The protest wave has changed the face of Israel's political map
The protesters don't speak in political terms, but they are highly political and they know what they're doing.
By Avirama GolanThe detractors and supporters of the protest wave at least agree on one thing. The demonstrations are unfocused. What in the world do the protesters want other than a better life, what's the common denominator other than general dissatisfaction?
Leaving the prime minister's associates aside, most of the critics come from the pro-settlement right wing, and that's no coincidence.
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Protesters watching Benjamin Netanyahu’s press conference from their Rothschild Boulevard tent city. |
| Photo by: Tali Mayer |
These people portray the protests as coming from the very place the right loves to disparage as a threat: the heart of Tel Aviv with its secular residents who lack values.
The protests break all the rules dictated for so long by the settlers. They don't involve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the occupation, and they're open to like-minded individuals, so the demonstrations have seen voters from Likud, Meretz and Hadash standing shoulder to shoulder; protesters with skullcaps and secular people, Jews and Arabs.
This poses a threat because just when the pro-settlement right thought its delegitimization campaign against the left's remnants had been totally successful, a new political movement has sprung up that is refusing to cooperate with this old dichotomy and is calling for unconventional alliances.
This change is also the proper response to anyone concerned about blurred messages. One might suggest that these concerned people listen to the insults from the right to understand how political the protests are. The major threat, which those same settlers and their associates understood from the beginning, is not necessarily that the rules have been broken, but rather what is hiding under the surface that is just beginning to resonate.
Seemingly faceless activists, graduates of youth movements such as Hamahanot Ha'olim and Hashomer Hatzair, veterans of urban kibbutzim, Koach Laovdim - The Democratic Workers' Organization, and a host of other social activist organizations are beginning to see the fruits of the seeds they sowed over the past 10 years, based on a focused worldview. In addition to work and study, these young people have made supreme efforts for a range of social issues including housing, labor rights and health issues.
Now they are at the heart of the protests, leading and making their influence felt. Their opponents understand who they are very well, so these opponents are scared, because the protesters' worldview sees the settlements and the occupation as a hindrance to democracy and the welfare state. The protesters don't speak in political terms, but they are highly political and they know what they're doing.
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THE ARAB SPRING ROLLS INTO ISRAEL. FREE PALESTINE NOW!
If there was free education for all those who wanted a degree, Israel would do very well when those graduates enter the job market in 4 years. They can use a couple of those billions that Staneley Fisher has been stock piling for a rainy day to jump start the economy.
Is an inherent human right. Having said that, I'm willing to be that Israeli doctors would disagree with you Yonatan.
Calls for a welfare state, free daycare and free university betray these people as absolute old time leftists/socialists who never ask where the money is supposed to come from to pay for these demands ! If you took every shekel from every rich person, there would still not be enough money to pay for it ! But, of course that's not their problem : they're Big Picture People !! Been there, done that ! Forward, into the past !!
I have news for you, pal, Israel already is a welfare state. Ask Americans and they'll tell you.
Well, do you Yisrael? Better yet, do you ever ask yourself how Americans must feel like having to give up the very fiber of their livelihood and safety nets like Social Security in order to give billions to you? Still, you don't think you're not a welfare state. Ha!
Israelis protesting the high cost of living is change. Uh, huh. They don't protest the underlying cause of their ills, namely, the occupation, warmongering and genocide of the Palestinians but they're quick to rise when it affects their pockets.
if the protestors want long lasting meaningful change they are going to have to form a new party or joing existing centrist ones and make a difference at the ballot box. bibi cannot be sent home until there are viable canidates. the protests are just a first step that must be followed by traditional political sweat.
Bull droppings Israel is,will remain the same. No one,especially the deluded protestors who may think it will change the character of Israel need their silly heads examined.Were Israel tp change as YOU suppose,it would be the death knell for my country ISRAEL (dream on)
... nothing has changed. But keep telling yourselves whatever makes you feel bette
Just as wars are ruining the American economy, so has the occupation and the settlements affected the heart of Israel which these people represent. Netanyahu was busy building his high-tech economy and touting Israel as a business model, and along the way he sacrificed Israel's soul, which these people are reclaiming.