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  • Opinion | Trump’s Gaza Deal: War Crimes in Exchange for Beachfront Property


    Trump’s proposition, the pundit Amit Segal said on Israel’s Channel 12, is “not 100 percent what Netanyahu wants — it’s 200 percent.” Until now, Israeli politicians who publicly discussed such ideas risked American blowback. Joe Biden’s administration was shamefully unwilling to restrain Netanyahu, but it did rebuke far-right Israeli ministers when they fantasized about building Jewish settlements in Gaza. The Palestinians, Biden’s secretary of state, Antony Blinken, said last year, “cannot, and they must not, be pressed to leave Gaza.” Netanyahu had to at least pretend to agree, insisting that it wasn’t “realistic” to talk about settling Gaza.

    It might seem more realistic to him now. On Thursday, Trump wrote on Truth Social, his social media site, “The Gaza Strip would be turned over to the United States by Israel at the conclusion of fighting,” after Palestinians had “already been resettled in far safer and more beautiful communities, with new and modern homes, in the region.” Never mind that under the terms of the cease-fire he takes credit for, fighting is supposed to be over now. Trump seems to be offering Israel a deal: The U.S. will countenance the ethnic cleansing of Gaza so long as America gets a prime piece of oceanfront property at the end of it.

    So far, of course, both Israel and the United States have spoken of the removal of Palestinians from Gaza as if it would be voluntary. No doubt some Palestinians would choose to leave the land that Israel has made uninhabitable if they had a decent alternative, which they don’t. (One Israeli news site reported that among the destinations being considered for Palestinians are Puntland and Somaliland, two regions of Somalia.) But many of the enclave’s nearly more than two million people, seared by a history of dispossession, are determined to stay put. Driving them out would be a war crime. It could not be accomplished without atrocity.

    Republicans may brush off Trump’s words as nothing but audacious spitballing, but by opening the door to a Gaza without Palestinians, Trump has already made the world more brutal and unstable. Right now, Israel and Hamas are supposed to be negotiating Phase 2 of their cease-fire agreement, which is meant to lead to a permanent cessation of fighting, the release of the remaining live hostages, and the withdrawal of Israeli forces. But the Israeli delegation has yet to leave for Qatar to participate in talks, and now Trump has removed an important incentive for Hamas to set the hostages free. Why would Hamas release them, asked Samuel Heilman in The Times of Israel, “when at the end of the process they will neither have control of Gaza back nor any hope of a Palestinian sovereign state?”

    There’s an idea floating around that even if Trump’s plan is unworkable, he deserves credit for recognizing that the status quo is untenable. “Trump picks up on a real problem, about how to reconstruct Gaza,” the British academic Lawrence Freedman told The New York Times. But there’s nothing admirable about tossing off absurd and impossible solutions to intractable dilemmas. If smart people are convincing themselves otherwise, it suggests to me a desperation to find rationality where there is none.



    In recent news, President Trump has announced a controversial deal regarding the Gaza Strip that has sparked outrage and condemnation from human rights organizations around the world. The deal, which involves the exchange of beachfront property in Gaza for what many are calling war crimes, has been met with skepticism and concern.

    Critics of the deal argue that it sets a dangerous precedent for international diplomacy, as it essentially rewards and legitimizes the use of violence and human rights abuses as a means to achieve political goals. By offering beachfront property in exchange for committing war crimes, President Trump is sending a dangerous message that such actions will be tolerated and even rewarded on the world stage.

    Furthermore, this deal undermines the rights and dignity of the Palestinian people, who have long been subjected to violence and oppression at the hands of the Israeli government. By condoning and rewarding such actions, the Trump administration is complicit in perpetuating the cycle of violence and injustice that has plagued the region for decades.

    It is crucial that the international community condemns this deal and holds all parties accountable for their actions. We cannot allow war crimes to be used as bargaining chips in political negotiations, and we must stand up for the rights and dignity of all people, regardless of their nationality or political affiliation.

    In conclusion, President Trump’s Gaza deal is a dangerous and reckless move that only serves to further destabilize the region and perpetuate human rights abuses. It is imperative that we speak out against this deal and demand justice for the Palestinian people who have suffered for far too long.

    Tags:

    1. Trump Gaza deal
    2. War crimes exchange
    3. Beachfront property
    4. Middle East conflict
    5. United States foreign policy
    6. Gaza Strip agreement
    7. Human rights violations
    8. International relations
    9. Trump administration decisions
    10. Palestinian rights

    #Opinion #Trumps #Gaza #Deal #War #Crimes #Exchange #Beachfront #Property

  • A much-deserved ‘thank you’ to Sen. Mitch McConnell | WADHAMS | Opinion








    032723-cp-web-oped-Wadhams-1

    Dick Wadhams


    For most of U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell’s 18-year tenure as the Senate Republican Leader, he was vilified as an “establishment” do-nothing by Tea Party and MAGA activists.

    Throughout that time, whether he was the minority leader or the majority leader, he was the master of Senate rules who did seek compromise with Democrats when he needed to get something passed. But he also was a fierce partisan who took no prisoners on the Senate floor or in Senate races across the nation.

    McConnell epitomized the saying by an unknown ancient philosopher “politics ain’t bean bag.”

    After Republicans won a solid Senate majority of 53-47 in 2024, McConnell stepped down as the Republican leader. He is the longest serving Senate leader in history. 

    During those 18 years, he served twice as Senate minority leader from 2007 to 2015 and from 2021 to 2025, and he was Senate Majority Leader from 2015 to 2021.

    If there was one thing that united both Senate Democrats and many conservative activists was their frustration with McConnell’s leadership style — but for much different reasons. Senate Democrats were often flummoxed by his mastery of arcane Senate rules that made him a formidable partisan foe on the Senate floor. Ironically, conservative activists thought he was too accommodating to Senate Democrats and did not fight hard enough.

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    Nothing defines McConnell’s effectiveness and steely resolve as majority leader more than what happened when U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia suddenly died in February 2016.

    President Barack Obama, in his final year as president, quickly nominated Merrick Garland, who served on the Washington, D.C. Court of Appeals, to succeed Scalia. Obama described Garland as a moderate judge who should be agreeable to both parties.

    Majority Leader McConnell made it clear to Obama there would be no action in the Senate on the Garland nomination during the heated 2016 presidential election year. He said the American people needed to have a say in who would replace Scalia by electing a new president to succeed the term-limited Obama, and the new president then could put forth a new nomination in 2017.

    Democrats howled, but McConnell remained firm and unmoved. The Garland nomination died on the Senate vine when Donald Trump was elected president in 2016, which allowed him to nominate Neil Gorsuch in 2017 who was serving on the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver.

    McConnell went on to get 235 federal judges confirmed who were nominated by President Trump, including two more Supreme Court justices, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett, which created a 6-3 conservative court majority.

    But it all started with McConnell’s hardball on the Senate floor keeping the Scalia seat open throughout 2016. Had Hillary Clinton defeated Trump in 2016, she would have filled all three of those open seats on the court. As is often said, elections do have consequences.

    In conjunction with the Republican speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, Paul Ryan, McConnell moved Trump’s landmark tax-cut legislation into law.

    Trump had no more prominent or effective an ally than McConnell when it came to getting judges approved and legislation passed, but their relationship eventually broke down over Trump’s behavior during the Jan. 6, 2021, violent attack on the U.S. Capitol and Trump’s obsession the 2020 election was fraudulent and stolen from him.

    Beyond his leadership in the Senate, McConnell was just as effective in helping to elect other Republicans to the Senate. Before he became the Republican leader, he chaired the National Republican Senatorial Committee whose sole reason to exist is to help elect Republicans.

    More often than not, Republican candidates who lost during McConnell’s tenure were outside the mainstream of their states and squandered winnable races. Who can forget the Republican candidate who had to declare “I am not a witch” or the one who talked about “legitimate rape.”

    When former U.S. Rep. John Thune, who lost a Senate election in 2002, decided to challenge the formidable Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle in South Dakota in 2004, there was doubt among many Republicans in Washington, D.C. Thune could win. They felt he could only keep the race close and prevent Daschle from raising money for other Democratic candidates around the nation.

    McConnell was the assistant Republican leader in 2004, and he strongly believed Thune could win and devoted himself to that cause along with Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist at the time.

    McConnell was right. Thune upset Daschle, which was the first time a Senate leader was defeated for reelection in 52 years. McConnell’s support was no small part of that victory.

    Ironically, McConnell’s leadership successor is now Senate Majority Leader John Thune.

    Thank you, Sen. Mitch McConnell.

    Dick Wadhams is a former Colorado Republican state chairman who managed campaigns for U.S. Sens. Hank Brown and Wayne Allard, and Gov. Bill Owens.  He was campaign manager for U.S. Senate Majority Leader John Thune in 2004.



    As we reflect on the achievements and progress made in recent years, it’s important to acknowledge the role that Sen. Mitch McConnell has played in shaping our nation’s future. Throughout his time in office, Sen. McConnell has demonstrated strong leadership, unwavering dedication, and a commitment to serving the American people.

    From pushing through crucial legislation to advocating for important causes, Sen. McConnell has proven time and time again that he is a true statesman who puts the needs of his constituents first. His tireless efforts have helped to improve our economy, strengthen our national security, and protect our values and freedoms.

    On behalf of all Americans, we want to extend a much-deserved ‘thank you’ to Sen. McConnell for his service and dedication to our country. Your hard work and perseverance have not gone unnoticed, and we are grateful for all that you have done to make America a better place.

    Thank you, Sen. McConnell, for your leadership, your integrity, and your unwavering commitment to the American people. We are truly fortunate to have you representing us in the Senate, and we look forward to seeing the great things that you will continue to accomplish in the years to come.

    Tags:

    Mitch McConnell, thank you, WADHAMS, Opinion, Senator, appreciation, gratitude, political, leadership, acknowledgment, recognition, government, Washington DC

    #muchdeserved #Sen #Mitch #McConnell #WADHAMS #Opinion

  • Opinion | Kash Patel Is a Warning Shot


    Two F.B.I. agents are at the door. Their faces are grim.

    You invite them in, and because you work for the Pennsylvania secretary of state, you realize why they’re there. The agents explain that they “just have a few questions” about the 2020 election.

    Puzzled, you agree to talk. The agents pull binders out of their bags and begin grilling you. They want to know, with precision, where you were and what you did, beginning the moment the polls closed on Nov. 3, 2020.

    The conversation is difficult. They press you on the details, but your memory of those weeks isn’t as good as it once was. They catch you in a contradiction and your heart starts to beat faster.

    Wait, you think. Will they think I just lied? Isn’t it a crime to lie to the F.B.I.?

    The agents start to press you even harder. Every part of you is aware of the danger. You realize you need a lawyer, but you’re a normal, middle-class American. You don’t have a legal team at the ready.

    But you haven’t done anything wrong. All you did was help monitor and oversee the vote count. So you try to reset the conversation. You take a deep breath and slowly describe the process, as best you remember it.

    After they leave, you walk through the conversation again. You realize they were trying to pin down that, yes, you had a role in counting votes. They were very intent on establishing that you did help finalize the Pennsylvania vote tallies.

    Late that night, after you’ve run the conversation through your mind again and again, a realization jolts you awake.

    You’re going to be prosecuted for crimes you did not commit.

    There’s a challenge in writing about the absurdity of nominating Kash Patel as F.B.I. director. There are so many reasons he is a dangerous choice to run the nation’s most powerful law enforcement agency that I have trouble picking his worst qualities.

    Do I highlight his commitment to conspiracy theories? He still won’t acknowledge that Joe Biden won the 2020 presidential election, and he believes the F.B.I. helped trigger the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. As Thomas Joscelyn and Norman Eisen reported in The Bulwark, Patel asked, on his podcast for The Epoch Times, “What was the F.B.I. doing planning Jan. 6 for a year?”

    He has also pushed the thoroughly debunked conspiracy theory that a man named Ray Epps was “allowed to encourage and incite a riot in and around some of the events of Jan 6. as a government employee.”

    Or should I highlight his vindictiveness? He wrote a book called “Government Gangsters” that includes a list of 60 people whom he calls a “cabal of unelected tyrants.” He posted an animated video online that portrays him as a lumberjack sawing through a log, except the log contains images of his political opponents, including Liz Cheney, Adam Kinzinger and Pete Buttigieg. George Thorogood’s “Bad to the Bone” plays in the background.

    And he’s not just threatening members of the government. He told Donald Trump Jr. that “the legacy media has been proven to be the criminal conspirators of the government gangsters.”

    In December 2023, he told Steve Bannon, “We’re going to come after the people in the media who lied about American citizens, who helped Joe Biden rig presidential elections. We’re going to come after you. Whether it’s criminally or civilly, we’ll figure that out.”

    Or do I highlight his association with far-right extremists? He was a guest on the podcast of Stew Peters, a Holocaust minimizer and vaccine conspiracist, eight times, and while he claimed he didn’t remember who Peters was at his confirmation hearing on Thursday, he repeatedly praised Peters during his podcast appearances, telling him, “You’ve got a great show” and “always love coming on your show.”

    As Andrew Egger reported in The Bulwark, one of the podcast episodes Patel appeared on was called “Vaxxed Mind Control? Zombies Advocate for WWIII With Russia to Save Zelensky’s Fake Democracy.”

    Do I highlight his extreme devotion to Donald Trump? After all, he actually wrote a series of children’s books celebrating “King Donald,” who prevails against three terrible plots — the Russia investigation, the 2020 election and clashes with the Department of Justice — with the help of a mighty wizard named … Kash.

    This degree of loyalty to a president is highly unusual in the F.B.I. As Garrett Graff wrote in December in a Times Opinion guest essay, “Directors, in turn, usually go out of their way to demonstrate clear independence from the presidents who appointed them.”

    Graff pointed to the example of Louis Freeh, who was “so tested during the Clinton scandals that the two men weren’t even on speaking terms, and Mr. Freeh turned in his White House pass to avoid even the appearance of familiarity with the president.”

    That’s not the case with Patel. No one doubts where his loyalties lie.

    But there’s a problem with simply listing Patel’s scandals and crackpot ideas: They actually understate the scale of the threat Patel presents to American law enforcement and American justice. He’s no ordinary public official. He would be occupying what is by design one of the most powerful offices in the United States government, and he won’t be working alone.

    In fact, the things that repel and worry so many Americans about Patel are the very things that attract so many millions of Republicans to Trump. Members of Trump’s movement would read my list above and applaud each entry. That’s what makes Patel a hero to the MAGA movement, and that’s what will help him fit seamlessly into the culture of the Trump White House.

    Patel will have an enormous amount of unchecked power. F.B.I. directors have a high degree of autonomy. They have 10-year terms, and traditionally, directors serve across more than one presidential administration. The F.B.I. can initiate investigations on its own authority, Patel will be able to pick his own senior team, and usually neither the attorney general nor the deputy attorney general tends to micromanage the director of the F.B.I.

    This means that Patel could, in fact, send F.B.I. agents to the homes of election workers, former members of the government who participated in the Mueller investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election, or anyone else Patel decides is an enemy of Trump’s.

    Even if charges aren’t ultimately filed, an F.B.I. investigation can be ruinous financially, and the stress can be catastrophic. That’s exactly why a well-functioning F.B.I. doesn’t open investigations lightly (much less for purely political reasons).

    Worse, the checks that do exist are already crumbling. We cannot look at Patel in isolation. He’ll ostensibly be supervised by Trump’s pick for attorney general, Pam Bondi, who is also an election denier.

    She was one of Trump’s principal advocates in Pennsylvania. (She was even at Four Seasons Total Landscaping in 2020 and helped, according to Sky News, “rearrange the company’s landscaping equipment” before the infamous Rudy Giuliani news conference.) She also declared, “We are not going anywhere until they declare Trump won Pennsylvania,” and said that “fake ballots” were coming in late to steal the election from Trump. Oh, and she’s already defending Patel by denying that he has an “enemies list.”

    At her confirmation hearing, she did say, “Mr. Patel would fall under me and the Department of Justice, and I will ensure that all laws are followed and so will he,” but given her history, those words are cold comfort.

    In theory, federal prosecutors can also rein in F.B.I. excesses. The F.B.I. depends on U.S. attorneys to prosecute its cases, and ethical attorneys could refuse to engage in meritless, politically motivated prosecutions.

    But that guardrail is also collapsing. The Trump administration’s decision to fire attorneys involved in the cases brought by the special counsel Jack Smith against Trump represent a breach of laws protecting federal employees from politically motivated terminations, and they send a signal to prosecutors that they have but one choice to make if they want to keep their jobs: comply with the president’s demands, no matter their ethics or their legality.

    Trump’s F.B.I. also moved to replace several senior leaders even before Patel’s confirmation. This was a break with past precedent and sends the same chilling message: In Trump’s second term, loyalty is everything.

    Patel’s nomination also raises serious national security concerns. The F.B.I.’s counterintelligence function means that the F.B.I. director is not only privy to highly classified information, he also works closely with allies to help maintain our mutual security obligations.

    We can’t forget that Trump’s second C.I.A. director, Gina Haspel, threatened to resign in 2020 rather than accept Patel as her deputy director. In his book, Bill Barr, who served as Trump’s attorney general for the second half of his first term, said that Trump suggested that Patel be named deputy F.B.I. director at the end of his term, and Barr said that would happen “over my dead body.” Barr said “the very idea” that Trump would move Patel into the role of deputy F.B.I. director “showed a shocking detachment from reality.”

    Patel’s confirmation hearing was a farce. His scheme was obvious. He was trying to assure senators that he shouldn’t be judged by his words and actions over the past decade. Instead, judge him by his vague assurances and empty promises of integrity and independence.

    No one should be fooled. The scenario I outlined at the beginning of this column is a live possibility if Patel is confirmed.

    I can remember the days when the Republican Party claimed to be the party of the American Constitution. I remember when the phrase “constitutional conservative” was a means of describing one’s commitment to the high ideals of the American founding.

    One of those ideals is the separation of powers, including granting the Senate an independent “advice and consent” power, which gives it the ability to evaluate and reject a president’s nominees.

    Patel was nominated for one reason and one reason only: He is one of Trump’s most zealous loyalists. But before they vote, Republican senators should take 10 minutes out of their day and read Alexander Hamilton’s words in Federalist No. 76.

    If the Senate fulfills its responsibilities, Hamilton wrote, presidents would be both “ashamed and afraid to bring forward, for the most distinguished or lucrative stations,” people who had no other qualification than being from the president’s state “or of being in some way or other personally allied to him, or of possessing the necessary insignificance and pliancy to render them the obsequious instruments of his pleasure.”

    Yet loyalty and “insignificance” are Patel’s only qualifications for the job. He would never be considered for the position in the absence of his devotion to Trump, his vindictiveness and his malice.

    Republican senators are heirs to a constitutional tradition that tells them they must exercise their own judgment. They should check the power of the president, especially a president of their own party.

    There is no case for Kash Patel. It would be bad enough if he were merely obsequious and subservient, passively compliant to Trump’s demands. But Patel is aggressively subservient. He seeks to pursue Trump’s enemies.

    Every Republican senator who votes for Patel is abdicating his or her constitutional responsibility. And for what? To please a lame-duck bully? To protect their right flank in a primary? It took immense courage to create our constitutional republic, and now immense cowardice is placing our system of justice under threat.



    Opinion | Kash Patel Is a Warning Shot

    Kash Patel, a former Trump administration official, has recently been appointed as the Chief of Staff to the Acting Secretary of Defense, Chris Miller. This move has raised concerns among many critics, who see Patel as a controversial figure with a history of promoting conspiracy theories and undermining the intelligence community.

    Patel’s appointment is seen as a warning shot to those who value truth, integrity, and professionalism in government. His past actions, including his role in pushing for the declassification of intelligence related to the Russia investigation and his efforts to discredit career officials, raise red flags about his commitment to upholding the principles of transparency and accountability.

    It is crucial for the American public to pay attention to Patel’s rise in influence within the Pentagon and to hold him accountable for his actions. The appointment of individuals like Patel, who prioritize loyalty to a specific political agenda over the well-being of the country, poses a threat to the foundations of our democracy.

    In the face of this warning shot, we must remain vigilant and demand that our government officials uphold the values of honesty, competence, and respect for the rule of law. The future of our democracy depends on it.

    Tags:

    Kash Patel, warning shot, political opinion, government affairs, political analysis, Trump administration, national security, intelligence community, conservative viewpoint

    #Opinion #Kash #Patel #Warning #Shot

  • Opinion | The Shame of What We’ve Done: Assessing Jews’ Responsibility for Israel’s Actions


    The dominant self-conception of the Jewish story is innocence, repeated persecutions, and then redemption by creation of the Jewish nationalist State of Israel.

    This narrative is critically examined in Peter Beinart’s new book,
    Being Jewish After the Destruction of Gaza: A Reckoning.

    Beinart’s book says the maudlin story we Jews tell ourselves of our virtue and heroic endurance inoculates Jews from seeing Israel’s agency in creating the resistance it faces: “We must now tell a new story to answer the horror that a Jewish country has perpetrated… We are not history’s permanent virtuous victims.”

    The predicted consequence of Jewish sovereignty in Palestine to Jews in “diaspora” is happening. Jews feel they are being scrutinized and called to account for Israel’s actions, on campuses and in the streets worldwide.

    Beinart, former editor of
    The New Republic, is now an editor-at-large of Jewish Currents, and a New York Times contributor.

    He has been in a 20-year progression of seeing, more and more sharply, the “Jewish and democratic” state of Israel as anti-democratic and incompatible with Jewish tradition.

    He writes that support for a Jewish state has become “idolatry,” permitting endless killing, torture, and oppression of Palestinians “There is no limit. No matter how many Palestinians die, they do not tip the scales, because the value of a Palestinian is finite and the value of a Jewish state is infinite.”

    Contemporary Jewish life is filled with that idolatry, he observes: “In most of the Jewish world today, rejecting Jewish statehood is a greater heresy than rejecting Judaism itself.”

    The book attributes the horrors imposed on 2 million human beings in Gaza not only to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) but to Jews: “Worshipping a country that elevates Jews over Palestinians replaces Judaism’s universal God—who makes special demands on Jews but cherishes all people–with a tribal deity that considers Jewish life precious and Palestinian life cheap.”

    Beinart is not playing the peekaboo game of saying Jews are not responsible for Israel, and the other half of the time saying Israel is the Jewish State.

    He’s not saying “all Jews,” but fairly saying “representative,” “mainstream” Jewish organizations worldwide are now Zionist. Anti-Zionist organizations are dissident.

    He observes that many synagogues have an Israeli flag on the
    bima (platform where the Torah is read) “and a prayer for Israel in the liturgy.”

    It was predicted and warned about, as the Zionist movement grew, that the effect of creating a Jewish nation-state would be Jews being seen in the light of that state’s actions.

    The predicted consequence of Jewish sovereignty in Palestine to Jews in “diaspora” is happening. Jews feel they are being scrutinized and called to account for Israel’s actions, on campuses and in the streets worldwide.

    Beinart places the Hamas violence of October 7, 2023 in context, as consistent with the history of suppressed peoples without peaceful means to contest their status, as is seen in slave revolts and anticolonial guerilla wars.

    I note that Beinart’s thoughts are resonant with what, almost 100 years ago, historian and then-Zionist Hans Kohn
    wrote of 1929 anti-Jewish riots after 12 years of Zionist colonization in Palestine under British authority:

    We pretend to be innocent victims. Of course the Arabs attacked us in August… They perpetrated all the barbaric acts that are characteristic of a colonial revolt… We have been in Palestine for 12 years [since the Balfour Declaration] without having even once made a serious attempt at seeking through negotiations the consent of the Indigenous people.

    Israeli retribution since October 7, 2023 on the 2 million-plus population of Gaza and their means of life—homes, utilities, schools, universities, hospitals—has officially resulted in over 46,000 deaths and innumerable injuries directly from IDF attacks.

    The medical journal
    Lancetestimates deaths as likely much higher, counting “deaths from starvation, disease, or cold.”

    Most of the population of Gaza was made homeless, huddled in improvised shelters, pushed by IDF warnings from one “safe zone” to another, often then bombed.

    Beinart’s book is an analysis of Zionist apologetics that are necessary to both regard oneself as moral and defend what Israel has done, from the 1947-49
    Nakba—terroristic expulsion of Palestinian Arabs from their communities within present-day Israelto Gaza in 2025.

    He denounces dehumanizing, demonizing, Zionist lies about Palestinian resistance: “These claims don’t withstand even modest scrutiny. They’re less arguments than talismans. They ward off dangerous emotions like grief and shame.”

    Using the model of the dismantling of apartheid South Africa, he tries to envision what principles could heal Palestine
    :

    The details matter, but they matter less than the underlying principles. Wherever they live together, Jews and Palestinians should live under the same law. And they should work to repair the injustices of the past. The Israelis who were made refugees on October 7 should be allowed to go home. And the Palestinians who were made refugees in 1948 should be allowed to go home. Historical wrongs can never be fully undone. But the more sincere the effort, the greater the reconciliation that ensues.

    This would be a radical reconception of Jewish life in Palestine, that in abandoning the role of conquerors, Jews may live as Jewish Palestinians. He makes the point that whites relinquishing apartheid was a more peaceful process for South Africa than having it overthrown.

    In the summary chapter of the book, Beinart says Israel’s conduct is from a heretical Jewish tendency to believe Jewish people are sacred, rather than people with extra obligations: “So what if a few dreamers in Moorish Spain or the Silesian shtetl [Eastern European Jewish village] consoled themselves with the idea that deep within us lies a special spark of the divine? They didn’t have the power to do anything about it.”

    This self-deification, first proposed by an Israelite named Korach, who challenged Moses’ leadership, hadn’t mattered as much until the creation of “Jewish” national power: “All that changed with the creation of Israel. Only once Jews control a state with life-and-death power over millions of non-Jews does Korach’s claim of intrinsic Jewish sanctity become truly dangerous.”

    Beinart calls for liberation for Jews from the Zionist doctrine that Jews are only victims, never victimizers: “We can lift the weight that oppressing Palestinians imposes on Jewish Israelis, and indirectly, on Jews around the world… We can lay down the burden of seeing ourselves as the perennial victims of a Jew-hating world.”

    More than level of observance or denomination, the question of Zionism is going to be a fault line in Jewish fellowship, Beinart believes:

    Remove Jewish statehood from Jewish identity and, for many Jews around the world, it’s not clear what is left. But the benefit of recognizing that Jews are not fundamentally different from other people is that it allows us to learn from their experience. Jewish exceptionalism is less exceptional than we think. We are not the only people to use a story of victimhood to justify supremacy.

    Israel’s perpetual peril is the Arab population it has displaced but not exterminated. They are determined to redeem their birthright to live as freely in Palestine as Jews do.

    Instead of conquest, Beinart proposes a model of restraint, cooperation, and respect—along a line of Jewish thinkers from Ahad Ha’am to Judah Magnes to Albert Einstein.

    Many of the visions for Jewish settlement in Palestine were universalist and pacific.

    In 1927, Zionist writer (and Chaim Weizmann protege) Maurice Samuel mused, in his book
    I, The Jew, that Jewish civilization “for 60 generations” demonstrated “that neither conquest or oppression was necessary to its survival… a group can survive without mass murder.”

    Whether trauma or hubris allows Zionists in Israel and elsewhere to trust that model—finding the image of God even in their “enemies”—is the question.



    As tensions in the Middle East continue to escalate, it is more important than ever to critically assess the role of Jews in Israel’s actions. The Israeli government’s policies and actions have been widely condemned by the international community, with many calling for accountability and justice.

    As Jews, we have a responsibility to speak out against the injustices committed by the Israeli government. It is not enough to simply stand by and watch as our fellow Jews perpetuate violence and oppression against the Palestinian people. We must take a stand and hold our own community accountable for their actions.

    The continued occupation of Palestinian land, the systemic discrimination against Palestinian citizens of Israel, and the violence and human rights abuses committed by the Israeli military cannot be ignored. As Jews, we must acknowledge the role that our community plays in perpetuating these injustices and work towards creating a more just and equitable future for all peoples in the region.

    It is time for us to confront the shame of what we have done and take a stand against the actions of the Israeli government. We must listen to the voices of the oppressed and marginalized and work towards a future where all people can live in peace and dignity. The time for silence is over – it is time to speak out and demand accountability for the injustices committed in our name.

    Tags:

    1. Jewish responsibility for Israel’s actions
    2. Israel’s actions and accountability
    3. Reflection on Jewish involvement in Israel’s policies
    4. Assessing Jewish complicity in Israel’s decisions
    5. Controversy surrounding Jewish connection to Israel’s actions
    6. Impact of Jewish support on Israel’s behavior
    7. Ethical considerations of Jewish responsibility for Israel’s actions
    8. Examining the shame of Jewish involvement in Israel’s policies
    9. Questioning the role of Jews in shaping Israel’s actions
    10. Critiquing Jewish accountability for Israel’s behavior.

    #Opinion #Shame #Weve #Assessing #Jews #Responsibility #Israels #Actions

  • Opinion | Israel Is Meant to Be Jewish and Democratic. It Cannot Be Both.


    In today’s Washington, which seethes with partisan acrimony, Democrats and Republicans at least agree on this: Israel has a right to exist. This right has been affirmed by the Republican House speaker, Mike Johnson, and his Democratic antagonist, the House minority leader, Hakeem Jeffries; by the Biden administration’s secretary of state, Antony Blinken, and his Republican successor, Marco Rubio; by Donald Trump’s new secretary of defense, Pete Hegseth, and by the Senate Democratic leader, Chuck Schumer. In 2023, the House affirmed Israel’s right to exist by a vote of 412-1.

    This is not the way Washington politicians generally talk about other countries. They usually start with the rights of individuals, and then ask how well a given state represents the people under its control. If America’s leaders prioritized the lives of all those who live between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea, it would become clear that asking if Israel has a right to exist is the wrong question. The better question is: Does Israel, as a Jewish state, adequately protect the rights of all the individuals under its dominion?

    The answer is no.

    Consider this scenario: If Scotland legally seceded, or Britons abolished the monarchy, the United Kingdom would no longer be united nor a kingdom. Britain as we know it would cease to exist. A different state would replace it. Mr. Rubio, Mr. Schumer and their colleagues would accept this transformation as legitimate because they believe that states should be based on the consent of the governed.

    America’s leaders make this point most emphatically when discussing America’s foes. They often call for replacing oppressive regimes with states that better meet liberal democratic norms. In 2017, John Bolton, who later became a national security adviser in the first Trump administration, argued that “the declared policy of the United States should be the overthrow of the mullahs’ regime in Tehran.” In 2020, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called the People’s Republic of China a “Marxist-Leninist regime” with a “bankrupt totalitarian ideology.”These U.S. officials were urging these countries not just to replace one particular leader but to change their political system — thus, in essence, reconstituting the state. In the case of the People’s Republic of China, which signifies Communist Party dominance, or the Islamic Republic of Iran, which denotes clerical rule, this would most likely require changing the country’s official name.

    In 2020, Secretary Pompeo declared in a speech that America’s founders believed that “government exists not to diminish or cancel the individual’s rights at the whims of those in power, but to secure them.” Do states that deny individual rights have a “right to exist” in their current form? The implication of Mr. Pompeo’s words is that they do not.

    What if we talked about Israel that way? Roughly half the people under Israeli control are Palestinian. Most of those — the residents of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip — cannot become citizens of the state that wields life-or-death power over them. Israel wielded this power in Gaza even before Hamas invaded on Oct. 7, 2023, since it controlled the Strip’s airspace, coastline, population registry and most of its land crossings, thus turning Gaza into what Human Rights Watch called “an open-air prison.”

    Even the minority of Palestinians under Israeli control who hold Israeli citizenship — sometimes called “Israeli Arabs” — lack legal equality. The Jewish National Fund, which has stated that its obligations are “to the Jewish people” and that it does not work “for the benefit of all citizens of the state,” holds almost half the seats on the governmental body that allocates most of Israel’s land.

    Last month, Mr. Blinken promised that the United States would help Syrians build an “inclusive, nonsectarian” state. The Israel that exists today manifestly fails that test.

    Still, for most of the leaders of the organized American Jewish community, a nonsectarian and inclusive country on this land is unthinkable. Jews are rightly outraged when Iranian leaders call for wiping Israel off the map. But there is a crucial difference between a state ceasing to exist because it is invaded by its neighbors and a state ceasing to exist because it adopts a more representative form of government.

    American Jewish leaders don’t just insist on Israel’s right to exist. They insist on its right to exist as a Jewish state. They cling to the idea that it can be both Jewish and democratic despite the basic contradiction between legal supremacy for one ethno-religious group and the democratic principle of equality under the law.

    The belief that a Jewish state has unconditional value — irrespective of its impact on the people who live within it — isn’t contrary just to the way America’s leaders talk about other countries. It’s also contrary to Jewish tradition. Jewish tradition does not view states as possessing rights, but views them with deep suspicion. In the Bible, the Israelite elders ask the Prophet Samuel to appoint a king to rule over them. God tells Samuel to grant the elders’ wish but also warn that their ruler will commit terrible abuses. “The day will come,” Samuel tells them, “when you cry out because of the king whom you yourselves have chosen.”

    The implication is clear: Kingdoms — or, in modern parlance, states — are not sacrosanct. They are mere instruments, which can either protect life or destroy it. “I emphatically deny that a state might have any intrinsic value at all,” wrote the Orthodox Israeli social critic Yeshayahu Leibowitz in 1975. Mr. Leibowitz was not an anarchist. But, though he considered himself a Zionist, he insisted that states — including the Jewish one — be judged on their treatment of the human beings under their control. States don’t have a right to exist. People do.

    Some of the Bible’s greatest heroes — Moses and Mordechai among others — risk their lives by refusing to treat despotic rulers as divine. In refusing to worship state power, they reject idolatry, a prohibition so central to Judaism that, in the Talmud, Rabbi Yochanan called it the very definition of being a Jew.

    Today, however, this form of idolatry — worship of the state — seems to suffuse mainstream American Jewish life. It is dangerous to venerate any political entity. But it’s especially dangerous to venerate one that classifies people as legal superiors or inferiors based on their tribe. When America’s most influential Jewish groups, like American leaders, insist again and again that Israel has a right to exist, they are effectively saying there is nothing Israel can do — no amount of harm it can inflict upon the people within its domain — that would require rethinking the character of the state.

    They have done so even as Israel’s human-rights abuses have grown ever more blatant. For almost 16 years, since Benjamin Netanyahu returned to power in 2009, Israel has been ruled by leaders who boast about preventing Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip from establishing their own country, thus consigning them to live as permanent noncitizens, without basic rights, under Israeli rule. In 2021, Israel’s own leading human rights organization, B’Tselem, charged Israel with practicing apartheid. The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported more attacks by Israeli settlers against Palestinians in the West Bank and East Jerusalem in 2024 than in any year since it began keeping track almost 20 years ago.

    Yet American Jewish leaders — and American politicians — continue to insist it is illegitimate, even antisemitic, to question the validity of a Jewish state. We have made Israel our altar. Mr. Leibowitz’s fear has come true: “When nation, country and state are presented as absolute values, anything goes.”

    American Jewish leaders often say a Jewish state is essential to protecting Jewish lives. Jews cannot be safe unless Jews rule. I understand why many American Jews, who as a general rule believe that states should not discriminate based on religion, ethnicity or race, make an exception for Israel. It’s a response to our traumatic history as a people. But global antisemitism notwithstanding, diaspora Jews — who stake our safety on the principle of legal equality — are far safer than Jews in Israel.

    This is not a coincidence. Countries in which everyone has a voice in government tend to be safer for everyone. A 2010 study of 146 instances of ethnic conflict around the world since World War II found that ethnic groups that were excluded from state power were three times more likely to take up arms as those that enjoyed representation in government.

    You can see this dynamic even in Israel itself. Every day, Israeli Jews place themselves in Palestinian hands when they’re at their most vulnerable: on the operating table. Palestinian citizens of Israel make up about 20 percent of its doctors, 30 percent of its nurses and 60 percent of its pharmacists.

    Why do Israeli Jews find Palestinian citizens so much less threatening than Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza? In large measure, because Palestinian citizens can vote in Israeli elections. So, although they face severe discrimination, they at least have some peaceful and lawful methods for making their voices heard. Compare that with Palestinians in Gaza, or the West Bank, who have no legal way to influence the state that bombs and imprisons them.

    When you deny people basic rights, you subject them to tremendous violence. And, sooner or later, that violence endangers everyone. In 1956, a 3-year-old named Ziyad al-Nakhalah saw Israeli soldiers murder his father in the Gazan city of Khan Younis. Almost 70 years later, he heads Hamas’s smaller but equally militant rival, Islamic Jihad.

    On Oct. 7, Hamas and Islamic Jihad fighters killed about 1,200 people in Israel and abducted about 240 others. Israel has responded to that massacre with an assault on Gaza that the British medical journal The Lancet estimates has killed more than 60,000 people, and destroyed most of the Strip’s hospitals, schools and agriculture. Gaza’s destruction serves as a horrifying illustration of Israel’s failure to protect the lives and dignity of all the people who fall under its authority.

    The failure to protect the lives of Palestinians in Gaza ultimately endangers Jews. In this war, Israel has already killed more than one hundred times as many Palestinians in Gaza as it did in the massacre that took the life of Mr. al-Nakhalah’s father. How many 3-year-olds will still be seeking revenge seven decades from now?

    As Ami Ayalon, the former head of Shin Bet, Israel’s domestic security service, warned even before the current war in Gaza, “If we continue to dish out humiliation and despair, the popularity of Hamas will grow. And if we manage to push Hamas from power, we’ll get Al Qaeda. And after Al Qaeda, ISIS, and after ISIS, God only knows.”

    Yet in the name of Jewish safety, American Jewish organizations appear to countenance virtually anything Israel does to Palestinians, even a war that both Amnesty International and the eminent Israeli-born Holocaust scholar Omer Bartov now consider genocide. What Jewish leaders and American politicians can’t countenance is equality between Palestinians and Jews — because that would violate Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state.

    Peter Beinart (@PeterBeinart) is a contributing Opinion writer, a professor at the Newmark School of Journalism at the City University of New York, an editor at large of Jewish Currents and the writer of The Beinart Notebook, a weekly newsletter. This essay is adapted from his forthcoming book “Being Jewish After the Destruction of Gaza.”





    Opinion | Israel Is Meant to Be Jewish and Democratic. It Cannot Be Both.

    The ongoing conflict in Israel between the Jewish majority and the Palestinian minority has raised important questions about the country’s identity as a Jewish and democratic state. The Israeli government has long claimed to be both a Jewish state and a democratic one, but recent events have shown that these two ideals are fundamentally incompatible.

    The Jewish character of Israel is enshrined in its founding documents and laws, which prioritize the rights and interests of Jewish citizens over those of non-Jews. This has led to discrimination and marginalization of the Palestinian population, who make up around 20% of the country’s population. In order to maintain its Jewish majority, Israel has implemented policies that restrict the rights of Palestinians, including land confiscation, restrictions on movement, and unequal access to resources and services.

    At the same time, Israel prides itself on being a democracy, with free and fair elections, a vibrant civil society, and a robust system of checks and balances. However, the treatment of Palestinians within Israel and in the occupied territories undermines the country’s democratic credentials. Palestinians face systemic discrimination in all areas of life, from housing and education to employment and political participation. This has led to widespread protests and calls for reform both within Israel and internationally.

    It is clear that Israel cannot continue to claim to be both Jewish and democratic while denying equal rights and opportunities to its Palestinian citizens. In order to truly live up to its democratic ideals, Israel must ensure equality for all its citizens, regardless of their religion or ethnicity. This may require difficult compromises and a reevaluation of long-standing policies, but it is essential for the country’s long-term stability and prosperity.

    Ultimately, the future of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state depends on its ability to reconcile these two seemingly contradictory identities. It is time for Israel to choose whether it wants to remain a Jewish state at the expense of its democratic values, or to embrace true democracy and equality for all its citizens, regardless of their background. Only then can Israel truly fulfill its promise as a homeland for all its inhabitants.

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    #Opinion #Israel #Meant #Jewish #Democratic

  • Opinion | Beyoncé Is America. Give Her the Grammy.


    But its achievement can’t be corralled into a single musical genre. It’s an album-length paean to a panoply of traditions, from folk to roots to country to rock to hip-hop, that together make American music great. It’s an album full of gospel and guns, car rides and cowboys, whiskey, weed and wine; of Jesus, money, furious fights between lovers, and the gentleness and wisdom of wily elders. The 27 tracks on “Cowboy Carter” are packed with musical quotes, jokes and dead serious historical reckonings, featuring a diversity of cultures all bringing their stories, religions, melodies, spirits, ancestors and rituals together for one big dance.

    The musical references that Beyoncé employs are wide-ranging and eclectic. Different listeners will hear different echoes, based on their own personal tastes. To my ear, “Ameriican Requiem,” the album’s first track, first evokes the gospel standard “Down To The River To Pray.” But I also hear echoes of The Who’s “Tommy,” Lead Belly’s “Looky Looky Yonder” and, wait, is that a nod I hear to Buffalo Springfield’s 60’s protest anthem, “For What It’s Worth”? With a dash of Nina Simone’s “Mississippi Goddam,” all in one song?

    To truly understand the project of “Cowboy Carter,” it helps to start with the guitar. This instrument was carried to the American West by various paths, including by Mexican vaqueros. The guitar became a mainstay in cowboy music — you can’t fit a piano on a horse.

    As the folklorist Alan Lomax writes in “Folk Songs of North America,” the “Texas cowboys adopted the Mexican vaquero’s costume, acquired his savvy of cattle and horses, and stole his herds.” The music of European-descended cowboys was influenced by vaqueros, and Black cowboys put their own twist on these American guitar stylings.

    Many freedmen, post-slavery, learned the cattle trade and became rodeo riders. Huddie Ledbetter — better known as Lead Belly — stands as one of America’s greatest cowboy singers, and Lead Belly’s catalog now all but defines classic rock; “No Lead Belly, no Beatles,” as George Harrison once memorably declared. Faithful renditions of Lead Belly’s arrangements have been covered by artists as disparate as Creedence Clearwater Revival, Led Zeppelin and Nirvana, to name a few. His stylings have roots in country guitar, but he transported the sound to something that roamed far away from the cowboy ranch — all the way to the tracks on “Cowboy Carter.”



    Opinion | Beyoncé Is America. Give Her the Grammy.

    In a year filled with uncertainty and unrest, Beyoncé has stood out as a beacon of hope and inspiration. From her powerful music to her impactful activism, she has consistently used her platform to advocate for change and uplift marginalized voices.

    Beyoncé’s visual album, “Black Is King,” was a stunning celebration of Black culture and history. It showcased the beauty and resilience of the Black community in a way that was both empowering and enlightening. The album not only showcased Beyoncé’s incredible talent as an artist, but also her commitment to using her platform to amplify important issues.

    It’s clear that Beyoncé is more than just a singer or performer – she is a symbol of America itself. Her music reflects the diversity and vibrancy of our country, and her activism speaks to the values of equality and justice that we hold dear.

    That’s why Beyoncé deserves to win the Grammy for Album of the Year. Her impact goes beyond just music – she is a cultural icon who represents the best of what America has to offer. Let’s honor her contributions and celebrate her excellence by giving her the recognition she deserves. Beyoncé is America, and she deserves the Grammy.

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    #Opinion #Beyoncé #America #Give #Grammy

  • How Donald Trump Should Deal With Saudi Arabia | Opinion


    On Jan. 23, his second full day in office after being sworn in as the 47th president, Donald Trump picked up the phone and dialed his first foreign leader. The honor didn’t go to the leader of a formal U.S. treaty ally like Canada or the United Kingdom, but rather to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS). This wasn’t a surprise given the relationship the two men conjured up. In his first term, Trump jetted to Saudi Arabia for his first overseas trip. The visit was a precursor to what would turn out to be a blossoming U.S.-Saudi relationship over the next four years. Trump showered the Saudis with billions of dollars in military equipment; continued to assist the Saudi-led military campaign against the Houthis in Yemen; joined Riyadh’s economic embargo against Qatar; and defended MBS when the U.S. intelligence community assessed that he was responsible for the October 2018 murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

    Trump and MBS are prepared to pick up where they left off. The two view each other as force multipliers for their respective agendas. Trump looks at the Saudi crown prince and sees a high net-worth individual who could throw a gargantuan amount of petrodollars into the American economy. In Trump, MBS spots a transactional businessman who couldn’t care less about high-browed concepts like the rules-based international order.

    Both men are also nationalists to the core. MBS can relate to Trump’s “Make America Great Again” mantra because he is following the same playbook in the kingdom. MBS wants to make his country stronger and wealthier than ever before, best exemplified by his Vision 2030 economic campaign to diversify Saudi Arabia from an oil-pumping machine into a center of banking, finance, and sports.

    President Donald Trump and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman take part in a bilateral meeting at a hotel in Riyadh on May 20, 2017.

    MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

    Trump would be wise to remember this as he interacts with MBS. Saudi officials may highlight their strategic relationship with Washington as mutually-beneficial, but the kingdom won’t be doing the United States any favors. And the concessions the Saudis do make will almost certainly be paired with demands.

    Trump is likely pleased with Riyadh’s stated commitment to invest $600 billion into the U.S. economy over the next four years. But what seems like a benevolent act smells a lot like a transparent bribe to purchase more U.S. defense investment. For nearly two years, Riyadh has been negotiating with U.S. officials on an upgrade to the U.S.-Saudi defense relationship. The original concept was to provide the kingdom with a U.S. security guarantee in the form of a treaty, largely as a reward for the Saudis normalizing diplomatic relations with Israel. While the war in Gaza has diminished the prospects of the Saudis normalizing ties with Israel anytime soon, they are still intent on bringing the United States closer militarily.

    Saudi Arabia has good reason to keep Washington in its camp. Although Iran is unmistakably weaker today courtesy of Israel’s military operations against Hamas and Hezbollah as well as Bashar al-Assad‘s fall, the Saudis can’t discount the Iranians as powerless. Iran retains proxies in Yemen and Iraq, maintains a formidable missile capability, and is improving upon a nuclear program that MBS’ late uncle, King Abdullah, wanted the United States to destroy nearly two decades ago. Despite a years-long ceasefire with the Houthis, the Yemeni militia group isn’t going to disappear and might resume fighting against the Saudi-backed Yemeni government if peace talks remain stalled. The United States is the big, warm security blanket the Saudis would like to use during chilly times.

    Yet what’s good for the Saudis isn’t necessarily good for the Americans. What exactly would Washington get for offering Riyadh a security guarantee? This is precisely the question Trump, who believes the American people have been taken advantage of by other countries for decades, should be asking.

    Once he does, one hopes Trump starts to recognize the security arrangement MBS desires as a very bad deal—not because Saudi Arabia should be shunned but rather because Saudi Arabia needs the United States a lot more than the United States needs Saudi Arabia. The U.S. foreign policy intelligentsia will argue the opposite, that as a major swing producer of crude oil, Washington can’t afford to walk away and leave the Arabian Peninsula to China. But those claims would be misplaced, overlooking the fact that China’s Xi Jinping appears more interested in staying on good terms with everybody in the Middle East instead of doubling down on a single partnership that could upset his capacity to be a neutral broker.

    And how valuable is Saudi Arabia to the United States, really? Surely it holds some value—the kingdom holds more than 21 percent of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries’ (OPEC) proven oil reserves. But despite MBS’ attempts to transform the Saudi economy, oil still accounts for 63 percent of his country’s revenue. Trump doesn’t have to worry about Riyadh throttling down production over a long period of time because the Saudis need the money.

    Donald Trump gave his Saudi pal a bit of a pass during his first term. He shouldn’t make the same mistake in his second.

    Daniel R. DePetris is a fellow at Defense Priorities and a syndicated foreign affairs columnist at the Chicago Tribune.

    The views expressed in this article are the writer’s own.



    In light of recent events, it is clear that the relationship between the United States and Saudi Arabia is complex and fraught with tensions. The murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi has brought to light the human rights abuses and lack of accountability within the Saudi government, leading many to question the United States’ close ties with the kingdom.

    As President Donald Trump navigates this delicate situation, it is imperative that he takes a firm stance on holding Saudi Arabia accountable for its actions. While Saudi Arabia remains an important ally in the Middle East, the United States cannot turn a blind eye to the atrocities committed by the Saudi government.

    First and foremost, President Trump must demand transparency and accountability from Saudi Arabia regarding the murder of Jamal Khashoggi. The Saudi government must be held responsible for its actions, and those involved in the murder must be brought to justice. Additionally, the United States should reconsider its military support for Saudi Arabia, particularly in light of the ongoing conflict in Yemen.

    Furthermore, President Trump should use this opportunity to push for reforms within the Saudi government. The United States can leverage its relationship with Saudi Arabia to advocate for greater respect for human rights and democratic principles. This includes pushing for greater freedom of speech and press within the kingdom.

    Ultimately, President Trump must strike a delicate balance between upholding the United States’ strategic interests in the region and promoting human rights and accountability in Saudi Arabia. By taking a firm stance on these issues, President Trump can demonstrate that the United States stands for justice and democracy, even when it comes to its allies.

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  • Opinion | Trump is Already Failing. That’s the Key to a Big Democratic Rebound.


    The Democrats are a party controlled by elites, liberals and special interest groups. They are out of touch with America’s middle class. They are personified by a president who let inflation get the better of him and world events spin out of his control. As a result, the Democrats lost the White House as well as control of the Senate.

    I’m talking about the 1980 election and its aftermath. But if politics back then has a familiar ring, it also has lessons for Democrats today, as they are in dire need of fresh vision and leadership. The election of a new party chair on Saturday is just the beginning of their reinvention process.

    The Democratic Party is now in worse shape than at any other time since 1980. Joe Biden’s policy mistakes — making inflation worse and making the border less secure — and the lack of trust in Democrats who circled the wagons around him in 2024 have done damage that the party does not yet seem to fully grasp. The party is paying the price for failing to develop and allow generational change in leadership; the Clintons and the Obama-Biden administrations have dominated for more than 30 years. At the same time, Democrats have too often been focused on whom they are against rather than what they are for. Especially for the past 10 years, the Democrats’ primary mission was defeating Donald Trump rather than articulating a coherent and appealing vision for the future.

    “Coherent and appealing” are difficult goals, of course, when you are a federation of special interests — such as abortion rights, the environment, social justice, gun control, L.G.B.T.Q. rights and a pro-labor agenda — more than an inspiring and forward-looking political party.

    In 2020, Democrats’ fears about Bernie Sanders pushed these groups to coalesce around Mr. Biden’s candidacy, which was made all the more palatable because he positioned himself as a transition candidate. But Mr. Biden proved to be a challenging figure in electoral politics: He had no political base of his own, and he governed by trying to placate those various special interest groups — and yet their priorities were not aligned with what was most important to many voters. I cannot remember a single instance when President Biden took on any element of the Democratic Party in the interest of the greater good. This was not a presidency that reflected the mood and needs of the country; the sum of his presidency was less than its parts.

    To regain power, Democrats would do well by first grappling with the best strategies for a minority party. As was the case when Ronald Reagan took office after 1980, the Democrats do not control their own destiny. At any given time, there are really only 1.5 political parties in America. Whoever holds the White House is the governing party, with the opposition essentially, at best, only able to affect policymaking at the margins.

    With that in mind, Democrats need to start making a compelling argument that President Trump and Republicans are failing at governing. Democrats need to do this in a way that reflects the mood of the country and cannot repeat the mistakes of Kamala Harris’s campaign, like focusing on joy during a time when anger and economic frustration dominated voter sentiment. With Republicans now in full control of the federal government, Democrats are well positioned to be the party of change, a narrative that finally broke the Reagan-Bush 12-year hold on the presidency in 1992.

    Then, as now, the strongest message for Democrats is centered on economic security and opportunity. With Mr. Trump and Republicans focused on tax cuts for the rich and corporations, it should be easy to make contrasts with his agenda on a regular basis. His blundered attempt to freeze federal money in ways that might affect popular programs, like Medicaid and Head Start, is an example of a prime opportunity to brand the G.O.P. as failing dangerously at governing.

    At the same time, Democrats need to neutralize issues of public safety and disorder that were central to Mr. Trump’s victory. That requires dealing with the immigration crisis in our country. Democrats don’t need to support every draconian measure that Mr. Trump puts into place. However, they need to establish their bona fides and make a credible case that they support secure borders in our country.

    Establishing these bona fides — and ultimately driving any successful narrative on the economy and public order — depends on the quality, vision and trustworthiness of the party’s presidential nominees. Do they “get it,” in the eyes of voters? Do they believe in and even personify change? Do voters feel they can count on a given leader to do what they want? Mr. Trump bested Mr. Biden and then Ms. Harris on these fronts.

    Bill Clinton’s candidacy and victory in 1992 offer valuable lessons for Democrats on the type of candidate who most likely succeeds in taking on Republicans. Mr. Clinton was not part of the ruling class of the party in Washington. His upbringing and his time as governor in a Southern state gave him an understanding of the country. Most important, he had a clear narrative about what he would do and change as president and where he wanted to lead the country. He also avoided choosing between being a liberal or being a moderate and getting mired in divisive social issues that were not essential to most Americans.

    A key part of the foundation for Mr. Clinton’s victory came from Senate Democrats. At the end of the summer in 1991, President George H.W. Bush had a 74 percent job approval. But after Labor Day, Democrats organized a near-daily pounding of Mr. Bush’s policies on the Senate floor, with a consistent message that he was out of touch with the struggles of America’s middle class. This narrative helped Democrats pick up the Pennsylvania Senate seat in a special election that November. These efforts were so successful that by the beginning of 1992, Mr. Bush’s job approval had dropped to 46 percent.

    The Democratic National Committee and its chairman also played a role. Under Ron Brown’s leadership in the run-up to the 1992 elections, the D.N.C. focused on creating a climate of the party “doing no harm” to Mr. Clinton. For the previous decade, the party label had been an anchor on Democratic candidates running for president. Mr. Brown was able to push the activist wing to focus more on winning rather than trying to push litmus tests on the candidates — something for the party to keep in mind as it gathers to elect a new D.N.C. leader.

    Now, for the first time since Barack Obama’s ascent in 2008, there will be a wide-open opportunity for Democratic candidates to demonstrate that they, too, have the right stuff to run the country. Not many people thought that Mr. Clinton and Mr. Obama had what it took when they announced their candidacies for president. Rather than declaring their fitness for office, they proved during their campaigns the capacity to lead. And the Democrats have a deep bench of elected officials, particularly at the state and local levels, who will have the opportunity to demonstrate their ability to take on the Republicans.

    The 2026 congressional midterm elections can play a key role in better positioning the eventual nominee for the 2028 election. The party in power generally suffers losses in the midterms. While it is unlikely that Democrats will be able to take control of the Senate, they are well positioned to take back the House. There are also 38 governor’s races in the next two years, which gives Democrats a tremendous opportunity to reset the party going into the next presidential election.

    And if Democrats can address their vision, trust and leadership problems — a tall order, to be sure — their chances of retaking the White House in 2028 are more favorable than those they faced in the 1980s.

    Mr. Trump won the recent election by one of the narrowest margins of the popular vote since 1900. He had no coattails, as evidenced by Republican losses in the House and the fact that they won only one of the five tossup Senate races in the seven battleground states that Mr. Trump carried. Given how unpopular the Biden administration was on Election Day, a more normal Republican candidate should have swept his party to victory in races across the country, as Mr. Reagan did in 1980.

    Mr. Trump starts his presidency with only 47 percent of the country giving him a positive rating. Current polling shows that a majority of Americans do not support some of his most radical proposals. He is misreading how big a mandate the voters gave him in the election and is widely overreaching with his executive orders and policy proposals. And Republicans start out not only with a historically narrow margin of control in Congress but also with a track record of demonstrating during the last Congress that they were incapable of governing.

    In this environment, Mr. Trump and the Republicans have set a high bar for themselves on how they are going to improve the economy. At the same time they also claim that they will cut trillions of dollars from the federal budget. Under Mr. Trump, the G.O.P. has become a working-class party, and its base is full of people who will be hardest hit by cuts in Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, which now constitute almost half of all federal spending.

    All of this points to a favorable opportunity for Democrats to regain power if they can learn the lessons that followed the 1980 election. Jimmy Carter was president for only four years, but because of Republican tactics, he defined what it meant to be a Democrat for 16 years. It was only when Mr. Clinton was elected president that the party was able to move past the Carter years.

    The same will hold true for the Democrats, with Mr. Biden defining what it means to be a Democrat until the party retakes the White House — whenever that happens. History offers Democrats a blueprint for retaking power. The question is whether they will follow it.

    Doug Sosnik was a senior adviser to President Bill Clinton from 1994 to 2000 and has also advised governors and U.S. senators.

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    As President Trump approaches the end of his first term, it is becoming increasingly clear that he is already failing in many key areas. This failure is not only detrimental to his own chances of reelection, but it also presents a significant opportunity for the Democratic Party to make a big rebound in the upcoming election.

    One of the most glaring failures of the Trump administration is its mishandling of the COVID-19 pandemic. From downplaying the severity of the virus to spreading misinformation about potential treatments, Trump’s response to the crisis has been chaotic and ineffective. As a result, the United States has seen a staggering number of cases and deaths, and the economy has been plunged into a deep recession.

    Additionally, Trump’s divisive rhetoric and inflammatory behavior have further polarized the country and alienated many voters. His lack of leadership and failure to unite Americans in a time of crisis have eroded his support among key demographics, including suburban women and independent voters.

    The Democratic Party has a real opportunity to capitalize on Trump’s failures and present a compelling alternative to voters in the upcoming election. By offering a coherent and effective response to the pandemic, promoting policies that address the economic fallout, and uniting Americans around a message of unity and progress, Democrats can appeal to a broad coalition of voters and secure a decisive victory in November.

    In conclusion, Trump’s failure as a leader is the key to a big Democratic rebound in the upcoming election. By presenting a clear and compelling alternative to his chaotic and divisive administration, Democrats have a real opportunity to win back the White House and set the country on a path towards recovery and renewal.

    Tags:

    • Trump administration
    • Democratic Party
    • political opinion
    • US politics
    • government failure
    • Democratic resurgence
    • Trump presidency
    • political analysis
    • liberal perspective
    • political strategy

    #Opinion #Trump #Failing #Key #Big #Democratic #Rebound

  • Opinion | If Kennedy Is Blind to Science, Why Entrust Him With Our Health?


    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. used to impress me. In the early 2000s, he did excellent work as an environmental lawyer taking on industrial hog farms that were fouling creeks and rivers, and we talked about making a visit together to North Carolina to document the pollution.

    But then Kennedy began to urge me to write about childhood vaccines, citing discredited arguments that they caused autism. I had read the vaccine research and considered his views uninformed, conspiratorial and dangerous, and his dogmatism soured me on his judgment in general. I decided it would be inappropriate to quote someone with such a mind-set.

    And if a person isn’t qualified to be quoted in a column, he probably isn’t the best choice to run America’s health programs.

    That’s particularly true because one of the biggest potential threats to this country — albeit one difficult to gauge — is an avian flu pandemic, for bird flu is mutating and spreading to cows and other mammals. If there is a pandemic, then vaccines will be essential. Perhaps the single best thing that President Trump did in his first term was to start Operation Warp Speed, a public-private partnership that accelerated the development of Covid-19 vaccines and saved many lives.

    What would happen if there were a need for another Operation Warp Speed, but this time the point man on health was suspicious of vaccines — including those that arrested the last pandemic?

    The coronavirus vaccine is “the deadliest vaccine ever made,” Kennedy falsely claimed, and in May 2021 he petitioned the government to revoke authorization for it — even though by then the vaccine already had saved 140,000 lives, one study found.

    Kennedy has also claimed that the polio vaccine — one of the great triumphs of the 20th century — may have caused cancers “that killed many, many, many, many, many more people than polio ever did.” The Times has reported that a lawyer close to Kennedy, Aaron Siri, who is helping him pick health officials for the Trump administration, has petitioned the government to revoke approval for the polio vaccine.

    Siri has also petitioned the government to revoke approval for the hepatitis B vaccine and a pause in the distribution of about a dozen other vaccines.

    Kennedy’s take? “I love Aaron Siri,” Kennedy has said.

    Kennedy now insists to senators that he is not “anti-vaccine” and would not discourage their use. Really? In 2021 he said on a podcast that he actively discouraged parents from vaccinating children and urged others to do the same.

    “Our job is to resist and to talk about it to everybody,” he said. “If you’re walking down the street — and I do this now myself, which is, you know, I don’t want to do — I’m not a busybody. I see somebody on a hiking trail carrying a little baby and I say to him, ‘Better not get him vaccinated.’”

    “Don’t keep your mouth shut anymore,” he advised. “Confront everybody on it.”

    Kennedy has said that doctors “butchered all these children” by vaccinating them. The nonprofit that he founded, Children’s Health Defense, sells baby onesies with messages such as “No Vax No Problem.”

    Even now that he is under great pressure, as he bobs and weaves in hopes of getting confirmed, Kennedy won’t renounce the discredited theory that vaccines cause autism.

    The idea of Kennedy’s running health programs is particularly worrisome because the administration may not have much medical guidance. The White House science adviser isn’t actually a scientist. Trump is pulling out of the World Health Organization, whose global flu surveillance network helps develop flu vaccines, and the administration even directed employees from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention not to email contacts at the World Health Organization.

    Kennedy has good ideas about promoting healthy school lunches and discouraging ultraprocessed foods. He’s right to ask questions about why there are increases in obesity, diabetes and autism (many scientists suspect that one factor may be environmental toxins such as endocrine disruptors). But Kennedy’s passion for many years has been hostility to vaccines, bundled in certitude and nastiness.

    This is not simply a quest for vaccine safety, as Kennedy tries to suggest. It is a misguided and dangerous campaign to undermine confidence in vaccines. A woman dies every two hours in the United States from cervical cancer, which is almost entirely preventable with HPV vaccinations — yet Kennedy has backed a lawsuit against the maker of the vaccine.

    The problems go beyond vaccines, of course. Kennedy is a conspiracy theorist who says he doesn’t “take sides” in the “debates” about who was behind 9/11, who argues that AIDS may not be caused by H.I.V., who suggested darkly that Covid-19 was engineered to spare Chinese people and Ashkenazi Jews, who claimed that Lyme disease is likely a military bioweapon. Some of this is bigotry; all of it is nonsense.

    On top of his ideological excesses, Kennedy doesn’t understand our health care system. In his hearings, he muddled Medicare and Medicaid. He represents the apotheosis of the politicization of science; he is our own Lysenko.

    I hope senators will protect American kids from Robert F. Kennedy Jr.



    Opinion | If Kennedy Is Blind to Science, Why Entrust Him With Our Health?

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been a vocal opponent of vaccines and has spread misinformation about their safety and efficacy. In light of his anti-science views, it begs the question: why would we trust someone like Kennedy with our health?

    Kennedy’s disregard for scientific evidence and his promotion of dangerous conspiracy theories should be alarming to anyone who values public health. Vaccines have been proven time and time again to be safe and effective in preventing the spread of deadly diseases, yet Kennedy continues to push his anti-vaccine agenda.

    When it comes to matters of health, we need leaders who are guided by evidence-based research and who prioritize the well-being of the public. Kennedy’s track record of spreading misinformation and fear-mongering about vaccines is not only irresponsible, but it puts lives at risk.

    It’s time to hold our leaders accountable and demand that they prioritize science and facts when making decisions that impact our health. Kennedy’s dangerous rhetoric should not be given a platform, and we must ensure that those in power are committed to protecting public health, not undermining it.

    Tags:

    1. Kennedy anti-science views
    2. Health risks with Kennedy
    3. Public health concerns
    4. Science denial in leadership
    5. Kennedy and health policies
    6. Impact of science ignorance on health
    7. Protecting public health
    8. Kennedy’s record on science
    9. Healthcare decisions and science
    10. Importance of science in health policy

    #Opinion #Kennedy #Blind #Science #Entrust #Health

  • Baku rejects Yerevan’s ‘Peace Crossroads’ amid Zangazur Corridor deadlock [OPINION]


    Baku rejects Yerevan’s ‘Peace Crossroads’ amid Zangazur Corridor deadlock [OPINION]


    Baku rejects Yerevan's 'Peace Crossroads' amid Zangazur Corridor deadlock [OPINION]

    Akbar Novruz

    On January 28, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev addressed several important issues during a meeting focused on transportation. The main topics included identifying the problems faced by Azerbaijan’s transport infrastructure and discussing potential solutions for their development. An additional topic discussed was the Zangazur Corridor, which has remained unresolved for about five years. This corridor is a commitment made by Armenia in the Trilateral Statement of November 10, 2020. It is important to note that even if Armenia does not agree to the Zangazur Corridor, which holds global significance, it is still required to provide unhindered access to Nakhchivan, which is part of Azerbaijan, as requested by influential external parties.

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    The recent proposal by Yerevan for a “Peace Crossroads” in the region has been met with rejection by Baku, further deepening the deadlock over the Zangazur Corridor.

    The proposal, which aimed to create a neutral zone for dialogue and cooperation between Armenia and Azerbaijan, was seen as a potential breakthrough in the ongoing conflict. However, Baku’s rejection of the idea signals a continued reluctance to engage in meaningful peace talks.

    The Zangazur Corridor, a key issue in the conflict between the two countries, remains a major point of contention. Azerbaijan views the corridor as essential for connecting its mainland to its exclave of Nakhchivan, while Armenia sees it as a threat to its territorial integrity.

    The rejection of the “Peace Crossroads” proposal underscores the deep-rooted distrust and animosity between the two countries, making it increasingly difficult to find a resolution to the conflict. Without a willingness to engage in dialogue and compromise, the prospects for lasting peace in the region remain uncertain.

    In conclusion, the rejection of Yerevan’s proposal by Baku highlights the need for both sides to prioritize peace and reconciliation over territorial ambitions. Only through genuine dialogue and cooperation can a lasting solution to the conflict be achieved.

    Tags:

    • Baku
    • Yerevan
    • Peace Crossroads
    • Zangazur Corridor
    • Azerbaijan
    • Armenia
    • South Caucasus
    • International Relations
    • Conflict Resolution
    • Political Analysis

    #Baku #rejects #Yerevans #Peace #Crossroads #Zangazur #Corridor #deadlock #OPINION

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