Benjamin
Netanyahu Is An Obnoxious Loudmouth Jewish
Supremacist
By
Norman G. Finkelstein
January 30,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"Byline"
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The historical
record shows that Israel’s rights have not been
prejudiced but in fact privileged by the
international community. It has been not the victim
but the beneficiary of a global double standard.
Therefore, the thesis that a primal hatred of Jews
accounts for its current pariah status cannot be
sustained. Still, hasn’t Israel been unfairly
targeted? Many more innocents (it is said) have been
killed by Arabs in Syria and Darfur, while Tibetans,
Kashmiris, and Kurds have also suffered under the
incubus of foreign occupations. Nonetheless, public
opinion fixates on Israel’s sins. How else to
account for this discrepancy except anti-Semitism?
But, although South Africa also bemoaned its pariah
status, and in some technical sense it perhaps was
unfairly singled out, it would have been ludicrous
to argue that anti-White-ism figured as a corrupting
factor in the international community’s moral
calculus. The system of apartheid incarnated an
essence so flagrantly antithetical and repugnant to
the epochal zeitgeist, that the expostulations of
its adherents fell—Ronald Reagan and Margaret
Thatcher excepting—on deaf ears.
Precisely why a particular local struggle
metamorphoses into an international cause célèbre is
not subject to mathematical demonstration. How does
one prove that one people’s suffering is the worst?
But surely the Palestine struggle possesses
sufficient appalling features in its own right such
that anti-Semitism need not be dragged in as a
critical, let alone the overarching, explanatory
factor. If you eliminate the “terrorism” background
noise, it’s hard to come up with a more pristine
instance of injustice. “What crime did Palestinians
commit,” my late mother (who knew something about
human suffering) once rhetorically asked, “except to
be born in Palestine?”[1] The longevity of the
conflict puts it in an “elite” class: if its
inception is dated from the Balfour Declaration,
nearly a century has elapsed; from the Nakba, seven
decades; from the West Bank/Gaza occupation, still,
five decades. Its various phases and facets embrace
the gamut of human misery: ethnic cleansing, foreign
occupation, and siege; massacre, torture, and
humiliation. Its inequity endows the conflict with a
biblical resonance: is it not David versus Goliath
when a tiny battered people does battle with the
regional superpower backed by the global superpower?
The sheer cruelty and heartlessness bewilders and
boggles: in the past decade, Israel has unleashed
the full force of its high-tech killing machine on
the “giant open-air prison in Gaza” (British Prime
Minister David Cameron) not less than eight times:
“Operation Rainbow” (2004), “Operation Days of
Penitence” (2004), “Operation Summer Rains” (2006),
“Operation Autumn Clouds” (2006), “Operation Hot
Winter” (2008), “Operation Cast Lead” (2008-9),
“Operation Pillar of Defense” (2012), “Operation
Protective Edge” (2014). The incommensurability of
the suffering makes mockery of affectations of
“balance”: during Israel’s last “operation” in Gaza,
550 Palestinian children were killed while one
Israeli child was killed, 19,000 Gazan homes were
destroyed while one Israeli home was destroyed.
Although it might not be the only epitome of human
suffering in the contemporary world, Palestine
surely qualifies as a “worthy” candidate. What is
more, whereas so much of the world yearns to “Give
peace a chance,” Israel conspicuously yearns to
“Give war a chance, and another chance, and another
chance” (is there a day that goes by without Israel
contemplating yet another attack on Gaza, Lebanon,
Iran?); Israel flouts the global consensus
supporting a two-state solution by appropriating and
incorporating the last remnants of Palestine;
Israel’s current head of state is an obnoxious
loudmouth Jewish supremacist, while the Israeli
people “shoot and cry,” “love themselves to death
and pity themselves ad nauseam” (Gideon
Levy)[2]—don’t Israel’s singular warmongering,
brazenness and self-righteous arrogance themselves
accentuate the conflict’s image as one of pure good
versus pure evil?
If Palestine has become the emblematic cause of our
time, it’s not because of a new “New Anti-Semitism,”
although no doubt some anti-Semites have infiltrated
its ranks. It’s because the martyrdom of Palestine
and the meanness of Israel are so wrong.
Notes
[1]My late mother was a survivor of the Warsaw
Ghetto, Maidanek concentration camp, and two slave
labor camps. Every other member of her family was
exterminated.
[2] Gideon Levy, “Yair Lapid, Israel’s New
Propaganda Minister,” Haaretz (22 February 2015).
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