Hate vs peace and harmony: Israeli prime minister’s aide flaunts “hate” as a unifier

Netanyahu aide says hate unites Jews
Gilad Atzmon writes:

We learned today that Israel’s UN ambassador, Danny Dannon, told  the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) – the United States’s top Zionist lobby group – that Bernie Sanders is an “ignorant fool, a liar or both”.He said:

We don’t want Sanders at AIPAC. We don’t want him in Israel…Whoever calls the prime minister of Israel a “racist” is either a liar, an ignorant fool, or both.

The evidence of Israel’s racism and the Netanyahu government’s racialist policies is, unfortunately, conclusive. One can look at the Netanyahu government’s approach to Black migrants. Or examine the racist Israeli national-state law. This leads one to wonder what motivated Ambassador Dannon to act so “undiplomatically” by attacking the Democratic Party’s frontrunner for expressing a reasoned criticism of Israel and its prime minister.

But even before we can get to that question, we have to consider what Israeli media outlets have informed us. In a leaked recording, Netanyahu senior adviser, Natan Eshel, revealed that “hate is what unites” the Israeli right-wing and it “works well on non-Ashkenazi voters”.

Eshel, a former Netanyahu chief of staff who resigned amid allegations of sexual misconduct, continues to work with the Israeli prime minister, and last year led the two coalition negotiations. 

The Jewish fear of anti-Semitism can be seen as projection: those who are “united by hate” may well attribute their own hatefulness to their neighbours, whether they are Palestinians, Labour voters or even the Democratic frontrunner.

In the recording, Eshel explains that Likud minister (and former Israeli army spokeswoman) Miri Regev is “excellent” at “stirring up” Likud supporters. Eshel refers to Regev as “an animal”, but notes her tactics work very well in  “drumming up the crowd”.

It is reasonable to think that Ambassador Dannon’s description of Senator Sanders served a similar purpose: to drum up the AIPAC crowd. And, of course, the British Jewish media together with Jewish pressure groups and the Israeli lobby have since 2017 also used this technique to ignite their crowd’s hatred of the Labour Party and its leader, Jeremy Corbyn. Some people, so it seems, are united by hate.

The leaked recording of Netanyahu’s senior adviser shines a light on the ever growing Jewish fear of anti-Semitism. Those who are so easily “united by hate” tend to believe that others are also similarly hateful. The Jewish fear of anti-Semitism can be seen as projection: those who are “united by hate” may well attribute their own hatefulness to their neighbours, whether they are Palestinians, Labour voters or even the Democratic frontrunner.

What we see is a lethal snowball of loathing and fear: the more hateful one happens to be, the more one is tormented by imagining that the Other is afflicted by the same hatefulness.

Jesus Christ diagnosed this very dangerous trait among his brethren. His solution was shocking, if simple. Instead of stockpiling weapons, he preached that his followers turn the other cheek: take a step forward, love your neighbour, break away from the vicious circle, seek peace and harmony.

The fate of Jesus is known to us all. The fate of those who try to preach peace to Israelis and Zionists isn’t exactly a secret either.

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