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Cult Watch Title: Glenn Beck Brings Firebreathing Rhetoric Back to Israel Glenn Beck is in Israel, again. In July, the talk radio host and former Fox News star was invited to the Kensset, where he met a room full of admirers in the words of a Channel 1 report led by Likud MK Danny Danon. Beck urged Israelis to stand strong; among those shaking his hand was Baruch Marzel, former chairman of the outlawed Kach movement. Yet it seems that this honor wasnt enough for Beck, who is back for a couple of Israeli rallies this week under the name of Restoring Courage. Americans are by now very familiar with the wild and irresponsible side of politics that Beck represents. Beck stokes hate among ethnic groups and pays little respect to democratic traditions in his own country, let alone in the rest of the world. Many of his comments in recent years have bordered on anti-Semitic. He embraced anti-Semitic writers, and all but one name on his list of enemies of America and humanity were Jews. Those were still mild references compared with the language Beck uses against liberals and Jews are the most liberal group in America. Beck is toxic: Even Fox News got that, and eventually dumped him. If you were representing a company and your product was in trouble, Beck would have been the last public relations man on earth youd call. Yet this is exactly what Israel has done. By supporting the right-wing government in Jerusalem, Beck seems to have found new respect in the eyes of many Jews and Israelis. While in Israel, Beck will be meeting with Vice Premier Moshe Yaalon and a couple of other government ministers, and even with centrist MK Einat Wilf from Ehud Baraks Atzmaut party. This is not the kind of help Israel needs. Becks religious rhetoric, his radical conservative positions and his fondness for the idea of Armageddon present a real danger to the well-being of Israelis and Palestinians alike, especially given that Becks rallies are taking place less then a month before the Palestinian Authoritys United Nations bid. Beck claims to stand by Israel but his views are similar to a small, extreme minority in this country. Beck places the conflict with the Palestinians within a childish clash of civilization context. His belief, shared by many in evangelical circles, is that Israel is the focal point of a worldwide struggle between good and evil. This notion is at odds with the need to see the conflict as a political problem and thus strive for a peaceful and just solution that would allow Palestinians and Jews to live together. Even scarier is the fact that those who push for this ultimate morale showdown between good and evil in the holy land live in a faraway country and would not have to face the terrible consequences of their actions. Originally, Beck wanted to hold his rally on the Temple Mount. Naturally, Jerusalems police department refused; after all, it was a visit by Ariel Sharon, then head of Likud, to the Temple Mount that arguably sparked the second intifada. And while there were other reasons for the outbreak of violence at that particular moment, one couldnt help but speculate as to how the Middle Easts history would have looked if Sharon had been denied his request to visit the holy site. Yet even Sharon was an Israeli-elected Member of Knesset, representing the real desires of a large portion of the population living here. Beck is not. His rally is nothing but an empty provocation intended to bring fame to a declining conservative loudmouth, at the expense of the very real people living in this country. Becks contempt for many of the Israelis he pretends to support was revealed when he mocked the social-justice protest movement that led hundreds of thousands of Israelis to take to the street and still enjoys more than 80% of the publics support in national polls. Describing the protests demands which are well rooted in Israels history as a welfare state as nothing but a plot against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu led by communists and Muslims, Beck revealed again his ignorance of the local history and of the political system he chose to invade. It is not a coincidence that Beck found Israel once his political star began to fade. It seems that in their despair, an increasingly isolated Israeli government and a politically alienated fundamentalist Christian movement have created a dangerous bond, one that might prevent Israeli leaders from facing the hard choices they need to make, and one that will serve the American conservatives as an effective vessel for their march on Washington. The more Beck and his army of evangelicals tie themselves to the Israeli case, the more difficult it will be to carry out the complex mission of helping Israelis find a way out of the impasse they are currently in. Progressive forces in Israel cannot fight this dangerous alliance on their own. Community leaders in the United States were slow to react to Becks vicious attacks on Jewish businessmen, but eventually they did denounce them. Yet when it comes to Israel, these voices are not heard, while conservative Jewish groups like the Zionist Organization of America go so far as to congratulate Beck on his moral clarity. In these difficult days, Jewish leaders have a special responsibility to make sure that our politics are not hijacked by the likes of Glenn Beck. Before we all pay a dear price for it, its time to make it clear to Beck that his help is not welcome.
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#1. To: Brian S (#0)
(Edited)
I wonder about Beck. He's a Mormon, but doesn't apparently believe in Mormon doctrine. Traditional Christian doctrine states that God was done with the Jews after they rejected Christ. God's new chosen people where Christians (people who believed that Christ died on the cross to pay for our sins). Dispensationalism (a Christian heresy invented about 100 years ago) believes that God is not done with the Jews. According to them, at the end of the world, Christians will be "raptured" to heaven (taken out of this world) and the Jews will covert to Christ and evangelize the remaining people before the world ends. I know a lot of Morons. Almost every Mormon I know is a salt of the earth, hard working, family oriented person. I have nothing but praise for the culture that they have built. Mormons are NOT traditional Christians. But they NOT dispensationalists either. Beck is a dispensationalist. One has to wonder why.
He's a neo-CON whore. End of the story.
The two sides in America are people who work for a living versus people who vote for their living.
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