T. Belman: Democracy started out as be the will of the majority.Starting in the seventies The will of the majority was limited just as the Magna Carta limited the right of Kings, by the embrace of what amounts to a Bill of Rights. Israel’s Basic Law requiring “dignity” now overrides everything that liberal judges think it should. This law is used to suppress any laws that place a higher or even equal value on National rights over human rights as if the two are in conflict. But even if they are in conflict what’s wrong with Israel protecting the character of Israel as being Jewish. Is this not what national liberation is all about. The Palestinians can want an Arab state free of Jews and no one says boo.
Secondly, whereas liberal democracy may work in America for now, it is causing great conflict in Europe. Muslims in Europe want to change the culture from a secular democracy to one dominated by Sharia and liberal democracy enables such a transformation. Is this democracy? Israel is in the ME where different norms apply and where existential dangers lurk on all sides. In an area where all states are Islamic states, Israel being a Jewish state is a necessity. In fact it is necessary to be so to survive. The left feel that it is not important to survive as Jewish so they want Israel to be a state of all its citizens.
Israel is not able to declare, simply and unambiguously, that Israel is the nation state of the Jewish people. We feel bound to declare, with equal emphasis, that Israel is a democratic state. Maybe even more than equal. We have a great deal of trouble defining what “Jewish” means and it is a source of confusion and even rancor. But “democratic” seems to be something that no Israeli needs explained. It’s just one of those things that “everyone knows.”
Well, pardon me for being so dense, but although I have lived in this country for more than thirty years and practiced law here for more than twenty eight of them, I do not know what Israelis mean by “democratic.” Simple law professor that I am, the exact meaning eludes me.
In the government, the most vociferous devotees of the democratic character of the state are Justice Minister Tsipi Livni and Finance Minister Yair Lapid. Looking to them should shed light on the meaning.
Livni champions human rights with great fervor. Among other things, she has protected African “migrants” who have entered the country illegally.
She also supports the “Israel HaYom Law,” to prevent Sheldon Adelson from disseminating a newspaper for free because that would tend to depress sales of competing papers and, in addition, she states that Israel HaYom is just right wing and specifically pro-Netanyahu “propaganda.” In a democracy, it is the citizens who should decide what is “propaganda,” not the government.
Furthermore, it does not trouble her that the citizens are forced to subsidize Israel Broadcasting Authority, which is firmly entrenched in the hands of the “left” and disseminates views that most voters consistently vote against. How is it democratic to force us to finance propaganda we do not agree with and to suppress views that the government decides is propaganda?
Tsippi Livni has been Justice Minister before, during the “Disengagement” from Gush Katif and four villages in the northern Shomron. Thousands of families were uprooted from their homes and farms and businesses and dispossessed. In the course of the public controversy, people opposed to the “disengagement” used to charter buses and go into the Center of the country to explain to people the likely results of the expulsion and to persuade people to oppose it. Justice Minister Livni had the police stop the buses and prevent the citizens from proceeding. She denied peaceful citizens who were engaged lawfully in the democratic process their freedom of movement and freedom of speech, the most basic elements of the democratic process.
On the other hand, she has opposed laws requiring disclosure of financing that Israeli NGO’s receive from foreign interests, especially foreign governments. So we are to understand that it is consistent with the Israeli notion of democracy that the government protect hostile foreign governments from mere disclosure of their participation in the democratic process in Israel but Sheldon Adelson’s participation in the Israeli political process should be curtailed. Is that democracy? Seems so, according to Tsippi Livni.
A case was brought before the High Court of Justice to block the Gush Katif-northern Shomron expulsion and confiscation. The government argued that it was necessary for the purpose of making peace with our enemies. The court recognized that the expulsion constituted a violation of those citizens’ human rights but permitted it anyway, ruling that high state policy requirements took precedence. That is a human rights doctrine that any despicable, bloody tyrant could endorse enthusiastically.
The unilateral and unconditional evacuation of southern Lebanon, for peace, had already happened and had already resulted in its takeover by Hezbollah. Did Justice Minister Livni and the rest of the cabinet really believe that the evacuation of the Gaza strip would lead to peace? The government’s lawyers solemnly averred that they did and the judges solemnly declared that they believed it.
People are deemed to have human rights solely because they are human. If the Supreme Court can take those away, what rights are safe in Israeli democracy? Tsippi Livni defends the Supreme Court against all criticism, calling it a pillar of democracy.
Yair Lapid was a television newscaster and journalist at that same time. He avidly supported the expulsion. In particular, he wrote an exceedingly divisive editorial against the “settlers” who opposed it. He warned that if they prevent Disengagement, “…our last chance to live normal lives,” the rest of the country would hate them and might even refuse to defend them. Right.
When it all blew up in Israel’s face, however, Lapid let the cat out of the bag. It was never about peace. That was all lies. Nor was it about the soldiers having to defend the “settlers” who had defeated the clear chance for peace. All lies.
The real reason for expulsion of Jewish citizens and the destruction of Jewish towns was to destroy the lives of the hated “settlers,” to break them, to teach them “a lesson in humility and perhaps in democracy too..” (Yair Lapid, “Things we couldn’t say during disengagement,” Yediot Aharonot 24.6.05. Read it at http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3315071,00.html.)
“Democracy?” What does it mean?
In fact, Lapid told the truth on that occasion. Everything about the expulsion had been meticulously planned, organized and rehearsed. Are we to believe that only the resettlement and rehabilitation of the settlers was not? To this day, nine years later, many of those families, maybe most, are still not permanently resettled and rehabilitated. Clearly, that too was planned meticulously, including the lies about all of them being in 5-star hotels with four hundred thousand dollars in their pockets. The hated settlers were to be banished and broken, their lives destroyed. That was the plan and that was the purpose.
In the Israeli system, where do citizens get rights? “Everyone knows” that we have these rights but what is their source? It appears clearly to be a gift bestowed by the government which the government can take back if it can invent a reason that sounds important enough, whether true or not. The government giveth and the government taketh away.
That is not Democracy. That’s DeMockracy.
The Jews have the right to a state in this Land not because of the devotion of the Jewish people to democracy but only because they are Jews. Iceland is also democratic. By unanimous vote, the League of Nations implicitly recognized the Jewish people as the long exiled indigenous inhabitants of this land. The preamble to The Palestine Mandate (http://avalon.law.yale.edu/20th_century/palmanda.asp) speaks of “the historical connection of the Jewish people with Palestine” as the “grounds for reconstituting their national home in that country.” (Note, “reconstituting.”) The Mandate says nothing about democracy.
The Jews have been the teachers of humanity for four thousand years. We have taught the world justice, morality and peace according to the Torah, also known as the Hebrew Bible. Are we going to relegate that to no better than equality with DeMockracy? From Zion will come the word of DeMockracy according to Livni, Lapid and the Israeli Supreme Court? Is that really why the State of Israel exists? Is that really what it is?
Read more: What Exactly Are These “Democratic Principles”? | Ya’akov Golbert | The Blogs | The Times of Israel
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Here’s the actual Lapid article, Oct 15, 2006: “Things we couldn’t say during disengagement”
@ yamit82:
I thought about that today. Your prediction that is. Uncanny so accurate, to the day.
Lieberman is out there meandering between meretz and Lapidism. I do not know why he went bunk.
@ Yidvocate:
Every act of Terrorism will add mandates to the right. Lieberman has lost his agenda to Bennett and has no place to go. I see him as the biggest loser in coming elections 🙂
@ SHmuel HaLevi 2:
I agree and I called Election by December…. Boy am I smart or prescient??? 🙂
BB brought in Livni and bennett brought in Lapid…both acted as political personal opportunists.
Its amazing that someone could prove so incredibly and irrefutably wrong and still get elected to ANY position.
an evil destroyer of peoples lives should be made to pay for his crimes. His incitement did not bring them genocide but did destroy their lives. If incitement to geonocide can bring capital punishment then incitement to destroy everything a people have should be punishable by a long term in prison. In my view Lapid is a despicable criminal deserving of a merciless prosecution. Only a Pinochet could restore the balance of justice here.
As for Livni, a similar deserving punishment. I believe she is an opportunist paid to represent foreign interests, a mole.
Israel’s claim to Eretz Yisrael has absolutely no legitimacy other than as the Jewish state. It’s that simple. A Jewish state that adheres to democratic principles, fine, but there should never be any tension between the two principles as the Jewishness must always take precedence. We didn’t persevere with all the atrocities through the ages to return to our democratic state!
@ NormanF:
Mr. Netanyahu was aware for some time of the typically Peresite styled undercutting, sabotage by the duo Livni and Lapid. He chose not to act for a while and in retrospect he did so correctly.
By pulling the trap door upon the plotters now, he has placed himself and a new coalition in a far stronger position when Mr. Obama will turn lame duck.
Now we will know if he really has what it takes to do Iran, cut down the local Islamics and build in our Land.
He has timed his counter move very well indeed.
It appears Netanyahu and Bennett have repaired their rift. Bayit Yehudi should be in a far stronger position in the next Knesset and we could see that lead to the end of the de facto building freeze in Judea and Samaria and Jerusalem. Plus, the next government will certainly pass a far stronger version of the Jewish State Law the Israeli Left opposed.
Netanyahu is going to get a fourth term as Prime Minister and only Ben Gurion pulled off the feat but he was in and out of government once in the 1950s.
Finally, given Arab intransigence and terrorism, the Oslo peace process is dead.
Excellent article. The subject treatment by Jack is precise, articulate. The coincidence of its publication and the firing by Mr. Netanyahu of both Livni and Lapid is a very good omen. I hope that Mr. Netanyahu is not using the occasion as another platform to deceive.