Showing posts with label State of Israel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label State of Israel. Show all posts

Friday, July 30, 2021

Message to Joe Biden and Kamala Harris Criticizing the State of Israel's Occupation of Palestine

      The following is a short message that I wrote to the Joe Biden / Kamala Harris White House on May 16th, 2021, as part of an effort to dissuade the administration from continuing to staunchly support Zionism and the illegal occupation of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.






     I request that the President and Vice President direct the Departments of Defense and Homeland Security, and the New York Police Department, to cease cooperation with, training of, and supply of armaments to, the apartheid regime of the State of Israel.

 

     Article I, Section 8, Clause 12 requires that appropriations for the army must be limited to two years at a time, so why do Israel and its military benefit from a ten-year aid package? This must be unconstitutional. $3.8 billion in taxpayer funds goes to Israel each year, and it needs to stop; private trade to Israel exceeds this amount and could easily replace those funds.

 

     I request that the Biden Administration direct the U.S. Ambassador to Israel, and the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, to review and respect the pertinent United Nations resolutions regarding the need to respect human rights, including the prohibitions against siege warfare, and against targeting journalists and public infrastructure.

 

     U.S.-made weapons are falling on the heads of Palestinian children, and it needs to stop.

 

     Please read this article I wrote about how the rights of Jews and Arabs can be respected in the Holy Land, with either a two-state solution, or a stateless solution based on communal autonomy and individual rights.

 

     http://aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2020/08/why-i-support-autonomy-for-palestinians.html

 

 

 

Original message written and delivered on May 16th, 2021

Introduction written on July 30th, 2021

Published on July 30th, 2021

Monday, August 17, 2020

Why I Support Autonomy, But Not Statehood, For Palestinians

Table of Contents



1. Autonomy, Not Statism

2. Democracy and Majority Rule as Potential Problems

3. Establishing Free Movement by Reviving the 1947 U.N. Plan

4. Why Communal Governance?

5. Ending Territorialism in Government

6. Conclusions








Content



1. Autonomy, Not Statism

     I don't support the creation of a Palestinian state, but I do support increased Palestinian autonomy (and, if possible, total Palestinian autonomy).
     However, the fact that I don't support statehood for the people of Palestine (the West Bank, the Gaza Strip, and the Golan Heights), is nothing against the Palestinians. It's just that I believe that political statism is a bad influence on governance, and makes it more likely that efforts to help the Palestinian people will result in episodes of violence.

     A political state is traditionally defined as an entity which is capable of wielding a credible monopoly on the legitimate use of force, violence, or coercion, within a given territory, in the pursuit of its legitimate political and legal goals and aims.
     Thus, the state intrinsically legitimizes violence, because by definition, the state cannot operate unless it uses legitimized forms of violence (i.e., war, and the police use of force to enforce laws). If the state stops using force, it ceases to be a state, and becomes a non-statist, non-violent governmental entity, which operates through persuasion, argumentation, debate, and keeping a wide range of non-violent resolution possibilities open.
     Basically, I don't want to risk turning what are now considered terrorist groups, into legitimate political entities.

     It's not that entities like Hamas and Hezbollah don't perhaps deserve to be considered legitimate governments - after all, Hamas and Fatah are real political parties, and Hamas and Hezbollah do protect people physically, provide military training for them, and provide them with aid, like an army or a humanitarian army would do - I would simply rather avoid legitimizing both 1) entities currently considered "terrorist groups" by the U.S. government, as well as  2) existing political states, in any way. To do so would be to risk further legitimizing political violence.
     And, to be honest, I don't want to risk legitimizing existing political states, by associating them with entities that provide actual aid, protection, shelter, and arms training, to the people who support them.
     If you look at the definition of the state, and compare it to the definition of a terrorist group, you will see that both of them use violence in order to achieve political goals, as part of their definitions. The only difference between them is that a political state has been successful at establishing lasting and well-defined borders.
     The fact that a group has begun to enforce laws and levy taxes, and claims that everyone in a certain area must follow those laws and pay those taxes, is what makes it a "legitimate political entity", but only because the form of political organization which is currently nearly universally accepted among the peoples of the world, is the model of the territorially contiguous, exclusive and monopolistic, centralized state. But the fact that such a group is successful at intimidating people and existing governments into respecting its authority, does not itself guarantee that a state's own subjects will not be terrorized by it, nor does it guarantee that the consent of the governed will be respected (when it comes to duly delegating authorities to the government from the people). Unless threats subside, as a way for the government to enforce its aims, the intimidation that the people feel due to their government's actions, will fester, and grow into revolutionary and insurrectionary movements.
     Government cannot fulfill its intended role of a civilizing influence on people, if it is busy legitimizing violence, as a matter of its everyday duties. That is why we need government to reject monopoly, the legitimization of violence, and territorialism: the most harmful features, as well as the key defining features, of the state. And, most importantly, we need to reject statism in government, whose practitioners (statists) use violence, threats, coercion, and pressure, as their routine tools of enforcement.
     We do not need more statism in the world, but we do need more autonomous regions, and we need localities to have more control over what happens in the regions. Therefore, I support autonomy for Palestinians, Catalonians, Scots, the people of Rojava, etc., but not statism.



2. Democracy and Majority Rule as Potential Problems

     If political division turns out to be a stumbling block to the establishment of a united Palestinian state, then a possible solution could be to make each of the three Palestinian regions - the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, and the Golan Heights - into its own state, or into its own autonomous zone.
     If each Palestinian area became a state, and the State of Israel continued to exist, then this could be termed "the Four-State Solution". But if each of the three Palestinian territories, and the Jewish territories, were each autonomous, that would be a stateless solution featuring four autonomous zones.
     I believe that autonomy of regions is a better solution than a democratic state, in terms of fostering the best representation, and the most freedom, for individuals and localities.

     The fact that the Gaza and the West Bank combined are politically divided, a Palestinian state, and majority rule within that potential state, would be likely to result in the political oppression of somewhere between 60-80% of the people. Given the fact that Hamas is more popular in Gaza, and Fatah is more popular in the West Bank, it's likely that a State of Palestine could result in divided government, gridlock, or even civil war. 
     About 40% of Palestinians support Hamas, 40% support Fatah, and 20% are monarchists. That's why the establishment of a Palestinian state would be tricky. If the West Bank, the Gaza Strip, and the Golan Heights, were to be united into a single Palestinian, state, then it would be difficult to pull off without oppressing at least 60% of the people.
     Think about it: If Fatah ruled, then the 40% of Palestinians who prefer Hamas and the 20% who prefer a monarchy might not feel represented. If Hamas ruled, the 60% who prefer either Fatah or a monarchy would not feel represented. If the monarchists ruled, then 80% of the people would not feel represented.
     It's possible that establishing a Palestinian state ruled by a Fatah-led majority coalition, or a Hamas-led majority coalition, could result in only "mild oppression" (by which I mean those who prefer other parties would be represented in government, but might not necessarily feel fully represented). Still, if they say they don't feel represented, then we should take them at their word, that they need better representation. Full, adequate and satisfied, and responsible representation - with as fully consensual and voluntary participation in government as possible, should be the goals.
     So should fully voluntary association and cooperation be the major goals of any and all negotiations between Hamas, Fatah, and the monarchists, and freedom of mutual aid to help people when governments cannot do so or refuse to do so.
     So should assurances that no minority group be oppressed, and that a government be created which is incapable of oppressing minority groups. Perhaps a high supermajoritarian threshold should need to be passed - like 80% or 90% - to ensure that the smallest voting bloc (the monarchists) are no more than 50% upset with whatever legislative change is occurring at any given moment.



3. Establishing Free Movement by Reviving the 1947 U.N. Plan

     Whether we pursue statism and sovereignty, and territorially contiguous and united polities (political entities) or not, in my opinion, we should turn to the original United Nations plan to divide the Holy Land, from 1947, for inspiration and guidance on resolving the Israeli-Arab Conflict.
     In that plan, the Jerusalem / Bethlehem area would have become a U.N.-protected international zone, with the remainder of the land being broken up into six sections (three of them parts of a Jewish state, shown in aquamarine; and three of them parts of an Arab state, shown in golden).







     I'd like to draw your attention to the two "four corners" points, one near Nazareth (labeled "North Four Corners" in the second image) and the other at north end of Gaza (labeled "South Four Corners").
     In each of those places, Israeli and Palestinian authorities could easily build a bridge over a tunnel, so that the two Palestinian corners connect through a tunnel, and the two Israeli corners connect through a bridge (or vice-versa).
     Free interior movement could have easily been established within the two states. Establish free interior movement in both states, and then open the borders up when it's safe enough. The Israeli/Palestinian borders could have been opened up - to allow free movement between Arab-majority and Jewish-majority areas - only when it would have become peaceful enough for both sides to consider do so in concert with each other.
      It's as easy as that! Perhaps it could have worked, if this detail about bridges and tunnels had been added to the U.N. plan. Adding a simple bridge-and-tunnel at those two locations could have changed history, and provided a new potential solution to providing freedom of travel in areas plagued by problems related to border disputes, enclaves and exclaves, and overlapping and overcomplicated jurisdictional boundaries.

     If the  United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine (of 1947, U.N. Resolution 181) could have been workable for people on both sites, then why was the plan rejected by the Palestinians? Because it would have allowed Jewish sovereignty in the homeland, which to them was intolerable, in any way, shape, or form.
     But can we blame them for not being able to tolerate this? It's not as if there are no Jewish people to whom Jewish sovereignty is tolerable! In fact, there are at least 18,000 rabbis in Brooklyn, and at least 100,000 Jews worldwide (perhaps even many more) who acknowledge that YHVH (G-d) is the sovereign of the Jewish people, not the Israeli state, nor the Israeli Armed Forces!
     [Note: For more information about criticism of Jewish sovereignty from a Jewish perspective, please watch Rabbi Yaakov Shapiro's speech at the Barclay's Center in Brooklyn, New York on June 11th, 2017, for more information, at the following link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcjO2nNz09k]
     This means that there can be a multi-faith solution that recognizes the equal and full human rights of both Jews and Arabs in the Holy Land, and doesn't involve the existence of a state of Israel. The fact that there are thousands of rabbis who reject Jewish sovereignty, means that there is no reason why rabbis and imams couldn't work together to solve this issue in a non-political context based on morality, human rights, and reaching an understanding across faiths.

     To be clear, I understand that there is already a limited form of Palestinian autonomy within the Israeli state; that is not what I am asking for. The degree of autonomy which the Palestinian Liberation Authority has, is so small that it is intolerable.
     For example, the Israelis refused to seat elected officials from the Hamas party in 2006. More Palestinian autonomy within the State of Israel might look good on paper, but it probably won't fully solve the problem, because the Palestinians would be left with something less than full sovereignty.

     The resolution to this conflict could involve a single-state Holy Land, with full autonomy for Jews in predominantly Jewish areas and communities, and full autonomy for Arabs and Muslims in predominantly Muslim communities. Such a plan, in my opinion, should involve Jewish autonomy, rather than statehood, and even then, only over areas which are designated parts of a "Jewish state" on the 1947 United Nations Partition Plan map.
     This would require the State of Israel to not only return to pre-1967 borders and give those lands to the new Palestinian authorities; it would require the State of Israel to give back additional lands (lands which are now situated near the State of Israel's boundaries with Gaza and the West Bank).

     Such a plan could also involve partial U.N. control. Perhaps the U.N. could administer Jerusalem, or the greater Jerusalem area. Perhaps the U.N. could guard only the external borders, providing the troops necessary to do so, while leaving Jews and Arabs to govern and protect Jerusalem jointly. 
     Another potential solution is that the U.N. could administer a joint capital city area, so as to allow both the Jews and the Palestinians to claim adjacent parts of Jerusalem as the capital "cities" (really, neighborhoods of Jerusalem, or multi-village groups of Jerusalem's suburbs).
     From those "capital cities", the autonomous zones or communities could be governed, as either centralized federations, or decentralized confederations, depending on what each group wants. I would recommend decentralized confederations of communities, so as to allow the maximum degree of autonomy.




4. Why Communal Governance?

     If the possibility of a United Nations -administered Jerusalem was not so far-fetched, then the idea of Jerusalem being run differently from the way other communities nearby are run, should not be considered so far-fetched. So, then, why shouldn't each community have a chance to govern itself – for the most part – autonomously?
     After all, the mode of governance which the Jewish people are supposed to be following, is that of the Sanhedrin, the courts of 23 rabbis in each community. Jerusalem's Sanhedrin is supposed to have 71 rabbis. Jewish law treats Jerusalem differently, but not because it is the “capital of the Jewish people”. The G-d of Abraham never designated Jerusalem any sort of “capital”. Instead, because it's a high-population city, and because it's considered a holy city. The point is that each community could govern itself, more or less, the way it wanted. That's libertarian communalism, a form of which is Bookchinism, the mode of governance currently being practiced in Rojava.
     Another reason why communal governance should be viewed as preferable to statism - as a solution to keeping Jews safe while they are in the Holy Land - is that political sovereignty, and such a thing as "a Jewish political entity" is not supposed to exist, until the Messiah (Mashiach) arrives. The covenant between G-d and the Jewish people was made when the people of Moses were in the desert; they had not yet arrived in the area now considered Israeli lands, and G-d's promises to the Jewish people were not conditional upon creating Jewish sovereignty, territorially contiguous government, political government, nor segregated living nor treatment favoring Jews.
     There is nothing in Judaism which requires Jews to practice segregation, or territorially contiguous government which requires all people in a given territory to submit to Jewish law. Jews can set up an eruv - a wire - to outline an area in which Jews will be free to carry items outside of their homes during Shabbat, but the eruv is only a symbolic boundary. Jewish definitions of what is public vs. what is private property, regarding eruvin, does not necessarily conform to the actual state of property ownership and territorially exclusive political entities which exist on the ground today. Furthermore, areas designated as part of the eruv do not include people's homes! So there is no reason why an Arab home or village could not exist -and even exercise full autonomy or sovereignty - right in the middle of a Jewish area.
     [Note: For more information about eruvs, see the following link: http://bigthink.com/strange-maps/615-the-eruv-a-jewish-quantum-state. This article calls the eruv "An interesting alternative to the territorial exclusivity claimed by many of the world's religions - and indeed nation states."]


An image taken from the article mentioned above.

Yellow = parts of the eruv

White squares and rectangles = people's homes
(and potentially, Arab homes inside of a Jewish community)



     Given these facts, is there any reason why we cannot, or should not, have statelessness and communal autonomy, with free travel and free movement of labor and capital, in the Holy Land? Absolutely not!
     The only potential problem is communities dealing with individuals who come to them to do harm. They must be dealt with on an individual basis, because collective punishment is a war crime, and because only individual human beings make decisions. They sometimes conspire to commit the same crimes, but still, you cannot blame an entire people for the crimes of one of them. Kristallnacht got started, and the Great Synagogue of Warsaw was set ablaze, because a single Jew shot an ambassador, and all Jews were blamed.
     We must not tolerate mass punishment, mass deportation, forced deportation, internal deportation, or deportation for work purposes; neither for Jews, nor for Palestinians, nor for any other human beings. We must find a way to end borders, and territorially contiguous governance (wherein the state dominates all and individuals have neither freedoms nor rights, but may only follow orders).





5. Ending Territorialism in Government

     Still, communal and regional autonomy only protect individual rights so much. Austrian social democrat and Marxist Otto Bauer proposed "National Personal Autonomy", which would enable each individual to file a form with a civil registry of their existing nation-state, notifying them as to which nation they would like to become a part of.
     Why do we even have territorially contiguous governance, when nearly all governments are capable of transporting goods and services to their subjects even when they're abroad, and considering that no reasonable person would choose to be protected by a nation whose infrastructure is too far away from him to provide him with any real protection?
     It is not necessary for governments to preclude people from membership (i.e., citizenship) solely based on their location, if that government is capable of delivering what it needs to deliver in order to make that person a citizen in full standing.
     [Note: To learn more about territorial governance, statism, and the critiques against them and possible solutions to them, look up topics like Panarchy, National Personal Autonomy, and Functional Overlapping and Competing Jurisdictions.]




6. Conclusions

     I should mention that I recognize and admit that I, as an American, should not talk about what another country should to do restore autonomy to oppressed people living within it, unless I also talk about similar problems in my own country. A country damages its own credibility in diplomatic negotiations, if it is guilty of the same crimes and human rights violations which it is trying to get other parties to those negotiations to take seriously.
     The United States of America, just as well as the State of Israel does to the Palestinians, needs to provide reparations to the Native Americans, and give them as much autonomy over their own affairs as possible. Additionally, the U.S. should decentralize, and afford more autonomy to communities, in the same manner which I have recommended that the political entities in the Holy Land decentralize. 
     I believe that decentralizing powers to the regions will not only help protect the rights of racial and ethnic minorities, but also that it will accelerate the process of delivering greater autonomy to under-served communities (which are not well connected to well-developed cities that have already-built infrastructures which are capable of sustaining and rapidly improving the local economies of such small towns which are in need).

     When considering possible solutions to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the wider Israeli-Arab conflict, we should not resign ourselves to believing that this is a millennia-old dispute that can never be solved.
     Political solutions can help solve this problem, if and only if "political solutions" ceases to mean "violent solutions". We need non-violent conflict resolution, and we need to let as many people as possible run their own lives, if we want these conflicts to end, without relying on too much supervision from the international community.
     But again, political solutions are not the only solutions which should be tried. There is still a chance for multi-faith negotiations to work, as long as parties to the negotiations focus on achieving mutual respect of holy places and burial sites, and keeping most of Jerusalem accessible to people of all faiths (except for those parts of Jerusalem and the Holy City which all parties involved will agree should be occasionally off-limits to certain groups of people on the basis of faith, in the interest of preventing riots and showing respect to pilgrims).

     What solution would you propose, to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict amicably, and to address the problem of the legitimacy of political violence?







Originally Written on July 19th, 2020
Edited, Expanded, and Published between August 17th and 19th, 2020

The title of the article has been changed several times.

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Thirty-Six Topics to Research Regarding Zionist Cooperation with Nazis and Anti-Semites

Table of Contents




Introduction

I. 1880s-1930s: Jewish Adoption of Zionism and Provocation of Anti-Semitism

II. Early 1930s: Jewish Consideration of Nazism

III. World War II: Deal-Making to Reduce Jewish Deaths and Deport Jews to Palestine

IV. Post- Israeli Independence (Post- 1947/1948): Judeophobic Zionism, Israeli Fascism, and Christian Zionism





Content



Introduction

     The following list consists of thirty-six topics which one should study if one wishes to learn the history of attempts by Zionists and Jewish people to cooperate, make deals with, or even collaborate with, Nazis and anti-Semites.
     I am publishing this list, not to criticize nor condemn the religion of Judaism, nor to condemn Jewish people. Nor do I wish to dismiss the rights of Jewish people to defend themselves when attacked, and to live where they please without harming others. Nor do I wish to pretend that Zionism and Nazism are the exact same ideology; I am only asserting that there is some overlap between the two ideologies.

    The purpose of this article is to explain that Jewish people have cooperated with Nazis and anti-Semites, but also that that cooperation has typically and primarily been done for the purposes of saving Jewish lives, and reducing harm and suffering experienced by Jewish people. Secondary goals of that cooperation were promoting Jewish emigration to Palestine, and establishing a Jewish national homeland (i.e., a state) there, goals which were thought to result in the primary goals of reducing Jewish deaths and suffering. 
     It is a terrible and unfortunate thing that Jewish Holocaust survivors, and other Jewish people, have thought it necessary to turn other Jews in to the authorities, in order to save their own families and themselves. But needless to say, those Jewish people cooperated with their captors only because they were under coercion and pressure. They did what they did out of desperation; from being forced into "cooperating with authority".
     The fact that they were under duress from their authoritarian government that wanted them dead, means that most "crimes" or "wrongs" that one Jew committed against another during that time, were likely done for the sake of each person's own individual survival, without consideration for the needs of others. It also means that some of them developed Stockholm Syndrome; they began to identify with their captors. Sometimes that is what happens when we are under other people's control; we justify the condition we're in, by taking genuine pity upon ourselves, and in doing so we identify with the pity which our captors have for us (which, unlike our own self-pity, is merciless and fraudulent).

     It is a sad thing that our concerns for other individuals break down when we are pitted against each other for survival; especially when we are forced to work for little reward, and worked to death. These were extenuating circumstances, and the fact that Jewish people were under coercion and slave-like conditions, should be considered a mitigating factor, when considering the actions taken by Holocaust survivors.
     This should go, both during the Holocaust itself, as well as afterwards, because survivors who fled Europe still risked arrest as illegal immigrants when they landed in Palestine.
     The Israeli Defense Forces were cobbled together out of three paramilitary groups, which would otherwise be considered terrorist groups, if not for a legal declaration of independence as a sovereign power by Israel in May 1948. Holocaust survivors who fled to Palestine only became "terrorists" because that's what they had to do in order to resist British attempts to limit immigration of Jewish refugees into what was then British Mandate Palestine.
     To quote comedian George Carlin, "One man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter."

     To be clear, what I am saying is that very little of what World War II -era Jews did to "cooperate" with the Nazis, should be construed as collaboration (which goes above and beyond cooperation). This is not to say, however, that no Jewish person has ever intentionally cooperated with anti-Semites and Nazis; some have.
     Even when Jewish cooperation with anti-Semites appears to be intentional (rather than accidental), it still may be accidental. Such cooperation has usually been motivated by: 1) a desire to set aside differences with anti-Semites and find some common goal that they can advance together, in order to reduce tensions (for example, anti-miscegenation, and assured deportation to Palestine); and/or 2) a perceived need to adopt anti-Jewishness in a limited manner (that is, to promote selective rejection of Jewish characteristics).
     The latter has usually been done in order to appease the Judeophobes whom are in charge of the political apparatus of the relevant host-nation. For example, some Western Jews, such as the early Zionist Ze'ev Jabotinsky, have practically adopted the European racists' ideas that the Ashkenazi Jews of Eastern Europe look "Asiatic" and ugly.

     Sometimes, however, Jews adopt anti-Semitism, in order to increase or exaggerate Jewish suffering, in order to make it more visible. The goal of this is to increase Jewish safety.
     It is easy to tell, from studying the stories of Theodor Herzl and Sarah Marshak, why Jewish people would want the suffering of Jewish people to be more noticeable.
     Herzl (see #3) sought to make this suffering more noticeable, by forging a sort of alliance with anti-Semites, saying "the anti-Semites will become our most dependable friends, the anti-Semitic countries our allies" and acknowledging that the Zionists' desire to leave Europe coincided with the European Christian anti-Semites' desire to be rid of the Jews.
     I do not say this in order to promote the idea that all exaggeration of Jewish suffering is staged, nor to promote the idea that all Jewish suffering is the result of faked or staged hate crimes. College student Sarah Marshak (#30) was accused of faking a hate crime after she drew swastikas on her own college dorm room door. But she only did this after someone else did it first - after the authorities failed to find the original vandal, and seemed to have given up on Marshak's case - a fact which was overlooked in reports about the vandalism.
     Marshak certainly exaggerated her victimization, and faked a crime and falsified a police report. But she did it because her previous victimization was being ignored; because the police had not yet found the perpetrator; the one who targeted her specifically, and possibly intended to hurt her. Marshak felt that she needed to manufacture another incident, in order to demonstrate to the police that the threat was still ongoing, rather than an isolated incident that they should treat as if it happened in the past.
     There is some similarity between the actions of Sarah Marshak and those of Theodor Herzl; both sought to increase the visibility of Jewish suffering. Herzl could have very well believed that what he was advocating was the course of action most conducive to increasing Jewish safety. But I feel confident in saying that what Sarah Marshak did was probably not as sinister as what Herzl had in mind.
     I wouldn't accuse Herzl of trying to promote anti-Jewish violence, but it's not unreasonable to ask whether Herzl would have considered limited violence against Jewish people (whatever that means) to be something conducive to his goals.

     Jewish collaboration and cooperation with - and appeasement of - Nazis, anti-Semites, and Judeophobes, happens, and has historically happened, for various reasons. What looks to one person like opportunism and betrayal, may look to another like doing what needs to be done to reduce suffering and to live another day.
     To some, the internment of Palestinians in the State of Israel - and Israel's wars with its neighbors - are intolerable, and could not possibly be justified by either the Holocaust nor the need to keep Jews safe in the present.
     But to the staunch defenders of Zionism, the need to protect "Israel" is so important, that the need to keep Jewish people safe, is subjugated to the need to promote the national security interests of the State of Israel and the Israeli Defense Forces. The needs of "Israel", meaning "the people of Israel", has been subverted to the needs of the State of Israel.
     That is why we must study the above explained and below listed topics, and that is why we must ask whether the militarism of the State of Israel is truly in the interests of the safety of Jewish people.
     We must ask whether the I.D.F. is protecting Jewish lives, or instead arming the enemies of Israel in order to provocateur attacks against Jewish people in order to justify increased military budgets and more lashing out disproportionately at Israel's enemies.
     Study of these topics are necessary; not only for preventing continued misguided, aggressive Israeli militarism in the name of "keeping Jews safe", but also for understanding how good people, and even Jewish people, can be tricked into complacency with fascism and anti-Semitism.
     America has been so eager to "protect Americans and American interests", in fact, that it has resorted to funding its enemies - and even arm and train them, and arm several of its enemies against one another - in order to provocateur them into committing attacks against Americans.
     The United States pretends the Iranians are preparing attacks against U.S. military bases, which could not be attacked by Iranians, if only they had never been set up in lands outside U.S. jurisdiction in the first place.
     In 2015, the United States sold weapons to terrorist groups in Syria and Ukraine. Senator Rand Paul voted for that weapons sale, but he apologized four years later, in 2019. Between 2015 and 2019, it was reported that the weapons sold to terrorist groups in Ukraine and Syria, were used to attack Israelis. The State of Israel, too, sold weapons to terrorist groups in Ukraine and Syria around the same time.
     Here is to the hope that the Israelis will stop emulating America in its penchant for selling weapons to enemies, and here is to the hope that Americans will stop emulating Israel's racist and illiberal surveillance and travel security policies.







I. 1880s-1930s: Jewish Adoption of Zionism and Provocation of Anti-Semitism

1. Frankish Jews (and the possible influence of Frankish Jewish ideas upon Adolf Hitler)

2. Racialized Marxism (incl. its possible influence on Hitler)

3. Theodor Herzl (founder of modern political Zionism; esp. on provoking anti-Semitism)

4. Vladimir Ze'ev Jabotinsky, and revisionist Zionism

5. Leo Frank (esp. racialized defenses of Frank which cast him and Jewish people as victims)







II. Early 1930s: Jewish Consideration of Nazism


6Claims that “Nazism” stood for “National Zionism” (esp. by Eustace Mullins)


7. The “Nazi / Zionist coin” which commemorated the journey of the Nazi Baron von Mildenstein to Palestine:
http://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn560259


8. Association of German National Jews (and Max Naumann, and Der Nationaldeutsche Jude)




9. German Vanguard (Der deutsche Vortrupp)




10. Joint approval, by Germans and Jews alike, of anti-miscegenation laws in Germany




11. Joseph Goebbels (esp. defense and support of Zionism, and incl. insinuations that Goebbels was Jewish based on his appearance)



12. Claims that Hitler and Alfred Rosenberg were Jewish (possible)




13. Claims that Dietrich Eckhart was Jewish (unlikely)




14. Gregor Strasser (non-Judeophobic left-N.S.D.A.P. leader; esp. views on Jews and Judaism, and relationship with anti-Semitic brother Otto Strasser)
III. World War II: Deal-Making to Reduce Jewish Deaths and Deport Jews to Palestine


15. 
Crystal Night by Rita Thalmann and Emmanuel Feinermann (esp. re: pre-Krystallnacht resistance of older Polish Jews towards criticism of the government's internal deportation and forced relocation policies; and also Nazis' gifts of cigarettes and small amounts of money to Jews who were being deported)


16Schindler's List (esp. depiction of deal-making to save Jewish lives in)


17. Nazis' support of deporting Jews to Palestine as something preferable to allowing them to go to other places (such as Poland, and Madagascar after the Madagascar Plan was abandoned)


18. British restrictions and limitations on Jewish emigration to Palestine, and British arrests of Jewish Holocaust survivors who fled to Palestine (see also British appeasement of Nazi Germany)


19
. Haavara Agreement
     http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/world-history/adolf-hitler-zionism-zionist-nazis-haavara-agreement-ken-livingstone-labour-antisemitism-row-a7009981.html


20. Zionist Federation of Germany / Zionist Federation of Germany (incl. its head, Max Bodenheimer)


21. Jewish Council(s) of Elders (
Altestenrat)
     http://yivoencyclopedia.org/article.aspx/Judenrate_and_Other_Representative_Bodies


22. Judenrat
     http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/judenrat-history


23. Rabbi Chaim Rumkowski (head of the Jewish Council of Elders of the Lodz Ghetto)

     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QBJZzu6YsMA


24. Jewish Ghetto Police
     http://yivoencyclopedia.org/article.aspx/Ghettos/Ghetto_Police

25. Use of alcohol and prostitution in concentration camps, by Nazis, to make Jews complacent and encourage cooperation (including forced prostitution of female prisoners to non-Jewish inmates)


26. Nazis permitted Jews to use money while interned in forced labor camps (incl. I.G. Farben's use of "prize-coupons", part of the "piece-work" program)

     http://www.topic.com/the-hidden-history-of-holocaust-money



IV. Post- Israeli Independence (Post- 1947/1948): Judeophobic Zionism, Israeli Fascism, and Christian Zionism


27. Incidences of dissociative amnesia, and especially Dissociative Identity Disorder (D.I.D., formerly known as Multiple Personality Disorder), among Jewish Holocaust survivors who experienced P.T.S.D. and had to hide out as non-Jews (especially those among them who were Germans and had to take on false identities as Germans or even Nazi sympathizers in order to survive without being outed as Jewish)



28. Christian Evangelical support for Zionism (including Rabbi Yaakov Shapiro's and comedian Bill Maher's comments on this topic)



29. Cessation of Israeli hunts for Nazi war criminals (before and after Menachem Begin's reign, and after Eichmann's death and other failed attempts to capture Nazis)




30. The Jewish "quarantine strategy" (regarding how to deal with Nazis who want to march in public)
http://aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2019/07/should-nazis-be-allowed-to-march-on.html


31. The Other Side: The Secret Relationship Between Nazism and Zionism by former Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas









34. Right-wing political Zionism and Israeli militarism (incl. sale of Israeli weapons to anti-Semitic Syrian and Ukrainian terrorists)











35. Rabbi Yaakov Shapiro's criticism of Jared Kushner over the likelihood that Kushner influenced Donald Trump to suggest in 2019 that Jewish-Americans should be protected under anti-discrimination laws which protect people based on nation of origin (Shapiro believes that this perpetuates the “Judaism is a nationality, not a religion” myth, and also the myth that “Jews are foreign nationals and dual citizens”, which enables anti-Semitism by legitimizing being suspicious of Jewish people's political allegiances).



36. Jews in Germany say wearing kippah is "unsafe", join party accused of supporting neo-Nazism
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IWEGNDPks3M&feature=youtu.be







For more information, read my previous articles on similar topics:


- The Relationship Between Adolf Hitler and Zionism”, written in December 2010 and published in April 2014:
https://aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2014/04/the-relationship-between-adolf-hitler.html


- “Sixty-Three Things That the State of Israel Has Done Wrong”, published in March 2019:
http://aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2019/03/sixty-one-things-that-state-of-israel.html
(especially the section “
What Israel Has Done Wrong to its Own People (Jews and Israelis) and to Judaism”)







Compiled, Written, and Published on February 26th, 2020
Edited and Expanded on February 28th, 2020
Links Added on March 13th, 2020

Monday, November 30, 2015

Trump Doubles Down on "Arabs Celebrating 9/11" Claims





            It’s like Alexander Stille said (although the quote has been misattributed to Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels): “If you repeat a lie often enough, people will believe it, and you will even come to believe it yourself.”
            Such is the case with the claim that Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has been repeating over the last week and a half; the claim that hundreds or perhaps even thousands of Muslims were seen in northern New Jersey on September 11th, 2001, celebrating the attacks.

            In recent interviews with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos, and Chuck Todd of CBS’s Meet the Press, Trump has stated that in either Jersey City or Paterson, the town’s Muslim and Arab populations were shown on television, in tailgate-style parties, celebrating the terrorist attack which brought down the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center.
On ABC’s This Week, Trump told Stephanopoulos, “There were people that were cheering on the other side of New Jersey, where you have large Arab populations. They were cheering as the World Trade Center came down”, continuing, “It was well covered at the time”. Trump says he has a clear memory of this, and that many people agree with him, and remember the same thing.
The Anti-Defamation League called Trump’s comments “irresponsible” and “factually challenged”. Chuck Todd responded that Trump has no evidence of this, and that all he has to go on is “re-tweets” and “hear-say”. Stephanopoulos told Trump that the police said it didn’t happen. However, Trump has refused to back down on the claim, and has even doubled down, asking “Why couldn’t it have happened?”. This is certainly no rational scientific basis for proof.
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, former New York Governor George Pataki, and Florida Senator Marco Rubio – all Republican candidates in the 2016 race for the presidency – have asserted that no such thing happened. To date, Trump has not been able to provide any evidence supporting this claim, although he claims that the Washington Post reported it.

Although it is true that Paterson and Jersey City do have sizable Muslim populations (Paterson has 25 or 30 thousand, and Jersey City has 10,000) – and although it is also true that some 1,100 foreigners were arrested in the United States in the days after the attacks (mostly from Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, and Egypt) – it is fair to say that Trump might be confused.
While many Americans remember seeing televised of images of foreigners celebrating 9/11, those images were of foreigners in foreign countries. Also, it is not clear whether the images were filmed immediately following 9/11, or instead simply footage of Muslims chanting “death to America”, filmed before the attacks.
What seems more likely than what Trump and his supporters seem to remember, is that they have mixed-together in their minds, the images of foreigners overseas celebrating, with what they heard from reports of people appearing to be Arabs seen celebrating the attacks in northern New Jersey.

Shortly after 8:46 A.M. on September 11th, 2001 – right after the first tower was struck by a plane – a homemaker, identifying herself only as “Maria”, living near Liberty State Park in Jersey City, called the police. She reported seeing three men sitting on top of a white Chevrolet van, which was parked on the roof of the rear parking lot of The Doric Apartments in adjacent Union City, near a waterfront park.
The men were videotaping the smoldering tower, smiling, laughing, cheering, dancing, giving each other high-fives, and posing for pictures. “Maria” wrote down the van’s license plate, and called the police, saying that they were wearing Arab dress, and that she thought the men were Palestinians. She later said “they didn’t look shocked”.
At 3:30 P.M. that day, a B.O.L.O. (“Be On Look-Out”) bulletin was issued to police regarding the call. Around 4 P.M., in the nearby city of East Rutherford, New Jersey Police Officer Scott deCarlo and Sergeant Dennis Rivelli pulled over a vehicle – a box truck – on Route 3 / Route 120, near the former site of the New York Giants Stadium. The five occupants refused to exit their vehicle when instructed, so the officers pointed their firearms at them.
The occupants – Paul Kurzberg, Sivan Kurzberg, Oded Ellner, Omer Marmari, and Yaron Shmuel – were all men in their twenties, and were Israeli citizens who had admittedly served in the Israeli military. In their possession were foreign passports (one man had both an Israeli and a German passport), maps of the New York City area with routes highlighted, socks containing $4,700 in cash.
During the arrest, one of the men was reported to have said “We are not your enemy”, and according to some reports, continued, “the Palestinians are your enemy.” One of the men had booked a flight to Thailand for September 13th.
The men were held in a federal prison in Brooklyn, spending 71 days in custody, until they were released around Thanksgiving of 2001. The men were questioned; one of the men refused to take polygraph tests, while tests were administered to at least two of them.
The white Chevrolet van that the men were driving was owned by their boss, Dominic Otto Suter, the owner of moving company Urban Moving Systems. The company – based in Bayonne, New Jersey – was located at 3 18th Street in Weehawken, right across the Hudson River from lower Manhattan, the location of the World Trade Center.
On September 14th, 2001, Suter left the United States, leaving nobody acting as the company’s agent. He later returned to the U.S., confident that he would never face prosecution. On June 22nd, 2001 – three months before the attacks – the company received $498,750 from the U.S. Federal Government Assistance Program, an arm of the Small Business Administration. The company’s warehouse was later raided by the F.B.I..
Urban Moving Systems has been alleged to be a front for the Israeli Institute for Intelligence and Special Tasks, commonly known as M.O.S.S.A.D., the State of Israel’s military intelligence agency. While the five men were being held in federal prison, their families were asked to stay quiet, and their parents enlisted the help of then New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and then- Mayor of Jerusalem Ehud Olmert (who later became the Prime Minister of the State of Israel) for assistance with the case.
Steve Gordon was hired as the men’s attorney in the United States, and Ram Horvitz was hired as their attorney in Israel. Alan Dershowitz also negotiated with the U.S. government on their behalf.
In November 2001, three of the five men later appeared on an Israeli television talk show, and one of them said "our purpose was to document the event", a statement which arguably suggests they had foreknowledge of the attacks. The same man said that the five were questioned regarding their possible connection to M.O.S.S.A.D..
On June 21st, 2002, Barbara Walters reported the story on 20/20, although a video of the report cannot be easily found online.

Additionally, on September 12th, 2001, at noon, another Urban Moving Systems van was directed to pull over into a rest stop. The vehicle was traveling east on I-80 near the town of York in northern Pennsylvania. The occupants, Roy Barak and Motti Butbul, were charged with having a broken turn signal and a missing fire extinguisher. A box cutter, or multiple box cutters, was found in the truck.
Both men were fingerprinted and photographed, and were incarcerated in York for nearly two months. Barak spent his first week in a cell, and his second in solitary confinement. Barak, a former paratrooper, was given two polygraph tests, and was found to have overstayed a six-month visa in the U.S.. Butbul, a former cook, declined to be interviewed, and was found to have no work permit. Both men, like the five arrested in New Jersey, were Israeli citizens in their 20s. Both men were deported to Israel on November 9th, 2001.

Out of 1,100 foreigners arrested in the days and months following the 9/11 attacks, sixty of them were Israelis, according to U.S. sources. However, according to Israel’s Foreign Ministry, between 90 and 100 were Israelis. The Washington Post reported in late 2001 that thirteen of the people arrested by federal authorities in connection to the attacks were from northern New Jersey.
Then- Secretary of State Colin Powell admitted that Israelis were arrested. Furthermore, in December 2001, a four-part series on FOX News, reported by Brit Hume and Carl Cameron, uncovered more Israeli connections to 9/11, including allegations that Israeli agents posed as art students in Florida, and toy salesmen in American malls.
These facts come in addition to reports that a van full of explosives was pulled over on or near the George Washington Bridge on the day of the attacks, and that a van bearing an image of the Twin Towers on fire was also seen in New York City soon after the attacks.
It is not easy to tell whether these vans were one and the same, but there exists an image of a white van, with a mural painted on its left side, depicting the two towers, with one of them being struck by a plane, and at the top, the words “Urban Moving Systems Incorporated.” Some have pointed out that the word “M.O.S.S.A.D.” (the Israeli equivalent of the C.I.A.) can be found in the name of the company: “urban MOving SystemS incorporAteD”. This adds (ahem) jet fuel to the possibility that Urban Moving Systems was a front for M.O.S.S.A.D..

            It has been said that the outcome of America’s future lies in the country’s response to “Who did 9/11?”.
Although Donald Trump’s supporters tend to be hard-core nationalists and protectionists who oppose political corruption – and, therefore, would be likely to respond with outrage when presented with information that members of any nation were seen celebrating the attacks – Trump’s open admission that his money fuels that corruption (and his past statements that “We love Israel”, and prefers to have his accounting done by “funny little guys in tiny little hats”) seem to assure that his statements about seeing Muslims celebrating 9/11 in northern New Jersey, will most likely not undergo the thorough investigation they deserve.
But if Trump or his people do happen to stumble upon the “dancing Israelis” story – as it is “popularly” known, at least among the 9/11 Truth community – the chances are high that the story will be ignored by mainstream media, and that the Anti-Defamation League would continue to condemn any statements by Trump suggesting an Israeli role in the attacks.



Written on November 30th and December 1st, 2015


Edited on February 8th and 10th, 2016,
and May 24th, 2019

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