Gilad Atzmon: French Left destroyed Western Civ., now suppresses
discussion
of Jewish hegemony
Newsletter published on 26 December 2013
(1) Gilad Atzmon: "The role of the Left ... is to stop
us from looking
into Jewish power"
(2) Finkielkraut: Left denies Cash of
Civilizations (Islam vs a West
whose Civ. has been destroyed)
(3) Gilad:
French Left destroyed Western Civ., now suppresses discussion
of Jewish
hegemony
(4) ADL calls on US to pressure Europe to monitor Hate crime and
confront anti-Semitism
(5) Hollywood's Arnon Milchan says he was Israeli
spy
(1) Gilad Atzmon: "The role of the Left ... is to stop us from
looking
into Jewish power"
Radio interview with Ryan Dawson
http://www.gilad.co.uk/writings/ryan-dawson-interviews-gilad-atzmon-very-interesting.html
27
Oct 2013
"In fact, I actually argue that the so-called anti-Zionists are
actually
far more dangerous - and this is crucial. You see, I like to talk
about
Jewish power: there is no doubt that the Jewish power plays a major
role
in contemporary politics, banking and so on. The Jewish Lobby openly
pushes for a war in Syria; and, before that, conflict with Iran and so
on. There is no doubt about it.
"However, I argue that all those
events can be easily checked - you can
read my book, and John Mearsheimer
and Stephen Walt about the Israeli
Lobby, you can read James Petras, you can
read Jeff Blankfort, and so
on. I argue that what they describe is not
Jewish power; it is just
symptoms of Jewish power.
"The real meaning
of Jewish power is the capacity to stop us from
talking about Jewish power.
The Jewish power is not the embodiment of
the pro-Zionists, for instance.
... Jewish power is the successful
tendency to stop us from looking into it.
Now this is not done by
Dershowitz, or Foxman - ADL Foxman. This is done by
the Jewish Left, and
the Left in general. The role of the Left, and the
Jewish Left in
particular, is to stop us from looking into Jewish power. In
other
words, the definition of Jewish power is the capacity to stop us from
looking into Jewish power."
"And this is exactly what Noam Chomsky
did on Democracy Now, when he had
to discuss John Mearsheimer. He dismissed
his whole approach, instead of
discussing it. Finkelstein – Norman
Finkelstein - did pretty much the
same thing. By the way, Democracy Now
should have brought Stephen Walt
and John Mearsheimer to debate Chomsky; but
they didn't. They operated
as an instrument of Jewish power, diverting
attention from the issue.
"Now, it is not a secret, that the vast
majority of Progressive
organizations in America, the vast majority of
Palestinian NGOs, the
vast majority of Palestinian Solidarity groups, are
supported by George
Soros' Open Society, who also support the Zionist
liberal J Street. And
this is why we see a suspicious similarity between the
ideas presented
by liberal Zionism and the progressive network. And this is
what
transforms the Left - which stands for beautiful values, that I respect
to a certain extent - this is what transforms the Left into a dubious
network of Controlled Opposition."
(2) Finkielkraut: Left denies Cash
of Civilizations (Islam vs a West
whose Civ. has been destroyed)
http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/interview-french-philosopher-finkielkraut-on-muslims-and-integration-a-937404.html
French
Philosopher Finkielkraut: 'There Is a Clash of Civilizations'
Interview
Conducted by Mathieu von Rohr and Romain Leick
French society is under
threat, argues philosopher Alain Finkielkraut in
a controversial new book.
The conservative spoke to SPIEGEL about what
he sees as the failure of
multiculturalism and the need for better
integration of Muslim
immigrants.
Alain Finkielkraut is one of France's most controversial
essayists. His
new book, "L'Identité Malheureuse" ("The Unhappy Identity,"
Éditions
Stock ), has been the subject of heated debate. It comes at a time
when
France finds itself in the midst of an identity crisis. But rather than
framing things from a social or political perspective, Finkielkraut
explores what he sees as a hostile confrontation between indigenous
French people and immigrants. He was interviewed in his Parisian
apartment on the Left Bank.
SPIEGEL: Mr. Finkielkraut, are you
unhappy with today's France?
Finkielkraut: I am pained to see that the
French mode of European
civilization is threatened. France is in the process
of transforming
into a post-national and multicultural society. It seems to
me that this
enormous transformation does not bring anything
good.
SPIEGEL: Why is that? Post-national and multicultural sounds rather
promising.
Finkielkraut: It is presented to us as the model for the
future. But
multiculturalism does not mean that cultures blend. Mistrust
prevails,
communitarianism is rampant -- parallel societies are forming that
continuously distance themselves from each other.
SPIEGEL: Aren't you
giving in here to the right-wingers' fears of demise?
Finkielkraut: The
lower middle classes -- the French that one no longer
dares to call Français
de souche (ethnic French) -- are already moving
out of the Parisian suburbs
and farther into the countryside. They have
experienced that in some
neighborhoods they are the minority in their
own country. They are not
afraid of the others, but rather of becoming
the others
themselves.
SPIEGEL: But France has always been a country of
immigrants.
Finkielkraut: We are constantly told that immigration is a
constitutive
element of the French identity. But that's not true. Labor
migration
began in the 19th century. It was not until after the bloodletting
of
World War I that the borders were largely opened.
SPIEGEL:
Immigration has had more of a formative influence on France
than on
Germany.
Finkielkraut: Immigration used to go hand-in-hand with
integration into
French culture. That was the rule of the game. Many of the
new arrivals
no longer want to play by that rule. If the immigrants are in
the
majority in their neighborhoods, how can we integrate them? There used
to be mixed marriages, which is crucial to miscegenation. But their
numbers are declining. Many Muslims in Europe are re-Islamizing
themselves. A woman who wears the veil effectively announces that a
relationship with a non-Muslim is out of the question for
her.
SPIEGEL: Aren't many immigrants excluded from mainstream society
primarily for economic reasons?
Finkielkraut: The left wanted to
resolve the problem of immigration as a
social issue, and proclaimed that
the riots in the suburbs were a kind
of class struggle. We were told that
these youths were protesting
against unemployment, inequality and the
impossibility of social
advancement. In reality we saw an eruption of
hostility toward French
society. Social inequality does not explain the
anti-Semitism, nor the
misogyny in the suburbs, nor the insult "filthy
French." The left does
not want to accept that there is a clash of
civilizations.
SPIEGEL: The anger of these young people is also stirred
up by high
unemployment. They are turning their backs on society because
they feel
excluded.
Finkielkraut: If unemployment is so high, then
immigration has to be
more effectively controlled. Apparently there is not
enough work for
everyone. But just ask the teachers in these troubled
neighborhoods --
they have major difficulties teaching anything at all.
Compared to the
rappers and the dealers, the teachers earn so ridiculously
little that
they are viewed with contempt. Why should the students make an
effort to
follow in their footsteps? There are a large number of young
people who
don't want to learn anything about French culture. This refusal
makes it
harder for them to find work.
SPIEGEL: These neighborhoods
that you speak of, have you even seen them
firsthand?
Finkielkraut: I
watch the news; I read books and studies. I have never
relied on my
intuition.
SPIEGEL: In the US the coexistence of communities works
better. The
Americans don't have this European adherence to a national
uniform culture.
Finkielkraut: The US sees itself as a country of
immigration, and what
is impressive about this truly multicultural society
is the strength of
its patriotism. This was particularly evident after the
attacks of
September 11, 2001. In France, however, the opposite could be
seen after
the attacks on French soldiers and Jewish children in Toulouse
and
Montauban last year: Some schoolchildren saw Mohamed Merah, the
assailant, as a hero. Something like that would be unthinkable in the
US. American society is a homeland for everyone. I don't think that many
children of immigrants here see it that way.
SPIEGEL: America makes
it easy for new arrivals to feel like Americans.
Does France place the
hurdles too high?
Finkielkraut: France prohibits students from wearing
headscarves at
school. This is also for the benefit of all Muslims who don't
want a
religious cage for themselves, for their daughters and wives. France
is
a civilization, and the question is what it means to participate in it.
Does this mean the natives have to make themselves extremely small so
the others can easily spread themselves out? Or does it mean passing on
the culture that one possesses?
SPIEGEL: But this has worked for a
long time. The Italians, Spaniards,
Poles and European Jews had no
difficulties becoming French patriots.
Why is this no longer
working?
Finkielkraut: Why is there today such aggression toward the West
in the
Islamic world? Some say that France was a colonial power, which is
why
those who were colonized could not be happy. But why has Europe been
subjected to this massive immigration from former colonies over the past
half a century? France still has to pay for the sins of colonialism and
settle its debt to those who vilify it today.
SPIEGEL: You yourself
are the child of immigrants, the progeny of a
persecuted family. Does your
personal will to integrate explain your
radical commitment to the values of
the Republic?
Finkielkraut: I defend these values because I probably owe
more to my
schooling than do the Français de souche, the hereditary French.
French
traditions and history were not laid in my cradle. Anyone who does
not
bring along this heritage can acquire it in l'école républicaine, the
French school system. It has expanded my horizons and allowed me to
immerse myself in French civilization.
SPIEGEL: And made you into its
apologist?
Finkielkraut: I can speak and write more openly than others
precisely
because I am not a hereditary Frenchman. The natives easily allow
themselves to be unnerved by the prevailing discourse. I don't have such
complexes.
SPIEGEL: How do you define this French civilization that
you speak of?
>Finkielkraut: I recently reread a book by the
admirable Russian writer
Isaac Babel. The story takes place in Paris. The
narrator is in a hotel
and at night he hears the lovemaking sounds of the
couples next door.
Babel writes: This has nothing to do with what one hears
in Russia --
it's much more fiery. Then his French friend responds: We
>French
created women, literature and cuisine. No one can take that from
us.
SPIEGEL: Those are idealized clichés that nations create for
themselves.
Finkielkraut: But it is true, or at least it was in the past.
France
can't allow itself to bask in its own glory. But it has evidence of
its
civilization, just like Germany -- it has its sights, its squares, its
cafés, its wealth of literature and its artists. We can be proud of
these ancestors, and we have to prove that we are worthy of them. I
regret that Germany -- for reasons that are understandable -- has broken
with this pride in its past. But I believe that German politicians who
speak of Leitkultur -- the guiding national culture -- are right. The
Leitkultur does not create an insurmountable barrier to
newcomers.
SPIEGEL: Is the modern French identity still shaped by the
Revolution of
1789?
Finkielkraut: Back in 1989, on the 200th
anniversary of the revolution,
I signed a petition against the Islamic
headscarf. For me it had to do
with the notion of secularism, which is
running into criticism around
the world these days. France believed at the
time that this was a model
for the world, and is today reminded of its
distinctiveness. It is no
longer a question of exporting our model. We have
to remain modest, yet
steadfast.
SPIEGEL: But doesn't French
secularism today also serve to justify the
aggressive rejection of
Islam?
Finkielkraut: How is that? We have prohibited the veil; we have
not
banned the individual. Previously schoolgirls were urged to place under
their blouses or sweaters the crosses or medallions of the Virgin Mary
that they wore on their necklaces. That is not asking too much, merely a
bit of restraint on everyone's part. This has nothing to do with
aggression against Muslims.
SPIEGEL: Hasn't Islam long since become a
part of Europe, a part of
France and Germany, as former German President
Christian Wulff once put it?
Finkielkraut: Former French President
Jacques Chirac made a similar
statement. Islam may one day belong to Europe,
but only after it has
Europeanized itself. It is not an insult to the others
to point out
their otherness.
SPIEGEL: Well, the Muslims are here
now. So don't they also belong?
Finkielkraut: The question is: How are
they here? Immigrants lose
nothing when they recognize their difference from
the established
population. Today the Muslims in France like to shout in an
act of
self-assertion: We are just as French as you! It would have never
occurred to my parents to say something like that. I would also never
say that I am just as French as Charles de Gaulle was.
SPIEGEL: In
France immigrants are covered by the jus soli , or "right of
the soil,"
meaning that every child born there has a right to French
citizenship. Do
you want to abolish this?
Finkielkraut: No. But all equality of rights
aside, such a child has
become a French national in a manner that differs
from descent. The
automatic right to French citizenship by being born on
French territory
makes many French people feel uncomfortable these days,
because the act
of wanting to be French gets lost in this process. Like most
other
Europeans, the French have the feeling that immigration has become an
uncontrolled process -- something that happens, not something that is
willed into being. The countries are not directing this process; at
most, they are escorting it.
SPIEGEL: Isn't it extremely easy to
attribute all problems to poverty
immigration from the developing
world?
Finkielkraut: A public political debate on the issue is the least
that
one could expect. Instead, this field is ceded to the extreme
right.
SPIEGEL: How do you view the political rise of Marine Le Pen and
her
far-right National Front party?
Finkielkraut: This disturbs me,
of course. But the National Front would
not be continuously on the rise if
it had not discarded the old issues
of the extreme right. Nowadays the
National Front focuses on secularism
and the republic.
SPIEGEL: That
sounds as if you could imagine voting for the party.
Finkielkraut: No, I
would never do that because this party appeals to
people's base instincts
and hatred. And these are easy to kindle among
its supporters. We can't
leave these issues to the National Front. It
would also be up to the left,
the party of the people, to take seriously
the suffering and anxiety of
ordinary people.
SPIEGEL: What do you say to people who call you a
reactionary?
Finkielkraut: It has become impossible to see history as
constant
progress. I reserve the possibility to compare yesterday and today
and
ask the question: What do we retain, what do we abandon?
SPIEGEL:
Is that really any more than nostalgia for a lost world?
Finkielkraut:
Like Albert Camus, I am of the opinion that our
generation's task is not to
recreate the world, but to prevent its
decline. We not only have to conserve
nature, but also culture. There
you have the reactionary.
SPIEGEL:
When you see all these problems in France -- the debts,
unemployment,
educational crisis, identity crisis -- do you fear for the
future?
Finkielkraut: I become sad and feel a growing sense of
anxiety. Optimism
would seem a bit ridiculous these days. I wish the
politicians were able
to speak the truth and look reality in the face. Then,
I believe, France
would be capable of a true awakening -- of contemplating a
policy of
civilization.
SPIEGEL: Mr. Finkielkraut, thank you for this
interview.
Translated from the German by Paul Cohen
Kristoffer
Larsson <krislarsson@gmail.com>
21
December 2013 09:30
(3) Gilad: French Left destroyed Western Civ., now
suppresses discussion
of Jewish hegemony
Alain Finkielkraut, Jews,
and Immigration
Friday, December 20, 2013 at 11:28AM
By Gilad
Atzmon
http://www.gilad.co.uk/writings/alain-finkielkraut-jews-and-immigration.html
http://dissidentvoice.org/2013/12/alain-finkielkraut-jews-and-immigration/
Along
the second half of the 20th century many Jewish intellectuals,
activists and
artists positioned themselves at the forefront of Western
advocacy of
immigration and multiculturalism. Occasionally we were also
expected to
believe that immigration, tolerance, pluralism and
multiculturalism are
intrinsic to Jewish culture and thought.
But as the West became gradually
aware of the scale of Israeli racism
and intolerance towards migrant
communities, more than just a few
intellectuals were courageous enough to
point at a clear discrepancy
between the progressive ideas Jews claim to
represent and what their
Jewish State happens to be. There aren't many
countries that are more
anti-immigration than Israel. The Jewish State is
also very selective
when it comes to multiculturalism. Israel happily
integrated humus and
falafel into its cuisine. It even let a few juicy Arab
swear words into
its emerging Hebraic dialect but it has been far less
enthusiastic about
Palestinian mourning their own plight and the Nakba in
particular.
However, Jewish passion for immigration is clearly fading
away these
days. It is not a secret that mass immigration of Muslims and
Arabs made
many Western Jews feel uncomfortable to say the least. In recent
years
we have been monitoring rapid surge of Jewish involvement in
anti-immigration political and intellectual activity. Some so-called
'progressive' Jews fight the veil in the name of 'feminism,' others
insist on eradicating Islamic symbolic identifiers in the name of
'secularism.' I guess that even Jewish 'progressive tolerance' has its
limits, especially when it comes to Muslims. However, Zionists are
actually slightly more consistent in that regard: they openly ally
themselves with ultra-nationalist groups such as the hawkish EDL.
Anti-Islam positions are often promoted by Hasbara, interventionist and
neocon outlets such as Harry's Place. The xenophobic message is also
disseminated via literature, academia and general media. Here in
Britain, journalist celebrity Melanie Phillips published her notorious
Londonistan.
Jewish past support of pro-immigration and
multiculturalism is easy to
explain.
For the obvious reasons, many
Jews prefer to live in multi-ethnic and
fragmented societies, being one
minority amongst many. Identity
politics, pro-immigration and
multiculturalism are there to dismantle
the cohesive national and patriotic
bond in favor of a manifold complex
structure consisting of a fragile and
dynamic exchange between a
manifold of minority groups.
Jews are
often threatened by the possibility that indigenous
lower-middle and working
classes may follow their nationalistic and
patriotic inclinations and turn
against them. In that regard, a radical
demographic boost of the working
class with a varied mixture of foreign
ethnicities is regarded by
progressive Jews as a necessary preventative
measure against
anti-semitism.
But here is an interesting development. Last week Spiegel
published an
intriguing interview with Alain Finkielkraut, a French
so-called
philosopher and also a Jew and son of immigrants. Finkielkraut is
no
longer threatened by 'the lower middle classes.' Quite the opposite, he
actually pretends to be their ally and he even makes himself their
ambassador: "the French that one no longer dares to call Français de
souche (ethnic French) are already moving out of the Parisian suburbs
and farther into the countryside. They have experienced that in some
neighborhoods they are the minority in their own country. They are not
afraid of the others, but rather of becoming the others themselves." In
other words, the ethnic French are now "otherized" together with the
Jews by a tidal wave of Islamic tsunami.
It doesn't take Finkielkraut
long before he points directly at the
'enemy within.' "Many Muslims in
Europe are re-Islamizing themselves. A
woman who wears the veil effectively
announces that a relationship with
a non-Muslim is out of the question for
her." I guess that Finkielkraut
finds it unacceptable that Muslims do not
buy into the Mendelsohnian
Jewish 'assimilation' paradigm — be a Goy in the
street and a Jew in
your dwelling — the façade of pretending to blend into
the masses, yet
adhering to tribal and exclusive supremacy in clandestine
fashion.
Muslims, so it seems, are not collectively buying into this
duplicity
mode. Seemingly, they are not shy of their love for Allah. They
are
actually proud of their symbolic identifiers. These facts alone indeed
have managed to challenge the notion of left and progressive tolerance.
And it isn't exactly a secret — the Left has failed in this tolerance
test.
Left and Islam
Finkielkraut may not be a sophisticated mind,
but he is not a complete
idiot either. He rightly points at the deceitful
nature of the
contemporary progressive and Left call. "The left" he says,
"wanted to
resolve the problem of immigration as a social issue, and
proclaimed
that the riots in the suburbs were a kind of class struggle. We
were
told that these youths were protesting against unemployment, inequality
and the impossibility of social advancement. In reality we saw an
eruption of hostility toward French society." The Jewish thinker then
voices his exact and very particular concern — "social inequality does
not explain anti-Semitism."
Finkielkraut is indeed partially correct,
and the 'Left' is indeed
wrong, deluded and misleading. Yet, in a
symptomatic attempt to conceal
the truth, Finkielkraut diverts the attention
from the vast French
institutional political support of Israel, its racist
policies and the
impact of the Jewish lobby in France. Accordingly, it may
as well be
possible that anti-Jewish sentiments within migrant communities
in
France are provoked by the French pro-Israeli attitude. In other words,
we are dealing here with a clear rational sense of 'inequality' that is
ethnically and politically driven (rather than merely
materially).
After all, France is actively and enthusiastically engaged
in the
destruction of more than just one Arab State. The ultra-Zionist
Bernard
Henri Levy was the leading advocate for the intervention in Libya.
In
the last few weeks France went out of its way in its attempts to
jeopardize a UN deal with Iran. Thus, it is only natural that some
Muslims find it hard to accept the unbalanced French pro-Israeli policy.
Would Parisian Jews support France if it decided to bomb an Israeli
Government headquarters in Tel Aviv as a response to Israeli crimes
against humanity? In short, it is more than likely that what
Finkielkraut describes as anti-Semitism is actually a direct reaction to
Jewish power.
Yet, the French Left cannot deal with such a
development for the obvious
reason that the Left is in itself an instrument
of such power – it is
there to suppress the discussion on issues to do with
Jewish political
hegemony and influence.
Civilization: Jewish and
Left Perspectives
Finkielkraut continues, "the left does not want to
accept that there is
a clash of civilizations." Finkielkraut is correct, for
a change, but
for the wrong reasons. The Left cannot accept the notion of
such a
'clash' because the Left, similarly to Jewish identity political
discourse, lacks a lucid understanding of the notion of
'civilization'.
This point needs a bit of elaboration. Zionism, according
to its early
mentors, was set to 'civilize' the Jew by means of
'nationalization'.
Early Zionists contended that that the diasporic Jewish
existence was
actually 'uncivilized'. Interestingly enough, in spite of the
Zionist
dream, Hebrew doesn't offer its users a word for 'civilization' and
this
is not exactly a coincidence. When Palestinian Israeli MK Azmi Bishara
suggested to civilize the Jewish State and transform it into a 'State of
its Citizens' he became Israel's 'No 1 enemy.' He had to run for his
life.
Similarly, the Left is also dotted with a clear animosity towards
the
traditional notion of civilization. The progressive commitment to social
change is driven by an attempt to undermine the 'bourgeois'
(reactionary) order. In retrospect, it was the '68 Students Revolution
and its long list of mentors from Antonio Gramsci to the Frankfurt
School that eventually succeeded to devastate the West and to cleanse it
of its most precious traditional assets. Targeting 'hegemony' as the
'enemy of the people', the new Left systematically uprooted every aspect
of Western philosophical and categorical thinking, destabilizing every
cultural, spiritual, intellectual and political domain.
In the name
of liberation, the Left and the progressive have managed to
eradicate a
sense of authenticity and belonging. Typically we, the
indoctrinated
post-revolutionary subjects, often refer to ourselves as
'as a [something]',
(as a Jew, as a black, as a lesbian, as an Arab, as
a Gay etc'). Instead of
thinking authentically and exploring creatively
the deep dynamic meaning of
the 'I', we deliver our thoughts by means of
projections driven by sets of
collective identifications. Our sense of
'selfhood' has been hijacked by a
contemporaneous, phenomenological,
post-modernist and vain relativism. But
in fact phenomenology,
relativism and post-modernism are rootless, they are
actually the
complete opposite of civilization or rootedness. They are
flaky, they
are contextually and hermeneutically detached and they are also
soil-less.
I guess that the Left's imperviousness to the notion of
civilization may
explain why the Left has failed systematically in its
attempt to bond
with working classes. Marx, I believe, failed to grasp that
the working
class is also an expression of rootedness. It is defined by
heritage,
patriotism, nationalism, spirit, culture, devotion, dialect,
cuisine,
defiance, or shall we say civilization. The working class is also
defined by the negation of other classes' culture and civilization. The
Left's failure to grasp this dialectical mode of thinking that extends
far beyond (dialectical) materialism also explains the Left's incapacity
to bond with Muslims, Europe's current working class. This is indeed
tragic yet far from being a coincidence.
Nevertheless, when the
French 'philosopher' Finkielkraut was asked to
define 'French civilization'
he had nothing to offer. He referred
initially to French 'fiery' love
making. The Spiegel interviewer wasn't
impressed. Then in order to rescue
his case Finkielkraut continued and
quoted a 'friend'; "we, French, created
women, literature and cuisine.
No one can take that from us." Embarrassingly
yet symptomatic, the
'defender' of French civilization himself has a very
limited
understanding of the true meaning of France nor can he grasp its
civilization. Finkielkraut happily reduces France to a banal material
symbolism consisting of Brigitte Bardot, baguettes and Balzac, but it is
hard to imagine what kind of 'Muslim Jihadist' would insist to bring
such 'France' down. On the contrary, if French contemporary civilization
is shaped by the powerful Jewish Lobby Crif, Bernard Henri Levy's
interventionist megalomania and tribal philosophy a la Finkielkraut, it
is actually easy to grasp why some French Muslims are irritated by their
republic and its state of affairs.
The Post-Political
Condition
There is nothing in Finkielkraut that differentiates him from
far
right-wing ideologists except of course his intellectual lameness and
theoretical lacking. Yet, for some peculiar reason, Finkielkraut doesn't
like to be associated with those who promote the politics he actually
preaches. When asked by Spiegel "how do you view the political rise of
Marine Le Pen and her far-right National Front party?" Finkielkraut
replied, "This disturbs me, of course. But the National Front would not
be continuously on the rise if it had not discarded the old issues of
the extreme right. Nowadays the National Front focuses on secularism and
the republic." I guess that Finkielkraut finds it difficult to admit to
himself that he is a hard core Right-winger, it simply doesn't fit
nicely into his Jewish assimilationist image. However, this ideological
discrepancy doesn't mature into a cognitive dissonance. It instead
manifests itself as a disingenuous spin.
Notably, Spiegel didn't fall
into the trap. It obviously notices that
the 'new French philosopher' is
obviously a right-wing hawk: "That
sounds as if you could imagine voting for
the party." To which
Finkielkraut replies, "No, I would never do that
because this party
appeals to people's base instincts and hatred. And these
are easy to
kindle among its supporters. We can't leave these issues to the
National
Front. It would also be up to the left, the party of the people, to
take
seriously the suffering and anxiety of ordinary
people."
Typically, the man who presents himself as the 'defender' of
French
Civilization, the one who voices the plight of the 'lower middle
class'
is apparently repulsed by French people's 'base instinct'. Like many
'progressives', Finkielkraut is actually dismissive of the working
class' inclinations and their way of thinking. Finkielkraut prefers
instead to transform the Left into an Islamphobic, national socialist
front. Finkielkraut probably realizes very well that the Left is no
longer an ideological standpoint — it is detached from any form of
universal or ethical thinking. It is only dedicated to its political
survival and its paymasters.
Sadly enough, Finkielkraut's pragmatism
may prove to be successful. In
the 'Liberal' West in which we are living in,
Left and Right have become
merely political instruments that facilitate
similar policies whether it
is perpetrating Zionist interventionist wars or
enabling our further
enslavement to bankers and big monopolies. From a
popular perspective,
'Left' and 'Right' are means of identification (instead
of theoretical,
analytical or political dynamic instruments). This
political,
intellectual and ideological paralysis is indeed symptomatic to
the
current post-political era.
With Jewish Lobby groups such as the
Crif, AIPAC and CFI dominating the
Western political discussion and its
outcome, democracy is just a
façade. But far more disturbing is the fact
that in contemporary France,
a uniquely lame mind such as Finkielkraut's is
considered a
'philosopher'. In that regard, I would actually argue that
Finkielkraut
is himself the ultimate emblem of the collapse of Western
Civilization
or at least an evidence of the eradication of the French
one.
(4) ADL calls on US to pressure Europe to monitor Hate crime and
confront anti-Semitism
http://www.ejpress.org/article/news/69156
from:
Michael Santomauro <RePorterNoteBook@gmail.com>
date: 30 November
2013 15:53
ADL calls on the US to ensure fighting
anti-Semitism and hate crime
remains a top priority at OSCE
by: Maud
Swinnen
Updated: 28/Nov/2013 15:14
NEW YORK (EJP)---The
Anti-Defamation League (ADL) urged the U.S. to
press the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe member
states to monitor hate crime and
confront anti-Semitism and other forms
of bigotry, ahead of the OSCE
ministerial meeting in Kiev, Ukraine,
which will take place on December
5-6.
The ADL deplores that only 27 of the 57 member states of OSCE
submitted
official statistics on hate crime despite multiple commintments
and
called on US Secretary of State John Kerry to ensure the fight against
hate crime remains on the organization's agenda.
"U.S. leadership has
been critical in making the OSCE a forum for
elevating the need for
governments to take action against anti-Semitism,
hate crime, and all forms
of discrimination," said Abraham H. Foxman,
ADL National Director. " We look
forward to continuing our work with
Secretary Kerry to ensure that fighting
anti-Semitism and hate crime
remains a top priority."
Earlier this
month, the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and
Human Rights (ODIHR)
released their report on hate crime in the 57
participating states of the
OSCE and government responses.
ADL, in partnership with Human Rights
First (HRF), analyzes data and
rates countries' performance in meeting their
obligations to address
anti-Semitism and hate crime. The ADL/HRF analysis
provides a series of
recommendations for governments to address hate crimes
and urges them to
utilize the training tools and resources that currently
exist in the
OSCE's hate crime toolkit.
The OSCE is the leading
intergovernmental organization tracking and
addressing hate crime response.
ADL has worked closely with ODIHR to
develop resources and action items for
OSCE member nations on effective
ways to confront violent bigotry, including
resources on anti-Semitism,
anti-bias education, hate crime data collection,
combating youth
violence, hate on the Internet, and Holocaust
education.
The League collaborated with ODIHR in preparing key components
of their
tool-kit to help states address hate crime: ''A resource guide for
community organizations on Preventing and Responding to Hate Crime, and
ODIHR's Hate Crime Laws: A Practical Guide,'' which provides practical
advice for lawmakers, community organizations and law enforcement for
responding to bias crimes.''
(5) Hollywood's Arnon Milchan says he
was Israeli spy
http://bigstory.ap.org/article/hollywoods-arnon-milchan-says-he-was-israeli-spy
from:
ReporterNotebook <RePorterNoteBook@gmail.com>
date: 1 December
2013 09:05
By ARON HELLER
— Nov. 25, 2013
5:09 PM EST
JERUSALEM (AP) — Stories about Hollywood producer Arnon
Milchan's
alleged double life have been circulating for years.
Now,
the Israeli businessman behind hits like "Pretty Woman," ''Fight
Club" and
"L.A. Confidential" has finally come forth with a stunning
admission — for
years he served as an Israeli spy, buying arms on its
behalf and boosting
its alleged nuclear program.
In a far-reaching interview aired Monday
with Israel's Channel 2 TV's
flagship investigative program "Uvda," Milchan
detailed a series of
clandestine affairs in which he was involved and
particularly how he
helped purchase technologies Israel allegedly needed to
operate nuclear
bombs.
"I did it for my country and I'm proud of it,"
said Milchan, who ran a
successful fertilizer company in Israel before
making it big in Hollywood.
Even there, he says he continued with his
clandestine work while
maintaining close ties with Israel's
leadership.
According to an unauthorized biography published two years
ago, Milchan
worked for Israel's now-defunct Bureau of Scientific Relations,
known as
Lekem, which worked to obtain information for secret defense
programs.
The bureau was disbanded in 1987 after it was implicated in the
spying
affair for which Jonathan Pollard, a civilian intelligence analyst
for
the U.S. Navy, was sentenced to life in prison.
Milchan also says
other big Hollywood names were connected to his covert
affairs.
"When
I came to Hollywood I detached myself completely from my physical
activities
to dedicate myself to what I really wanted — filmmaking," he
said. "(But)
sometimes it gets mixed up."
The 68-year-old Milchan founded the New
Regency film company and has
produced more than 120 movies since the 1970s,
working closely with
directors such as Martin Scorsese, Roman Polanski,
Sergio Leone and
Oliver Stone. He forged an especially close relationship
with Robert De
Niro, who along with actors Russell Crowe and Ben Affleck, is
featured
in Uvda's broadcast.
"I had heard but I wasn't sure," De
Niro said, of Milchan's activities.
"I did ask him once and he told me that
he was an Israeli and of course
he would do these things for his
country."
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