Israel/Palestine
Related: About this forumBernie Sanders's new plan to force a genuine debate in Congress on Israel
Source: Washington Post
By Paul Waldman
Opinion writer
December 19 at 12:18 PM
Earlier this week I wrote about the Israel Anti-Boycott Act, a piece of legislation that some Democrats and Republicans are hoping to quietly attach to a budget bill so it can be passed into law. The bill would bar American companies and individuals from participating in certain boycotts of Israel, and, though even its supporters say it would have minimal practical impact, it represents a serious attack on fundamental principles of free speech.
The bill is also part of a broad nationwide movement playing out at both the federal and state level to quash criticism of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus right-wing Likud government and its policies toward Palestinians, an effort that Democrats unfortunately have participated in far too often.
Now two senators Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) have a plan to try to do something about this. They are coming out against that measure, which could help realize the larger goal of forcing a genuine debate in Congress that does not place such criticism off limits.
It is a lack of debate about Israel not just about the Netanyahu governments policies but also about how we in America should react to them that allows provisions such as the Israel Anti-Boycott Act to flourish. But that also means that if you draw enough attention to them, things can change. We may be at a point where politicians who would previously have gone along precisely because it seemed like the easiest thing to do given that few people were watching are now having second thoughts. And thats what makes this an important lesson in how politics works.
Sanders and Feinstein represent two influential Jewish senators from different points on the ideological spectrum. On Wednesday morning, they sent a letter urging Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) not to include the IABA in the latest budget bill. Heres part of what they wrote:
The bill would prohibit and penalize certain constitutionally-protected political activity aimed solely at Israeli settlements in the West Bank, thereby extending US legal protection to the very settlements the United States has opposed as illegitimate and harmful to the cause of Israeli-Palestinian peace for more than 50 years. Whether one opposes such targeted measures or not, criminalizing acts such as the mere furnishing of information on companies that do business in the settlements would represent a significant and heavy-handed departure from five decades of bipartisan opposition to the settlement enterprise. At a time when the Netanyahu government is pursuing policies clearly aimed at foreclosing the two-state solution, it is deeply disappointing that Congress would consider penalizing criticism of those policies.
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Read more: https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2018/12/19/bernie-sanders-new-plan-force-genuine-debate-congress-israel/
UpInArms
(51,787 posts)This is extremely important...
Without the anti apartheid movement in the 80s, Nelson Mandela would have stayed in prison
Mosby
(17,448 posts)I agree that discussions should not be framed as "pro-Israel" or "anti-Israel". That formulation bothers you, as it does me. Unfortunately it's realistic, because unlike China, Russia, etc, your friends on the left are actually calling for Israel to be eliminated, I don't hear anyone saying anything similar about any other country, because if someone said some crazy ass shit like that most people would ridicule them, but when it's Israel its apparently OK with people like you to say Israel is a mistake.
Tell me I'm wrong.
You can't, because Israel is the only country on earth where people question it's very existence.
Response to Eugene (Original post)
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