Why Continue To Build The Settlements?

HEBRONHazemBader:AFP:Getty

One of the more striking aspects of the pre-emptive strikes on Peter Beinart's tightly argued polemic, The Crisis Of Zionism, is not just their viciousness, but their avoidance of the core issue of the book:

Why continue to build the settlements?

Is it not clear by now that the settlements' existence and relentless expansion are turning liberal Zionism into "something much darker"? What justification is there for continuing to build them, to add to them, to keep increasing the Jewish population in an area that under any two-state solution, Israel would presumably have to give up? Only today, we read in Haaretz the following:

Civil Administration’s maps and figures, disclosed here for the first time, suggest the barrier route was planned in accordance with the available land in the West Bank, intended to increase the area and population of the settlements.

A total of 569 parcels of land were marked out, encompassing around 620,000 dunams ‏(around 155,000 acres‏) − about 10 percent of the total area of the West Bank. Since the late 1990s, 23 of the unauthorized outposts were built on land included in the map. The Civil Administration is endeavoring to legalize some of these outposts, including Shvut Rahel, Rehelim and Hayovel.

Etkes believes this indicates the settlers who built the outposts had access to the administration’s research on available land − more proof of the government’s deep involvement in the systematic violation of the law in order to expand settlements, he says.

Let us be clear. The Israeli government is systematically taking and holding the land that could be the Palestinians' future state. They have been doing so for decades. The deliberate population of Zev_Vladimir_Jabotinsky_uniformoccupied land violates the Geneva Conventions. The occupation itself enrages the Arab and Muslim world and creates a huge drag on the US's strategic need to build up allies among emerging Arab democracies, and defuse Jihadism across the globe.

And Peter's book is explicitly about this problem. It lies at the center of his argument. And yet it is all but ignored by his critics. The trope responses are varied in their weary familiarity. Let us examine them.

The Palestinians have for a long time been their own worst enemies, and in the past have not sought peace. It's more complicated than that, but sure, for much of the past sixty years, the Palestinians bear a huge responsibility for their own situation.

Why continue to build the settlements?

Iran's nuclear development is the most urgent issue.

Lets concede that for the sake of argument, but why continue to build the settlements?

China occupies Tibet and you don't fixate on that.

Well, I do oppose the occupation of Tibet and if my own taxpayers dollars were going directly to sustain that occupation, or to facilitate transfers of the Chinese population to Tibet to shift the demographic balance, I'd have an issue with that as well.

But why continue to build the settlements?

Obama made freezing the settlements a precondition for talks so it's his fault, the Greater Israel Benzion-092210lobby insists, that the two state solution is going nowhere. But when the issue at hand is a division of land, and when one side, which holds almost all the raw power, wants to keep taking parts of that land while it is simultaneously negotiating its division, it's an impossible negotiation. You don't negotiate while simultaneously adding facts on the ground to tilt the talks your way. You freeze the situation; you talk to the other side. That's all Obama asked for – just a freeze of construction for a year. Netanyahu refused. Even the ten-month alleged suspension made no measurable difference in the number of new homes built in the relevant year.

So again: why continue to build the settlements?

And the reason for urgency is obvious: the faster the settlements grow in property, scale and population, the harder it will be to remove them. The longer a democracy occupies a foreign country and people, the more it risks the moral corruption of imperial control of another people's destiny, of dehumanizing those you fear, of fueling the hatred you then use to justify further violence and coercion. Peter Beinart's book is a simple restatement of this truth.

It cannot be restated enough.

And the evasions of this central point of Beinart's book by its vitriolic critics are as legion as they are predictable. And they matter. Because the evaders do not want to answer the question: why continue to build the settlements? They do not want to answer that question and dodge it relentlessly because the answer is obvious and devastating to their position.

AVIGDORMayaHitij:Pool:GettyThe answer is that the settlements are there because the current Israeli government has no intention of ever dividing the land between Arabs and Jews in a way that would give the Palestinians anything like their own state; and have every intention of holding Judea and Samaria for ever. Netanyahu is, as Beinart rightly calls him, a Monist. He is the son of his father, Ben Zion, as Jeffrey Goldberg has also insisted on. But what Peter does is spell out one side of the Netanyahu vision that Goldberg elides.

Vladimir Jabotinsky was a huge influence on Netanyahu's father and Netanyahu himself. He's a complicated figure, as Beinart readily concedes. For Jabotinsky, what it all came down to in the end was "the single ideal: a Jewish minority on both sides of the Jordan as a first step towards the establishment of the State, That is what we call 'monism'." My italics. The Revisionist Zionists (whence eventually Likud) envisaged a Jewish state that would not only include the West Bank but the East Bank as well, i.e. Jordan.

Ben Zion Netanyahu followed Jabotinsky's vision, and his willingness, even eagerness, to use violence to achieve it: "We should conquer any disputed territory in the land of Israel. Conquer and hold it, even if it brings us years of war … You don't return land." Ben Zion Netanyahu even favored the "transfer" of Arabs living in Palestine to other Arab countries. In 2009, Netanyahu Sr, put his position this way to Maariv:

"The Jews and the Arabs are like two goats faing each other on a narrow bridge. One must jump into the river." "What does the Arab's jump mean?" asked the interviewer, trying to decipher the metaphor. Netanyahu explained: "That they won't be able to face the war with us, which will include withholding food from Arab cities, preventing education, terminating electrical power and more. They won't be able to exist and they will run away from here."

Suddenly, the situation in Gaza and much of the West Bank makes more sense, doesn't it? It's a conscious relentless assault on the lives of Palestinians to immiserate them to such an extent that they flee. And if you do not think that Bibi Netanyahu's father isn't easily the biggest influence on his life and worldview, read Jeffrey Goldberg. Money quote:

“Always in the back of Bibi’s mind is Ben-Zion,” one of the prime minister’s friends told me. “He worries that his father will think he is weak.”

Ben Zion is a radical and a fanatic and an illiberal Zionist, who sees the world as for ever 1938, the Arabs as a monolithic group of barbarians, and foreswears any interaction with them except through force. You cannot understand the current Israeli government without grasping that it is led by the son of the man who said this, and who shares his worldview. "The Arabs know only force," Bibi has said. And here is the message from Ben Zion on Iran, as reported by Goldberg:

“From the Iranian side, we hear pledges that soon—in a matter of days, even—the Zionist movement will be put to an end and there will be no more Zionists in the world. One is supposed to conclude from this that the Jews of the Land of Israel will be annihilated, while the Jews of America, whose leaders refuse to pressure Iran, are being told in a hinted fashion that the annihilation of the Jews will not include them … The Jewish people are making their position clear and putting faith in their military power. The nation of Israel is showing the world today how a state should behave when it stands before an existential threat: by looking danger in the eye and calmly considering what should be done and what can be done. And to be ready to enter the fray at the moment there is a reasonable chance of success.”

The key phrases are "faith in military power" and "enter the fray." Diplomacy with enemies is not in this mindset. Nor is any consideration but the defense and expansion of Greater Israel – "conquer and hold it" – even at the expense of what Ben Zion has called "years of war." Am I attaching the view of this fascistic vision from father to son? Not according to Goldberg:

Many people in Likud Party circles have told me that those who discount Ben-Zion’s influence on his son do so at their peril. “This was the father giving his son history’s marching orders,” one of the attendees told me. “I watched Bibi while his father spoke. He was completely absorbed.”

The mindset that believes that Israel should in principle include all of Jersualem, all of the West Bank, and all of Jordan, that it must never, ever return lands it "conquered", that all Arabs are barbarians, incapable of negotiating with, is exactly the same mindset that sees an existential threat from Iran – "in a matter of days even" – even though Iran has not yet got the capacity to make a single nuclear bomb, and if it did, would be facing over 100 nuclear warheads coming back from BIBIGaliTibbon:GettyIsrael and the annihiliation of most of its population. There's paranoia. And then there's irrationality.

And this irrationality is intrinsic to the current Israeli government's intent to hold on to the West Bank for ever, restrict Palestinians (whose very nationhood is dismissed) into vast gated communities, where the gates exist to keep the inhabitants inside, and between which Israel effectively rules. The inhabitants of these "reservations" would have no vote in Israel itself. And they would occupy only a fraction of the West Bank. This is the best we can expect from a Netanyahu future. It is not the likeliest, which is the continued settlement and de facto annexation of the entire area (i.e. the last three years).

If I am wrong, and those remaining liberal Israelis who still believe in a democratic, pluralist Israel can find a way to remove the settlements and come to a 1967-based land-swap compromise, we may be able to view this Netanyahu-Lieberman era as a horrible period in a gradual path forward. But the one emotion I felt closing Peter's book was sadness. I don't think the data suggest that either a majority of Israelis or a majority of American Jews are prepared to challenge a policy of conquering and subjugating another people in this way. And Beinart's book is very persuasive in showing how the mere act of occupation – the way it sets up inherent distance between Jew and Arab, and constantly humiliates the Arab – is profoundly shifting Israeli culture in such a way as to make the younger generations even less likely to compromise with "the other" than the older ones.

Beinart's book has been attacked so mercilessly, in my view, because it clearly, methodically, even-handedly exposes the radical Zionism that threatens to eclipse Israeli democracy, corrupt Jewish ethics and threaten American interests across the globe. And the key proof of his case is the continued, relentless expansion of West Bank settlements, and the ethnic social engineering in East Jerusalem. And so I ask again of Beinart's criticism to answer the core question of the book:

Why continue to build the settlements? 

(Photo: Israeli settlers walk along al-Shuhada street, past two of dozens of shuttered Palestinian owned shops daubed with the Jewish Star of David, on September 28, 2010, in the West Bank town of Hebron, after Palestinians were forced years ago to move out of the old quarter by the Israeli army to allow for the Jewish settlers to move securely in the area. A few hundred hardline Jewish settlers live under heavy Israeli military protection in the heart of the town of 160,000 mostly Muslim Palestinians. By Hazem Bader/AFP/Getty.)

(Portraits (from top down): Ze'ev Jabotinsky, Ben Zion Netanyahu, Avigdor Lieberman, Binyamin Netanyahu.)

The Blog Heard ‘Round The Court

Adam Teicholz wonders if posts on a conservative legal blog may have set off a chain of events resulting in the mandate's possible defeat: 

Blogs — particularly a blog of big legal ideas called Volokh Conspiracy — have been central to shifting the conversation about the mandate challenges. At Volokh, Barnett and other libertarian academics have been debating and refining their arguments against the mandate since before the ACA was signed. At the beginning, law professor Jonathan Adler fleshed out the approach that came to typify the elite conservative response for the first months of the public debate…there followed months of posts by various Volokh bloggers, alongside increasingly sophisticated legal arguments, about just how reasonable, how comfortably within bounds the legal arguments against the mandate were. By the following year, a district court judge had cited [Volokh contributor Randy] Barnett in his opinion striking down health care reform, and Barnett himself had left behind his March 2010 conclusion that the Supreme Court would need to risk its credibility in a politically charged case, Bush v. Gore-style, to overturn the mandate.

Volokh anti-mandate writer Ilya Somin challenges Teicholz's theory:

Randy and I also initially believed that striking down the mandate would be more politically difficult for the Supreme Court than is likely actually to be the case. That’s because we (or at least I) failed to foresee that the mandate and the health care bill as a whole would remain so unpopular for so long. I’d like to think that some of that unpopularity was the result of our efforts. But the lion’s share was surely caused by other factors. If we really had the power to swing public opinion massively, I would long since have persuaded the public to oppose the War on Drugs and support legalization of organ sales. Where we did have some influence is in debunking the myth that the constitutionality of the mandate was a no-brainer backed by an overwhelming consensus of expert opinion. But we could not have done that were we not 1) recognized academic experts on these issues ourselves, and 2) able to point to other well-known experts who also believed the mandate to be unconstitutional, many of them not VC-ers.

How Conservative Is The Supreme Court?

Very:

Mr. Martin and Mr. Quinn rate the current court (based on data up through late 2010) as the most conservative in their database based on the positioning of the median justice, the previous high having come in the early 1950s. Although Justice Kennedy is not extraordinarily conservative relative to all other justices who have served on the court, he is very conservative by the standards of the median justice, who has typically been more of a true moderate.

Campaign Ad Of The Day

Apparently, Obama has something against adorable infants:

Steve Benen is not amused

In this ad, the Romney campaign tells the viewer, "President Barack Obama named himself one of the country's four best presidents." Later, the commercial says Obama is really only the best at amassing debt. Let's put this plainly: there's simply nothing honest about this attack ad.  … Of course, if this is the sort of ad Mitt Romney is running in March, it's unnerving to think of how dishonest his campaign messages will be in, say, October.

Meanwhile, Weigel compiles the best – but not necessarily most effective - dystopian campaign ads of the last 50 years, including Hewitt Award nominee "Obamaville" (a series that has only just begun).

Malkin Award Nominee

"[A]ny and all criticism of Israel not only can be but must be antisemitic. It is either subjectively antisemitic, in that it consciously and intentionally furthers the goals of the campaign; or it is objectively antisemitic, in that it unconsciously and unintentionally does the same thing. The distinction, if there ever was one, between the two, is now meaningless. Either way, the result is the same: Those who seek to slaughter the Jews en masse are brought a step closer to their goal," – Benjamin Kerstein, Pajamas Media.

Can Lack Of Choice Lead To Love?

Robin Hanson writes that "you might expect people to feel more affiliated with people who they can choose," but he thinks the opposite is true:

Contrary to what many say, I’d guess most people really did love their king, really do love their partners in arranged marriages, and feel comforted by their connection to longtime neighbors, friends, and employers when the relation would be costly to break on both sides. Because we are most stuck with them, we tend to love family most of all.

Is Big Football The Next Big Tobacco? Ctd

A reader continues the thread:

The NFL has unquestionably gotten bigger and faster and therefore more violent. Partially due to performance enhancing drugs, but also partially due to vastly improved fitness regimens and nutrition research in the past 30 years (weightlifting wasn't even really encouraged in the '60s and early '70s). But to suggest that the previous iterations of the game weren't also dangerous is wrong. Mike Webster, a Hall of Fame center in the '70s, ended up severely brain damaged and died as a homeless man because of it. The NFL knew this.

There's been a spate of suicides from retired and active NFL players in the past few years, many of them coming from depression and drug abuse but also tied to histories of brain damage. One suicide [see update below] from a few years ago, Chris Henry, was 26, but after autopsy was found to have the brain of a 60-something due to chronic traumatic encephalopathy. There are probably more retired NFL players with pugilist's dementia than retired pugilists with pugilist's dementia. The NFL knows this.

There's been a neuropathologist, Bennet Omalu, on the NFL's heels for years about this, and the NFL has consistently denied him. Here are two articles from a few years ago, one from GQ and one from the Washington Post, about him and his research. And here is a video of Bernie Goldberg interviewing one of the NFL's doctors about head trauma and the toadie, a Dr. Casson, denying any connections between football and the problem. The interview reminds me a lot of the "medical experts" in other corrupt industries. The NFL remembers this.

So yeah, the NFL may have some blood on their hands in a few grisly cases of some former players, but they have most assuredly known about the dangers of their sport for years, and only in the past year or two have they begun to panic and CYA and backtrack.

Another adds:

Until very recently, if memory serves, the NFL often attacked studies linking NFL concussions with later cognitive issues.  A quick search of the NY Times confirms my recollection. In fact, we see below that, as recently as 2007, you have a medical consultant for the Indianapolis Colts referring to such research as "virtually worthless":

The N.F.L. has criticized previous papers published by the Center for the Study of Retired Athletes – which identified similar links between on-field concussions and both later mild cognitive impairment and early-onset Alzheimer's disease – and reasserted those concerns this week with regard to the paper on depression.

Several members of the league's mild traumatic brain injury committee cited two main issues in telephone interviews this week: that the survey was returned by 69 percent of the retired players to whom it was mailed, and that those who did respond were relying solely on their memories of on-field concussions. One committee member, Dr. Henry Feuer of the Indiana University Medical Center and a medical consultant for the Indianapolis Colts, went so far as to call the center's findings ''virtually worthless.''

So, yes, these lawsuit by former players will be very interesting.

Another:

I'll be excited if the thread about brain injury in football takes off – it's a topic near and dear to my heart. I am a professor specializing in the study of brain signals. I am currently involved in a project that attempts to create a model of chronic mild brain injury in rats with the goal of understanding how multiple "minor" brain injuries accumulate over time to produce the kind of trauma seen in veteran professional athletes. (I keep a blog and I've flagged some useful articles.)

Brain injury is an awful condition because it is very hard to diagnose. There are currently no clinical modalities that can image damaged brain tissue – even experimental research imaging modalities perform poorly in detecting brain damage. In fact, the best method for determining if there is chronic brain injury is to submit to a battery of neuropsychological tests which examine things like short- and long-term memory and so on. But even those aren't perfect, and ultimately you need the opinion of a skilled psychologist to make a determination of brain injury. The best test unfortunately is to test for the presence of tau protein in the brain, or to slice the brain and look for evidence of neuronal injury, both of which can only be done posthumously.

As far as football is concerned, the real question at hand is whether players knew about these risks going in and decided to play anyways. Or alternately, whether the league knew about these issues and neglected to alert players to the risks. That's a prickly legal battle that could easily not favor the players, regardless of how severe their injuries are.

Update from a reader:

I just want to make one minor correction.  Chris Henry was one of my favorite players on the Bengals and a reader e-mail referred to his death as a suicide.  While the situation surrounding his death was sad and his actions possibly a result of a damaged brain, he did not commit suicide.  He fell out of a pickup truck bed while the truck was being driven by his fiance during a domestic dispute. Almost as sad as a suicide and CTE was found in his brain at a later date.  While it is undetermined if the CTE led to his aggressive actions some doctors have acknowledged it is possible.

Another adds:

Your reader might be thinking of Andre Waters, who committed suicide a few years ago. He was in his 40s but was found to have severe brain damage consistent with how your reader described.

Update from the contested reader:

Just thought I'd explain why I said Chris Henry committed suicide. While it's not certain that Chris Henry killed himself, witnesses at the scene of his death said that Henry said from the back of the truck he was in: "If you take off, I'm going to jump off the truck and kill myself." The next thing people saw was him out of the bed of his truck unconscious. I know most the news stories said he fell, but this quote from a witness suggests something possibly more tragic.

Red And Blue Accents

Your ideology could influence your speaking style:

Not everyone feels that politics are a part of their core identity. But I suspect that political ideology may become an anchor for accents to the extent that large social groups collectively identify themselves by their political beliefs. According to Bill Bishop, author of The Big Sort, this is happening more and more as Americans voluntarily cluster themselves into homogenous, politically like-minded communities. So perhaps it’s not surprising that George W. Bush acquired a distinct Texan accent, despite having abundant exposure to people from the Northeast, or why Barack Obama sprouted a mild set of Chicago vowels, even though he was fully an adult before ever living there. 

Unemployment Does Permanent Damage

Unemployment_Duration

A devastating snapshot

A 2009 study, to cite one recent example, found that workers who lost jobs during the recession of the early 1980s were making 20 percent less than their peers two decades later. The study focused on mass layoffs to limit the possibility that the results reflected the selective firings of inferior workers. Losing a job also is literally bad for your health. A 2009 study found life expectancy was reduced for Pennsylvania workers who lost jobs during that same period. A worker laid off at age 40 could expect to die at least a year sooner than his peers. And a particularly depressing paper, published in 2008, reported that children also suffer permanent damage when parents lose jobs. 

In response, Calculated Risk furnishes the above chart:

One of the defining characteristics of the 2007 recession is the large number of workers unemployed for an extended period (the red line on the graph). The consequences of long term unemployment are probably worse than the studies Appelbaum mentioned.