Ask Haviv Anything - Episode 76: How elites drive Jew-hatred, with Hussein Aboubakr Mansour
Episode Date: January 6, 2026From Manchester to Bondi Beach to Denver, from Tucker Carlson to Nicolas Maduro to Zohran Mamdani to the most significant and mobilizing political ideologies of today’s Muslim world, Jews seem to lo...om large in the imaginations of elites. They’re attacked physically and verbally and politically. The old obsession has well and truly returned.What does this return mean for the future of these societies? And for Jews?The Egyptian-American writer and thinker Hussein Aboubakr Mansour returns to the podcast to make sense out of the chaos.—This episode is sponsored by Max and Susan Reichenthal in honor of the work of Friends of the IDF (FIDF), which works to ensure that the soldiers of the IDF have the support they need during their service. Max and Susan asked to dedicate the episode in honor of the IDF soldiers who put their lives on the line to protect the people of Israel.—If you like what we do here, please join our Patreon community at https://www.patreon.com/c/AskHavivAnything. There you can ask the questions that guide the topics we cover on the podcast, join our great discussions where listeners share news and valuable resources, and take part in our monthly livestreams where Haviv answers your questions live.If you would like to sponsor an episode, please email us at haviv@askhavivanything.com.Musical intro by Adam Ben Amitai.
Transcript
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Hi, everybody. Welcome to a new episode of Ask Haviv Anything.
The year ended. The new year began.
What's happening to Europe? What's happening to Western civilization?
What's happening to Islam? What's happening to Muslims in the West?
Who we have some very concerning data points are undergoing certain radicalization trends
that are actually worse than some of what's happening in the Arab Muslim world.
What's happening to the discourse about Jews?
It's not strange or accidental.
It's not random.
that Tucker Carlson's response to Venezuela is A, Trump is doing it to impose gay marriage in Venezuela,
and of course that it was done for Israel. Candice Owens went with it. All the, what we have now come to know
as the anti-Semit coterie of the right have moved forward with it. Of course, the anti-imperialist
left has decided to as well jump on that bandwagon. Jews are somehow a vocabulary for talking
about all of these great problems,
about a sense of institutional decline
and maybe even elite failure in the West,
of a lot of the intellectual dysfunctions
currently visible in the Muslim world,
a lot of it is about Jews.
After Colorado, Manchester, after Bandai,
we can't ignore this question of Jews.
Maybe as a canary in the coal mine
for some of these problems,
that's what we're going to talk about.
For those of you who are not familiar
with the work of Hussein Abu Bakr Mansul and Egyptian-American thinker, writer,
somebody I find absolutely fascinating.
We already had him on the podcast.
He was with us in episode 30, and now he's back.
He is the author of the Abrahamic Metacritique substack.
That's the Abrahamic Metacritic.
I know.
You're thinking, that'd be a great name for a band.
I also think that.
He's also an adjunct fellow at the Z3 Institute in Palo Alto,
and we're very excited to have him on.
we get started, let me just one minute just tell you that we are very grateful to our sponsors of
this episode, who are Max and Susan Reichenthal, and they're sponsoring the episode in honor
of Friends of the IDF, FIDF, an organization that supports IDF soldiers while they serve in all
kinds of ways that help them to serve, whether that's on the front lines or that's behind the
lines. Max and Susan asked me to read the following note, which is embarrassing, but also wonderful,
and thank you. We appreciate this podcast, which takes on complicated topics, brings guests on
that are topic experts, and together help their listeners to gain a deeper understanding of each
important topic. Thank you, Max and Susan. We're very grateful. I also want to invite everyone
listening to join our Patreon. If you want to ask the questions that guide the topics we talk about,
the Patreon's the place where we pick up a lot of those.
topics. There's a wonderful discussion forum there. It's very active. People come from really
a huge cross-section. Jews and non-Jews, left and right. We have people from Gulf states. We have
people from Britain and America and Germany, all kinds of different countries. And we have these
fascinating conversations and I'm there and my wife, Rahel is there. You get to be part of our
monthly live streams where I answer all of your questions. Live, join us at patreon.com
ask Chaviv anything.
The link is also in the show notes.
So let's get started.
Hussein, how are you?
I'm good.
Thank you for having me. Glad to be here.
It's really great to have you.
We have really two themes for this moment,
for this conversation,
especially after, as I said,
the killings of Jews from Colorado,
from Manchester, from Bandai,
from Washington, D.C.,
it's becoming a bit of a trend.
And it's something that, you know, the Jews kind of have to pick up the pieces each time on their own because many others aren't paying attention.
One of the really important facts coming for me out of the Bondi massacre, which was already almost a month ago, is that Prime Minister Albanese of Australia didn't visit any of the victims.
He did visit Ahmed al-Ahmid, the Syrian hero of the day who personally tackled one of the gunmen and grabbed his gun.
got shot, a wonderful thing to do, a wonderful guy. The Prime Minister visited him. He didn't visit
any of the victims of the actual massacre because he didn't want to be shouted down on his way in
or on his way out. And right now we speak, I think it's day seven of the massive protests in Iran.
And those massive protests in Iran have drawn complete silence from all of these different elites.
Progressives on Twitter are actually raging. They're forming rage mobs against people sharing.
protest videos. They are defending the Ayatollahs. Amnesty International jumps at the bit to
critique everything and anything that it thinks is against the progressive agenda, but it took
it six days to put out any statement of any kind against the Ayatollahs as they are
oppressing their people and their people are rising in what may become an unprecedented
uprising. So what's going on? It was in that mindset.
that I read your response to Bandai,
which also dealt with this question of Islam
and the failure of Western elites.
What do you think of this moment?
Am I crazy?
No, I don't think you're crazy.
I think exactly the things that you're seeing
are actually are happening.
I think my own personal moment of alarm
was actually a while ago,
but when we know that the problems
of anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism,
the insanity, that's been prevalent, sadly,
in the middle,
despite what people refuse to acknowledge,
but anybody who was aware in the issue, so Middle Easterners, Israelis, people who were informed
always knew that this is a problem in the Middle East. The explosion of this to become a global
scale issue of just a complete domination of anti-Zainism and anti-Semitism in discourses around
issues that have nothing to do with Israel and Jews. So you're not, you're not crazy and things
definitely got increasingly insane. And this has to do exactly what you've said, is the epic
mismanagement of liberal institutions and the liberalities that have been managing them
for quite some times that ultimately led to the collapse of a lot of mitigating structures
that were supposed to not let this happen, whether in the universities or whether at society
at large. What we're saying is a complete corruption of judgment, that is a complete degradation
of the moral and strategic faculties that are supposed to govern complex society.
like Western societies
that have been in place
for a very long time.
Even in the Middle East,
I grew up in Egypt,
so even with the anti-Westernism
and all of this rhetoric,
most people understood
that Western societies
have a much more complex
faculties of judgment
that makes them reliable
on a lot of issues.
And that's why
whenever he had a major crisis
in the Middle East country,
the beginning of a civil war
a massacre about somebody like Saddam Hussein,
you'll find a lot of people
suddenly saying,
well, we want the United States
to help.
us. We want the West to help us. The reason that people did this is because they implicitly
understood that these societies have better capacities of judgment. And that's exactly
what we're seeing being corrupted. And if we can explore the mechanism of this complete corruption
in which now you have basically liberal institutions, that their judgment is completely
skewed and off in the ways that you explain towards Israel, towards Islamism,
towards a Muslim Brotherhood, towards anti-Semitism.
We can say that, first of all, you had an increasing moralization of all interpretation
that started really to take over Western institutions, I think, from the 70s onwards,
but really did come to peak in the last few decades.
That is, people started to be trained to see politics primarily through either post-colonial lens
or a therapeutic lens.
So you're always asking who's oppressed
or if you're going to do the therapeutic lens,
well, who's wounded and traumatized,
who's authentic, who's harmed, so on and so forth.
And this way of seeing things
doesn't really describe reality.
It really distributes moral permissions
and moral values, that it distributes guilt
and innocent and so on and so forth.
And this way of interpretation,
for example, if we apply it to the Israel-Palestine conflict,
you end up in a situation in which the more violent, the more insane, the more absolutely genocidal and maniacal,
actions like Hamas become, the more people think Israel is guilty.
Oh, you must be so guilty that you made them behave this way, which is a completely perverse logic of judgment.
But this is the moralization. Once you had this moralization of politics, this is how we end up with.
Second, you had selective universalism.
That is, liberal institutions insisted on enforcing,
sometimes in a very illiberal way,
rig their liberal norms, pluralism, tolerance, anti-racism.
However, they insisted doing that in their own population.
That is, you were policing their own populations militantly,
and you see in places like the UK,
but completely suspend these norms whenever it comes to other populations,
whenever it comes to migrant populations,
whenever it comes to Islamist rhetorics
and Islamist groups,
whenever it comes to important
ideologies that now reign freely
in a lot of these Western societies,
whenever Israel is framed as cosmic villains and so on,
and ultimately, the result is that basically
anti-Semitic positions that were recognized as such
not too long ago
basically became understood as politics,
identity positions, well, they have this identity, so it's normal or acceptable that they view Jews and Israel in this way.
Now, the last thing maybe to mention is the complete outsourcing of moral seriousness.
That is liberal institutions try to manage the complex foreign and domestic realities with slogans, diversity, inclusion.
and community empowerment, so on and so forth,
and not actual policies.
That is, these were moral cosmetics,
and they were never, they can never be substitutes for hard decisions.
About integration, about your border control,
about civic education, about confronting transnational ideological networks,
and so on and so forth.
And ultimately, what this, all of these structure of permissions and inhibitions and so on,
aided Islamist movements in the West that now are present in the West, and they do have,
there is now such a thing as Western Islamists.
That was not a reality a while ago.
Islamism was known to be something that's local, regional in the Middle East, Middle East and
ideologies.
They do have supporters and networks that extend in the West.
But these networks job, this was the case until the 90s, was to channel support back to the
motherships, which is, let's say, the Muslim motherhood in Egypt, so on and so forth.
Khabiv, this is not the case anymore.
You actually have established Western Islamist movements
that no longer look back to the Middle East,
but got rooted in Western societies,
and now they are competing for institutional power
inside Western institutions themselves.
Governance, so they are entering local politics,
and they are using, of course,
the now growing population of Muslim migrants,
cultivating their resentments, their hatred, the anti-Semitism, and so on, and using this
within these weakened conditions of liberal institutions to gain footholds, and they already did so.
The last fact that probably, of course, they are not also doing this alone.
There's a foreign policy element to this in which you have countries like Qatar.
Qatar, they saw exactly that this is happening, and they learned basically how to leverage it,
how to use it, how to work with these groups now in the West, in order to empower their own
positions in the geo-strategic competition in the region. That's kind of the summary of how I see
the moment that we're in. I'm trying not to despair. I've been on a lot of college campuses
over the last two years, and I met students who were not trained the way I was trained.
When I went to Hebrew University 20 years ago, let's just say it was 20, they taught me to read
carefully, read twice, to try to be fair when I argue, to understand multiple traditions,
multiple perspectives. If I can't make the Palestinian case in a coherent and serious
and humanizing and convincing way, I don't understand it well enough to debate it,
to argue that something about the Palestinian narrative is wrong. And I meet students on campuses
all over the United States. And it's just, it's happened too many dozens of times already
for it to be a one-off or a bad example,
who were taught at university,
just as you said,
to locate the power in society,
to assign blame in society,
to perform righteousness in society,
to be the perfect activist.
Rhetorically very skillful,
they're constantly coming up with new terminology
and new means and new ways of sort of packaging
arguments and delegitimizing the interlocutor, the other side.
They don't believe in any institution because everything smacks to them of power.
And therefore, they can't actually tolerate ambiguity, dissonance, disagreement.
And these are the kids who are in the most elite institutions.
They are being trained that way.
I don't know if I'm, I don't meet a lot of computer science majors.
talking about the humanities majors, the social science majors. I've had that experience with so much
of American and British journalism where I don't know about the education, although, you know,
when you meet the students, you understand the education funnel that they all go through
into the journalistic world. But journalism, the advertising model collapsed. And the attention
economy took over everything and outrage and a sales outrage sells tribal confirmation sells all of
journalism even very elite journalism has fallen into that kind of curated outrage that kind of
selection bias where everybody just literally absorbs the one thing that actually mobilizes you
that triggers you that everything has become tribal everything has become moral signaling
and everybody is radicalizing.
And it's happening in every democracy that you slightly lift the, you know, you lift the engine hood and you take a look underneath and it's happening to all of them.
And that's the elite.
When you meet the young people, you understand that the future is going to be worse.
We now have deep economic dislocation.
Globalization can move industrial bases very, very quickly.
A lot of the capital in an economy is moving into virtual things, into things most people don't understand.
the AI revolution, everybody tells us it's happening. Nobody quite tells us what it means or
what we're supposed to do about it or how it's going to affect our jobs. And if you're an
ordinary working class person, what's going to happen to you and what industries aren't going
to exist in 10 years and you literally don't know? And so in that dislocation, we have elites
that have been talking for generations now about this promise that was made, this kind of bargain
underlying the Western order, which was that economic growth, you know, you invest in your
education, we have an open economy, capital can move around, factories can move around, and that will
create the kinds of efficiencies that will produce upward mobility. What if nobody's experiencing
that upward mobility anymore? What if wage growth is stagnant for 30 years? What if people are
on their way to becoming trillionaires while everybody else is losing ground and falling backward?
And GDP per capita is stagnating everywhere. Then what do we do? And so there's this sense that
elites have failed everywhere. And if elites have failed, we might as well go to this radical socialist
experiment. We might as well go to this radical populist right experiment to take a look and maybe there's
maybe there's answers over there because the state and motionless thing where I don't even have
the very fact that these elites are so highly educated. The education gap itself that produces a
kind of ethos of technocracy means that a lot of policies aren't noted. They're all about
the spreadsheets. They're all about the professionalism. They don't notice ordinary people.
And that's how you can get the Democratic Party's open borders policy. You can only get that
if you're looking only at spreadsheets. And when you do that, you make a lot of ordinary people
in your society feel like the democracy isn't can't hear them, can't see them, can't understand
what their needs are. And so there's also this sort of technocratic elite that is formed out of all
of these cultural changes. There is a profound disconnect in the West from elites and ordinary people.
And sometimes a person can be an ordinary person and also have a job in an elite institution.
And I don't know exactly what these terms mean. And please don't challenge me on them because I won't be
able to give you an exact definition. But it's there. And these institutions very quickly become
captured by the radicalizing ideology. The people most keen on taking down the elites are the elites themselves.
And there's a lot of this anger at the base that doesn't see itself in the progressive project because the progressive project is an elite project. And so that's building out the populist right project. And that's only driving further radicalization on the progressive elite project. And so societies are tearing each other apart, losing the capacity to do serious policy, losing the capacity to produce good outcomes. And somehow, somehow everybody's talking about Jews.
I'm getting a little worried.
If, okay, my rant is over.
Okay, I want to complicate what you said a little bit more without losing people, I promise.
I'll make it simple.
What you really, what you have here is you have a co-centric spheres of competition.
What you don't have only one competition elite against normal people, against society and so on.
No, no, no.
You have actually various, very now intensifying competitions happening at the same time.
So you have a competition between the right on the left over, of course, who's in power.
And then you have a competition within the left about who's going to be on top and who's going to be on the bottom within the elite itself and the elite and its relationship to its movement.
And you have now an instantifying competition on the right between what is the future of the right.
What is the future of the post-Trump mega coalition?
Who's going to be basically who's going to represent that new.
right-wing movement. And seeing Tucker Carson and the anti-symismism, I think it's very important
to see it in that context, that this is a rivalry over elite positions within the right
movements itself. And this has been happening in the left for quite some time. That's basically
in different leftist institutions, you know, for example, in the universities it's been happening
since Edward Saeed and post-colonialism, you know, third world intellectuals trying to take over
the positions of Jewish intellectuals and Jewish professors. So these are elite competitions that are
happen? Wait, wait, I'm sorry. You said a lot here. Can you, can you take us through that?
First of all, on the right, and then we'll get to third worldism taking over the positions of
Jewish intellectuals. What the Tucker Carlson fight between Tucker Carlson and let's say the
mainstay Republicans of the past, which Tucker used to be a part of, over control. So I have a lot
of questions, but my fundamental question is, why is it about Jews? Why do you become the
which issue. I mean, that's a, that's a bigger question, but it's not, it's not, this is,
it's not only about Jews here. It's becoming about Jews in a lot of these spheres of competition.
And that enforces each other. That is, it's in the salience of the issue itself, that's already,
that's a big selling point. The symbolic, the overwhelming symbolic and moral power that
comes behind, um, the anti-Semitic discourse and anti-Semitic imagination. And the position of
Jews themselves. I mean, that's also a part of the reality that we have to see. That is,
as a lot of intelligent people recognize, that Jews as a success story of the United States
ended up being really represented that is visible in most elite circles in the different things,
whether actually on the left, whether the progressive movement, you know, communist Sunday
universities, or the rights, you know, that also right spheres of, of, of, in,
influence. One of the most important conservative pundits in the last decade or so has been
Ben Shapiro, who's an orthodox Keepa wearing Jew doesn't get more visible than that. That's
actually a fascinating development in itself because it's new that Jews are very represented in
conservative movements like this. But this also means that you have, Jews have a position
of influence within elite circles. Now this position of influence is the Achilles heel. If you are
competing, if you're trying to get in, this can
be Achilles heel in multiple things. You can use it to de-legitimize these Jews themselves.
Already, if you can remove them, that already creates a space for you. And you can see this
in the competition against bin Shapiro. I mean, some of it is clearly is professional competition,
so to speak. That is, you have other influencers and pundits who basically want to diminish him
in order to elevate themselves and for them to have bigger audiences and bigger influence on
the conservative movement.
Candice Owens has launched broadsides on Ben Shapiro, and she's decided to do it through conspiracy theories of 19th century anti-Semitic conspiracists who invented insane things about the Talmud, and so she pulls out a book, discredited within anti-Semitic discourses of the Germany.
I read your essay on this, on the substack, where, you know, the Talmudic Jew it's called.
And it's not just a forgery.
It's a forgery that embarrassed the anti-Semitic.
Semites who took themselves seriously in Germany.
And so they kick this guy out of their circles.
And she literally pulls out a printed copy on her podcast.
What?
There's so many ways to compete with Ben Shapiro.
Well, this is the most vulgar.
I mean, this is really,
but this is how alarming this is,
that usually this kind of vulgar anti-Semitism
were really lived in the dark margins of American society.
You did have anti-Semitism that tried to hide it
I mean, for example, Carlson, I mean, it's not very subtle.
But at least he's still trying to commit himself.
He succeeds, I think, maybe 70% of the time to the idea that, no, I'm just talking about
American foreign policy and our policy in the Middle East.
I'm not talking about Jews.
Owens, of course, doesn't even try to do that.
But the alarming thing that this works, that is, it has constituency.
It has a huge following.
I don't know how much, I suspect not all of these people are watching it because of the
curiosity. I am afraid that that's not the case.
There's a lot of people who actually may be actually thinking that this is this is true
or taking her for for her word.
But this is, this is a, this is the outcome or the, the, the, um, the, um, the, um, the, the, um, the, the,
consequences of severe elite competitions done in this way in which no scruples
are, are, are, are respected, um, or held and then people engaging in the, in this
kind of anti-Semitic discourse.
this is happening on the right. For instance, if we're going to take a more sophisticated
example than Candice Owen, the whole spat between Tucker Carlson and Ted Cruz. Why Cruz?
Because Cruz is an extremely important Republican senator. He almost became president.
And he is one of the most staunch, a pro-Israel senators in the U.S. Senate. And this has been
the case for a very, very long time. So it's what he represents. He represents.
primarily actually not Jews.
He represents a kind of conservative
and Republican politicians
who have been there for a long time
who have a lot of power
inside the establishment
who are pro-Israel.
Now this pro-Israel position
is used in order to delegitimize them
and undermine them
and thus giving a space
for probably a new elite
that offers itself
for the Republican and conservative movement
as the new replacement
with the new correct commitment,
so to speak.
So this is the kind of competition, how I see it, that's happening, happening on the right.
Now, this has been happening on the left for decades.
That's happening on the right is actually new.
But in the left, it's actually this competition in which Zionism specifically and anti-Zionism became central.
This has been the case probably since the late 70s and 80s.
If you're going to talk about in the academy, it was used by the new sort of intellectual that came to the
United States and American institutions represented kind of the icon of this as Edward Saeed,
in which this anti-Zionist commitment becomes a tool to relocate the moral prestige to themselves
from the Jewish intellectual and professor that was really the symbol of the post-war liberal
success. So this was itself a form of competition in order to do that. But
Then that spread also in the academy and among progressive elites themselves in which basically higher commitment to anti-Zionist or pro-Palestinian or really anti-Zionist politics and opinions then gives one advantage in their elite competition.
And this elite competition gets worse because you talked about economic displacement.
This is by the way, it's not only happening on the base.
So that means also there are fewer opportunities for elites.
That is, elites are also now having status and security and having insecurity about their own futures as elites.
Because journalistic jobs are drying up and everybody's opening podcasts.
And that means that you have to ratchet up and this many times.
And I've seen this dynamic even in Muslim societies, basically it happens many times with Islamist rhetoric.
That's how you ratchet it up.
Basically, when groups are competing, everybody's committing to Sharia more, everybody's more pure.
everybody's more this.
So it's a sad dynamic
of ideological purity
that happens within
when the resources
are actually limited
for elites
and then they are
competing heavily.
This is happening
while you talked about
the university
and that's what I know
a lot about
so I'm going to talk
a little bit about that.
So the administrations
of the university
as this is happening
what do they choose to do
because ultimately
they are within the elite
circles. They choose to do nothing. That is a they choose to make the issue about reputational
management. That's what we did. The important thing is that we manage our reputation and,
and we make sure that there is no risk. So basically risk management. And that's kind of what we see.
What do you mean? How do they manage what? How do they manage? Which part of this is they managing?
There's this competition and it's radicalizing people because radicalism is a great way to, as you said,
relocate moral prestige, and that builds out the kind of Marxist sort of power dynamics
kind of interpretation of literally every single thing happening everywhere, because then we can
all step in with our great, you know, and the old class that's still used to analyzing
other things and other frameworks, they can't do this. And the very fact that it is activist
is what gives us that moral prestige. In other words, the transformation of academia, at least
those sections of academia into activism, almost pure activism, is why we know this is moral,
while those people who have time for other kinds of economic or other analyses, they're actually
part of the problem because they're complicit in the power structures that be. That's what they
decided to walk us through this slowly. A lot of people don't know what you're talking about.
One last thing, another dynamic is that all of this trickles down to the students who actually
believe in this. That is, you have these conditions of elite competition in which radicalism
is performed in order to do their status and prestige gains and resources gains. But of course,
the students, the young students actually believe because they are the subject of all of this.
And you end up with these very young people who know next to nothing about the world,
they were practically still children, and they have this unbelievable moral certainty
that they are marching on the history and their side. And then you have all the conditions
of the encampments and so on, which creates the conditions of anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism
that threatens Jewish students and faculty and just radicalizes the country, and then attracts foreign
funders, who, by the way, did not invent Qatar.
I think the issue of Qatar also is very misunderstood.
They didn't invent our radicalism.
They didn't come.
No, they saw what's happening and they invested in it because it works for them.
Now, the management of the universities, the administration, what they end up doing is
pure risk management.
That is, they don't interfere with any of this, but they want,
want to ensure that they are still legally protected. So they basically, they spend money on lawyers,
the donor money still come in, and the enrollment are still studies. And that's how the
administration of universities think about the issue. They think about it entirely for risk management,
not that this is a bad thing happening, not that we need to protect students. And this is why you
have the showdown between the Trump administration and the IVs, whether Columbia or Harvard,
because they are not taking it seriously. They are just trying to get away from it. I remember
the Harvard president was complaining about finding an off-ramp with the competition,
with the showdown with Trump, which is very funny because the off-ramp would be just
applying Title VI protection to Jewish students.
That's all you need to do.
There's so many off-ramps.
What was he talking about an off-ramp?
To make it all go away so it doesn't disrupt their fundraising.
They have become fundraising organizations that aren't institutionally capable of really
paying close attention to their educational purposes.
This is true.
And that big is a bigger question.
I mean, we can fight.
Here's, I think, I'm not really interested in joining these elite institutions,
and maybe I am not an ambitious person, but I look at them,
and maybe, you know, five years ago, ten years ago,
I would look at them, oh, I wish, you know, they are a little crazy,
but, you know, they are amazing people,
and they are the gold standard in education and intellectual life,
and they really want to be a part of them.
Maybe that was a case 10 years ago.
Today, when I look at this illicit institutions,
say these people are absolutely insane.
I want nothing to do with them.
and they want to go find a good place for me.
And I think that's really what people need to think about
that this is a serious possibility,
that we don't know a lot of these important institutions
that's supposed to do very important work,
especially, as we said, the humanities and social sciences,
which I think the humanities are completely gone
and are not going to come back in these places,
that they are possibly irreversibly corrupt,
at least for some time.
And it's important to actually build alternative institutions.
which I think a lot of people are already starting doing.
Well, saying you wrote a piece after Bandai that addressed both the anti-Semitic anti-Zionist question and the solities and questions there, but mainly addressed Western elite, the Western elite question.
And I'm going to quote two paragraphs and I just want to, I want to ask you because you're very, you're very fierce in your critique and also you're very pessimistic in your conclusions.
You write, outside the United States, there is no Western political establishment with either
the will or the capability to address this problem, let alone reverse its growth.
The future of Western Europe, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand is likely to be increasingly
Jew-free and increasingly dysfunctional, as strange as it may seem to read the latest White House
National Security Strategy distancing itself from Europe that was in the White House.
National Security Strategy. We were all trying to skim it and figure out what it says,
and we didn't notice the little bits about Venezuela. We should have been paying attention.
The assessment you write is correct about the distancing from Europe. And the distancing is prudent.
The decivization of Europe, a program conceived by European elites over decades and for which
mass migration and Islamic movements were recruited as instruments is likely unstoppable.
This does not mean that Western societies will be governed by Sharia law.
That fantasy only contributes to the confusion.
What it means is that Western societies will become their own versions of third worldist caste systems, autocratic, corrupt, stratified.
Think less caliphate, more Latin America.
What I'm reading you're saying here is that you take very seriously the possibility that the trends of, you know, the
wealth gaps, the trends of capital being owned abroad, a factories moving willy-nilly without actual
attention paid to the needs of populations at home, that all of these trends of elite detachment
and elite radicalization, they're not going anywhere. And you describe this with just to finish,
national wealth will be sold by corrupt elites to golf investors and other foreign patrons,
while populations are abandoned to navigate the wreckage on their own. You paint a very
dystopian future.
Is that what's waiting for us?
At this moment, it's prudent to be pessimistic.
And I think that's basically what the White House
National Security Strategy did about the
Europe is lost.
Most like, I hope I'm wrong.
I mean, nobody's, and I'm not a defeatist, and I'm not.
But it's.
No, so let me ask this.
Europe is lost because it has gone too far down the path
of the very trends that we've talked about.
It did.
And whether,
whether in terms of elite corruption.
I mean, they look at the European elites,
often the ones, whether in the EU various institutions,
whether on the national level in countries like Germany, France,
the countries that matter,
or not that other European countries that matter,
but basically the major European powers
and historical actors.
And I don't see any, even any sincere opposition
to the direction that these countries took
or a promise of reversal.
If anything, they see actually doubling down more,
more will to police people
who complain about conditions and so on.
So I think it's very prudent to be pessimistic.
That's one.
That's the one thing in the elite.
The second thing, and I want to be completely honest here,
but sometimes I want to be precise.
I grew up in Egypt.
I know, and I write very sympathetically
about the problems of the Muslim worlds.
I write extensively.
about helping people understand Muslim problems,
the anti-Semitism problem,
you know, it's not an eternal essence,
it's a modern development,
the influence of German ideas, so on.
I don't deny the problems.
The problems are real as big and awful as we see them.
I just try to help people understand them better.
But that does not mean I want to live with these problems.
I escaped these problems.
I fled.
Had I been living in Egypt,
people who read my things can understand.
I would have probably,
I don't know if I would have survived till now
had I've been living in Egypt for the last 15 years or so.
I don't want to live.
I don't live with these problems that are extremely difficult to solve.
One of the things also that I started to do
is I'm trying to explain how deep these problems are
and why they are extremely difficult to deal with.
Importing these problems on that scale
into Western societies is a nightmare.
For me and obviously now for a lot,
of people. Now, you have a lot of populations.
Can you get specific?
That is, you have a, you've written, you've written critiques of Islam that have taken
the Quran as a literary text and said, as a literary text, it grounds Muslim ideas
in the Muslim intellectual universe in actually very, in very shallow ground, and because it rejected
Judaism or it rejected the monotheistic world of Judaism and Christianity that came before it that
emerged out of. That kind of thing treats the Quran as a secular thinker would look at it,
an anthropological artifact.
Is that what you're talking about?
That's something you can't do in Egypt?
I mean, yeah, of course, that's part of it.
But no, it's actually the other, that actually lists.
I think actually in Egypt today you would be able to do that
because you do have kind of this opening secular.
No, it's critiquing the modern conception of Islam and Muslim identity and Muslim allegiance
and loyalties, which basically revolves around commitment to anti-Zionism.
that is the core today for a big part of the Muslim world.
And as I said, I wrote extensively about how this happened.
This is not a mystery.
It actually went through phases of how this, by the works of Muslim elites,
starting from the interwar years,
how sadly they brought this to reality,
in which the restructured mass Muslim identity for the modern world
around a struggle specifically that ultimately collapsed
into the struggle against Zionism
and struggle against,
against Israel. Now this is this became such a foundational commitment that you can be an atheist,
but you cannot be a pro-Israel in Muslim countries. That is you can be a secular and you see it in
a lot of these secular activists. Think about somebody like Basim Youssef. It's entirely secular in his,
beliefs. Al-Aab al-Fatah, the Egyptian British activist in which had the controversy. I have an
essay on him also on my substack and go into the UK. And then the discussion.
all of these absolutely nauseating anti-Semitic record of his.
A lot of these, by the way, I know many of these people personally,
a lot of them are completely liberal, modern atheists.
They don't believe in God.
They don't believe in religion.
They don't believe in Islam.
They don't believe in any of this.
But they remain stidfast in their commitments
to the narratives of victimhoods at the hands of the Zionists
in the United States and how Palestine is the anchor that anchors everything.
So there was a...
And the Jews control everything.
Why?
Why, Bassem Yusuf?
Why does Bassem Yusuf obsess constantly about Jews?
What does he care?
Bassem Yusuf, by the way, has a border with Gaza.
Fine.
Bassem Yusuf also has a border with Sudan.
Haven't heard a peep from him about Sudan.
He has a literal border.
By the way, Egypt hosts vast numbers of refugees from Sudan.
What are his thoughts on Sudan?
No one will ever know.
Why Israel?
I genuinely, I'm so used to it.
It's almost silly to ask, but suddenly I want to ask, you're an Egyptian, you know these people, you talk to these people, you've read all these people in Arabic I have never read.
Why, why Israel?
Well, I think that's actually the interesting question that people don't ask because it doesn't make sense.
And a lot of the things that I write is actually because I started to ask that question.
We don't really, we're so used to it that it doesn't strike us anymore is how bizarre this is.
This is bizarre.
It completely does not make sense.
we can try to make it make sense.
Oh, it's because of Islam.
Oh, well, anti-Semitism.
But ultimately it doesn't explain anything.
It's kind of...
I'll do more than that.
Even if let's accept for the purposes of this conversation
that Israel is evil,
that Israel has got, you know,
deeply malign intentions toward the Palestinians,
that there's no good there,
that there's no important context you need to know,
that there's no history,
that there's no diversity among Israelis.
Let's go all in, all in, okay? Israel is North Korea, but somehow smellier. That's what we're doing.
Still, why Israel? Yemen would still be worse. Why Israel? Well, the answer, again, the answer that I have
ultimately historical, it's about how these modern societies themselves developed and the ideological
history. So to be modern, you have to be ideological. That's what, that is, you have to believe
in one of the main worldviews of the modern world. You can't,
That's the actually definition of being modern, that you see the world in a modern way.
And these modern world views that you're, let's say that you're a society like Lebanon or Syria in the 1920s, 1930s and 40s and so on.
And you're now modernizing your society.
You have to modernize them through a mass education system, creating schools for all of these illiterate prisons in the countryside.
This is basically the modernization model all over, Russia, Eastern Europe.
You build an education system.
You bring all of those illiterate epism children
and you try to turn them into working class
and middle class, modern middle class
through national identity, so on and so forth.
To condense it very, to condense it in a simple,
the model that a lot of Muslim elites and Arab beliefs,
because a lot of them actually were not Muslim,
but sadly chose for this process,
when they did this in the mid-century,
was completely modern,
completely modeled on German ideas,
on fascist ideas, and on communist ideas.
And that produced a totalitarian modern worldview
and social ethos that can just keep reproducing itself.
That is, when it was secular, it's totalitarian and anti-Semitic,
whether Arab nationalism and so on and so forth.
If they disillusioned with this ideology,
you know what, maybe I'm going to go back to my roots
and read the Quran and become Muslim.
You go read the Quran to become Muslim again.
you reproduce the totalitarian anti-Semitic vision of the world
through these Islamic texts that you're reading.
And that's basically what's been happening.
Now, this problem has been deep enough
that you don't have even a memory
that this actually did happen,
that this is how this problem came.
So you have people who even changed their,
like Basimusuf, you know, they become secular, so on and so forth,
and they are still really dependent
in organizing their own identity and their moral worldview
and these ideas of being a victim
and struggling against the injustice of just Israel existing.
This is the idealist understanding of it.
Obviously, there is also now a geostrategic and political
and interests that are built on this.
That is, you have now, okay, because this happened already,
so you have many Middle Eastern states
or Arab states or Muslim states
who organized their power, elites,
who organized their power,
around the relationship to this conflict.
So now you don't just have a belief system.
You have serious powers and serious interests that tied in.
The biggest example is Qatar and the Qatari.
Qatar has built an empire of influence globally.
It started regionally.
Al Jazeera was kind of the pioneer of Qatari influence.
They built in a tiny state.
And they built this empire.
higher of influence, of influencing Muslim Arab opinion in every country, in which people speak
Arabic and they have they have access to satellite TV. And the way they did it is actually
through Palestine because they are the ones who are talking about Palestine all the time.
A lot of Arab national TVs were not. You have countries like Egypt who had a peace
agreement with Israel. They are not going to, they are only, they are trying to walk the line.
So they are not going to be pro-Israel, but they are not going to try agitate
their populations, but now Qatar became the spokesperson against this injustice, and that
leverage an insane amount of influence, not to mention, of course, extending their patronage to the
Islamist movement, then they leveraged all of this leverage that they have regionally, and then
they gained leverage with Western politicians and Western institutions, and they became basically
the main mediator between Western powers and Western elites and Islamist movements and Muslim
populist movements and so on and so.
So now their entire model of power is really built upon this.
They have no interest in whether helping the problem being solved or taking down the
rhetoric or they have an interest in keeping things inflamed the way they are.
So as I said, there are two aspects to this.
There is the historical actually understanding, ideological history and understanding of the
ideas.
And then there is, of course, the actual political and geo-strategic aspect.
to this.
Lassain, you are describing a situation in which the ideas borrowed, I think the last time we talked
back in episode 30, I called it inhaled, because you really described it as truly like
a void of ideas, this experience of European modernity and European strength and European
competence and power.
And so they just absorbed into an empty shell left behind by the decaying Ottoman
empire, a social and intellectual shell, they absorb these, you know, mid-century, 1930s,
really 19th century into Naziism, German ideas, whether that's on the right or on the left.
And when you write about Muslim immigration, you write about it almost as a warning,
you're not talking about Muslims.
You're talking about the ideas that Muslims have incubated from
19th and 20th century Europe, that they're now bringing back into Europe, but coding it either in
Islam, either in the validation, the authentication that Islam can granted, that Islamic vocabulary
can grant it, or in this anti-imperial left-wingism, which is a European invention, and Muslim
diaspora intellectuals in the West have basically revived it, revived it as a Western moral project.
and it comes from the Marxist in the 19th century right up to the Soviets.
And that is what you mean by anti-Zionism.
Now, I want to suggest that I'm just going to talk about you for a minute, if that's okay.
That anti-Zionism for you is code.
You are a theorist of what the obsession with Jews has done to break the Muslim world
or the Arab Muslim world that you're very familiar with.
And so I want to just read one last piece of the paragraph having introduced it,
that way. Incidentally, I'm starting to begin to suspect, and I even talked to some colleagues at the
free press about maybe trying to write something about Tucker Carlson as basically an importer into
America of the Muslim Brotherhood. And this is something that I've been thinking about for months,
because the things that I was reading from 1920s Muslim Brotherhood to try to understand
really what Hamas is, right? But the sort of the birth of the ideas that obsessed about Zionism in that way
That's exactly how Tucker Carlson is constructing his campaign to take over the right now,
the populist right, which is to say it's a pietistic return to origin story, right?
He has given speeches critiquing mainline American churches, liberal churches, for being hollowed shells
inhabited by raccoons.
I mean, he sees the degradation of the religion and the need to restore the original piety.
And incidentally, totally separate story.
It's all about Jews ultimately.
Who is decaying society, destroying society?
Who do we need to face down?
Who is secretly in control of things?
It's carbon copy of Muslim Brotherhood.
And suddenly he's deep friends with Qataris, which is super interesting, right?
So it all comes together.
European ideas, incubated in the Muslim world for a century and a half,
coming back to Europe now on the wave of all these things.
And then you write the following paragraph.
The anti-Zionist derangement of the last two years was a final.
warning. In it we witness the full legitimization of genocidal anti-Zionism within the
commanding heights of Western institutional life and its enthusiastic adoption by large
segments of the public. The protests themselves, as they began immediately on October 7th,
were celebrations of the Hamas massacres, organized before the first IDF soldier had entered Gaza.
They revealed what had been constructed over decades, the encampments, the building occupations,
the harassment campaigns against Jewish students, the open calls for Indian, and
or the attacks on Jewish institutions, it is the new baseline, our new norm.
When Hussein Abu Bakr Mansul says that, he's talking about Egypt.
Your fear, this is a, there's a question mark at the end of all of this.
Your fear is that through these intellectual channels, through populist revolts and
internal elite revolts and competition, driven by,
the crises, the real crisis, the real economic dislocations and crises, a crisis of legitimacy
that Western elites are undergoing because of the massive and very fast changes happening to all
Westerners that are causing a real crisis of legitimacy. Through that, in that space,
these ideas are coming in from the places where they had incubated and retaking Western societies.
Is that a fair assessment of your analysis?
I think it's very fair. I think ultimately,
you touched really in something deep
and something very personal.
My nightmare is having to live in Egypt again.
And, you know, Egypt is, you know,
there are a lot of normal people who live in Egypt.
You can live your life in Egypt, by the way,
being a Christian, atheists, Muslim,
but as long as you're not engaged in anything,
seriously, and you'll be fine.
If you are a thinking person,
that is, if you want to question anything,
whether it how society behave,
you want to question how society is organized. And I'm talking about the deep things.
Like, why do we think that we're the good one, the good guys in the Palestine-Israel story?
Maybe we're the bad guys. Like, serious questions. You can, it's, it's, the consequences are
extremely severe, socially, politically, so on and so forth. Also, also other issues?
That's the issue that you and I talk about mainly because you're talking to me.
But women's, women's status in Egyptian society is famously.
There are reports on female genital mutilation out of the Swiss government and out of the UN that are horrifying.
Egypt has a real problem with women.
So usually their regime in Egypt would be tolerant.
Actually, they would like to have some sort of an official feminist movement that is performing feminism.
That's how a lot of these countries work, right?
Which is really funny because that's really similar to the condition that's happening to liberal institutions.
that we would like to have people who perform
a certain social justice
and radical idea. But that's it.
We're going to perform this.
We have the elite control and elite competition
and so on and so forth. But what happens at the bottom
doesn't really concern us. And this is why
it really, as you said, in the essay, said,
like, don't think about you're going to living in a
caliphate. You're going to living in a
Western version of third world
dysfunction. And that's
the scary thing. Now,
there is, of course, the Muslim component of this
that has to do with
the issues then that we care about,
the ideological commitments to anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism
that I don't want to be an antiquarian,
you know, historian who's just living in history.
I'm trying to understand how things happened,
but because of today.
That is, I, I'm not, I don't want to spend my life
obsessing over German ideas and this German philosophers
and how they think.
I'm obviously learning and thinking about these things a lot,
but ultimately I understand that this is the past.
We're not there anymore.
Islam, this version of mainstream, Islam did indeed become like this.
It was not Islam 150 years ago.
It is today, and it's done.
And I'm not sure it's actually reversible.
This is also my most pessimistic idea.
I think it's too late.
That is, sadly, you could do that.
Like, you could indoctrinate all of these people at once
because they had a majority of illiterate people who knew nothing.
And you can just put them into this indoctrination system and produce them.
But that process is over and you're not going to get it again.
That is, people already have ideologies.
People already have no ideas.
So in order to change their understanding of the world, change of it.
I'm not sure that this is possible.
So having these ideologies becoming part of the Western institutional structure is terrifying.
especially within the dysfunction of Western elites that we just talked about.
And this is why I look at Western Europe and I'm pessimistic.
I don't know if they can get back from this.
They have now these large populations that now they have their own culture.
They are not integrating into anything.
It's becoming unsafe.
Everybody knows it's becoming unsafe for Jews there.
It's becoming unsafe for women in certain places at certain times.
same thing is happening in Canada
and the hope that this is not
going to happen here
I can't help looking at this
as a Jew
but I'm just a Jew
you know there's a lot of as a Jews
I'm not as a Jew I'm just a Jew meaning
I'm not the Jew
as the cartoon character
running around to the morality plays running in everybody's heads
all around the world trying to serve their own
ideological needs I'm literally
just that one guy who is the real-world thing that they have decided to code into their
morality plays in ways I can barely comprehend. And what I just heard was, Middle Eastern Islam is
not repairable for me. I, I, I, the Amaradis are to me extraordinary, extraordinary
people. I mean, they, everywhere they go, everything they do, every time I talk with Emirates,
what amazes me is that I don't get any of the victimhood garbage that I get in so many of the
panels I sit in or discourses or Twitter exchanges with the Muslim world. I don't get any of the
grievance and anger and bitterness and rage. They are looking to invest in AI. If they're talking to an
Israeli, they want to know what I have to sell them and what I have to buy from them.
there's just a very practical, confident, clear-eyed kind of conversation that you can have with this culture.
But they're tiny.
And the broader culture of the Arab Muslim world, with all the caveats that, you know,
you can't in these kinds of conversations represent the real humanity of hundreds of millions of people.
But the broader Islam of the Arab world that I have access to, not Indonesia, but, you know, Iraq roughly through Libya,
cannot be saved from its anti-Zionism.
And I don't mean anti-Zionism
as the luxury belief
in the way it's talked about in America
of pro-Israel, not pro-Israel.
I don't mean in these kinds of silly luxury beliefs.
I mean, the actual anti-the-existence
of eight million Jews
who without Israel would be dead
simply would not exist.
And the genocidal anti-Zionism
that you talk about.
They're not getting over that.
It's too fundamental to their religious world.
It's too fundamental to their understanding.
of the world, they are too much early 20th century Europeans for any of that to ever be washed away,
no matter how much we have Abraham Accords and trade deals and how much they want my, I don't know
what, Nvidia chips. It's not going to help. I think, I mean, I'm very pessimistic. I hope I'm
again, I'm wrong. But first of all, societies are becoming much more autonomous than used to be
because of social media, the internet.
That is now you do have societies or pockets society
generating all kinds of discourse all the time.
And we see it here.
And the internet does all these weird things
beyond the control of states and elites and so on and so forth.
So you're not living in a condition anymore
in which you have a centralized Arab state
with an state-owned TV network
with only state-run three channels
and the state-run newspaper
and the state-run radio.
And you make peace with the guy in top and you try, even that in Egypt was very difficult.
We know, of course, prison Sadat himself got assassinated.
But at least it was a possibility then.
Now, within the kind of conditions, I don't know how is that possible, especially also if you have actors like Qatar, who have infinite liquidity.
And they really mastered the telecommunication games.
And they have access to your population through the internet, through satellite, and so on and so forth.
I can just bypass you and talk to them all the time.
So, I mean, technically speaking,
if people's understandings of themselves changes constantly,
if this is a new understanding,
thinking speaking, which can be undone,
you can have another understanding.
The problem, why I'm pessimistic,
is basically the conditions of this change.
Now, you add to this,
and this is what I'm talking about the Middle East.
I mean, ultimately, I think the Middle East,
this issue can be dealt with politically
because you have states who are willing to do so,
like the U.E, I hope Saudi Arabia is not now trying to instrumentalize and change its regional policy.
But generally, you can try to deal with the states.
You can incentivize better behavior in this area.
Some states can see that it's disruptive to its own.
That is, you have Middle Eastern rulers or Arab rulers rulers, rulers who understands that this whole obsession is also disruptive to their own stability and power.
By the way, that's the case in Egypt.
That is, it's very important and central to Egypt.
and the state has to keep the flame low,
but they know that the flame can't get high
because that will disrupt their own legitimacy.
So anyways, it can be dealt with politically.
The other...
But even that's very time-limited.
How long can it?
Sisi, you know what?
After Sisi, it'll be some other general,
but eventually it won't be a general.
Eventually, when 98% of Egyptian society is Muslim Brotherhood,
we're out of options.
And then what have us?
I don't know.
I hope that happens.
But here's the thing.
The second part is now you have a lot of these populations who already sent big migrant groups
who are now living on their own in Western societies.
And they already moved out of this.
That is, now they have these ideas.
And they are developing them, by the way, in very different state of conditions.
That is, a lot of the Islam's commitments in Western societies among second generation,
first generation Muslims, let's say in the United States where I live, so I know this firsthand,
is becoming a Muslim.
So Muslim Brotherhood thought,
who used to be this fascist, totalitarian movement.
That's how it started.
Today, it transmutated in the United States,
and it became identity politics activism for Muslims, right?
So if you could be a very secular Muslim,
and you go to college,
and then you understand that Islamism is basically for you,
let's say that's how you see it,
it's like black lives matter for black.
So you'd be a secular woman, you know,
without even without a hijabism.
But your allegiance to this because you understand it in identity terms of the conditions now.
And this is only one of the sad developments that did happen.
And in which these, as you said, like 19th century, basically 19th century, terrible European ideas,
now became established or became modernized to continue with us in the 21st century.
And now you have their own versions now laundered in by Tucker Carlson and others,
into the larger American public.
And this is an important reason
why I started to try to tell the story
to begin with of basically how the modern,
the modern Arab ideology,
how it came to being and tried to offer this
that I started working on years ago.
When I started working on years ago,
this is before October 7th.
I was working at this book
that I had no luck publishing
because nobody was interested in this.
But basically, I wanted to say
that the ending of the book
that this book actually, yes, is about the Middle East, but it's a warning about what can happen
here. That is, your assumption that, oh, these Muslim societies are very, they have their own
culture, they have their own identity, they are failing to assimilate wisdom ideas for an idea.
These are foreign ideas to them. That's kind of the assumption that people had. And I'm telling them,
no, that's not, that's not happen at all. That's not true at all. They completely internalize all of
these new ideas very quickly. And if this happened there, that could happen here. That is that
your own society can also very quickly internalize
terrible ideas that you thought
would never very foreign and alien to hear.
And sadly, I was thinking about this years again,
and sadly this became a reality,
or we discovered this already becoming the reality,
that you have large segments of the population
who are internalizing a set of ideas
that only a decade ago
would have been thought of as the epitome
of anti-Americanism.
I have one of my friends who's,
In the United States military, he spent a lot of times in the Middle East.
And so he knows kind of Arab culture of Middle Easterners.
And now he's becoming a pastor and the chaplain.
I was talking to him the other day.
And he was telling me, you don't understand, it's crazy.
I hear now things from some of the people I meet, like in the church, people from his own Christian white world,
that I used to hear from like Arab taxi drivers 15 years ago while I was in Kuwait.
while I was in Doha or this.
And this is exactly the outcome of all the failures that we've seen,
and that's a reality that we're living in today.
The West's sense of self was actively dismantled by academia,
by sense-making elites, and this stuff is making its way back.
I think I have a fairly clear picture of what you see, and I don't have a ready and obvious counter.
It makes a lot of sense that that's exactly what's underway right now, what's actually happening.
And it becomes intelligible because I don't have to now assume there's this mysterious, you know, backroom sort of backlog of vast Muslim ideas that I have no access to,
and that it's all some kind of secret coding that I can't understand because of the language and culture and religion gap.
This is Europe. This is 20th century Europe.
And so if this is 20th century Europe, entering into a West whose elites have completely dismantled the Western sense of self,
I know I just said a completely irresponsible and coherent sentence.
I'm going to run with it. That's to all the emails I'm going to get.
Because there is something real there, even if people, even if it has to be explicated and carefully mapped out.
that those ideas coming back.
What do we do about it?
What are Jews who find themselves in this incredibly untenable position on the progressive side?
They can either join through all of these loyalty oaths that they have to take the progressive side, including anti-Zionism, including literally being upset that half the living Jews of this earth survived the 20th century because without Israel they wouldn't have.
And when people come at me and say, what do you mean?
They could have gone to America.
and I have to start explaining about immigration quotas in the 1920s and 30s.
They're literally all, like, they're pretty much statistically, apologies to French Jews
who are 90% Sephardy because they're basically after the Holocaust, all the Jews have fled
North Africa.
They're pretty much the last living Jews of the Eastern Hemisphere.
And American progressive Jews to remain in those progressive spaces have to perform
a rejection of the last living Jews on the other side of the world.
something no one has ever asked any Muslim to do from Muslim societies. Nobody has ever asked somebody,
oh, are you Syrian, are you Sudanese, are you Yemeni, are you Chinese? We have some problems with
your very existence as a nation or with you here having to perform apologies for your nation over there.
And so Jews in progressive spaces can be progressive on the condition that they do something profoundly
anti-Jewish or just simply a historical to the Jewish historical experience. And then on the right wing,
what Ben Shapiro has to go through. Ben Shapiro feels himself, I believe. I haven't spoken to him,
but I've heard him speak about these things. He feels that he's at war. Why should Ben Shapiro be
a war? He's in a more serious war internally than with the progressive other side of the debate.
And what is that? And if he wasn't Jewish, he wouldn't be. If he wasn't Jewish, he could be doing the
J.D. Vance, the Megan Kelly hedging all sides thing. So Jews suddenly have to be circumspect
about navigating these political spaces. And these political spaces have overwhelmed the senses.
They've overwhelmed the discourse. I don't know if most Americans are on the populist right and
the progressive left, but all Americans have to respond to it. And Mamdani is the mayor of New York.
So asking as a Jew, watching other Jews suddenly living the life that Herzl's Jews were living,
that Herzl saw them living, that drove him to Zionism from deep believer in integrationism,
to the point where he was willing to convert to Catholicism,
watching Jews live those lives again for the first time in a century
or for the first time since the end of the Second World War probably.
What do you do?
How do you push back against a cultural shift so profound,
so utterly bolstered and held up by all possible mechanisms of prestige,
How do you push back against what academia has now as a monoculture adopted onto itself?
And the sense-making elites of the left have adopted into themselves.
And the biggest podcasters on the right, Joe Rogan will platform Ian Carroll
because it's kind of interesting to check if maybe the Jews are a giant world-spanning conspiracy
out to destroy the Christian white man.
How do you build a response to that?
All right.
I'm always afraid of giving prescriptions, but I can tell you what I think really should happen.
I think number one, everything that's happening actually shows that Israel matters a lot.
This is exactly why Israel is important.
And I think this should push people to commit more to Israel and Israel future and Israeli security.
And that also means that Israelis need to get their politics in order, honestly.
The messy politics is hurting the country, is hurting the world.
Jews that actually now need Israel more than ever,
Western or basically Western Jews.
So Israelis need to get their politics in order because it just, things are bad enough
to set aside all of the pity and pathetic things and try to get things right.
The Middle East is probably all of these fantasies and the utopias of the Abraham Accords,
which were great, you know, the region is going to become one.
That's it.
It's going to become like another version of the EU.
I don't think that this is happening.
The Middle East is going to be dysfunctional for a while.
You have, if it's not Iran, it's going to be somebody else, you're going to have regional competitions.
It's just history as it is.
Powerful men competing, populism, using movements, using ideologies, as long as you have collapsed states, extremely cheap labor in which basically you can hire a fighter for like $50 a month.
You're always going to have, you're going to have a lot of dysfunction, at least for the observable future.
So commitment to Israel is number one.
Number two, in America itself, I think we should exactly, or Jews should do exactly what Ben Shapiro is doing.
I like what Ben Shapiro is doing a lot.
I have to say it fills me with an immense sense of inspiration and pride when I see him standing,
an Orthodox Jew wearing a Kippa, within American conservative circles, not flinching,
defending himself and attacking all of those insane, corrupt, pathetic people.
who go to Qatar, and it's just unbelievable what's happening.
It's on so many levels, not just lying, not just conspiratorial, not just pathological, not just, they also corrupt there.
We know they go to Arab capitals and the worst of Arab capitals, Dohan, they receive their patronage.
So what Ben Shapiro doing is exactly right, not flinching, Jews belong to the United States.
They are part of the American experience.
It's actually a key, I think, it's a key component, I believe, it's a key component.
I believe it's a key component of American identity.
And there are a lot of good people that are standing with you
that are going to be your allies.
I am one of them.
I'm not Jewish, but I don't want to live in whatever sick fantasy
these other people want.
I like America that produced American Jews as the most positive
diaspora experience in Jewish history.
That's a great country.
There's a great country for me.
That's a great country for my children.
And I'm not sure I'm not the only one
who actually believes that.
way. So standing and fighting for for America. The last thing, and this is a
critique from or a criticism from an outsider, in Israel Israel is probably the place where
you can just be and you will be Jewish. That is, you can just live because Israel is a
Jewish state. It's the national culture. So you can be, you cannot particularly care about
these things, but you and your kids will be Jewish anyways. I'm not sure that you can do that in
America. That is, you have to actively engage with your Judaism. You have to actually want
to be Jewish. This Woody Allen, secular, liberal, coastal Judaism, it was extremely thin.
I mean, is extremely thin. And I'm not sure it can withstand the pressure of the moment,
or that it will, even without the pressure, I don't know if it has a future anyways. I mean,
ultimately what then, why then just disappear in society?
I think it's very important to actively, and I'm saying this again, as somebody, I'm not
Jewish, I'm not converting to Judaism, but I have an immense respect to Jews and Judaism.
And I think Judaism has been an immensely positive force in the world.
And basically, I like Jews who are Jews.
And that's actually what I discovered when I kind of looked at the people that I like and the people
I like talking to and the people I don't like talking to.
I discovered that basically
I like Jews who disagree with me
even liberal Jews, progressive Jews,
but who are really Jews.
I like them a lot.
And I think a lot, that also goes for a lot of people.
But it's not just about liking.
It's about actually being committed to being Jewish.
Because otherwise, well, if you don't want to be Jewish,
if you don't want to do the work of being Jews,
if you don't choose it actively,
why are we, why the headache?
Why are we doing all of this fighting to begin with?
My takeaway is the problem is bigger than we can possibly imagine, and also when you can see it,
you can fight it. And so we stand up and we fight. I agree with you about Ben Shapiro.
I think the same way about Barry Weiss. I think the same way about an entire host of Jews that I have seen and talked to and learned from who have stood up and said,
we are drawing a line in the sand, and we are pushing back because these forces, as you describe it, you describe it, I think,
a deeper dive into the bookshelf than most of the rest of us possibly could.
These are forces that are self-destructive.
A society that does too much thinking about Jews is probably seriously collapsing everywhere else.
The Jews are in that sense, not the canary in the coal mine, they're the signal.
So we stand and we fight.
We fight for the very societies in which we live, not for ourselves.
Thank you so much for joining me.
This was fascinating.
Thank you.
