Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
February 9, 2009
Elections in Israel

Tomorrow Israel will elect a new parliament and thereby a new government.

Gabriel of Jews sans frontieres has posted a good primer on the various race/class/religious constituencies, their parties and election chances.

He summarizes:

The secular Ashkenazi founders of Zionism built a racist society based on their own political, economic and cultural domination. Since the seventies, that domination has been increasingly challenged by Jews of lower status and different backgrounds. Because racism against Palestinians is the glue that holds the nation together, all Jewish challenges to the founders' hegemony are expressed as a competition in racism. Parties step in front of the electoral mirror and ask,

mirror mirror on the wall, who's the most racist of us all.


The only restraining factor is the fear of alienating the Western alliance that support Israel. The rise of the "extreme" right (as if Labor isn't extreme) expresses a number of trends: 1) the continuing assertion of Palestinian presence in the land 2) an intensification of the internal social struggle among Jewish Israelis 3) the continuing decline of the secular Israeli block and 4) the growing confidence that Israel need not worry about negative repercussions from the U.S. and Europe.

Some say that this confidence is a misreading of the international moment. I hope so but I wouldn't be so sure.

The election result will likely be a decisive move to the far right.

That could well undermine the 'western' support for Israel. So far every Israeli government after 1968 faked to bow more or less to 'western' demand of a two state solution and negotiated in bad faith with the Palestinian site while at the same time silently expanding the colonization of the West Bank.

The far right politicians that may now lead the government, Nethanyahu and Lieberman, have spoken out against any two state solution or giving up the Golan heights to make peace with Syria. They want to 'transfer' the non-Jewish Arabs out of 'greater Israel.'

With them in the lead it may be much more difficult to play the old negotiations-for-show game with the 'west'. That could well undermine 'western' support for their 'project'.

At least that is what I hope for.

Comments

isreal’s elections and US policy
isreal, like all countries, has the right to choose what leaders it wants. But as is also always true, other countries have the right – and, in the case of the US as the enabler of virtually everything Israel does, the responsibility – to react appropriately. It’s bad enough that we have tied ourselves so blindly and inextricably to isreal as it has existed over the past several years. But an isreal led by Benjamin Netanyahu and Avigdor Lieberman produces whole new responsibilities for the US not to continue on this path of uncritical support for a government like that.

Posted by: GG | Feb 9 2009 19:36 utc | 1

Recommended: My? Israel. Some anecdotes by a U.S. Jew from a recent visit in Israel.

Posted by: b | Feb 9 2009 19:38 utc | 2

Better the mask is off.

Posted by: Malooga | Feb 9 2009 20:27 utc | 3

Well, if Israelis select Netanyahu they will also have guaranteed Ahmadinejad’s re-election, so Israelis had better be careful what they pray for.

Posted by: Parviz | Feb 9 2009 20:51 utc | 4

Why so? I doubt iranians care much about which murderous criminal is currently directing the massacres in Palestina. From what I read the iranian election seems to be more about internal issues and power sharing/fighting between different branches of the clerical elite than about any external non issues.
Ahmadinejad isn’t going to be more succesful at stopping sanctions or attacks than Khatami. And the same the other way around. The global western ‘civilization’ objective is the destruction of any independant powers (and if they are sitting in or next to trillion of dollars in oil much more so). And no iranian president is going to become a puppet without ‘extreme’ treatment applied.

Posted by: ThePaper | Feb 9 2009 21:03 utc | 5

iran isn’t going to go after israel Ahmadinejad or no Ahmadinejad. at least that is the impression i get. the only thing stopping israel is the US, and i don’t see that happening anytime soon. the most the world population can do is boycott.
i’m w/malooga. the bigger the contrast, the faster they go down, hopefully. if they got another rabin (or politician willing to negotiate) they would just assassinate him.
b, your #2 link is dreadful.

Posted by: annie | Feb 9 2009 22:52 utc | 6

My friend Lizard was kind enough to point this article out to me.
I am generally a bit ambivalent about these sorts of psychohistorical explanations for human events- not because they are wrong, but rather because they do not explain things as completely as they might purport to. The same holds true for dialectical materialism though, and most any other such meta-theory, even though viewing things through these various lenses may be important, too.
I therefore offer up this article as, at the very least, “food for thought”…
Israel is Outgassing Its Unhealed Trauma

As a human being of Jewish heritage, I feel deeply ashamed by what Israel is acting out in Gaza. I feel so shocked by the horror of what Israel is doing to the Palestinians that it has literally taken me a few weeks to sufficiently integrate the trauma triggered within me so that I could begin to find words. I feel as if I am sitting in the audience watching a family member who I love perform on stage, and because of my intimate connection and identification with my beloved family member, I am completely mortified by what I see them unconsciously acting out in the world theater. I am rendered numb and speechless, as my face turns pale and my breath is taken away by the extent of Israel’s criminal and immoral insanity. It is like watching a dark, destructive inhuman energy making a people its instrument.
How we understand what is happening in Gaza depends upon where we start looking in time. The Israeli-influenced U. S. government/mainstream-media’s propaganda starts the narrative at the missiles being shot by Hamas, who are considered the terrorists, without asking the relevant question — why is Hamas shooting off missiles in the first place? Though Hamas shooting rockets into Israel can in no way be condoned, when we look at the situation in a broader context, we see that Hamas is terrorizing Israel in response to the terror, genocide and holocaust being perpetrated by Israel upon the Palestinians. Hamas is lobbing missiles into Israel to publicize the plight of the Palestinians, to bring international attention to the fact that they are being imprisoned and starved to death, as Israel has not been permitting sufficient food, water, fuel and medicine into the death camp which is Gaza.
There is an insidious double-bind inherent in their conflict. Both Israel and the Palestinians are afraid, and therefore unable to do themselves the very thing they need the other to do, which is to stop the violence. Israel wants security. And the Palestinians just want to be free of Israel’s illegal occupation and have the right to their own self-determination. Israel wants Hamas to stop shooting its missiles into Israel. Hamas insists they will stop if Israel stops oppressing them and gives back to the Palestinians their intrinsic right to exist in freedom. Israel, in its flawless illogic, is afraid to let the Palestinians be free of their domination because it imagines that the Palestinians will then shoot rockets at it, thereby creating as well as perpetuating the very situation it doesn’t want (please see my article “Delusions of Separation [1]”).
To resolve the deadlock, Israel, being in the position of having infinitely more power than the Palestinians, has to be the figure which takes the first step out of the infinite regression. Those with the most power are undoubtedly in a better position to fix a problem than those with the least. Holding the power in its very hands, Israel has it within its grasp to stop abusing it. You can only let go of something if you fully possess it. The fact that Israel is wielding its overwhelming power in a way which creates the very thing it is afraid of is the signature of the traumatized soul caught in the act.
Trauma is an Entity All Its Own
Israel is a nation in trauma, which is a form of collective madness.Trauma is a form of psychological damage rooted in a kind of vital shock to the organism. When we are in trauma, we unconsciously act out the unhealed trauma both within ourselves and out in the world, traumatizing and terrorizing others as we simultaneously re-traumatize ourselves. There is a newly emerging scientific understanding of trauma that describes its underlying bio-energetic logic and illumines how unhealed trauma warps and alters the emotional and psychological lives of human beings. Understanding how trauma operates in the human psyche and exhibits itself through behavior in the outer world will help us to illumine the underlying, deeper process animating events in Gaza. As we understand the deeper process in-forming events in Gaza, we reciprocally deepen our understanding of the trauma within ourselves, for no human alive today is free from trauma and/or the effects of trauma.

more at the link and well worth reading… As someone whom suffers P.T.S.D., I can tell you, Levy’s trauma model resonates a great deal, and to my thinking explains much.
In addition, this is much like how I experience the ptb here in the States, that use our collective trauma against us.

Posted by: Uncle $cam | Feb 9 2009 23:18 utc | 7

Kahane won
Rabbi Meir Kahane can rest in peace: His doctrine has won. Twenty years after his Knesset list was disqualified and 18 years after he was murdered, Kahanism has become legitimate in public discourse. If there is something that typifies Israel’s current murky, hollow election campaign, which ends the day after tomorrow, it is the transformation of racism and nationalism into accepted values.

Posted by: Anonymous | Feb 9 2009 23:45 utc | 8

a pint that is not made often enough is about the place or corruption in the political life of the state of israel. since ben gurion there are very few figures in the political landscape who have been untouched by it – largely i imagine because of the enormous tap from its masters in washington – that keeps on flowing
that is to say, the party, its operatives & often its ‘leaders’ have picked up money from bagmen much as their forebears of tammany hall. israeli political life is essentially crooked.
the comatose sharon was a perfect example where he & his family personally profited – just like common thieves
the russian oligarchs who have come to live out the twilight of their lives have also polluted an already debris filled political culture
their tendency to murder – as a foreign policy is a mirror of that corruption – it is as if the murdering of palestinians somehow purifies the nation of its essential crookedness
it was true in the foundation – because you stole territory. then you stole homes. then you stole the goods & chattels. not as a heroic army but as a collection of thieves. the colons essentially continue that practice – so their basic brutishness does not surprise me, it does not surprise me in the least. perhaps an intellectual here & there can try to reïfy it – like benny morris or an amos oz for example – but it is essentially – common theft. & what follows is not defence but murder
the attack on helpless gaza is merely the latest act of outrageous murder. nothing new under the sun – except even the cruelest amongst us who live outside israel have had enough of the injustice. it appears today for what it is – murder. no matter how quickly the media who rule from the roll of dollars wants to cash in on the next catastrophe & forget the palestinian people
what can a nation be that is founded in theft & continues by acts of excessive murder & whose logical solution is the anhilation of the palestinian people & their culture ?
i would suggest that it cannot be anything & that it should dissapear as apartheid south africa dissapeared

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Feb 9 2009 23:57 utc | 9

it should dissapear as apartheid south africa dissapeared

Amen.
And it would disappear if only the world would show the same resolve as it did with SA. But I can already hear the congratulatory phone calls from world leaders, giving the newly elected Israeli government a rhetoric pad on the back and promising unwavering support for their despicable policies. No positive change for Palestinians will materialize as long as we, the concerned and disgusted citizens at home in the US, Europe and other western nations do not protest our governments continued propping up of apartheid Israel.

Posted by: Juan Moment | Feb 10 2009 1:50 utc | 10

You think Christian Zionists, politicians of both parties, and Joe and Jane Sixpack are going to desert Israel if the government moves further right? I think not. Lots of folks in the USofA get their rocks off seeing Israel humiliate and murder Palestinians; they wish we could do the same thing to blacks and Mexicans. And the political class in the western world have given their fealty to Israel. The iron fist will ain’t gonna loosen up.

Posted by: euclidcreek | Feb 10 2009 2:37 utc | 11

the national lawyers guild of america who have been on a fact finding mission in gaza – have found horrific & i mean utterly horrific evidence of israeli war crimes
there will of course be the response from the i d f – that they have investigated fully & found their soldiers completely innocent of all charges, whatever charges & that these lawyers should investigate hamas – they will lie through their teeth & tell the world that they were fighting hamas & somehow 1500 people were killed, 5000 people were seriouslly wounded
israels einsatzgruppen & their heroic ‘killing actions’ will continue endlessly

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Feb 10 2009 3:00 utc | 12

the original einsatzkommando were founf guilty amongst other things of :
War crimes for the same reasons, and for wanton destruction and devastation not justified by military necessity.
one of the judges calle d their work a bloody harvest & that description could not descibe better the work of the i d f in the occupied territories

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Feb 10 2009 3:10 utc | 13

annie (6), no, Iran isn’t going to go DIRECTLY after Israel, but Ahmadinejad will make life far more uncomfortable for Israel than Khatemi would. So a Netanyahu (or combined Fascist) victory would guarantee problems for Israel for years to come from Hamas and Hezbollah.
The Obama camp would be wise to wisen up before it’s too late. Biden doesn’t sound very wise to me. Time’s running out. Losing the opportunity. Pity.

Posted by: Parviz | Feb 10 2009 8:47 utc | 14

hi parvis,
Losing the opportunity. Pity.
i’m still in hope/action mode.

Posted by: annie | Feb 10 2009 9:05 utc | 15

remembereringgiap,
“they were fighting hamas & somehow 1500 people were killed”
There was a documentary on last night on the BBC about Gaza. The Israeli minister said the following:
a. Most of the dead were Hamas
b. Those that weren’t were being used as shields by Hamas
c. Therefore, Israel has no culpability at all for any civilian deaths (if there were any)

Posted by: mo | Feb 10 2009 14:38 utc | 16

sorry about the cut & p&ste but believe this to be important :
A Report from Gaza
Strong Indications of Israeli War Crimes
By NATIONAL LAWYERS GUILD
Gaza City.
We are a delegation of 8 American lawyers, members of the National Lawyers Guild in the United States, who have come here to the Gaza Strip to assess the effects of the recent attacks on the people, and to determine what, if any, violations of international law occurred and whether U.S. domestic law has been violated as a consequence. We have spent the last five days interviewing communities particularly impacted by the recent Israeli offensive, including medical personnel, humanitarian aid workers and United Nations representatives. In particular, the delegation examined three issues: 1) targeting of civilians and civilian infrastructure; 2) illegal use of weapons and 3) blocking of medical and humanitarian assistance to civilians.
Targeting of Civilians and Civilian Infrastructure
Much of the debate surrounding Israel’s aerial and ground offensive against Gaza has centered on whether or not Israel observed principles of proportionality and distinction. The debate suggests that Israel targeted Hamas i.e., its military installations, its leaders, and its militants, and in the process of its discrete military exercise it inadvertently killed Palestinian civilians. While we have found evidence that Palestinian civilians were victims of excessive force and collateral damage, we have also found troubling instances of Palestinian civilians being targets themselves.
The delegation recorded numerous accounts of Israeli soldiers shooting civilians, including women, children, and the elderly, in the head, chest, and stomach. Another common narrative described Israeli forces rounding civilians into a single location i.e., homes, schools which Israeli tanks or warplanes then shelled. Israeli forces continued to shoot at civilians fleeing the targeted structures.
We spoke to Khaled Abed Rabbo, who witnessed an Israeli soldier execute his 2-year-old and 7-year-old daughters, and critically injure a third daughter, Samar, 4-years old, on a sunny afternoon outside his home. Two other Israeli soldiers were standing nearby eating chips and chocolates at the time on January 7, 2009. Abed Rabbo recounts standing in front of the Israeli soldiers with his mother, wife and daughters for 5 – 7 minutes before one of the soldiers opened fire on his family.
We spoke to Ibtisam al-Sammouni, 31, and a resident of Zaytoun neighborhood in Gaza City. On January 4th, the Israeli army forced approximately 110 of Zaytoun’s residents into Ibtisam’s home. At approximately 7 am on January 5th, the Israeli military launched two tank shells at the house without warning killing two of Ibtisam’s children: Rizka, 14 and Faris, 12. When the survivors attempted to flee Israeli forces shot at them. Her son Abdullah, 7, was injured in the shelling and remained in the home among his deceased siblings for four days before Israeli forces permitted medical personnel into Zaytoun to rescue them. After medical personnel removed the injured persons, an Israeli war plane destroyed the house and it crumbled over the lifeless bodies. The dead remained beneath the rubble for 17 days before the Israeli Army permitted medical personnel to remove their bodies for burial.
We spoke to the family of Rouhiya al-Najjar, 47, who lived in Khoza’a, Khan Younis. Israeli forces ordered her neighborhoods residents to march to the city center. Rouhiya led 20 women out of her home and into the alley. They all carried white scarves. Upon entering the alley, an Israeli sniper shot Rouhiya in her left temple killing her instantly. Israeli forces prevented medical personnel from reaching her body for twelve hours. These are only some of the accounts that we’ve collected.
Israeli forces also destroyed numerous buildings throughout the Gaza Strip during the recent incursion. Guild delegates viewed the remains of hundreds of demolished homes and businesses – in addition to the remains of the American School in Gaza, damaged medical centers, and the charred innards of UNRWA warehouses. While in situations of armed conflict, collateral damage and mistakes can occur, the circumstances surrounding the cases that the delegation investigated indicate deliberate targeting rather than collateral damage or mistake. Specifically:
The American School at Gaza, which was hit with two F-16 missiles on January 3, 2009, killing the watch guard on duty. According to Ribhi Salem, the school’s director, the Israelis gave no warnings. Mr. Salem stated that the school had come to an agreement with resistance groups not to use school grounds and there had never been resistance activity on the property.
United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA)
John Ging, the Director of Gaza Operations for UNRWA reported that Israeli forces fired missiles at UNRWA schools in Gaza City, Jabalyia and Bet Lahiya. The United Nation compound in Gaza city was also hit with white phosphorous shells and missiles. Ging noted that al United Nations buildings and vehicles all fly UN flags, are marked in blue paint from the top, and that during hostilities the UN personnel remained in constant contact with Israeli authorities.
Misuse of Weapons
Our delegation has heard allegations of the use of DIME (Dense Inert Metal Explosive) weaponry, white phosphorus and other possible weapons whose use in civilian areas is prohibited. We have also heard of the use of prohibited weapons, such as fleshettes. We have found our own evidence of the use of fleschette shells, which we will combine with evidence collected by Amnesty International to push for further investigation. We have not found any conclusive evidence of the use of DIME, though we believe that this warrants further investigation and disclosure by the Israeli military.
Our findings overwhelmingly point to the use of conventional weapons in a prohibited manner, specifically, the use of battlefield weaponry in densely populated civilian areas. Customary international law forbids the use of weapons calculated to cause unnecessary suffering. We found evidence that Israel used white phosphorus in extensively throughout its three-week offensive in a manner that led to numerous deaths and injuries. For example, Sabah Abu Halima, 45, lived in Beit Lahiya with her husband, seven boys, and one girl. It was midday and she and her entire family was home. Within minutes she felt her home shaking and missiles fell through the rooftop. She fell to the ground upon impact. When she looked up she saw her children burning.
Preventing Access to Medical and Humanitarian Aid
Under customary international humanitarian law, the wounded are protected persons and must receive the medical care and attention required by their conditions, to the fullest extent practicable and with the least possible delay. Parties to a conflict are required to ensure the unhindered movement of medical personnel and ambulances to carry out their duties and of wounded persons to access medical care. Speaking to medical workers and the family of victims, NLG delegates documented serious violations of this provision. Among the stories documented include:
Zaytoun neighborhood, which came under attack and invasion by ground foces on January 3, 2009. The Palestinian Red Crescent received 145 calls from Zaytoun for help, but were denied entry by Israel. Bashar Ahmed Murad, Director of Emergency Medical Services for the Palestinian Red Crescent Society told us that “a lot of people could have been saved, but hey weren’t given medical care by the Israelis, nor did the Israeli army allow Palestinian medical services in.” When paramedics were finally allowed to enter on January 7, Israeli forces only gave them a 3-hour “lull” to work and prohibited ambulances into the area. Instead they forced paramedics park the ambulances 2 kilometers away and enter the area on foot. Murad told delegation members how they had to pile the wounded on donkey carts and have the medical workers pull the carts in order to help the most people possible in the short time they were given. After the 3 hours were over, the Israeli army started shooting toward the ambulances. The Red Crescent was not able to reach that area again to evacuate the dead until January 17, 2009 when the Israeli army pulled out.
Al-Shurrab Family
On January 16th, Israeli forces shot at the jeep of Mohammed Shurrab, 64 years of age, and two of his sons, Kassab and Ibrahim, aged 28 and 18 as they were returning from their fields. Mohammad was shot in the left arm and Ibrahim was shot in the leg. The elder son, Kassab, sustained a fatal bullet wound to the chest, being shot multiple times after being ordered out of the car. Mohammad, bleeding from his wound, contacted the media, the International Committee of the Red Cross, and a number of NGOs via mobile phone in order to acquire medical assistance. Israeli forces denied medical relief agencies clearance to reach them until almost 24 hours after Mohammad, Ibrahim and Kassab had been shot. Earlier that morning, Ibrahim had succumbed to his wound and died. Mohammad Shurrab and his sons were shot during a so-called “lull” in Israeli ground operations, which Israeli forces had agreed to in order to allow humanitarian relief to enter and be distributed in the Gaza Strip. As such NLG delegates fail to see how this denial of medical access to the wounded Shurrab family could have been absolutely necessary and not simply arbitrary.
International humanitarian law also prohibits attacks on medical personnel, medical units and medical transports exclusively assigned to carry out medical functions. Delegate members saw ambulances seriously damaged and destroyed, some apparently deliberately crushed by Israeli tanks. The Palestinian Red Crescent Society and the Palestinian Ministry of Health informed delegates that 15 Palestinian medics were killed and 21 injured in the course of Israel’s assault.
Conclusions
This delegation is seriously concerned by our initial findings. We have found strong indications of violations of the laws of war and possible war crimes committed by Israel in the Gaza Strip. We are particularly concerned that most of the weapons that were found used in the December 27 assault on Gaza are US-made and supplied. We believe that Israel’s use of these weapons may constitute a violation of US law, and particularly the Foreign Assistance Act and the US Arms Export Control Act.
A report of our initial findings will be compiled and submitted to, among others, members of the United States Congress. We intend to push for an investigation by the United States government into possible violations by Israel of US law. We also hope to contribute our finding and efforts to other efforts by local and international lawyers to push for accountability against those found responsible for the egregious crimes that we have documented.

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Feb 10 2009 19:35 utc | 17

gideon levy has been a clear voice

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Feb 10 2009 19:39 utc | 18

the war parties win & i imagine netanyahu will lead a govt of so called national unity. the palestinians had no illussions because they are the ones who feel the heat of israels hatred
israel’s iranophobia is really pure fucking theatre
& israel must understand well – that their parliamentary processus is built on the dead bodies of palestinans. they knew. they know – they are all good germans

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Feb 10 2009 20:39 utc | 19

netanyahu – i will be the prime minister

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Feb 10 2009 20:44 utc | 20

constantly, the state of israel offers lessons on stability to the arab people in general & to palestinians particularly – yet for most of its life it has been completely unstable

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Feb 10 2009 21:49 utc | 21

iranically, it is iran who are the winners of this election because the hardening of the right is completely similar to the hardening of the right in south africa after soweto – yes the state became more murderous but in fact it was a sign of its weakness. power, which the mafia have studied well – is revealed to be hollow when you constantly have to use your deterrence strategy
thye state of israel is being delegitimised & the netanyahu – either as prime minister or foreign minister – government will delegitimise it even further. it will also reveal more nakedly the relation between u s imperialism & israel
it is going to be a more terrible time for the palestinians – wherever they are – there can be no question of that – that means all the people who came out into the streets aginst the assault on gaza must intensify their efforts – in disinvestment & sanction, economic, cultural & scholarly on israel
if these last years have taught us anything though is how inexpert are the so called experts – almost on any question. never has dialectics of study been more useful to sort through the shit that is spread upon us because in an epoch where events pass or seem to pass so quickly, it is in the details, the close details – where the truth(s) are fixed
& for this again we have to thank b

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Feb 10 2009 22:44 utc | 22

netanyahu is so corrupt even the judges he had in his pocket felt great discomfort in ‘acquitting’ him of bibery, theft & general corruption

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Feb 10 2009 22:58 utc | 23

breaking news :- aeiel sharon will serve as prime minister from his cot

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Feb 10 2009 23:42 utc | 24

Well, some countries appoint judges to office for life.
Ariel Sharon also has a lifetime synecure: Israel’s State Vegetable.
Kind of like Hummus is to Lebanon.

Posted by: Malooga | Feb 11 2009 2:59 utc | 25

Malooga-
Are you suggesting he’s a dip?

Posted by: David | Feb 11 2009 3:09 utc | 26

U.N. Chief Says Israel Is Blocking Most Gaza Aid

The human rights organization Amnesty International issued a statement criticizing Mr. Ban for being too timid on the extent of the inquiry.
Mr. Ban said at a news conference that the United Nations was trying to get relief supplies to nearly one million people daily, but that Israel was only allowing one border crossing to open, permitting trucks with supplies for only about 30,000 people to get through.
“We are experiencing serious difficulty in getting all the materials, humanitarian assistance, so it is absolutely necessary that they open the crossings,” said Mr. Ban, whose previous statements urging Israel to allow more aid into Gaza have been ignored. “I will continue to urge that.”
Irene Khan, the secretary general of Amnesty International, said that researchers had found compelling evidence of war crimes and other violations of international law committed during the three weeks of fighting that ended Jan. 18.

Posted by: b | Feb 11 2009 7:13 utc | 27

r’giap, thanks for all your posts, especially #17. The more documentation of Israeli atrocities, the better.

Posted by: Parviz | Feb 11 2009 10:05 utc | 28

christ, if they call kadima centrist then i suppose i am lavrentia beria
the more i study the results the darker the reality of it becomes
i think as annamissed has pointed out – that israel has taken the cheney bush construct of pure fucking evil as policy & extended upon it

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Feb 12 2009 2:37 utc | 29

these elections demonstrate that proportional representation may be better at expressing the will of the people, but when the will of the people is so completely misguided, the results are truly tragic.

Posted by: Malooga | Feb 12 2009 6:00 utc | 30

jean bricmont

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Feb 12 2009 18:39 utc | 31