How Conservatism Became the Real Rebellion
How the world turned upside down – and what was once considered “mainstream” suddenly became a bold rebellion

How the world turned upside down – and what was once considered “mainstream” suddenly became a bold rebellion
Facebook is not a friend. It is not a neutral platform. It is a political entity. It is a power. It is the new corporation that tells us what to think, what to say, and what not to say. And all this, while we donate information, emotions, photos, and even memories to it.
Journalists used to chase the story, now they dictate it in advance.
They don’t ask what happened, they ask: “How does this serve my message?”
Europe’s problem is not Sharia, the problem is that it is no longer sure what it wants to be – and when that happens, someone else fills the vacuum.
To sum it up simply: missiles are hardware, regimes are software
And in the Middle East, software tends to crash long before the hardware does.
Saturday morning, the sun is shining, the kids are screaming, the dog is running away, and the neighbor decides to turn on Ofer Levy karaoke at exactly 7:48. And amidst all this commotion, there is a moment of grace: you open the refrigerator door and know – mushroom borax is waiting there.
The world of generalizations – the place where the brain saves energy, logic goes on a cigarette break, and reality is forced to adapt itself to one short, sharp, and incorrect sentence.
If there is one thing that can be said about the people who live in Zion, it is this: they may not have asked for this reality.
But they have certainly learned to live with it… and if they have to live with it – then at least with a little humor.
The story of the barista from Netanyahu’s video is one of those small moments that explains a large phenomenon.
In the age of social media, the battle for public opinion is no longer fought only between governments, it is fought between images.