Blumenthal’s Goliath and PEP Critics like Eric Alterman
I read half of Max Blumenthal’s new book
Goliath on
Shabbat, and I would like to send a copy to every Jew I know,
especially every PEP Jew I know (“PEP” means “progressive except for
Palestine.” ) This is the sort of book that even if you want to diss it,
you can't dismiss it. To quote PEP critic,
Eric Alterman,
the book is "mostly technically accurate". And that should be enough to
make anybody's hair stand on end. Clearly, Alterman and other leftwing
American secularists can't accept the unstated conclusion of the
reportage that some of the fundamental problems of Israel are not due to
a bunch of right-wing religious fanatics and nationalist Russians – not
even due to Bibi and his crowd – but that, on the contrary, to core
Zionist principles of the Ben Gurion school. As Ari Shavit put it
bluntly in this week’s
New Yorker,
you could not have a Jewish state without inducing the mass departure
of the native Palestinians in strategic areas like Lydda and elsewhere.
And that is one of the foundations of the State of Israel today for all
Israelis, left and right. Anybody who opposes the return of
Palestinians refugees to their homes, or allowing their immigration and
naturalization, because of a “demographic threat” justifies
post factum that
ethnic cleansing. (There may be other humanitarian reasons for opposing
such a mass return, but that’s another issue.) That is the inexorable
logic of Ben Gurionism that managed to refashion Zionism in its image.
That is the core philosophy of the 1948 regime. It was
not the core philosophy of Zionism before the 40s.
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