Posted by Daniel Greenfield @ the Sultan Knish blog
(Editor's Note: Daniel Greenfield has a way with words and I've added highlights to emphasize his thoughts. But as you read this article please think of this in broader terms. Everything he's saying here is not just a problem with issues involving Israel - the points of courrption and duplicity he outlines are the source of all the problems we face. RK)
Here is how the pro-Israel theater works.
Every other country has its American embassy in its capital. Except Israel.
Every few years, Congress would bring up a bill or a resolution calling or even
mandating that the embassy be moved to Jerusalem. Even politicians not known
for their great love of the Jewish State would vote for it.
Some like Biden or Kerry would even sponsor them.
The bill would have a loophole allowing a president to waive it in the
interests of national security, which he always did, even when he had promised
to move the embassy to Jerusalem in his campaign.
The politicians were happy. The pro-Israel lobby got to justify its budget.
Some Jews however were baffled why the embassy never seemed to get moved.
A similar farce would play out on other issues like cutting off aid to the PLO.
There would be a bill and then a waiver and everyone would issue the appropriate
press releases. And terrorists would go on killing people and then getting paid
salaries with money provided by US taxpayers.
Iran's nukes are the acid test. This is the one that matters. It's the one that
activists are frantically fighting for.
But Congress is not about to override the White House on Iran, no more than it
wanted to on Jerusalem or the PLO. The Republicans certainly didn't want to be
put in the position where their vote against Iran might actually count. And
then Obama would blame them.
That's what the Iran Nuclear Review Act was for.
It sets up a grand theatrical production in which Republicans damage Democrats
by splitting the Jewish vote without any of it actually mattering. Everyone
gets to posture, to play their parts, not to get anything done, but to advance
their own careers.
Some Democrats will 'choose' Israel over Iran and win the undying affection of
Jews. Others will back Obama to the cheers of the left. The Republicans will
chortle over the split in the Dems. A few who know better, like Tom Cotton and
Ted Cruz, will grind their teeth at the betrayal.
AIPAC will once again nobly lose, while increasing its donations and
membership. The Republican Jewish Coalition will point to this as proof that
the GOP is more pro-Israel. J Street will use the number of Jewish Democrats
who defected to the Iran side as evidence that they won.
Obama will do what he intended to do all along. And all this will turn out to
have been the same hollow charade as the votes over recognizing Jerusalem as
Israel's capital or defunding the PLO.
The game is rigged. It's been rigged all along.
Some Congressmen really do believe in what they're doing. There are a few
"righteous men in Sodom", but for the most part Congress is a way of
moving money around, of making speeches without taking responsibility, of
making grand gestures that don't rock the boat.
The Republican Party is indeed more pro-Israel ideologically, but Republican
ideology is hypothetical. While the Democrats turn left, the Republicans turn
in circles. The left acts on its ideology, the right talks about it.
The most pro-Israel Democratic administration was LBJ's. The most anti-Israel
Democratic administration was Obama's. With a certain amount of wavering, the
trend between those two markers has been negative.
The most anti-Israel Republican administration was Eisenhower's. The most
pro-Israel was Bush II's. The trend here has mostly been positive.
But while there's no limit to how anti-Israel the Democrats can go, there is a
hard limit on how pro-Israel the Republicans can go. And Bush II was probably
it.
The pro-Israel politics of Republican presidents, like the rest of their
conservative ideological commitments, is more talk than reality. You can get a
Republican president to say nice things about Israel, small government, the
value of life, religious freedom and all that, but you can't get him to do
anything about it, like moving the embassy, ending the funding of terrorism or
ending the pressure on Israel to comply with assorted PLO demands. That and 5
bucks might get you a cup of coffee on Capitol Hill.
When I encourage Jews to go Republican, it's not because it will usher in a
glorious pro-Israel era. It's because being associated with a Democratic Party
dancing to the fiddle of the left is deeply corrosive. Being around the left is
damaging. It's a destructive movement that poisons everything it touches.
Especially people.
Maybe the GOP can become what it should be. We should certainly work toward
that. And the first step is to be realistic about what it is and what it does.
The Republican Party tells conservatives what they want to hear while taking
its marching orders from an infrastructure of advisers, experts and consultants
who urge it to implement the same old bad ideas while lying to the public.
That is how we got here in more ways than one.
Republican politicians want to win elections without changing anything. They
want to do the 'sensible' thing which means keeping up the status quo and not
rocking the boat. The only way to do that is by lying a lot.
Some Democrats, perversely the ones who actually have retained some sense of
right and wrong, are the same way.
So are most organizations. At the end of day everyone just wants to collect
their paycheck, put in the same hours they did yesterday following a familiar
work routine, and go home.
It's human nature.
Our enemies have taken advantage of that. They have taken over the system step
by step, by exploiting the apathy of the system in the traditional manner of
the left, be the first to show up, be the last to leave, organize, lie, aid
your comrades and drive out any form of opposition.
We have been lulled to sleep by the promises and lies of those we thought were
on our side.
If we're going to change anything, let's deal with these realities. There are
no easy solutions. Our friends have no appetite for a fight and our enemies
control the high ground. The cavalry isn't coming. We can change things as long
as we are determined to really shake things up.
And that means realizing that much of what we've been investing our energy in
has been theater, not truth. We can't change things until we stop letting
ourselves be fooled.
None of this means that we should stop fighting the Iran nuke deal.
The harder we fight it, the more significant it will be when the deal comes
apart. We don't want this to be another North Korea in which the opposition
goes down the memory hole. We need to be able to say that we fought this
disaster ever step of the way and called it out for what it was.
Because this is the beginning, not the end.
The deal is not impossible to stop. It's just impossible to stop playing by the
rules of the GOP and Democrats. It's impossible to stop by playing out a game
whose outcome was predetermined by Obama, the GOP and the Democrats. That game
was over before it started.
It is important for people to understand that. It's not just the Iran deal
where the outcome was known ahead of time. It's true for most pro-Israel
efforts in Congress that bump up against the two-state solution. It's true for
most conservative political efforts for that matter.
Playing that game makes lobbyists, consultants and politicians look good. And
we pay them and lose. Nothing will change until we make it clear that we
understand the game and that we want real change, not more theater. The left
didn't get its change by playing by the same old rules.
Neither will we.
Change happens when politicians recognize that they will be held accountable
and that their lies and games have been exposed. It happens when they are
forced to realize that the people not only see through them, but that they're
angry and their anger will impact their support and their opposition.
Everything else is business as usual. And business as usual is what got us here.
It's time for the lies to end and for the truth to be heard. It's time to end
the fake votes, the fake resolutions, the theater whose weekly productions
change, but whose theme is the same.
There are politicians who want to fight and politicians who want to appear to
be fighting. The latter have done more damage than any enemy by draining time
and energy, providing false reassurances and empty hopes. It's time to bring
the curtain down on their latest production in which a big chunk of Congress
walks away hiding a smirk after having pulled off its latest scam.
No comments:
Post a Comment