Those Who Destroy You Will Come from Within You
When Israel’s Greatest Haters Come with Israeli Passports and Hebrew Grammar
There’s an ancient line from the Bible that never goes out of style:
“Those who destroy you and those who ruin you shall come from within you.”
It sounded poetic back then — now it sounds like the evening lineup on Channel 12.
Once, our enemies wore uniforms and carried AK-47s.
Today, they wear linen shirts, sip macchiatos in Tel Aviv, and publish op-eds titled “Why Zionism Is a Moral Failure.”
The battlefield has gone from Gaza to Google Docs.
And the people firing the shots? Israelis. Jews. People with tenure, Twitter, and an uncontrollable urge to apologize for existing.
Self-Hatred: The New Israeli Export
There was a time when self-hatred was a personal issue.
Now it’s a business model.
You can find it in academia (“Zionism is colonialism”), in culture (“The Settler Who Ate the Palestinian Child”), in the courts (“The State must obey its own laws!”), and on TV (“Israel has lost its moral compass”).
They call themselves “the conscience of the nation.”
We call them what they are: the PR department of our enemies.
They never hate Israel, God forbid — they just “care deeply” about its crimes.
They don’t burn flags — they write op-eds instead.
“But Maybe… We Are the Villains?”
That’s when they’re most dangerous — when they make you doubt yourself.
Not with weapons, but with words.
They use morality as a stick and empathy as a sledgehammer.
They say, “Not every Palestinian is a terrorist” — true.
But they never add, “Not every Israeli soldier is a murderer.”
They preach “freedom of expression,” but panic at “freedom of disagreement.”
If you say Israel is right — you’re a fascist.
If you wave a flag — you’re a settler.
If you believe God gave us this land — you’re a lunatic who needs deprogramming in Givat Haviva.
The Radical Left: Where Despair Meets Fashion
In a sane world, people hate their enemies.
In Israel, that’s considered poor taste.
Today, hating yourself is intellectual chic.
You see it in Europe: Jews protesting Israel to feel pure again, as if the Torah were a canceled franchise.
It’s not politics anymore — it’s a religion of eternal guilt.
A cult where salvation is achieved through hashtags and self-flagellation.
They really think that if we just apologize enough, post “Free Palestine” in pastel font, and boycott ourselves — the world will love us.
News flash: they won’t.
For Israel’s enemies, there’s no such thing as a “good Jew.”
There’s only Jew.
And if you’re explaining your right to exist, you’re already halfway to erasing it.
Follow the Money
This isn’t happening by accident.
There are budgets, fellowships, and “peace foundations” in Europe that bankroll this moral vanity.
You hear a professor rant about “the ongoing Nakba”? Check who signs his paychecks.
Hint: it’s probably not the Ministry of Education — it’s a German foundation called “Peace Now, Shame Later.”
These NGOs don’t defend human rights — they weaponize them.
They don’t condemn terror — they “document violations.”
They don’t criticize Hamas — they “understand the context.”
And they never criticize themselves — they’re too busy saving the world from Israel.
When the Enemy Speaks Hebrew
The scariest part? The enemy now speaks fluent Hebrew.
You hear them on TV, on podcasts, on panels — using the same words you do, only inverted.
“Democracy” means courts overruling the voters.
“Freedom” means silencing dissent.
And “values” means surrender — preferably in high resolution for international news outlets.
The Great Israeli Apology Tour
We’ve become a nation that apologizes for surviving.
We apologize for defending ourselves, for existing, for having the nerve to win.
A soldier kills a terrorist and spends the next year proving he’s “moral enough.”
Meanwhile, the journalist grilling him hasn’t left Tel Aviv since the Second Intifada.
We now live in a country where it’s easier to defend a terrorist than a soldier.
Because the terrorist, you see, is a “victim of circumstances.”
The soldier? “Excessive use of force.”
Translation: he dared to live.
But Don’t Despair Just Yet
That biblical line — “Those who destroy you will come from within you” — isn’t just a curse.
It’s a reminder.
If the problem comes from within, so will the cure.
There’s still an Israel that doesn’t confuse weakness with virtue.
An Israel that serves, builds, prays, and loves this land without the need for foreign approval.
That Israel doesn’t trend on X — it shows up to reserve duty.
The guy in uniform, the mom waving a flag, the kid singing “Am Yisrael Chai” —
they’re the antidote.
They’re the ones keeping this place alive while the elites argue about its obituary.
The Media and the Courts: The New Temple of Self-Hate
Once, the media was meant to ask questions. Today, it only asks Israel questions — and only tough ones.
Israeli journalists don’t report anymore; they educate.
Every military operation comes with a sermon, every terror attack becomes a therapy session on “Palestinian despair,” and every victory ends with the headline: “Did we go too far?”
And the courts? They’ve turned into temples of judicial narcissism — the judges are gods, the law is scripture, and the people are a regrettable typo on the way to “justice.”
The very system meant to protect Israel has become one that protects from Israel — mostly from its citizens.
American Jewry: Liberalism as a Religion, and Identity as a Forgotten Hobby
In Israel, self-hatred hides behind moral pretension. In American Jewry, it hides behind Prada and The New York Times.
Jews who feel uncomfortable being Jewish turned it into a lifestyle — “progressivism with roots,” minus the roots.
They donate to anti-Israel causes in the name of “universal values,” because loving humanity is easier than standing with your own people.
They march in human rights rallies, but not in the March of the Living.
And when Israel is under attack, they either vanish — or worse, write an op-ed titled “Both Sides Are to Blame.”
It’s not hatred. It’s fear of the mirror.
Force 100 and the Military Prosecutor: When the War Moves from the Line of Fire to the Studio
Once, our enemies fired rockets. Now, they just wait for Channel 13 to air an “investigation.”
The Unit 100 affair exposed the same chronic disease: instead of defending soldiers, we prosecute them — all in the name of “transparency.”
The Military Advocate General no longer defends the army; it defends itself from the army.
Every soldier is a suspect, every success is a scandal, and every dead terrorist is “an exceptional incident.”
When an entire system sides with the enemy under the banner of morality, Hamas doesn’t need a spokesperson — it already has a prosecutor.
Final Thought: Israel Will Survive Even Its Own Critics
Yes, the destroyers and ruiners are among us — in faculty lounges, film festivals, and NGOs with suspiciously generous grants.
But they won’t win.
Because even if they hate themselves, we love this country enough for both of us.
We don’t need validation from Paris or Berlin.
We’ve got something better — purpose, faith, and Wi-Fi in the desert.
And when the history books are written, and someone asks how Israel survived all this,
we’ll smile and say:
“Easy. We finally realized the enemy was sitting in our studio.”
הירשמו כדי לקבל את הפוסטים האחרונים אל המייל שלכם





