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Culture War Roundup for the week of September 12, 2022

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I don't fully understand the Israel conundrum.

The ideological stake over the issue hasn't been divided merely between the left and right, but within each aisle too. In recent years, it seems as though liberals have fallen out of love with them and many of them believe that (on principle) Israel shouldn't exist. While others believe in the two state solution. The mainstream media has been louder about the IDF's excesses in occupied territories (like this one, a cursory search). Tankies over at GrayZone and related websites are convinced that western mainstream media is still defending Israel. I don't get this position, are they arguing that western media isn't criticising Israel enough or that the media is silent altogether? The right seems to be divided too, many of them enthusiastically support them while others don't like that billions of dollars of taxpayer money is sent to Israel every year and they're convinced that their lobby in the US is most supportive of liberalism and progressivism and the war machine.

My questions are what drove the evolution of these views into what they are, exactly how influential is the Israel lobby in the US, why do tankies believe that Israel doesn't get criticised in the media, are the liberals starting to decouple from Israel, are there any other reasons besides the treatment of Palestinians that the Israel question takes up so much oxygen in the foreign policy room?

From my perspective, Israel is simply the most reliable country in a strategically important area. The rest are loonies like Iran, unstable, like Egypt and Syria, or simply children (Palestine). Overall it would be nice to be able to disengage from the Middle East a bit more, but until we magic up batteries that can store 60 days of electricity use for a trivial price, they are going to remain important.

but until we magic up batteries that can store 60 days of electricity use for a trivial price

That's not the only alternative....