Israeli Academic Extremism
Ariel University Will be
Established because it's "the Will of the Voters" Despite
40 years of Leftist indoctrination
For over 40 years Israeli society has been
subjected to an intense indoctrination onslaught, involving the
"Ministry of Truth" marketing its special lexicon by way of media
mouthpieces and the Israeli academia: Peace (which has instigated
war), human rights (excluding the right of Jews to a national home
and to self defense), rule of law (as long as the law adheres to the
Left's values), democracy (meaning a disregard for majority rule),
pluralism (meaning giving room to all the minority opinions, even
the most esoteric ones, but not to the majority opinion), silencing
(after having grown accustomed to hearing only themselves, they
become angry when voices that differ from their own appear in the
media here and there), enlightenment (meaning ignorance of
historical facts but a solid grasp on emasculating political
correctness), etc.
…
Another important battle currently being waged in the education
arena is the declaration that Ariel University Center in Samaria is
officially the eighth Israeli university. The Left has completely
lost its mind on this issue. The government has managed to overcome
every obstacle on the path to approving Ariel's official university
status. The hypocritical objections voiced by the Committee of
University Heads to the status upgrade will be remembered with
shame, just like previous objections to the establishment of the
existing universities. The self-promoting, short-sighted professors
will be confronted by elected officials and the latter will bring
about the will of the voters. The Ariel University will be
established.
http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=5535
The battle for Israeli minds
For 40 years, Israeli society has been
indoctrinated by the Left, whose peace triggers war and whose human
rights are bestowed on everyone but the Jews • The conservative camp
is fighting back • Meanwhile, Peres refuses to pass up any
opportunity to pass himself off as the peace messiah.
Dror Eydar
August 24, 2012
The new school year is about to begin and there
is a lot of excitement. Ever since the current government took
office, the education system has been under constant attack by the
"influential" crowd, which has been none too happy with the
direction that the education minister and his office have taken. It
is too Jewish, too nationalistic, too historic, they say.
For over 40 years Israeli society has been
subjected to an intense indoctrination onslaught, involving the
"Ministry of Truth" marketing its special lexicon by way of media
mouthpieces and the Israeli academia: Peace (which has instigated
war), human rights (excluding the right of Jews to a national home
and to self defense), rule of law (as long as the law adheres to the
Left's values), democracy (meaning a disregard for majority rule),
pluralism (meaning giving room to all the minority opinions, even
the most esoteric ones, but not to the majority opinion), silencing
(after having grown accustomed to hearing only themselves, they
become angry when voices that differ from their own appear in the
media here and there), enlightenment (meaning ignorance of
historical facts but a solid grasp on emasculating political
correctness), etc.
In recent years, the conservative camp has
started to fight back. The conservatives now realize that winning
elections is not enough. They must govern, or, in other words,
implement political and cultural ideas. That is the task they were
given by the voters. Besides the ongoing ministerial work, the
government needs to extricate the collective Israeli awareness from
this indoctrination. And it begins with education.
One of the battles that have gained a lot of
media attention recently is the dismissal (which has now been
suspended by the labor court pending a special committee hearing) of
the Education Ministry's civics education inspector, Adar Cohen.
Cohen was the political inheritance left to the
ministry by former Education Minister Yuli Tamir, one of the
founders of the Peace Now organization. Just like Tamir
opportunistically appointed Professor Yedidia Stern to head the
Education Ministry Committee on Civics Studies ten days before the
election that ended her term as education minister. Just like the
Planning and Budgeting Committee was opportunistically established
in 1977 by an interim leftist government, during coalition talks,
taking away much of the government's authority over the budgets of
higher education institutions. Just like in countless other cases,
the aim was to plant mines along the conservatives' path, making it
impossible to govern as they saw fit.
When Cohen was dismissed from his post, the Left,
as usual, sang from the same hymn sheet in the media. The narrative
of lies they fed to the public was that Cohen had been "persecuted
while fulfilling his duties" (an especially clever way of putting
it, brought to us by Gil Bringer who first exposed the case in Makor
Rishon). Cohen served as the civics supervisor for three years under
the current education minister, and now suddenly the government has
decided to persecute him?
Cohen didn't just slip up once, he screwed up
time and time again, approving textbooks rife with significant
errors, issuing misguided messages aimed at covering his own ass,
rewriting meeting protocols, and more. Education Ministry
Director-General Dalit Shtauber described it as a "problematic
behavioral pattern" adding that Cohen "said he did wrong, but tried
to lay the blame on others." The Civil Service Commission (the
government's human resources body) also concluded that Cohen had
displayed "severe professional failures" and that "we must
re-examine the professional suitability of this employee and decide
whether to continue his employment in his current position."
With a rap sheet like that, who could have
possibly held on to a job? But Cohen has an army of supporters in
the media: from Haaretz to Yedioth Ahronoth, by way of Army Radio
and Israel Radio and all the television channels. These supporters
haven't taken the time to read the serious charges against Cohen
(incidentally, I don't get the impression that they read anything
contrary to their own ideas in any kind of depth). Indeed, the Right
has a lot to learn from the Left on banding together to protect one
of their own.
Another important battle currently being waged in
the education arena is the declaration that Ariel University Center
in Samaria is officially the eighth Israeli university. The Left has
completely lost its mind on this issue. The government has managed
to overcome every obstacle on the path to approving Ariel's official
university status. The hypocritical objections voiced by the
Committee of University Heads to the status upgrade will be
remembered with shame, just like previous objections to the
establishment of the existing universities. The self-promoting,
short-sighted professors will be confronted by elected officials and
the latter will bring about the will of the voters. The Ariel
University will be established.
Club Mad
Here is an interesting hypothesis regarding
President Shimon Peres: As long as his revered role model, Israel's
first Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion, was alive, Peres was a hawk
who put an emphasis on security and saw, for example, the hard-core
ideological settlements in eastern Samaria as a necessary component
for Israel's future.
During the first years following Ben-Gurion's
death, the old man's spirit continued to influence Peres' political
decisions. But then came the 1977 election upset (in which the Right
took power for the first time after decades of left-wing hegemony),
the savages rose to power, and the white tribe did everything to
hold on to the power centers it still controlled (academia, media,
state prosecution etc.).
The Mishna teaches us that a man shall always
live close to his teacher, because it increases the likelihood that
he will remain true to himself and not be tempted by false gods. But
Peres looked behind him and didn't see his old teacher. He then
looked at his fellow hawks and realized that in terms of direct
electorate and his legitimacy as the leader of the defeated camp,
they would not get him where he wanted to go. He converted and
became the great dovish hope of the Israeli Left.
And then, only five years after one of the most
daring military operations in history – the rescue of hostages in
Entebbe, which Peres orchestrated as defense minister – he opposed
the bombing of the nuclear reactor in Iraq. And then came Oslo, and
the welcoming of Yasser Arafat and his gang into Israel and the
massive suicide attacks and so on and so forth, up until the
unilateral withdrawal from Gaza in 2005 and the wars that followed.
Someone recently pointed me to a typical Peres
news story from April 2005, just before the withdrawal from Gaza,
when Peres, in his capacity as vice prime minister, met with
then-French President Jacques Chirac to discuss the "economic future
of the region" after the withdrawal. Peres suggested international
cooperation. Among other things, Peres suggested erecting a Club Med
resort in Gaza in place of the Jewish settlements.
The blatant flattery piece, which ran in Yedioth
Ahronoth, began as follows: "Why didn't anyone think of it before?"
Well, as we all know, the Jewish settlements in Gaza have been
replaced by a huge "Club Mad" – a club of fanatics all gunning for
one thing: the destruction of Israel. Since then, many more Club Mad
franchises have popped up across the Middle East.
When Peres was appointed president, I was glad.
It is best that he occupy his time with ceremonies and honors,
collecting medals and hobnobbing with celebrities for the sake of
Israel, rather than imparting his political vision on us. No thanks.
We're full.
Now, faced with media incitement against the
state's leadership on a purely military topic (a possibly Israeli
attack on Iran's nuclear facilities), which is supposed to remain
outside the political debate, Peres could not resist. He couldn't
pass up the opportunity to rejuvenate the image of peace messiah
that his waning camp has been trying to maintain. So he gave
interviews to his tribe's news channels, and put spokes in the
wheels of the government's efforts to stop Iran.
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