1_jc063sd wrote

> I love how your response begins with excusing the Jews getting displaced from land that was theirs and ends with mischaracterizing how Jews got it back

I am not excusing forced displacement of people, the exact opposite in fact.

>As though it was taken by force and not given by the British, who owned it. As though the Jews who moved there didn’t purchase land. As though there weren’t any Jews still living there.

I never said no Jews were living in what this today Israel before it was Israel. And it was taken by force by the British, who did indeed decide to create a Jewish homeland there but you are ignoring one key point

Neither the British who wanted to create a Jewish homeland nor the people coming there to live, asked or seemed to care what the majority of people already living there thought about it

>Then you lament that Syria, which never made any overtures to leave Israel in peace and used the strategic high-ground that is the Golan Heights to terrorize the Israelis living below, somehow deserved to get that land back.

I'm not saying Israel has to give it back without peace, and it's under no obligation to do so without peace, but nothing justifies annexing territory without the consent of the people living there

>And if the people of the West Bank have to live in semi-occupation (1% of which are settlements) to ensure that Israelis can live in relative peace, then so-fucking-be-it

This is what I mean by forgoing democracy when it's inconvenient. You're outright supporting the permanent occupation of territory and the subjectation of it's people. Palestinians are people with human rights which includes the right of self determination and representation in government, to keep them under permanent military occupation is an act of tyranny and evilness

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Familiar_Pea_9345 t1_jc0awir wrote

So, what? You’re complaining that the Israelis got their land the same way literally every other country in the entirety of history did? Except it’s only the Jews who are evil because of it? Wtf is your problem if not antisemitism?

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MeatsimPD t1_jc0coum wrote

You understand that by advocating for the right of conquest you are giving an excuse to Israel's enemies as well correct? As in, if you're saying its okay for Israel to take from others by force its okay for others to take from Israel by force as well.

I don't believe in "might makes right" but of course its undeniable that for the majority of human history thats pretty much how things were done.

However as nations and as people when we aspire to be something better than that, when we talk about protecting human rights, democracy, etc then you have to leave things like "right by conquest" behind.

Just as the United States must come to terms with its ugly racist and bloody past of slavery and literally conquering most of a continent, Israel too should honestly confront the human rights violations that were perpetuated in its creation. And it should also stop with the on-going human rights violations its perpetuating in places like Gaza, Golan Heights, and the West Bank.

Otherwise it can never claim to really be a "secular democracy" as you originally said.

I think it would be helpful if you acknowledged that Israel governs and taxes people in the West Bank and Golan Heights without their consent and without granting them representation in Israeli government on par with citizens. Its a simple fact, but sometimes simple facts can be the hardest things to accept.

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Familiar_Pea_9345 t1_jc0fmlk wrote

I’ve had this discussion a thousand times already…. You continue to mischaracterize Israel’s defensive actions as conquest, which is what was attempted by their enemies. You mischaracterize as conquest how Israel came to exist; the territory was granted by the previous owner, the British, who took it from the Ottomans, who took it from…, who took it from the Jews. You claim that Israel is undemocratic when it’s the only fucking democracy in the entire fucking region and, although as imperfect as any other democracy, uses that government to protect the rights of its citizens to a far greater extent than any other country in the region, including the fifth of the population who are Arabs who enjoy far greater rights than any other Arab in any other Arab nation.

The fact is that you know all of this. You twist your words to fit your antisemitic narrative. You take advantage of the fact that those who respond to you feel the need to use words responsibly. I will not be responding to any more of your replies. I’ve given you more of my time and energy than an antisemite deserves.

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MeatsimPD t1_jc0hs4i wrote

> You continue to mischaracterize Israel’s defensive actions as conquest

Annexing territory through force without the consent of the people living there is conquest. I don't know what else to tell you. It's the difference between Israel's occupation of the Sinai and it's annexation of the Golan Heights, one is different than the other.

Can you answer me a simple question, when Israel annexed the Golan Heights did it ask any of the people living there what they thought about it?

>You mischaracterize as conquest how Israel came to exist; the territory was granted by the previous owner, the British, who took it from the Ottomans, who took it from…, who took it from the Jews

If we're going to go this far back in history, let's not forget that the Jews took what became Israel from people living there already. I think it's dumb to talk about who conquered who in the Iron Age when it comes to informing modern international relations but if we must let's remember the Israelites took Canaan though force. It's in the Bible

>You claim that Israel is undemocratic when it’s the only fucking democracy in the entire fucking region and, although as imperfect as any other democracy, uses that government to protect the rights of its citizens to a far greater extent than any other country in the region, including the fifth of the population who are Arabs who enjoy far greater rights than any other Arab in any other Arab nation.

The authoritarian of Arab states around Israel doesn't excuse Israel's behavior. I can talk all day about how the Arab states around Israel violate basic human rights of people, and they absolutely do. I mean look at Syria. But none of that excuses another country commiting its own human rights violations.

You never once acknowledged that Israel didn't ask the people who it forcibly took into it's territory if they wanted to be part of Israel

You can't pretend that's not real

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hoozt t1_jbx9rni wrote

So Italians could claim they own Britain and just take over someones home then? Gtfo with that bullshit logic please, it's pathetic

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Familiar_Pea_9345 t1_jbxe1p0 wrote

> So Italians could claim they own Britain and just take over someones home then?

What???

> Gtfo with that bullshit logic please, it's pathetic

What are you on about?

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hoozt t1_jbxhbce wrote

Yep. It was under Roman rule for 400 years my friend. What is it that you don't understand?

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MeatsimPD t1_jc3hllq wrote

When Israel annexed the Golan Heights in 1981, did it ask the opinion of anyone living there?

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NPVT t1_jbuq69c wrote

250,000 protesters take to the streets against judicial reform

Bad title

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Narrator2012 t1_jbwlaak wrote

Is there an Israeli here who could summarize this weird new alliance between the Israeli right-wing and fascists the world over? It's very confusing to try to square Likud/Alt-right partnership. (End-of-days Evangelicalism doesn't explain it for me to be honest)

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LengthExact OP t1_jbwqx86 wrote

The difference between Likud and the far-right has been minimized substantially over the years (during Bibi's leadership).

From Bibi's point of view, these people will let him do anything, including assuming dictatorial power.

And his voters are more extreme than he is, so most of them are happy with this far right government.

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adamr_ t1_jbwq5rv wrote

What do you not understand? Racist likes racist

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waiver t1_jbxllah wrote

I mean, Likud was founded by a fascist: Menachem Begin at least according to Albert Einstein.

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Academic-Spare-4816 t1_jbwhoif wrote

Would be nice if they got those numbers to protest the continuing encroachment into other people’s land through illegal settlement expansions.

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Sinphony_of_the_nite t1_jbynmki wrote

But settlement expansions are good for the Israeli people at the expense of others. Why would they protest? It isn't like they have some kind of religion that says these things are immoral or anything.

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[deleted] t1_jbuzkp3 wrote

[removed]

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Caveman108 t1_jbvbfyf wrote

Netanyahu would do well to remember what happened to the last supposed “King of the Jews.”

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sherm39 t1_jbvojq7 wrote

In the end, yeah, but the world is still reeling from his pretensions.

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