Is the Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty Worth the Paper It’s Written On?
How a “Historic Peace” Became a Polite Non-Aggression Pact With a Neighbor Who Still Can’t Stand You
How a “Historic Peace” Became a Polite Non-Aggression Pact With a Neighbor Who Still Can’t Stand You
Israel is a mirror and Egypt, like many others, does not like what it sees in it.
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.
If there was a Nobel Prize for throwing Israel under the wheels, Europe would already win it every year.
Maybe it’s time we stop being surprised: this is not a bug, it’s a function. As long as Europeans are looking for a cheap sense of morality – we will remain their favorite scapegoat.
The lie of “genocide in Gaza” is not just a plot — it is a global PR exercise, designed to turn Israel into the next apartheid state on the moral board of the global left.
We will not fall for it, because unlike them, we know what real genocide is — we were there, we survived, and we returned home. And while they scream in the streets, we will continue to guard this house, even if it causes them to accuse us of ten more “genocides.”
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.
To those who shout “Free Palestine” on the streets of London, Paris or New York — understand: “Free” Palestine will cost you dearly.
It will not come without blood, it will not come without war, and it will not come at all – because we are here, from the Jordan to the sea, and we are not going anywhere
This sentence is sold around the world, especially on the progressive left, as if it describes some fantasy of inter-ethnic brotherhood: from the Jordan to the sea, everyone will live in peace, share hummus, and teach each other folk dances.
It’s a beautiful idea — kind of like thinking that if you opened all the cages on a safari, the lions, zebras, and giraffes would cook together over a fire.
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.