On Revolution: Toward a Bloodless
Revolution
By Prof. Paul Eidelberg
Violent revolution would have erupted in any country had its people
suffered
what the Jews in Israel have suffered since Oslo 1993:
deceit, betrayal, bloodshed, humiliation.
Can you imagine any Christian
country tolerating the violence
Israeli governments have tolerated since Oslo -- the butchering of
Jewish women, men, and children by
Arab terrorists? Can you
imagine the leaders of any Christian country raising money for their
people's enemies, as Shimon Peres has been
doing for Yasser Arafat
and the PLO-Palestinian Authority? A government that included the
likes of Shimon Peres would have been
overthrown.
Israel, however, is virtually immune to revolution. The mere fact
that this country has democratic elections induces
Jews to believe
that they can change things for the better merely by changing the
prime minister or party in power. They are deceived and
disarmed by
democratic elections. The system of fixed party lists and the
absence of regional elections render Jews powerless. Nothing
really
changes. Arabs continue to murder Jews -- almost 1,000 under three
Labor and two Likud prime ministers; more than 500 during the
first
18 months of the Sharon regime.
Unfortunately, security is not the only existential threat facing
Israel. Regardless of
the party in power -- regardless of the
results of democratic elections -- neither Labor nor Likud addresses
the demographic problem. Not
a word about the burgeoning Arab
population and the influx of hundreds of thousands of gentiles from
Russia, even though the Jewish
majority in Israel has declined from
82 to 72 percent in the last two decades. At this rate, the Jewish
state is doomed. Rest assured
Israel's ruling elites are aware of
all this Hence I ask: Can it be that Labor and Likud, to say
nothing of other parties, have a vested
interest in preserving the
existing system of government, whose institutions and modes of
election enable the ruling elites to perpetuate
their power, perks,
and privileges?
Oslo has taught many Israelis that the Likud is the right wing of
the Labor Party. But this
has been the case since Menachem Begin
appointed Labor's Moshe Dayan as foreign minister in 1977.Ý
Thereafter the Likud betrayed Eretz
Yisrael, did nothing to curb the
disloyalty of Israel's Arab citizens, and Israel still has a
Bolshevik economy which, like Arab
disloyalty, makes a mockery of
democracy. Labor still controls all the levers of power: the
country's economic assets, the bureaucracy,
the military, the
police, the Intelligence services, the media, the educational and
cultural institutions, the Supreme Court, etc. In
this
democratically elected despotism revolution is out of the question.
Do not be deceived by its human face. Yes, it preaches
pluralism,
tolerates many parties, gives interviews to many newspapers. But
Jews continue to be murdered and Israel's future as a Jewish
state
remains dismal. Against this despotism, some prefer to call it a
mafia in demonstrations, full-page ads, newspaper
articles,
pamphlets, petitions, bumper stickers, video cassettes, law suits,
are futile. Millions of dollars have been wasted on these
efforts.
Not that such expressions of opposition are of no value. But when
millionaires and activists support seemingly rightwing
prime
ministerial candidates, thinking this will prevent Israel's leftwing
drift toward oblivion, one can only raise one's hands in
despair.
Had much of the wealth and energy been focused on efforts to change
Israel's political system, whose corruption is unspeakable,
there
would be no talk of a Palestinian state and the demographic problem
would no longer threaten Israel's existence.
I am
speaking of making Jews aware of the fact that institutional
change is a necessary precondition of policy change. Israel cannot
survive
with multi-party cabinet government. It cannot survive so
long as Knesset Members, instead of being individually accountable
to the
voters in constituency elections, can ignore than with
impunity ñ indeed, can hop from one party to another to obtain a
safe seat or a
cabinet post or a Mitsubishi. And heaven knows that
Israel cannot survive as a Jewish state with a Supreme Court that
scorns the Jewish
heritage.
The only revolution possible in Israel is a bloodless one. This can
only be accomplished by empowering the Jewish
people by more
democratic, more professional, and more Jewishly oriented
institutions.