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Israeli Election Circus 2019, Act 5: The Scariest One - The Alt-Right Scam

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This will definitely be my last Act pre-election; the election is today.

But I must write this one; saved the worst news for last. I hoped it wouldn’t be that bad, but at the moment...

(Here are the links to Acts One, Two and Three.)

...It is bad enough that the main opposition List against the hard-right government (see Act 4) is more right-of-center than any prior occupant of that role, and is devoid of any substance.

Despite that, there was still hope that a 60+ seat majority  will be won by Lists that will not sit in a government headed by Bibi no matter what, maybe-maybe opening some slit towards positive change.

That hope seems very remote now, thanks to the rise of this cycle’s scariest party by far, an alt-right scam party that has most other parties quaking in their boots for good reason. A far-right party that succeeds in siphoning off quite a few votes from what can be charitably called the centre-left’s Stoooopid Vote Sector. (mostly guys, btw)

More below the salmon.

Since 1967, Israel has controlled the lives of the Palestinian people living in East Jerusalem, West Bank, and Gaza, without giving them citizenship; the vast majority have been forced to live as stateless, rightless subjects under military rule. Even now, as Occupation-tolerant advocates often deny and discount this basic reality (or are shamefully ignorant of it), Israel controls the freedom of movement of these territories' residents, in particular their ability to go abroad and return; controls their residency status; their airspace, currency, water supply, fuel supply, most of their electricity, and their ability to import and export products. All the while, deeply exploiting their day labor and natural resources — and further controlling their social and intimate lives via a secret police that extorts an extensive network of collaborators. THIS IS A VERY PARTIAL LIST.

This Occupation regime has continued unabated for nearly 52 out of the Israeli parliament’s 70 years of existence, covering the last 14 out of Israel's 20 general elections. Apart from a couple of elections in the 1980s-90s, no major Israeli party has campaigned on ending it.

As long as this continues,  the Israeli elections cannot be considered really democratic. That said, one should never give up hope, and elections might open the door to the Law of Unintended Consequences, in a good way.

Besides, it’s one of the world's most entertaining electoral circuses. So I'm writing this series.          


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