Wednesday, May 12, 2021

Dov Fischer. Sen. Kennedy Tries To No Avail. Listening To A Friend. Other News.







The Rockets Over Tel Aviv Will Change Israel for 

Years to Come


By Dov Fischer  

The long, sordid Israeli history of how the current crisis came 

to be.

First things first: Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar, Elizabeth Warren, and Bernie Sanders all can go to 

hell. The first two are outright Jew-haters. Not all Nazis in Germany shoved Jews into gas chambers

 and ovens. Some simply lined the streets and cheered the Hitlers on. The third may be a Jew-hater

 or just so leftist that her anti-Israel venom cannot be distinguished without a scorecard. The fourth 

is an apostate, one in a long line of history’s born Jews who would watch other Jews incinerated as l

ong as he and his warped ideology benefits. Jews encountered it with Karl Marx and Leon Trotsky. 

We encounter it with George Soros and the ilk whom he funds. It is the curse Jews uniquely endure 

when the Torah is abandoned for G-dless utopias that are dystopic. And now to the war in Israel:

The fools who are to blame for the catastrophes now emerging from Hamas and Gaza mostly are 

dead. They are the left-progressive Israeli Labor Party fools who had the power in June 1967 to 

grasp a moment of Divine miracle and launch Israel on a new destiny of fulfillment. “The Temple 

Mount is in our hands!” we heard when Israel liberated Jerusalem’s Old City and took back the 

Temple Mount and the Western Wall. But the cowards of Israel’s Labor party could not fathom the 

moment. It would take the 1973 Yom Kippur War to fully reveal that Moshe Dayan, whatever 

courage he may have manifested in battle, cowered in fear when not on the battlefield. The 

coward had been terrified to take East Jerusalem in 1967, and he suffered a meltdown as defense 

minister in 1973. Likewise, it took 1973 to see that Golda Meir may have been qualified to be a 

grandmother cooking chicken soup but was no leader of a nation on the cusp of historic greatness 

but simultaneously facing annihilation. Her refusal to act on intelligence she had before Anwar 

Sadat struck cost the lives of thousands of Israel’s boys, sacrificial lambs to her politics of fear and 

her obsessive need to be loved by American and European liberals.

Even the heroes of Labor like Yitzhak Rabin and Yigal Allon came to be exposed more over time. 

It had been years since Rabin had played his evil role during the perfidious criminal murdering of 

Irgun heroes on the Altalena, patriots who had risked their lives to bring weapons to take Jerusalem

in 1948, but Rabin returned with perfidy to push through the “Oslo Accords” disaster that laid the 

foundation for Yasser Arafat to control whole swaths of Judea and Samaria (the “West Bank”), to 

gain political autonomy and control over his own mass media, and to educate two new generations 

of Arab children to hate and murder Jews, all while he was given by Rabin his own internal security 

and police apparatus. Yigal Allon, meanwhile, had helped form the even-more-extreme-left Mapam 

party that idealized Josef Stalin and later mourned the death of Stalin, may his bones rot.

Ariel Sharon, too, now is dead, but his legacy lives on in the thousand Hamas rockets fired

indiscriminately at Jewish civilians throughout Israel. Sharon unilaterally withdrew Israel out of 

Gaza without a plan for The Day After, expelled 8,600 pioneering, brave Jews from their homes in

Gush Katif, handed over to the Arabs of Gaza thriving industries and gorgeous synagogues and 

yeshiva academies, and watched them all burn as he turned his attention next to wreak the same

havoc for Judea and Samaria. Only a significant ischemic stroke, and then yet a more massive 

hemorrhagic stroke a fortnight later, stopped him permanently from bulldozing more Jews out of 

their homes. Was his termination the hand of G-d or a stroke of luck? You be the judge.

But that is what aggregated to cause today’s catastrophic latest Hamas War against the Jews. 

That — plus Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s decade-long hesitancy to fight to a 

complete and outright crushing victory.

Professor Daniel Pipes has been advocating “Victory” these past several years, the idea that 

nothing short of an actual bruising, crushing, unequivocal Israeli victory over Hamas terror will 

achieve long-term results. By contrast, Netanyahu has followed a “lawn-mowing” philosophy: 

every few years, as new Hamas weeds grow, Israel confronts the comparatively reduced challenge 

to “mow the lawn.” The two competing perspectives each carry their respective pros and cons. A 

"Victory” campaign will entail the risk of more casualties up front and even worse international 

condemnation. By contrast, “mowing the lawn” reduces deaths in battle for the short term and 

limits ICC “war crimes” investigations initially but ensures more deaths and more world 

condemnations later, as future wars erupt. And these indeed are brutal wars. Responding to 

1,000 rockets fired from an enemy border into civilian centers in Paris and Marseille, London 

and Manchester, Berlin and Hamburg, Rome and Milan, Shanghai and Beijing, Moscow and 

St. Petersburg, Los Angeles and New York — that is war, not an “operation.” It took much less 

for all of Europe to bury each other into a Great War in 1914 and another even more catastrophic f

rom 1939–45.

If any country on Earth were to fire 1,000 rockets in three days indiscriminately into Los Angeles, 

Phoenix, Denver, Omaha, Chicago, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Boston, New York, Atlanta,

 

and Houston civilian centers, this country — yes, even under Biden and Pelosi, Obama and 

Schumer — would be dropping nuclear bombs on the source. And England would be doing the 

same if their cities were enduring this. So would France and Germany. So would China and Russia.

 So would you if you had the button.

Amid such catastrophes, Israelis vote every so often — with emphasis these past two years on

 “often” — and, as happens in every democratic electorate, certain regions tend to vote in 

certain ways. For example, in America the Northeast tends towards the Democrats and the left 

while the Deep South goes Republican conservative. Similarly in Israel, the 800,000 Jews in 

Judea and Samaria, those in the northern border development towns, and those near and amid 

the Gaza “envelope” vote for the military security of a Likud-right bloc, those in Jerusalem veer 

towards religious parties and the political right, and those in the Gush Dan–Tel Aviv region where 

the “beautiful people” live tend to vote for Labor and Meretz on the left. Meanwhile, for decades 

Israel’s third-largest city has been known as “Red Haifa” for its more extreme leftist sympathies. 

Thus, the leftist Ron Huldai has been elected and reelected mayor of Tel Aviv forever — now 

at 23 consecutive years — but when he tried to form a national political party to contend for the 

premiership over all of Israel’s voters he was handed his head in a hand-basket unceremoniously.

Tel Aviv and Haifa voters always have felt they could vote gaily and merrily for the Left because 

it never was their necks on the line as rockets roared nightly from Gaza into southern Israeli cities 

like Sderot, Ashkelon, and Ashdod. Haifa leftists did not share the concerns of residents based in 

northern Israel’s development towns like Maalot and Kiryat Shmona who contend with Hezbollah 

on their border with Lebanon. But all things come to an end. Decades of Oslo-based Israeli 

governmental failures driven by myopic leftist Labor governments, and by Sharon’s additional 

blind blunders, now have synergized to bring onto Israel the catastrophe of a Hamas-dominated 

Gaza in the south whose terror rockets now do reach Tel Aviv, even as Hezbollah yet awaits 

demonstrating to Haifa’s Meretz leftists what lies in store there.

Moments like these change a nation. The fall of the Twin Towers in Manhattan showed liberal 

New Yorkers that they, too, can be hit. They ended up shocked into voting for mayors on the

Republican line for more than another decade. America stuck with George W. Bush for the

next eight years. The year 2002 was only the fourth time since the Civil War that the party 

controlling the White House gained seats during a midterm election.

If Israel’s political stalemate soon forces the country into its fifth round of national elections in 30 

months, it may well be expected that the present catastrophic awakening — the awareness that

Hamas now can, will, and does hit Tel Aviv with rockets aimed at women, children, and civilian 

men — will move more seats to the right. More than that, it will change a generation of Jewish 

thinking in Israel among the dwindling remnant of leftists who did not already wise up after two 

intifadas. Jewish Israelis now consistently vote 70 percent right-wing. That number will increase.

For Israel, there is no making peace with people who will not accept the right of Jews to live 

sovereign in the land. It is a hard pill to swallow, recognizing with exasperation that there is no 

possible formula for making peace with such other than utterly crushing. The reason that German 

Nazis under Hitler and Eichmann finally have stopped their effort to destroy Jews is that they are 

dead, crushed, annihilated, wiped out. Even their carcasses are gone. The reason that Japan, who 

destroyed Pearl Harbor, became friendly to and a great ally of America can be explained in eight 

syllables: Na-ga-sa-ki-Hi-ro-shi-ma.

As with Oslo and the intifadas, this latest Hamas War catastrophe, highlighted by the Hamas war 

crimes of embedding their entire terror apparatus amid civilian population centers — primarily at 

hospitals, residential apartment buildings, and school yards — will impact another cohort of leftist 

Israelis for years to come. The last remnants of “Beautiful People” liberalism and progressivism in 

Israel — the voting booths of Tel Aviv and Haifa — will become a bit less red, even less pink. And 

there may come a time when, beyond mowing the lawn, the weeds finally will be extirpated because

 they must be.

As Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar, Elizabeth Warren, and Bernie Sanders tweet their condemnations of 

Israel for doing what any sovereign country would do to defend itself against a terror regime that 

bases its rocket launchers in hospitals, elementary schools, residential apartment buildings, and in 

ambulances, fair people will respond in the only five words that seem logical: They can go to hell.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Kennedy is the equivalent for our generation of the great humorist from Oklahoma who had common sense 

and knew when others did not know their behind from a hole in the ground,  He was Will Rogers for those too 

young to understand and appreciate solid clear headed thinking. This administrator is paid bick bucks to sped

 trillions yet cannot answer a simple question.

++++++++++++++++++++++++

 I have been listening to podcasts daily and have gleaned a lot of details which seem to be the conviction of most 

all  participants I have been listening to including my friend whom I had come speak at one of the SIRC President 

Day Dinners. This is what he had to say today:

He agrees the May 22 election cancelation precipitated an internal conflict between ABBAS/FATAH and HAMAS. 

It shut Hamas out and thus, they were unable to prove they are the real defenders of the Palestinians. Therefore,

in is view, Hamas needed to find a reason to become relevant and seized upon the election and  the Temple 

Mount Episode.

He was surprised the West Bank did not erupt so far and the noise from most of the Arabic/Moslem Nations and 

Territories has been mute as he expected. He believes the Abraham Accords will survive because it  is in the long 

term  national interests of the signatories and he also suggests  Biden and The State Department understand 

Hamas must be defeated and therefore are allowing Israel to deal them a punishing blow. He emphasized Israel 

must be allowed to show their strength as well as their will because that message would also be important to

 those Arab/Moslem  nations who were part of the Abraham Accords.

He laments Biden has been slow to appoint, even name, a U.S Amb. to Israel and once this "war" is over he says

Biden must move quickly to do so. 

He was not surprised Iran was able to arm Hamas  but was taken aback by Hamas'ability to stir up and cause

 massive disruption in the various streets of Israeli towns and, again, once the :war" ends Israel must address

 grievances and improve  Israeli Palestinian integration.  He mentioned 10% of the pharmacists and 50% of the 

hospital doctors are now Israeli Palestinians.

He agreed Hamas had been able to disrupt the elections  and he hoped the "war" would not expand to include an

 Israeli ground operation. 

As for what America can do beyond what it is doing he said block negative resolutions in The U.N and support 

Israel publicly as well as quietly and stay in constant touch.  As for what citizens can do to stay informed he 

emphasized they should read English editions of The Jerusalem Post and Times of Israel and not listen to Western Mass media sources because they were biased and  Israel sources were more balanced.

In terms of Hezbollah, he said their presence was important to Iran because an armed Hezbollah gave protection 

to Iran that Israel would not get aggressive towards Iran.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++

In other news:

Testing: Education's Indispensable GPS

by Chester E. Finn Jr. via Hoover Education Success Initiative | The Papers

We need a national conversation about the “why” of testing students annually, because we as 

educators need to come to a collective understanding of their importance. This could be led by our 

country’s new secretary of education, and we’re seeing many governors and state commissioners 

lead these conversations in many states.

===


Florida gains an additional seat as a result of the census.

===

Breaking: Border surge: Kamala Harris not doing too well on all those ‘root

 

causes’ she’s still looking for

===


Retired Generals And Admirals Sign Open Letter Questioning The 

Election And Biden's Mental And Physical Condition

imageA group of more than 120 (updated to 317) retired military officers has written President Joe Biden to tell

him his election was less than legitimate -- while questioning his mental acuity.



===

 https://www.nysun.com/foreign/a-not-so-little-war-brings-palestinian-arabs-back/91508/ 

the author of this article is: Josef Joffe is a Distinguished Visiting Fellow at Stanford’s Hoover 

Institution

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++


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GAZA ASSAULT


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This from our "Australian Family:
Hi Richard, I know you are on a week’s vacation but I thought this article from my friend Beni in Israel may be of interest as an insider look at the current situation.  xxxxx E-----



Last week I signed off by saying, “Next week I hope I will find something more cheerful to write about.” Well, I should have known better, the current chaotic situation had already flared up while I was writing about the Mount Meron tragedy.
This week I am less concerned about the Israel-Gaza confrontation than I am about Israel’s internal confrontation. The unbridled rioting, vandalism and physical attacks carried out by both Arabs and Jews.
One observer summed up the situation as follows:
The delicate and vastly imperfect coexistence that has existed between Jewish and Arab Israelis for the last 73 years now risks fraying beyond recognition.
What makes this dangerous tipping point even more tragic is that it comes just as it seemed the country’s Jewish and Arab citizens were on the cusp of a historic breakthrough.
That breakthrough was the product to some extent of the coronavirus, where Jewish and Arab medical personnel worked side by side and radiated a sense of one fate affecting all. It was also the product of the emergence of *Ra’am’s Mansour Abbas as a legitimate political partner in the minds of many Israelis, a man whose speeches of reconciliation were not spiced – as they historically have been by other Arab party Knesset members – with jabs at “apartheid” Israel and “oppressive” Israelis.
Abbas came across as someone who just wants a fair piece of the pie for his constituents, a claim most Israelis deem completely legitimate, given the degree to which the Arab sector has been neglected over the years.
*Ra’am is an Arab political party and the political wing of the Southern Branch of the Islamic movement currently negotiating its role in the next government coalition
But then, as was the case in 2000 during the last major wave of Israeli-Arab rioting, the Palestinian terrorists turned al-Aqsa Mosque into a rallying cry, and some Israeli-Arabs – a small minority of them – answered the call and rushed headlong into the rioting and violence.
President Reuven Rivlin, not one prone to panic or exaggeration, summed up the situation well. “The sight of the pogrom in Lod and the disturbances across the country by an incited and bloodthirsty Arab mob, injuring people, damaging property and even attacking sacred Jewish spaces, is unforgivable,” he said.
“Tearing down the Israeli flag by Arab rioters and replacing it with the Palestinian flag is a brutal assault on shared existence in the State of Israel. The silence of the Arab leadership about these disturbances is shameful, giving support to terrorism and rioting and encouraging the rupture of the society in which we live, and in which we will continue to live once all this has passed.”
And all this will pass. At a certain point the rockets will cease and the air will clear. And when it does, Israeli Jews and Arabs will remain destined to share Lod and Ramle, Haifa and Jaffa, Acre and the Galilee.
Israel, for its part, must ensure that its Arab citizens have all the infrastructure, opportunities and protection that every citizen of this country deserves.
But Israel also has the right to expect that Arab leaders – be they national politicians, municipal heads or religious leaders – step up to prevent a small minority of their own people from shattering the foundation of coexistence in this land by making common cause with those trying to destroy the country.
Yesterday busloads of Jewish right-wing extremist hailing mainly from West Bank settlements joined the fray facing off against the Arab rioters. Despite a dawn to dusk curfew in Lod a mixed Jewish-Arab town near Ben Gurion Air Terminal, the police were hard put to contain the rioting. Earlier, attempts to control the confrontations in Jerusalem were initially ineffective. Having to deal with multiple incidents relying solely on its limited manpower resources, the police called for reinforcements. Border police reserve units were called up to bolster the overextended regular police force. In faceoffs with the rioters hundreds of arrests were made.
The situation is still very volatile and some security experts have called for additional support from IDF regular army units. TV Channel news 12 claimed that the IDF High Command is reluctant to involve its troops in law-and-order incidents.
Viewing TV footage of the Arab rioters it’s clear that most, if not all of them are youngsters under 25. The older generation that took part in earlier violent demonstrations, stayed home this time.
Prime Minister Netanyahu will have a hard time restraining the right-wing extremists.
He will need them if he gets a second chance to form a coalition government.
Trying to recall how the current flare-up started I came across a very simplistic account in the Washington Post -
The trouble started with street unrest in Jerusalem, where Palestinian protests over evictions, Muslim commemorations of Ramadan and an Israeli holiday celebrating its capture of the city overlapped. Under normal circumstances, it might have petered out. But the Islamist Hamas group, which last month was denied an opportunity to take over leadership of the Palestinian movement when secular rival Mahmoud Abbas postponed a promised election, sought to accomplish the same end by other means — firing rockets at Jerusalem and deliberately crossing an Israeli red line.
That, in turn, handed a chance to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who had just failed to form a new government following elections in March and was facing the loss of his office after the past 12 years in power. He quickly vowed to strike back hard, and Israeli planes were soon bombing hideouts and arsenals in Gaza of Hamas and the Islamic Jihad……”
The evictions referred to concern Palestinian residents in Sheikh Jarrah a predominantly Palestinian neighbourhood in East Jerusalem, 2 kilometres north of the Old City, on the road to Mount Scopus. It received its name from the 13th-century tomb of Sheikh Jarrah, Saladin’s physician, located close by. The modern neighbourhood was founded in 1865 and gradually became a residential centre of Jerusalem's Muslim elite, particularly the al-Husseini family. After the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, it bordered the no-man's land area between Jordanian-held East Jerusalem and Israeli-held West Jerusalem until the neighbourhood was captured by Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War. Most of its present Palestinian population is said to come from refugees who fled from or were encouraged to leave Jerusalem's Talbiya neighbourhood in 1948.
Over a period of five decades, a number of Israeli settlements have been built in and adjacent to Sheikh Jarrah
 
 
 
Right-wing Israeli nationalists seeking to evict the Palestinian residents argued successfully in a claim they made to a district court that the properties were owned by Jews before Jordan conquered the area and resettled the current occupants there. The law firm representing the pro-eviction group invoked a 1970 law that allows, for all intents and purposes, only Jewish Israelis to reclaim property that was lost to them during the 1948 War of Independence. On the other hand, Palestinians who fled the Talbiya neighbourhood have no recourse to the courts to reclaim their lost properties. We will have a hard time explaining that lopsided law even to the most neutral, uninvolved observer. 
In the meantime, the scheduled evictions have been halted pending a ruling by the Israeli Supreme Court. The court has wisely deferred the hearing till June.
While the Israeli government has — fairly unconvincingly — attempted to portray this as a “real-estate dispute between two private parties,” the looming eviction of these families has been taken as emblematic of a movement within Israel to move Jewish Israelis into areas that have been historically inhabited by Arabs.
On the 24th of April 1948 Haganah units launched an attack on Sheikh Jarrah, but they were forced to retreat when a British Army force intervened. The British Mandate for Palestine was about to end, but the British army’s partiality for the Arab side in the fighting is clearly evident. It’s tempting to speculate what would have happened if the British Army force had not intervened in Sheikh Jarrah. 
I’m tempted to speculate about the convergence of events during Ramadan too. Consulting my religious events almanac, I notice that in 2016 Ramadan occurred in June. In 2026 it will be celebrated in February and in 2031 the faithful will fast in December.
In a piece he wrote for the Jerusalem Post Herb Keinon quoted from Datagraver, a Dutch project that “harvests and scrapes data from various online government pages and databases to create figures and dashboards.” In a report it published in 2016 the authors said that in the years 2006-2015 there was no correlation globally between terrorist attacks and Ramadan.
But there is a significant variation when the report is examined according to country: “In Bangladesh, Iran and Lebanon the number of attacks during Ramadan is over 50% lower than during non-Ramadan days. In Israel it’s over 200% higher.”
 
While some Israelis commemorated the capture of East Jerusalem in the 1967 Six Day War with a flag parade and a festive gathering at the Western Wall on Monday, my almanac informed me that the date fixed for the annual parade was arbitrary, since that war was fought in June.
Nonetheless, Hamas and the Islamic Jihad exploited the occasion to fire rocket barrages aimed at Jerusalem and its environs.
Within hours, Israeli jets began bombing targets in Gaza and since then the fighting has escalated dramatically with Hamas firing hundreds of rockets towards Tel Aviv and Israel carrying out hundreds of air strikes in Gaza.
Hamas also appeared to see the escalation as an opportunity to marginalise Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and present itself as the guardian of Palestinians in Jerusalem.
The Iron Dome defence system proved once again to be extremely effective in intercepting most of the mass salvos of rockets fired at cities, towns and communities in Israel. At one stage there was a rumour that Hamas had found a way to outwit the Iron Dome interceptors, but it was just fake news.
In an article evaluating the Iron Dome System Janes Defence weekly said,
Underpinned by a development philosophy of enduring upgrades to address a range of emergent complex air threats, in the 10 years since it first entered operational service, the system has quietly evolved beyond its original remit.
Pini Yungman, executive vice-president and head of Rafael Advanced Defence Systems’ Air and Missile Defence Division, told Janes. That, “Since its first deployment, we’ve had teams of engineers working continuously to enhance the system, upgrading it on a daily basis to give it more capacity and capability to address embryonic and predicted next-generation air threats.
 
The Israeli air strikes in Gaza included a number of high-rise buildings housing Hamas military headquarters. Rank and file non-militants also live in these buildings. Living alongside the civilian population ostensibly affords Hamas a measure of protection. To overcome this obstacle the IDF devised the “knock on the roof” technique. First an IDF drone fires a small explosive charge at the roof.
Almost simultaneously the particular Hamas operations official in the building receives a phone call from the IDF advising him to evacuate the entire building.
Then an Israeli air force jet fires a few air-to-surface missiles to bring the building down. The effect is demoralising for Hamas, though most Gaza residents are unaware of their changing skyline.
But the “unkindest cut of all” was made earlier this week when the IDF and the Shin Bet domestic security service brought about the demise of 16 high-ranking members of Hamas including a senior commander and weapons developers in Israeli targeted attacks on Gaza City and Khan Yunis.
The dead were members of the Hamas high command and close associates of Mohammed Deif
Then, seemingly out of nowhere there was a message from Mohammed Deif,
the military commander of the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas. He has been Israel's 'most wanted' man for the last 26 years since 1995 for his direct involvement in militant attacks such as the killing of IDF soldiers, suicide bombings and kidnappings.
Late on Tuesday, Hamas circulated what it described as a pre-recorded audio statement from Deif over the encrypted Telegram messaging service.
In it, Deif said he was sending a “clear, final warning” that if Israel goes through with the threatened eviction of dozens of Palestinians in the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood in east Jerusalem, then Hamas “will not stand by helplessly and the enemy will pay a heavy price.”
Mohammed Deif has been in hiding for more than two decades.
He has been the target of Israeli airstrikes on numerous occasions, and has escaped each time, although not unscathed. He is partially paralysed and wheelchair-bound, with only one arm and one eye.
As far as is known Hamas doesn’t have an external armaments

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