How Is It Possible That 89% of Israelis Are Happy Living in Israel?
We love this country, because it is ours.
With all the mess, the congestion, the luxury and the madness… and maybe that’s why.
We love this country, because it is ours.
With all the mess, the congestion, the luxury and the madness… and maybe that’s why.
As long as there are people here who continue to believe – not in the theory of binationality, but in the historical right of one small and troublesome people to return home – hope is not lost.
And deep down we still have a little bit of Jewish audacity, a little faith, and a little healthy cynicism – it will not disappear either.
Charlie’s murder is not just a personal tragedy. It’s a wound in society. But the painful truth is that the murder began a long time ago – not with the bullet, but with the slander. For years, the media has been painting him as an enemy. For years, academia has been explaining that he’s dangerous. For years, social media has been trying to remove him from our feeds.
And when you label someone a “threat to democracy” enough times – don’t be surprised if someone takes it a step further.
The death of Charlie Kirk is not just the end of a chapter. It is the beginning of an era. If until now it was possible to pretend that we live in a “democratic discourse,” today it is clear that this is no longer a debate about ideas but a war for our very legitimacy.
The big question is not what to do with the assassin, but what to do with the legacy that Charlie left behind
Anyone who thinks this is an American story is greatly mistaken. Here in Israel, too, there are those who mark opinions as “dangerous,” there are those who make sure to suspend accounts, cancel events, and paint people as monsters. Anyone who thinks it ends there should remember that when someone is marked as an enemy of the people, there will always be someone who will take the law into their own hands.
Charlie Kirk was no longer a political commentator. He was a culture warrior. He understood something that many conservative politicians miss to this day: that the real struggle takes place not in parliament, but in the classroom. Not in the Knesset or in Congress – but on the campus pavements and the screens of TikTok. He knew that without returning public discourse to a healthy center – we can forget about any political reform.
The truth must be told: This bullet was not fired from just one rifle. It was fired from years of demonization. From the media that painted him as an enemy of democracy. From academia that turned him into a symbol of “fascism” because he dared to speak out for freedom of expression.
The Druze don’t need us to cheer them on Memorial Day or when a Druze officer falls in battle.
They need – like every citizen – to be treated with respect even when it’s unpleasant, even when there are no cameras, and even when there is a planning and building committee.