Real Life Hunger Games

Sarah A. Hoyt writes: Social capital, what’s that? The built-up support networks of families and individuals that help maintain and order their lives. Family ties, community ties — with organizations like churches, schools, and voluntary associations that once were more common parts of everyone’s lives. The mutual assistance of friends and neighbors. Reputation, status, and the regard of others which motivated good behavior, honesty in dealing, and charitable assistance, which maintained and strengthened those ties, and helped those in need with both assistance and the strings of obligation to repay that assistance by being useful members of the community.

In a small town, the impulse to assist the poor and disorganized was direct, and the people being helped were known to everyone. Big cities with their concentrated slums of poor immigrants led to social service agencies, funded at first by churches and cities, and then by state and federal governments. As the source of the assistance became impersonal, so did the aid — and the direct contact between those assisting and those assisted declined. Instead of the local church matrons with their bourgeois ideas of proper behavior and work, harassed social workers with enormous caseloads processed cases quickly, and the ideology of government assistance changed so that any behavioral expectation of the client population was viewed as an affront to their dignity.

In time, the government assistance ethos spread to every corner of the country and crowded out the local community services. Meanwhile, locally-controlled schools were gradually taken over by higher levels of government and distant union bureaucracies so that the influence of local parents was minimized. This was viewed as “progressive,” since distant elites thought local school boards and parents were too parochial and backward to be entrusted with decisions, and would get in the way of teaching the correct materials.

The incorrect application of emotions of sympathy and support to faceless categories of people like “the poor” and “the undocumented” removes any possibility of understanding the real situations of each of the category’s members. A hazy idealized poor family is envisioned, then a response that would be appropriate if that family lived next door (help them!) leads to voting for politicians that offer new programs to help “people like that.” By misapplying family and community feelings to higher levels of government, voters put into place a bureaucracy that misses most of the social signalling features of local groups and takes tax money to grow itself, crowding out local groups (and the valuable social signals that maintained bourgeois standards.)

Progressives generally are sentimentally supportive of direct local politics — they especially favor the ideals of the New England town meeting, where everyone who showed up had a say. The reason why this form of local government was generally abandoned is that it is simply too time-consuming for larger communities, and allows the motivated minority to capture control. Election of representatives was an advance which allowed voters to go about their own lives most of the time while exerting control through their representative, who had time to understand the issues thoroughly and vote in council in the best interests of the voters. Being in the 1% of local voters who cares deeply enough about an item to show up at a public meeting about it does not mean your feelings about it are more important than the views of those who didn’t show up; the once-every-few-years election is more likely to reflect what most voters want.

What have been the effects of progressive, centralized control of education, healthcare, and social services? It is true that the backwards practices of a few local school boards have been reformed, but the loss of a rich layer of church and private charity social services has impoverished local social capital. While today’s mass communication and the Internet removed one of the impulses to community (“I’m bored. Let’s go into town and hang out!”), a lot of the loss is due to the crowding out by a monopoly government, which had deep pockets and would use them to continue failed policies, as Microsoft in the 80s used the profits from its near-monopoly OS business to keep creating mediocre applications software until the innovators in applications were destroyed.

Very wealthy people have always been freer than others from the stifling social controls and judgments of bourgeois community standards. The elite of Paris and London in the 1800s often kept mistresses and dabbled in drug use without having their lives destroyed. The lower classes did not have the wealth to recover from errors, and those who did not hew to bourgeois social norms were isolated and damaged.

As the upper middle classes in the US grew as wealthy as the elite had been in the previous century after WWII, the sexual revolution and War on Poverty bestowed more social freedom on everyone — the middle and upper classes got birth control, sexual freedom, and women in the workplace, while the poor got programs to “uplift” them from poverty (a term which exposes the condescension involved). Social workers in vast numbers were hired to distribute assistance, free of any obligation — except for unmarried mothers, who were told their assistance would be cut if they married a working man.

Over the course of several generations, the well-off used their freedoms and came out relatively unscathed — families were still largely intact, children were still trained in the arts of civilization and followed the path of university and marriage into professional careers. But the artificial assistance to the poor, with its lack of community obligations and support and its immediate withdrawal in the event of marriage and better work, removed the social incentives that keep healthy communities healthy. Intact families grew less common. Crime and social pathologies became the norm in poor inner-city communities. As conditions worsened, the motivated and organized left for more civilized neighborhoods with better schools. The segregation of cities and even whole regions by income increased. Whole generations of children were poorly raised, poorly schooled, and left to drift without purpose or guidance from now-absent fathers, who were in prison or adrift themselves.

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The West Needs More Ethnocentrism, Less Pathological Altruism

Richard Rorty writes: If we Westerners could get rid of the notion of universal moral obligation created by
membership in the species, and substitute the idea of building a community of trust between ourselves and others, we might be in a better position to persuade non-Westerners of the advantages of joining such a community. We might be better able to construct the kind of global moral community which Rawls describes in ‘The Law
of Peoples’.

In making this suggestion, I am urging, as I have in other writings, that we should peel apart Enlightenment liberalism from Enlightenment
rationalism. I think that discarding the residual rationalism which we inherited from the Enlightenment is advisable for many reasons, some of which are theoretical and of interest only to philosophy professors, for example the apparent incompatibility of the correspondence theory of truth with the naturalistic, Darwinian account of the origin of the human mind.22 But others are more practical. One more practical reason is that getting rid of rationalistic rhetoric would permit the West to approach the non-West in the role of someone with an instructive story to tell, rather
than in the role of someone purporting to make better use of a universal human capacity.

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Europe’s Migrant Crisis

From Chronicles Magazine: RS: What is your take on the migrant crisis inside Europe, and what’s happening between Serbia and Croatia?

ST: “Migrant crisis” is the right term. I wouldn’t use the term “refugees” because, strictly speaking, most of these people had already been safe and sound in Turkey and other countries of first refuge. Their decision to move on is mostly prompted by economic reasons, by the desire to reach countries such as Germany, or the Benelux and Scandinavia, where they can look forward to free apartments and welfare payments. A refugee is someone who escapes from Syria to Turkey. Someone who moves on from Turkey to Europe is no longer a “refugee.” [ . . . ]

The Hungarian fence along the border with Serbia is obviously working. The “refugees” do not want to stay in Serbia – it is a relatively poor country by European standards, and there are no jobs and no welfare handouts – so the pressure will go wherever there is least resistance. Croatia was able to stem the flow only temporarily, because in the long term the build-up in Serbia is also insustainable. The country simply lacks the infrastructure to take care of the additional thousands of people who are arriving from Greece and across the former Yugoslav republic of Macedonia every day.

In the long term, the decision by the European Commission to impose mandatory quotas [on EU member countries to accept allocated numbers of refugees] is a mistake. It will only prompt more ?uroskepticism among the former Soviet Bloc countries, and also in Britain. It will also act as an invitation to further hundreds of thousands of migrants to make the trip from Turkey and other countries. In the long term I wouldn’t be surprised if Europe were to impose more stringent controls. In order to do that, they will need to exert pressure on Turkey’s President Rejep Tayyip Erdogan. Not many people realize that he is really the villain of the piece, because he has used the refugees in Turkey as a means of exerting pressure on the Europeans, and the Turkish infrastructure has been mobilized to move hundreds of thousands of people from its eastern borders with Syria and Iraq to the Aegean, Mediterranean ports in the southwest of the country.

In the long term, resistance to this migratory influx will increase even in the “old” European countries which have been welcoming them for the time being, notably in Germany, France and the Benelux. After all, even though they are better off than the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia and Rumania, it is only a question of time when the unassimilable multitudes start acting in the way in which the Islamic diaspora in those countries has been acting for a long time – unwilling to assimilate and unwilling to adapt to the European cultural norms. [ . . . ]

RS: They left one place, they left the conflict zone and they are moving on for purely economic reasons. Why isn’t the Western press portraying it like this? Why is the press saying that it’s not even the Syrians, that we need to help everybody – it could be Libyans, it could be Africans. Why don’t we have the true media definition of what’s happening?

ST: It is a mix of political correctness and what has been called “the pornography of compassion.” When what remains of the religious impulse is compassion devoid of the moral infrastructure based on the Christian religion, then you get these knee-jerk reactions. For instance, the photograph of a drowned Syrian boy on a Turkish beach trumps any rational debate.

I would say that fewer than one-half of the people on the move at the moment even come from the countries that can be legitimately regarded as refugee-producing. Most of the people crossing from Libya into Lampedusa and Sicily in Italy are sub-Saharan Africans. Admittedly they come from some rather unpleasant countries, such as Mali, Tchad, or Nigeria, but by that token at least two and a half, maybe three billion people around the world, live in poor and unpleasant countries with no economic prospects. If they are put in the same category as genuine refugees, it will only be a matter of time before Europe is literally deluged.

In the long term this will produce a huge security problem for the host countries. As the Charlie Hebdo attack in Paris last January, and the attack on the train from Brussels to Paris only a few weeks ago remind us, the French security services had had the culprits in those attacks under supervision – and then they lost the ability to track them because they were overwhelmed. Nobody knows how many would-be jihadists and sympathizers of the Islamic State are coming with this latest flood, and I greatly fear that the European security services simply do not have the resources to investigate each and every applicant. Even if only a few percent of these people are jihadist-minded, it will create a new hotbed of extremism in the heart of Europe.

RS: You’ve mentioned that Turkey’s Erdogan is playing the disguised villain in this case. Are you suggesting that he is using the migrants as some sort of migration weapon?

ST: Turkey has been very actively projecting its influence in southeast Europe, particularly among the Muslim communities in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Albania, Kosovo, in Macedonia, in Serbia’s Sanjak region, and in southern Bulgaria. Not only is he [Erdogan] delighted to increase the Muslim diaspora in Europe, at the same time I think he is also exerting indirect pressure on the Europeans to subscribe to his way of resolving the Syrian crisis. He continues to treat Bashar al-Assad as the key culprit. He also seeks the creation of a buffer zone in northwestern Syria, along the border with Turkey, which would be but another way for Turkey to battle the Kurds in Syria, whom he regards as more dangerous to the stability of the Turkish state than the Islamic State itself.

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Trump, Carson have Republican Jewish establishment worried

From JTA: WASHINGTON – The Republican Jewish establishment is watching the surge of political outsiders — like Donald Trump and Ben Carson — in the presidential primaries with dismay.

“It’s like we have a conference call every morning, and we ask, ‘What can we do to screw ourselves up today?’” said Fred Zeidman, a longtime fundraiser for Republican presidential candidates.

Zeidman’s exasperation pervades the Jewish Republican world: A party that has, in recent years, established a cozy relationship with Jewish conservatives seems to be careening — at least since the presidential race began.

Donald Trump, the billionaire reality show star, has lobbed rhetorical bombs at Hispanics, women and GOP rivals, and promised to deport 11 million illegal immigrants. Ben Carson, the retired world-famous neurosurgeon, said this weekend that a Muslim can’t be president.

The two men are jostling for the lead in polls, with former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina in third. All three have never held elected office — and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, along with other establishment candidates, lag behind the outsiders.

“This election is proving that nobody really knows anything, including me,” said Seth Mandel, the Op-Ed editor of the New York Post.

It’s a disorienting experience for longtime Republican Jewish donors and activists, who have made inroads into the party’s establishment over the last two decades, and who have been at the forefront of advocacy for tolerance and pluralism within the party.

“The tone of what they’re saying, we get painted as a party of intolerance,” said Zeidman, who practices law in the Houston area and backs Bush’s candidacy.

The anti-immigrant rhetoric especially infuriates Zeidman, a past chairman of the US Holocaust Memorial Council, who was driving near his home during his phone interview with JTA.

“I think half the people I’m looking at doing roadwork in 100-degree heat are not legal — and they are working their tuchus off,” he said.

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The Future of Palestine: Righteous Jews vs. the New Afrikaners

John J. Mearsheimer is widely regarded as the most important political scientist in America today. I respect his work. Yet his prediction and prescription for Israel in this 2010 talk bewilders me.

Regrettably, the two-state solution is now a fantasy. Instead, those territories will be incorporated into a “Greater Israel,” which will be an apartheid state bearing a marked resemblance to white-ruled South Africa.

With Stephen Walt and John J. Mearsheimer, I don’t think Israel is a worse nation than others. On the other hand, along with Walt and Mearsheimer, I don’t think it is a significantly more kind occupier than others.

If Israel were kinder to the Palestinians, it would cease to exist. If Israel were harsher, it would lose Jewish and Gentile support. From my perspective, Israel, like most nations, is just doing the best it can with very difficult circumstances.

John Mearsheimer is a foreign policy realist. He knows that a country’s human rights record has nothing to do with how effectively it can govern and project power and retain its independence. So why is he getting all moral about Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians?

I am not a political scientist, but what other countries are called “apartheid”? I just did a Google search for “apartheid” and all of the results refer to South Africa except for a handful for Israel. Is the way Israel rules so distinctively and uniquely evil in the world that only it deserves the term “apartheid”?

For most people in the western world, “apartheid” is about the worst term you can fling at a country.

So John J. Mearsheimer’s choice of it for Israel and for nobody else (aside from the former South African regime) disturbs me. A Google search for “John Mearsheimer apartheid” reveals he does not use the term for any other country but Israel (and the former South Africa).

It seems like John J. Mearsheimer, following up on his important book The Israel Lobby (co-written with Stephen Walt) has become unhinged about the Jewish state. I wonder if all the slurs hurled at him have somewhat disengaged him from his rational faculties with regard to Israel?

Mearsheimer writes “young Israeli Jews, many of whom hold clearly racist views toward the Palestinians in their midst.” Is noticing differences and conflicting group interests racist? I thought the “realist school” of foreign policy analysis meant that the moral quality of a regime has nothing to do with how powerful and effective it can be. Why is Mearsheimer suddenly getting all moral with Israeli attitudes?

A Google search for “racist John Mearsheimer” reveals in the first 50 results that Mearsheimer only uses the term for Israeli attitudes. That’s weird. Why is Israel’s racism so much worse than everyone else’s?

Mearsheimer writes that if Israel expels its Arabs, it would be a “crime against humanity.” Would expulsion be a greater crime than all the genocides that happen routinely in the Arab world and Africa? Compared to those genocides, why would expulsion be such a crime?

Here is an example of why I respect Walt and Mearsheimer.

From Walt’s blog:

Ever since John Mearsheimer and I began writing about the Israel lobby, some of our critics have leveled various personal charges against us. These attacks rarely addressed the substance of what we wrote — a tacit concession that both facts and logic were on our side — but instead accused us of being anti-Semites and conspiracy theorists. They used these false charges to try to discredit and/or marginalize us, and to distract people from the important issues of U.S. Middle East policy that we had raised.

The latest example of this tactic is a recent blog post from Jeffrey Goldberg, where he accused my co-author of endorsing a book by an alleged Holocaust denier and Nazi sympathizer. Goldberg has well-established record of making things up about us, and this latest episode is consistent with his usual approach. I asked Professor Mearsheimer if he wanted to respond to Goldberg’s sally, and he sent the following reply.

John Mearsheimer writes:

In a certain sense, it is hard not to be impressed by the energy and imagination that Jeffrey Goldberg devotes to smearing Steve Walt and me. Although he clearly disagrees with our views about U.S.-Israel relations and the role of the Israel lobby, he does not bother to engage what we actually wrote in any meaningful way. Indeed, given what he writes about us, I am not even sure he has read our book or related articles. Instead of challenging the arguments and evidence that we presented, his modus operandi is to misrepresent and distort our views, in a transparent attempt to portray us as rabid anti-Semites.

His latest effort along these lines comes in a recent blog post, where he seizes on a dust jacket blurb I wrote for a new book by Gilad Atzmon titled The Wandering Who? A Study of Jewish Identity Politics. Here is what I said in my blurb:

Gilad Atzmon has written a fascinating and provocative book on Jewish identity in the modern world. He shows how assimilation and liberalism are making it increasingly difficult for Jews in the Diaspora to maintain a powerful sense of their ‘Jewishness.’ Panicked Jewish leaders, he argues, have turned to Zionism (blind loyalty to Israel) and scaremongering (the threat of another Holocaust) to keep the tribe united and distinct from the surrounding goyim. As Atzmon’s own case demonstrates, this strategy is not working and is causing many Jews great anguish. The Wandering Who? should be widely read by Jews and non-Jews alike.

The book, as my blurb makes clear, is an extended meditation on Jewish identity in the Diaspora and how it relates to the Holocaust, Israel, and Zionism. There is no question that the book is provocative, both in terms of its central argument and the overly hot language that Atzmon sometimes uses. But it is also filled with interesting insights that make the reader think long and hard about an important subject. Of course, I do not agree with everything that he says in the book — what blurber does? — but I found it thought provoking and likely to be of considerable interest to Jews and non-Jews, which is what I said in my brief comment.

Goldberg maintains that Atzmon is a categorically reprehensible person, and accuses him of being a Holocaust denier and an apologist for Hitler. These are two of the most devastating charges that can be leveled against anyone. According to Goldberg, the mere fact that I blurbed Atzmon’s book is decisive evidence that I share Atzmon’s supposedly odious views. This indictment of me is captured in the title of Goldberg’s piece: “John Mearsheimer Endorses a Hitler Apologist and Holocaust Revisionist.”

This charge is so ludicrous that it is hard to know where to start my response. But let me begin by noting that I have taught countless University of Chicago students over the years about the Holocaust and about Hitler’s role in it. Nobody who has been in my classes would ever accuse me of being sympathetic to Holocaust deniers or making excuses for what Hitler did to European Jews. Not surprisingly, those loathsome charges have never been leveled against me until Goldberg did so last week.

Equally important, Gilad Atzmon is neither a Holocaust denier nor an apologist for Hitler. Consider the following excerpt from The Wandering Who?

As much as I was a sceptic youngster, I was also horrified by the Holocaust. In the 1970s Holocaust survivors were part of our social landscape. They were our neighbours, we met them in our family gatherings, in the classroom, in politics, in the corner shop. The dark numbers tattooed on their white arms never faded away. It always had a chilling effect. . . . It was actually the internalization of the meaning of the Holocaust that transformed me into a strong opponent of Israel and Jewish-ness. It is the Holocaust that eventually made me a devoted supporter of Palestinian rights, resistance and the Palestinian right of return” (pp. 185-186).

It seems unequivocally clear to me from those sentences that Atzmon firmly believes that the Holocaust occurred and was a horrific tragedy. I cannot find evidence in his book or in his other writings that indicate he “traffics in Holocaust denial.”

The real issue for Atzmon — and this is reflected in the excerpt from his blog post that Goldberg quotes from — is how the Holocaust is interpreted and used by the Jewish establishment. Atzmon has three complaints. He believes that it is used to justify Israel’s brutal treatment of the Palestinians and to fend off criticism of Israel. This is an argument made by many other writers, including former Knesset speaker Avraham Burg, historian Peter Novick, and political scientist Norman Finkelstein. Atzmon also rejects the claim that the Holocaust is exceptional, which is a position that other respected scholars have held. There have been other genocides in world history, after all, and this whole issue was actively debated in the negotiations that led to the building of the Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC. Whatever one thinks of Atzmon’s position on this subject, it is hardly beyond the pale.

Finally, Atzmon is angry about the fact that it is difficult to raise certain questions about the causes and the conduct of the Holocaust without being personally attacked. These are all defensible if controversial positions to hold, which is not to say one has to agree with any of them. But in no way is he questioning that the Holocaust happened or denying its importance. In fact, his view is clear from one of Atzmon’s sentences that Goldberg quotes: “We should strip the holocaust of its Judeo-centric exceptional status and treat it as an historical chapter that belongs to a certain time and place.” Note that Atzmon is talking about “the holocaust” in a way that makes it clear he has no doubts about its occurrence, and the passage from The Wandering Who? cited above makes it clear that he has no doubts about its importance or its tragic dimensions; he merely believes it should be seen in a different way. Again, one need not agree with Atzmon to recognize that Goldberg has badly misrepresented his position.

There is also no evidence that I could find in The Wandering Who? to support Goldberg’s claim that Atzmon is an apologist for Hitler or that he believes “Jews persecuted Hitler” and in so doing helped trigger the Holocaust. There is actually little discussion of Hitler in Atzmon’s book, and the only discussion of interactions between Hitler and the Jews concerns the efforts of German Zionists to work out a modus vivendi with the Nazis. (pp. 162-165) This is why Goldberg is forced to go to one of Atzmon’s blog posts to make the case that he is an apologist for Hitler.

Before I examine the substance of that charge, there is an important issue that needs to be addressed directly. Goldberg’s indictment of Atzmon does not rely on anything that he wrote in The Wandering Who? Indeed, Goldberg’s blog post is silent on whether he has actually read the book. If he did read it, he apparently could not find any evidence to support his indictment of Atzmon. Instead, he relied exclusively on evidence culled from Atzmon’s own blog postings. That is why Goldberg’s assault on me steers clear of criticizing Atzmon’s book, which is what I blurbed. In short, he falsely accuses me of lending support to a Holocaust denier and defender of Hitler on the basis of writings that I did not read and did not comment upon.

This tactic puts me in a difficult position. I was asked to review Atzmon’s book and see whether I would be willing to blurb it. This is something I do frequently, and in every case I focus on the book at hand and not on the personality of the author or their other writings. In other words, I did not read any of Atzmon’s blog postings before I wrote my blurb. And just for the record, I have not met him and did not communicate with him before I was asked to review The Wandering Who? I read only the book and wrote a blurb that deals with it alone.

Goldberg, however, has shifted the focus onto what Atzmon has written on his blog. I discuss a couple of examples below, but I will not defend his blog output in detail for two reasons. First, I do not know what Atzmon may have said in all of his past blog posts and other writings or in the various talks that he has given over the years. Second, what he says in those places is not relevant to what I did, which was simply to read and react to his book.

Let me now turn to the specific claim that Atzmon is an “apologist for Hitler.” Again, I am somewhat reluctant to do this, because this charge forces me to defend what Atzmon said in one of his blog posts. But given the prominence of the charge in Goldberg’s indictment of Atzmon (and me), I cannot let it pass.

Plus, I see that Walter Russell Mead, who is also fond of smearing Steve Walt and me, has put this charge up in bright lights on his own blog. Picking up on Goldberg’s original post, Mead describes Atzmon’s argument this way: “poor Adolf Hitler’s actions against German Jews only came after US Jews called a boycott on German goods following Hitler’s appointment as German Chancellor. Gosh — if it weren’t for those pushy, aggressive Jews and their annoying boycotts, the Holocaust might not have happened!”

It is hard to imagine any sane person making such an argument, and Atzmon never does. Goldberg refers to a blog post that Atzmon wrote on March 25, 2010, written in response to news at the time that AIPAC had “decided to mount pressure” on President Obama. After describing what was happening with Obama, Atzmon notes that this kind of behavior is hardly unprecedented. In his words, “Jewish lobbies certainly do not hold back when it comes to pressuring states, world leaders and even superpowers.” There is no question that this statement is accurate and not even all that controversial; Tom Friedman said as much in the New York Times a couple of weeks ago.

In the second half of this post, Atzmon says that AIPAC’s behavior reminds him of the March 1933 Jewish boycott of German goods, which preceded Hitler’s decision on March 28, 1933 to boycott Jewish stores and goods. His basic point is that the Jewish boycott had negative consequences, which it did. In Atzmon’s narrative — and this is a very important theme in his book — Jews are not simply passive victims of other people’s actions. On the contrary, he believes Jews have considerable agency and their actions are not always wise. One can agree or disagree with his views about the wisdom of the Jewish boycott — and I happen to think he’s wrong about it — but he is not arguing that the Jews were “persecuting Hitler” and that this alleged “persecution” led to the Holocaust. In fact, he says nothing about the Holocaust in his post and he certainly does not justify in any way the murder of six million Jews.

Let me make one additional point about Goldberg’s mining of Atzmon’s blog posts. Goldberg ends his attack on me with the following quotation from a Feb. 19 blog post by Atzmon: “I believe that from [a] certain ideological perspective, Israel is actually far worse than Nazi Germany.” That quotation certainly makes Atzmon look like he has lost his mind and that nothing he has written could be trusted. But Goldberg has misrepresented what Atzmon really said, which is one of his standard tactics. Specifically, he quotes only part of a sentence from Atzmon’s blog post; but when you look at the entire sentence, you see that Atzmon is making a different, and far more nuanced point. The entire sentence reads: “Indeed, I believe that from [a] certain ideological perspective, Israel is actually far worse than Nazi Germany, for unlike Nazi Germany, Israel is a democracy and that implies that Israeli citizens are complicit in Israeli atrocities.” This is not an argument I would make, but what Atzmon is saying is quite different from the way Goldberg portrays it.

Finally, let me address the charge that Atzmon himself is an anti-Semite and a self-hating Jew. The implication of this accusation, of course, is that I must be an anti-Semite too (I can’t be a self-hating Jew) because I agreed to blurb Atzmon’s book. I do not believe that Atzmon is an anti-Semite, although that charge is thrown around so carelessly these days that it has regrettably lost much of its meaning. If one believes that anyone who criticizes Israel is an anti-Semite, then Atzmon clearly fits in that category. But that definition is foolish — no country is perfect or above criticism-and not worth taking seriously.

The more important and interesting issue is whether Atzmon is a self-hating Jew. Here the answer is unequivocally yes. He openly describes himself in this way and he sees himself as part of a long dissident tradition that includes famous figures such as Marx and Spinoza. What is going on here?

The key to understanding Atzmon is that he rejects the claim that Jews are the “Chosen People.” His main target, as he makes clear at the start of the book, is not with Judaism per se or with people who “happen to be of Jewish origin.” Rather, his problem is with “those who put their Jewish-ness over and above all of their other traits.” Or to use other words of his: “I will present a harsh criticism of Jewish politics and identity … This book doesn’t deal with Jews as a people or ethnicity.” (pp. 15-16)

In other words, Atzmon is a universalist who does not like the particularism that characterizes Zionism and which has a rich tradition among Jews and any number of other groups. He is the kind of person who intensely dislikes nationalism of any sort. Princeton professor Richard Falk captures this point nicely in his own blurb for the book, where he writes: “Atzmon has written an absorbing and moving account of his journey from hard-core Israeli nationalist to a de-Zionized patriot of humanity.”

Atzmon’s basic point is that Jews often talk in universalistic terms, but many of them think and act in particularistic terms. One might say they talk like liberals but act like nationalists. Atzmon will have none of this, which is why he labels himself a self-hating Jew. He fervently believes that Jews are not the “Chosen People” and that they should not privilege their “Jewish-ness” over their other human traits. Moreover, he believes that one must choose between Athens and Jerusalem, as they “can never be blended together into a lucid and coherent worldview.” (p. 86) One can argue that his perspective is dead wrong, or maintain that it is a lovely idea in principle but just not the way the real world works. But it is hardly an illegitimate or ignoble way of thinking about humanity.

To take this matter a step further, Atzmon’s book is really all about Jewish identity. He notes that “the disappearance of the ghetto and its maternal qualities” in the wake of the French Revolution caused “an identity crisis within the largely assimilated Jewish society.” (p. 104) He believes that this crisis, about which there is an extensive literature, is still at the center of Jewish life today. In effect, Atzmon is telling the story of how he wrestled with his own identity over time and what he thinks is wrong with how most Jews self-identify today. It is in this context that he discusses what he calls the “Holocaust religion,” Zionism, and Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians. Again, to be perfectly clear, he has no animus toward Judaism as a religion or with individuals who are Jewish by birth. Rather, his target is the tribalism that he believes is common to most Jews, and I might add, to most other peoples as well. Atzmon focuses on Jews for the obvious reason that he is Jewish and is trying to make sense of his own identity.

In sum, Goldberg’s charge that Atzman is a Holocaust denier or an apologist for Hitler is baseless. Nor is Atzmon an anti-Semite. He has controversial views for sure and he sometimes employs overly provocative language. But there is no question in my mind that he has written a fascinating book that, as I said in my blurb, “should be widely read by Jews and non-Jews alike.” Regarding Goldberg’s insinuation that I have any sympathy for Holocaust denial and am an anti-Semite, it is just another attempt in his longstanding effort to smear Steve Walt and me.

Who could read that and the linked smears against him and not side with John Mearsheimer in this case against the slur merchants?

In early 2009, John Mearsheimer castigated Israel for its war in Gaza:

Israel and its supporters claim that the IDF is going to great lengths to avoid civilian casualties, in some cases taking risks that put Israeli soldiers in jeopardy. Hardly. One reason to doubt these claims is that Israel refuses to allow reporters into the war zone: it does not want the world to see what its soldiers and bombs are doing inside Gaza. At the same time, Israel has launched a massive propaganda campaign to put a positive spin on the horror stories that do emerge.

The best evidence, however, that Israel is deliberately seeking to punish the broader population in Gaza is the death and destruction the IDF has wrought on that small piece of real estate. Israel has killed over 1,000 Palestinians and wounded more than 4,000. Over half of the casualties are civilians, and many are children. The IDF’s opening salvo on Dec. 27 took place as children were leaving school, and one of its primary targets that day was a large group of graduating police cadets, who hardly qualified as terrorists. In what Ehud Barak called “an all-out war against Hamas,” Israel has targeted a university, schools, mosques, homes, apartment buildings, government offices, and even ambulances. A senior Israeli military official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, explained the logic behind Israel’s expansive target set: “There are many aspects of Hamas, and we are trying to hit the whole spectrum, because everything is connected and everything supports terrorism against Israel.” In other words, everyone is a terrorist and everything is a legitimate target.

Israelis tend to be blunt, and they occasionally say what they are really doing. After the IDF killed 40 Palestinian civilians in a UN school on Jan. 6, Ha’aretz reported that “senior officers admit that the IDF has been using enormous firepower.” One officer explained, “For us, being cautious means being aggressive. From the minute we entered, we’ve acted like we’re at war. That creates enormous damage on the ground … I just hope those who have fled the area of Gaza City in which we are operating will describe the shock.”

One might accept that Israel is waging “a cruel, all-out war against 1.5 million Palestinian civilians,” asHa’aretz put it in an editorial, but argue that it will eventually achieve its war aims and the rest of the world will quickly forget the horrors inflicted on the people of Gaza.

This is wishful thinking. For starters, Israel is unlikely to stop the rocket fire for any appreciable period of time unless it agrees to open Gaza’s borders and stop arresting and killing Palestinians. Israelis talk about cutting off the supply of rockets and mortars into Gaza, but weapons will continue to come in via secret tunnels and ships that sneak through Israel’s naval blockade. It will also be impossible to police all of the goods sent into Gaza through legitimate channels.

Israel could try to conquer all of Gaza and lock the place down. That would probably stop the rocket attacks if Israel deployed a large enough force. But then the IDF would be bogged down in a costly occupation against a deeply hostile population. They would eventually have to leave, and the rocket fire would resume. And if Israel fails to stop the rocket fire and keep it stopped, as seems likely, its deterrent will be diminished, not strengthened.

More importantly, there is little reason to think that the Israelis can beat Hamas into submission and get the Palestinians to live quietly in a handful of Bantustans inside Greater Israel. Israel has been humiliating, torturing, and killing Palestinians in the Occupied Territories since 1967 and has not come close to cowing them. Indeed, Hamas’s reaction to Israel’s brutality seems to lend credence to Nietzsche’s remark that what does not kill you makes you stronger.

But even if the unexpected happens and the Palestinians cave, Israel would still lose because it will become an apartheid state. As Prime Minister Ehud Olmert recently said, Israel will “face a South African-style struggle” if the Palestinians do not get a viable state of their own. “As soon as that happens,” he argued, “the state of Israel is finished.” Yet Olmert has done nothing to stop settlement expansion and create a viable Palestinian state, relying instead on the Iron Wall strategy to deal with the Palestinians.

There is also little chance that people around the world who follow the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will soon forget the appalling punishment that Israel is meting out in Gaza. The destruction is just too obvious to miss, and too many people—especially in the Arab and Islamic world—care about the Palestinians’ fate. Moreover, discourse about this longstanding conflict has undergone a sea change in the West in recent years, and many of us who were once wholly sympathetic to Israel now see that the Israelis are the victimizers and the Palestinians are the victims. What is happening in Gaza will accelerate that changing picture of the conflict and long be seen as a dark stain on Israel’s reputation.

The bottom line is that no matter what happens on the battlefield, Israel cannot win its war in Gaza. In fact, it is pursuing a strategy—with lots of help from its so-called friends in the Diaspora—that is placing its long-term future at risk.

I think Mearsheimer is over-doing the case against Israel. I don’t know of any other nation that has been hit by a constant barrage of rockets and reacted with more restraint than Israel did? Which people in Israel’s position would be more compassionate to Palestinians while staying alive as their own independent state?

Posted in Israel, John J. Mearsheimer | Comments Off on The Future of Palestine: Righteous Jews vs. the New Afrikaners

Fallout (2013)

Helen Caldicott says in this documentary: “America was testing atmospheric bombs in Nevada and they only did it when the wind blew east over the Mormon population because they knew the Mormons were so patriotic, they would never complain.”

You would think all smart countries would prefer patriotic citizens.

From imdb.com:

Any fears that Lawrence Johnston’s documentary on the making of Stanley Kramer’s 1959 film On the Beach would be something of a parochial, introspective effort were instantly dis-spelled with footage of President John F. Kennedy giving a speech likening the threat of nuclear annihilation as being a Sword of Damocles hanging over the whole world’s population.

On the Beach, the apocalyptic story of the world coming to an end following a northern hemisphere war in which the use of cobalt bombs brought about inevitable mutual self- destruction was penned by Nevil Shute in 1957. As the radioactive fallout heads south on the Trade Winds killing all life in its path, the Australian city of Melbourne is the last major centre on earth to be left standing, its population going about its daily business with stoic phlegm, law and order prevailing. The documentary explained that Shute based this on the reaction he witnessed of Londoners during the blitz of 1940.

Shute sold the film rights to Hollywood for 80,000 pounds and the then very dull and isolated Anglo-Celtic enclave of Melbourne went agog with excitement as screen royalty – Gregory Peck, Ava Gardner, Fred Astaire and the up and coming Anthony Perkins – arrived to shoot the adaptation of the international best-seller.

This meticulously researched, superbly produced and always fascinating documentary swept along with seamless segues as it detailed Nevil Shute’s life and career, his fractious relationship with Stanley Kramer and the politics behind the film – both internal and external. All this was set in the context of the time when people the world over were coming to terms with the realisation that Man had invented a weapon that could see everyone wiped out at a near instant.

Nevil Shute was extremely wealthy through his ‘hobby’ writing. However, he considered himself first and foremost an aeronautical engineer and, as his daughter advised in the film, considered writing a ‘nancy’ occupation. The documentary also detailed how Shute left Britain for Australia soon after the Second World War due to punitive taxation from the Labour Government. But this I think only told half the story. Shute was an extremely conservative man – both with a big and small C – something which so often comes through in his work. He only left Britain in 1950 after Attlee’s Socialist administration had been re-elected and despondently he believed that the country was now well and truly finished. In his 1953 novel, In the Wet, Shute gives a prophetic vision of 30 years hence. Britain is governed by ill-educated Welsh miners and in terminal decline. Australia and Canada are paragons of private enterprise, prosperous and free of state regulation. HM The Queen decamps for Canberra leaving the United Kingdom under the control of a Governor-General.

But when it came to the threat of nuclear war, Shute identified strongly with those, mainly on the left, who thought the whole concept total madness. As Fallout clearly detailed, it was Conservative forces which were uncomfortable with the film’s premise and put barriers up to frustrate its production.

Fallout is choc a bloc with interesting facts and vignettes. There are interviews with Donna Anderson, the only star from the film still alive; Shute’s daughter; Kramer’s widow Karen together with contributions from historians, journalists and an incredibly lucid photographer who was at Hiroshima immediately after its bombing and who was subsequently chosen to produce the stills for On the Beach.

All this was interspersed with clips from the film, a fleeting history of the development of nuclear bombs and a social history of Melbourne with relevant archive footage to accompany. It should be of interest to anyone who wants to get a feel of what the world was like in the Cold War days of the 1950s.

One of the last words went to author and journalist Gideon Haigh who wondered why the threat of nuclear destruction is no longer the social issue it once was when it is probably more likely now then ever before. He suggested the world was now an ammunition dump which one stray spark could set off. With nuclear proliferation now so prevalent and suicide bombers seemingly happy to achieve immortality, he opined that it was highly feasible two volatile states could go to war , or some fanatic detonate a nuclear device in a major world city.

This was thought provoking. Why so many are expending energy on the rather abstract idea of climate change that may cause major problems in 50, or 100, years time when a far more devastating event could happen at any time is strange indeed.

Posted in America, Australia, Nuclear | Comments Off on Fallout (2013)

SEE IT: High school cheerleader dance-off turns nasty as brawl erupts between rivals

NYDailyNews: A brawl erupted between two [black] high school cheerleading teams after a impromptu dance-off turned nasty.

The fight between Wilmer Hutchins Blue Bells and James Madison Trojanettes drill teams in Dallas happened after the football game ended last Friday.

A 13-year-old dancer from the Trojanettes has been accused of starting the row after appearing to strike rival Shamyra Cooper, 15, in the back of the head.

Cooper’s mom Deshannon Roberts said the other girl performed a mock routine and failed to respect her daughter’s personal space, which triggered the brawl.

“You do have a personal space in which you are supposed to respect,” Roberts told Fox 4 News.

Posted in Blacks | Comments Off on SEE IT: High school cheerleader dance-off turns nasty as brawl erupts between rivals

America’s Broke Politicians

Comments to Steve Sailer:

* They don’t actually write those books, do they? Aren’t they all ghostwritten by hired writers? Their speeches are all written for them and consultants decide what their opinions are supposed to be. Most of our politicians are like Hollywood actors auditioning for a role. It’s hard to tell what the real person is like behind the role they’re playing.

* The base pay of a US Congressman is $174,000, plus a fully paid benefit plan. They also receive about 1.3 million dollars for office expenses. They get wined and dined by rich lobbyists, their family members are given cushy, high paid jobs and they’re usually guaranteed a high paying job for themselves if they decide to give up their office. The line of people willing to spend enormous sums of money to get into office shows they make more than enough. Who was the last Senator or Congressman who ran for office because he actually believed in something. If they do care about an issue, that changes the day they win.
In our corrupt system, we should probably force politicians to pay for their seats.

* The job itself has become less accessible or amenable to people with no education or other types of education and backgrounds. Take a look at the US Constitution and compare it to the foot high stack of papers that is a tax code or a healthcare program, and you’ll notice the trend. Legal training becomes an obvious asset to the work when the legislation is, by rational political necessity (special interests, obfuscation, given and take), so large that you don’t even have time to read it before passing it. I read that a lot of legislation is simply written by lobbyists then argued over by Congressmen in straight political terms, like soccer amateurs discussing their teams with no moneyball statistics behind them. Then the legislation passes, in one way or another, modified to the broad strokes agreed upon, and that’s when the various industries and the Congressmen learn what everything inside the piece of legislation is or does or means in the short and long term. With so little actual input or time for even Congressional aides to read the thing, having a legal education helps you to speed read it better or get the gist. I think the non-lawyers in Congress are mostly the self-taught ideologues, like the father-son doctor duo.

Of course, this kind of legal occultism is by design, as advanced by the most powerful professional guild in existence in almost every country, that of lawyers. It cements both their role in Congress, their role in the Congressional apparatus, in drafting legislation, in being the muscle and the worker ants of special interests, their meat and potatoes after (litigation opportunities) and so on.

My significant other is a lawyer and I’m constantly amazed by how much the deck is stacked by the Barr Association to not only limit the influx of new lawyers and keep prices high, but to obtain preferential treatment. For instance, Romania has a universal pay-as-you-go public pension system, where people’s current payments are immediately transferred to existing retirees and pensions are set, by law, at a level that, in theory, fits past contributions in real terms, but fiddles with it to subsidize poorer retirees and people who performed dangerous or debilitating labor (factory, mines etc). Being a poorer country, the pensions are not that great and sob stories abound, as well as fear for the future, as the population ages and decreases rapidly (migration and low birth rate) while the population of subsidized and criminal zero marginal product “workers” from the Indian subcontinent balloons.

Anyway, imagine that, in all of this, the lawyers, who are the best paid professionals in society, exceeding bank workers as an average (who have lots of low paid grunts) and maybe comparable only to certain IT workers (fiscally subsidized by the State for strategic reasons), have their own separate pension fund just for themselves into which they pay their huge contributions, not burdened by any paupers and the socially necessary but financially disadvantaged classes (teachers, nurses, public doctors). It’s like separating a pot of health insurance money and administering it in two – one for the elders and one for the youngsters. It obviously won’t work without transfers, no matter how much the companies would like it to.

PS Notice how the Chinese mostly had engineers as Politburo members and legislators and only in the new generation of leadership an economist and a lawyer made their way to the top. PM Li Keqiang being an economist I think.

* Lee Kuan Yew paid Singapore officials extremely well so they wouldn’t be tempted to take bribes.

* The ‘book deals’ are what troubles me. Former Speaker Jim Wright threw together a bunch of old speeches and called it “Reflections of A Public Man”. Labor Unions and others with business they needed the Speakers help with could buy a few hundred copies of this magnificent tome as a round about bribe.

Wright was ridiculed for this but he didn’t have to return the money. Clinton and The Rodhamster refined this scheme when they got their multimillion dollar ‘advances’ from Simon and Shuster and it was a perfectly legal way for corporate money to be delivered to a sitting politician but at least it was private money.

Obama has gone a step further with his book deals. As noted, his efforts as a wordsmith had been completed years before he became a well known public figure so his out of print books got some sales as reporters and political interests needed to do some research on a man with no public past. I suppose that might have generated some modest legitimate sales of the books but nothing that would make you millions. Obama is making his book money from the taxpayer. You can bet every public school library in America has copies of his books. So lucrative is this little scheme anyone contemplating running for the presidency would be a fool not to have published a book in the off chance they win. Why wait until you are out of office to cash in when you can start getting your book royalties the day after the election!

* Rubio’s financial struggles were due to his profligate spending habits and indicative of a guy with middling IQ and low future time orientation. Getting involved in politics did not hurt his earning potential. This is a guy who went to clown colleges before finally being able to transfer in to UF and then graduating middle of the pack from University of Miami Law which is itself a middle of the pack law school. Florida legislators get paid about $30 grand a year but real gelt is in the private law work. Legislating is part time business in Florida and everybody with a law degree draws a separate pay check from whatever firm they work for and being a state legislator vastly increases your value to any potential employer. Rubio was making about $70 grand before he got elected, which is about what you would have expected given his age and educational background. Within just four years of being a legislator, that amount jumped to $270,000. Once he was elected Speaker, it jumped to over $300,000 a year.

Nobody is going to shed a tear for a politician struggling to get by on $300,000 a year. Rubio is “poor” because took out $900,000 in home mortgage debt (on top of over $100,000 in student loans that were still outstanding!), bought an $80,000 boat, and lived a life style far beyond what his extremely healthy salary could afford. He’s the NBA point guard/Rap Star of GOP Presidential candidates. He was making Paul/Walker type money, but he wanted to live the life of a Bush.

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Prop. 187 Debate: No Tolerance but Abundant Anger

George Ramos writes for the Los Angeles Times Oct. 10, 1994:

There wasn’t any tolerance the other night at the Simon Wiesenthal Center Museum of Tolerance. Only petty narrow-mindedness held sway.

The center, in conjunction with Occidental College, opened its Peltz Theater in West Los Angeles for a debate on Proposition 187, the supposed “save our state” measure on the Nov. 8 ballot that would deny health and educational benefits to illegal immigrants in California. Any hope for a rational discussion was dashed before the debate even started.

Several hundred Latino demonstrators–who have loved to hate Harold Ezell since his days as regional immigration commissioner–confronted him before he took the podium. One protester called Ezell, a godfather of 187, “a bigot and a Nazi.”

Amid signs calling him “Slezell,” Ezell cried foul, telling reporters on his way out that the assertion was ridiculous. “I don’t have a racist bone in my body,” he said. Ezell also claimed to know nothing of a comment made by a pro-187 leader, Ron Prince, who enraged protesters by recently telling an audience: “You are the posse and SOS is the rope.”

The evening went downhill from there…

Ezell knows I hate Proposition 187. But that didn’t stop him from calling the next day to see what I thought of the debate high jinks.

We went back and forth, hammering each other. Ezell did say that Prince’s “SOS is the rope” comment was out of line.

When we finished chatting, I realized I couldn’t take another word on 187. I don’t like what it’s done to us.

Posted in Immigration | Comments Off on Prop. 187 Debate: No Tolerance but Abundant Anger

Museum of Tolerance Holds Immigration Workshop

Link: “A 3rd grade student draws about hopes for her future as an FBI agent during an immigration workshop at the Museum of Tolerance on May 6, 2013 in New York City. Some eighty 2nd and 3rd graders, many of whom are immigrants or children of immigrants, participated in the event. The workshop was designed to help children understand the challenges faced by immigrants in their home countries, their often difficult journeys to the United States and the tough adjustment to their new surroundings. It was led by guidance counselor Karina Medina, who just published “Old Home New Home” about a child immigrant’s experience coming to New York City.”

Posted in Immigration, Museum of Tolerance | Comments Off on Museum of Tolerance Holds Immigration Workshop