Israeli Arabs in 2025 – Integration or Radicalization?
Those who want to integrate – welcome, those who want to undermine, incite and justify terror – should not be surprised when they stop calling it “complex”.
Those who want to integrate – welcome, those who want to undermine, incite and justify terror – should not be surprised when they stop calling it “complex”.
There are big holidays, there are important holidays, and there is Hanukkah – the holiday that reinvents itself every generation: once a national heroic story, then a miracle of oil, then a children’s holiday, then a 15-shekel donut holiday.
Haifa used to be a “demographic mosaic.” Today it’s more like a graffiti wall after a protest: Everyone is sure they know who painted it, no one admits, and only one thing is clear – something has changed here, and it’s not just real estate prices.
No, we don’t hate peaceת We just learned that peace doesn’t come from circles of empathy and songs in the park.
It comes from clear borders, a strong army, and an unshakable belief in the rightness of our cause.
The Netherlands – the land of freedom, cannabis, rights and cheese – seems like the last place where Sharia would find a sympathetic audience. But as we learned from neighboring Belgium: The world of 2025, what seemed impossible becomes reality before you’ve even finished your latte in Amsterdam.
The lie of “Israeli apartheid” is not a mistake, but a strategy. It is designed not to fix Israel—but to destroy the idea of it.
And so we must not treat it with academic leniency or liberal humor. But we are allowed, and even desirable, to treat it with cynicism—and to expose its absurdity.
The Palestinian people may not be a people — but they are certainly a weapon of consciousness. One aimed at the heart of Zionism, armed with lies, heartwarming words, and the cooperation of the post-Western world.
If we don’t understand that the threat is not just missiles but also narratives — we will find ourselves apologizing for our existence. Again.