Q&A: Immigration Initiative to Australia
Immigration Initiative to Australia
Question
I saw on Facebook that immigration initiatives are being developed to establish Israeli communities in Australia and escape the madness here in the country. They argue that the grim situation here is not really going to improve, and in the long run the battle is lost even if corrupt Bibi leaves us alone to live our lives (which is also not at all certain to happen anytime soon).
Do you see such a project as viable? Do you support it, or do you favor staying in the country and trying to fight tooth and nail against the appalling demographics here?
Answer
Everyone should do as their heart desires. If you want the state to endure and prosper, and you think there is a chance of that, then it makes sense to stay and fight. If not—then not. To each their own.
Discussion on Answer
Yes.
Anyone who thinks the vote of right-wingers is worth less should emigrate to Australia right now. And we won’t cry for them when antisemitism erupts there, once such a large number of pushy, opinionated Jews with no loyalty make their usual noise and try to worm their way into the institutions of government there. And when they want to come back to Israel, then their vote will be worth less—measure for measure.
Emigrating really is the preferred option when you’re a tiny minority. But now that the productive/liberal/normal public recognizes that it is not a tiny minority, it is rising and will rise to stand up for itself, and will wave pathetic soft weaklings like you off to go on shrieking on social media.
But that public is subjugating a foreign majority over a people for whom this has been their land since ancient times. So you agree that Israel is an apartheid state (toward Jews).
You probably meant to write: this public is the natural continuation—in other words, it is that very public which, after two thousand years of exile, rose up with courage and determination to establish a state, initiated, acted, and got things done despite the protests of the religious leadership in Europe, and in its abundant mercy hosted its brothers devoted to their religion, and for mixed motives also invited its brothers from the Eastern countries. And everyone was happy to come. The Haredim latched onto its neck almost from the very beginning, and a substantial part of the other religious people filled themselves with pretensions bordering on the ridiculous and imagined themselves to be leaders and important figures (they did nothing except talk nonsense, and on balance mainly got in the way), and lately the Mizrahim too are focusing on the flaws instead of the advantages and the overall gains, and all the hitchhikers who for years have been wagging their tails with pretension without having created, built, or done a thing believed the nonsense they themselves churn out, and instead of showing gratitude from morning till night until their lips wore out from saying enough, they started blathering. You, for example, are an excellent example of the chronic pitifulness—stricken with nonstop talk and resentment—that has spread through a substantial part of those publics.
Do you see a chance that the state will endure, prosper, and have a liberal character?