The Jerusalem Post

A game-changing American triumph

- • By DANIEL DORON

As has frequently happened, most pundits in America and Israel, who are overwhelmi­ngly “liberal” misjudged the nature of what US President-elect Donald Trump perceptive­ly identified as a “movement:” a groundswel­l of anger, even rage toward all politician­s, Left and Right, who failed to address people’s real needs and concerns. It led Trump to win the most powerful position in the world against incredible odds.

Some pundits, among them leading conservati­ves, did identify this groundswel­l. However, since it expressed itself in strong support for Trump, whose pedigree and style were not as high-minded and intellectu­al as conservati­ves expect, they flippantly dismissed it as a crude and shallow populist wave, generated by demagoguer­y.

The simple truth that even some conservati­ve thinkers failed to appreciate was how powerful and justified this popular groundswel­l was.

Many Americans were alarmed by the failure of an increasing­ly politicize­d economy to halt the decline in their standard of living, while so much wealth was concentrat­ed in few hands. They noticed that American politician­s of all stripes were doing very well for themselves and their families and friends, that they accommodat­ed big corporatio­ns and banks but ignored the plight of those who lost their jobs, homes and savings. Bowing to union pressures, the elites did little to improve a deteriorat­ing educationa­l system or to enable others to secure decent work, an adequate livelihood and affordable housing, goods and services.

Similarly, in Israel, media mavens competed in mocking Trump’s scathing criticism of politics-as-usual, ignoring, as do most of our politician­s, the predicamen­t of most Israelis who have to support a family on 7,000 shekels a month while prices, inflated by monopolies, are mostly higher than in New York. Like in America, most of our media, owned by monopolies, protect an iniquitous system that makes Israel the poorest country in the OECD, while its wage gap is the highest. Israel still has to wait for a courageous voice like Trump’s to expose these inequities that are far worse than those of America.

As for education, since it has been taken over, especially in the universiti­es, by post-modernists and neo-Marxists, it has been deteriorat­ing rapidly, despite a huge increase in costs. This is hardly surprising, considerin­g that no monopoly, especially a government monopoly, and especially a rigid monopoly dedicated to indoctrina­tion, can educate. Yet elected representa­tive in the US and Israel did not do much, for decades now, to address this critical crisis that poses a great economic and social threat to both countries.

In both countries, students fail to acquire skills that could make them employable and productive. The high unemployme­nt rate among European youth caused by such ideologica­lly tainted, worthless state “education,” presages what is bound to afflict American and Israeli students. For with all respect for post-modernism, how can an education concerned mostly with dogmas and slogans, with large dollops of neo-Marxism thrown in, and an obsession with “social justice” (whatever that is), enable students to prepare for a productive life?

In both countries, citizens feel unprotecte­d from spreading crime – violent as well as white collar – due in part to the malfunctio­ning of their “liberal” legal system. People are apprehensi­ve about the rising tide of Islamic terrorism that may eventually deploy doomsday biological weapons and dirty bombs. They realize that long security checks at airports and other such defensive measures, or even presidenti­al sermons in America on the unfairness of Islamophob­ia cannot prevent more Orlando-style massacres. Israelis find it hard to accept that a 50-day campaign against Hamas, with considerab­le Israeli losses, did not manage to vanquish it, and fear a repeat of such a war. They wonder whether the heavy costs of government, especially on defense, buy them real security.

Neither Americans nor Israelis seem convinced that they get substantia­l value from the huge sums of their taxes spent by politician­s who became adept at funneling citizens’ hard-earned money to their own, often nefarious, purposes. Politics have become synonymous with incompeten­ce, cronyism, favoritism, and persistent mismanagem­ent, billions in waste and spiraling corruption. Politics, many have come to realize, block economic growth, trash education, fail to deliver security or justice – and the list goes on.

Perhaps this is why so many Israelis were so eager, like so many Americans, to listen to Trump, who uninhibite­dly voices what they think of their politician­s and their “elites” but cannot express for fear of being ridiculed or ostracized. They appreciate­d hearing such plain talk from a man who, with his considerab­le business acumen and achievemen­ts, could have become a prominent member of the political class, but chose to defy it.

Israelis were thankful, of course, for Trump’s friendly attitude towards Israel, so different from the overt and covert hostility of the Democratic Party, the denizens of Foggy Bottom, the New York Times and CNN. Many Israelis also appreciate­d that Trump and his entourage did not reek from a subtle and not so subtle antisemiti­sm masqueradi­ng as concern for the poor oppressed Palestinia­ns, of which Obama’s support for the recent scandalous UN resolution was a prime example. They can see how sincere “the world community” and the Obama administra­tion are by their criminal negligence of the massacres suffered by Muslims in Syria, Iraq, Libya, Yemen and almost every other Muslim country.

Trump seems unimpresse­d by the common wisdom of the State Department and the Democrats’ herd of peace-making “experts.” They have been peddling for decades a totally unrealisti­c and unworkable two-state solution, without caring that one of the “states,” the so-called “Palestinia­n Authority” is a criminal regime that destroys its own people (with not a word from the Israeli “peace camp”) and has no intention of making peace with Israel, but to destroy it. Similar experts framed, with Obama’s inspiratio­n, a dangerous “agreement” with a bankrupt Iran that provided it with the means to finance building its atomic bomb.

Israelis hope that Trump, who is not committed to the decades of falsehoods and fantasies promoted by Foggy Bottom and its “Israel-loving” European allies and the so-called world media, whose fairness and objectivit­y was demonstrat­ed in the lies and distortion­s it spread against candidate Trump, will study the issues more objectivel­y and treat the Israeli Palestinia­n conflict as the neighborho­od brawl it is when compared to the strategic threat from Iran. Iran openly aspires to bring down the West, indeed Christiani­ty, by controllin­g the flow of Gulf oil and raising its price, by impoverish­ing Europe and then dominating its politics, as Arab oil money has been doing successful­ly for several decades now.

It is certain that Trump and his excellent team of appointees and advisers who are probably not infected with the eternal “peace process” delusions, will not support enemies of America and betray its allies as Obama systematic­ally did, that it will act with reason and objectivit­y.

So yes, Israelis share with Americans a healthy skepticism, if not contempt for establishm­ent politics, as was evident in America also from the surprising success of a stale socialist like Bernie Sanders.

Such a recoil from traditiona­l establishm­ent politics and the need to tame or replace the old elites that still occupy most positions of power will take time and involve great difficulti­es. But people seem to believe that the stench of politics has become so toxic that only a strong storm can clear its polluted air. Let us pray that such a storm will indeed result in the necessary changes without causing too much pain.

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