The Tucker Carlson Show - Former Interim President of Israel Avraham Burg Speaks Out on Netanyahu’s Killing Spree
Episode Date: March 23, 2026Avraham Burg, former speaker of the Knesset and interim president of Israel, on why Netanyahu can never settle, only kill. (00:00) Introduction (03:16) What Is Israel's Strategy? (09:21) What Does... Victory Look Like for Israel? (33:01) What Will the US Gain From This War? (36:11) How Do Israelis View Gaza? (47:12) How Do Israelis View the US? Avraham (Avrum) Burg is an Israeli author, intellectual, and former Speaker of the Knesset, who has combined a career in public leadership with writing, teaching, and dialogue across cultures, and is known for his insightful reflections on Israeli society, Judaism, democracy, and global politics, with a consistent emphasis on ethics and peace Paid partnerships with: Hallow prayer app: Get 3 months free at https://Hallow.com/Tucker American Financing: NMLS 182334, http://nmlsconsumeraccess.org. APR for rates in the 5s start at 6.196% for well qualified borrowers. Call 800-685-5696 for details about credit costs and terms. Visit http://AmericanFinancing.net/Tucker. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The government of Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel and its many organized cheerleaders here in the United States have for some time now made the case that all criticism of their government is anti-Semitism.
And it is because their government somehow speaks for all Jews globally.
Every Jewish person is represented by the Netanyahu government.
Therefore, the actions of the Netanyahu government represent every Jew on this planet.
And any criticisms of that government are by definition an attack on every Jew.
They are anti-Semitism.
It's a position that doesn't make any sense.
but it's kind of hardened into a consensus in the United States, at least for right now.
And if you think about it for a moment, it's not only incorrect, it's a kind of slander against Jews.
It is itself a kind of anti-Semitism because, no, not all Jews are represented by Benjamin Netanyahu,
and there are many who don't want to be.
And that's true even within Israel.
Yes, polling consistently shows that most Israelis were in favor of the war.
but in Israel, as in all countries, most people don't really know the details of what is happening
or why, and that's by design. Israel is a particularly censored place. It's also a particularly
small place, fewer than 10 million people. And so its citizens, by and large, live the same way
we do in an information vacuum, where what they know is determined by somebody else for political
reasons.
All of which makes it very important to do our best to break the spell of this, to hear from
people who disagree and hear them explain why.
People who have some credibility and knowledge, not just wackos with weird opinions, but
thoughtful people who have a dissenting view.
And one of those people is a man called Avram Berg.
Berg is in his early 70s.
He was born in Israel.
He's from a prominent Zionist family, and he himself was a prominent political figure for many years.
He was a member of the Knesset.
He was Speaker of the Knesset, the Israeli parliament.
It's a lawmaking body.
It's Congress.
He was even interim president of Israel at one point.
So his opinions may represent the minority of Israeli opinion, but he himself is not a fringe figure.
He was at the very center of Israeli politics.
Once again, he was the interim president of the country.
And in the hours after this current war broke out, he wrote a very strong op-ed in the Israeli press
explaining why it was a terrible idea, why it didn't serve Israel's interests, and while the people doing it had no idea why they were doing it.
It's a pretty brave thing to say in the middle of a country of war, but he said it because he's a pretty brave guy, agree or disagree.
So we thought it would be worthwhile to hear directly from him.
Avrimburg from Israel.
Here it is.
Avronberg, thank you very much for doing this.
I want to ask you about something that's happening right now, apparently.
So the President of the United States issued a statement this morning saying that because of ongoing negotiations between the U.S. and Iran, the U.S. would not actually commence with hitting civilian infrastructure, as he promised.
and that we're going to try and work something out diplomatically this week.
Almost immediately after issuing that statement,
there were reports that the Israeli military was hitting civilian infrastructure in Iran.
Assuming that's true, what do you make of that?
What strategy does that suggest?
The same strategy that Israel has for years, no strategy.
In Israel, in many, many cases, the compilation of many tactics
sometimes assemble into a de facto strategy, but otherwise nothing.
I mean, just look at the last two hours.
When was the announcement of the president, the surprising one two hours ago?
And you have a bundle of messages coming from all directions.
The first and the most important one, hallelujah, they're going to renew the flights so we can go for
Passover vacation.
That's the immediate reaction of many Israelis, my daughter included.
The second is, oh, Netanyahu knew all together.
I mean, Netanyahu is behind the move as if framing it as his own move.
And then, oh, Trump, oh, he is so softy.
He is so weak.
He doesn't have any resilience.
The Iranians, they trick him, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
Bottom line is nobody has a clue.
And in this chaos, the military does what he does the best.
simply hammer the nail.
But you're suggesting that those tactics, the one we're seeing today and the ones we've seen
for the last month, don't add up to a strategy. There's no strategic goal in mind?
I listened to you very carefully in the last couple of weeks and the way you try to conceive
the Israeli strategy from Netanyahu's 40 years life mission to the greater lens.
of Israel, biblically speaking, or messianic, scatological one.
And I envy you that you really believe that we have something like that.
Okay?
It doesn't work that way.
I mean, in a way that let's start somewhere else.
I mean, somebody once told me that what's the difference between an Israeli and an American,
among many differences, is that we Israelis, we see an aim, so we aim and we should.
You Americans, you see an aim.
So you take an aim and aim and aim and aim.
You are a lot about process.
And we are a lot about, yala, let's shoot it.
And there is a difference here.
I have no idea what's the American strategy.
I do not know what was the endgame.
I have no idea what is the final design.
The architects of the White House or the Washington really had in mind.
I can tell you one thing for sure.
Israel wants to remove the Iranian monster
because part of it is a real threat
and part of it because we pumped it to the size of a monster.
So we are fighting in a way a real demon
and a demon which is our own creation.
So what we want to do is we don't like the war,
we want it to end, we don't like the missiles,
we hate the sirens, we skip nights after nights of sleeping,
but once we are into it, let's make sure that it's over.
So the real will of many Israelis is,
let's get over with the Iranians.
The problem is the relative size.
Israel is a small country, Iran is a large country.
How exactly do Israelis expect that's going to happen?
Size-wise and number-wise, we are, let's say, 10 million in a good day,
and there are 100 million in an average day.
In a way, many Israelis do not really measure it this way.
Many Israelis believe that we are a kind of a superpower.
A couple of weeks ago, I was in a high school somewhere,
and I promoted my good old, no-goodnik peace agenda, okay?
And one of the students stood up and said, Avram, can I ask you a question?
I said, yes, please do.
And he said, why won't we do to them what we did to them in Afghanistan?
And I said, I know Gaza, I know Lebanon, I know Syria, I know Egypt.
What did we do to whom in Afghanistan?
I mean, we haven't been there yet.
And I asked him, where are you from originally?
And he said, I was born in Moscow.
And I said to myself, ha ha, he thinks like a Russian.
And I ask him, tell me, how many Jews are there in the world?
Now, Tucker, with no hesitation, he said, ah, 54.3.
Okay?
And how many Israelis are we?
He said, something like 20 million.
In the eyes of many Israelis, we're not just superpower technologically and superpower economically
and a regional hedging.
politically, we have the numbers, the numbers in economy, the numbers in support, the numbers in
demography, without really calculating what are the real numbers. So when you ask the Israelis,
how simply do it? And what will the end victory look like from an Israeli perspective? How will
Israelis know they've won? I don't have a good answer for this question. At a sense,
that in many cases, the American or the Western way of thinking is usually a kind of a win-win.
I mean, we end the war and we make sure that we left the other side somebody to talk with.
I mean, yes, it is ridiculous that the American president is saying, I would like to talk with
somebody, but there is nobody there because I killed him.
Okay, this is your own oxymoron.
This is a paradox that I take it you intellectually, you know how to square this circle.
Okay, but from the Israeli point of view, in many, many cases philosophically, no, psychologically,
we do not live in a win-win situation.
We live in a zero-sum game.
If there is a competition, if there is a race, if there is a war, if there is a bottle,
if there is a conflict that ends up,
that Packer and Avrum prophets,
something is wrong with me.
I want to win alone.
I want you to be dead.
I want to humiliate you.
I want to cancel you,
whomever you are my enemy.
And when you look at this philosophy,
you understand where comes the political rhetoric
that every adversary, never mind who is he minor or major,
by the end of the day he is a Hitler.
And every decade we have a new Adolf Hitler.
And since everybody is the arch enemy,
there is only one solution to this one enemy.
Removal.
And therefore, when you ask me,
what is the Israeli political echelon.
Forget about the people in the street.
The political echelon approach
toward any kind of resolution,
whatever it is, it's not a dialogist one.
Now, it is not just about Netanyahu,
which is a case by himself.
When you look at what is allegedly called opposition in Israel,
they simply compete with the government
who is more aggressive, who is more as if resilient,
who has more so-called creative solution
to the enemy we have to demolish and obliterate.
And this is why you hardly find in Israel
any reconciliatory politics.
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Where does this attitude come from?
When I was in school, in high school, every other week, the rabbi, I was in a religious high school, in a religious academy, yeshiva.
So the rabbi used to call my mom.
My father was busy, so he used to call my mom and said, you have a very, very talented boy child.
He is like an egg.
The more I boil him, the harder he becomes.
Now, in a way, our life experience as Jews in the last couple of thousands of years
and Israelis in the last couple of decades boiled us into a very, very hard, stiff-neck egg.
On one hand, we never trusted hands offered to us.
and on the other hand, we never experienced to extend our own hands.
I'll give you two examples.
The rhetorics of Israel since 48 is a rhetoric of survival, of existential threat, of permanent imminent war.
Out of nowhere came President Saadat to Israel.
I remember myself as a young soldier at 73 Wall
at the other side of the Suez Canal
in a foxhole in the desert.
In the middle of the night,
a frightened 18 years old boy
and I was listening to the then iPhone transistor.
Do you remember the transistor with the rusty voice?
Oh, yeah.
And I heard President Sadat in the middle of the night say,
I'm ready to sacrifice a million and a half Egyptian soldiers in order to redeem the Sinan Peninsula.
And I said, holy, holy God, million and a half Egyptians soldiers against me, Abraham Bog, a Jew boy from Jerusalem.
I was frightened to death.
And then four years later, he came to Jerusalem and I'm running.
Now I'm a release part-trooper of him.
officer, young one, running after his convoy and chant, no more war, no more bloodshed.
It was redemption. It was eschatological. It was messianic. It was the first time Israel was offered a
different syntax. From a syntax of war to a grammar of peace, we never grew up into the challenge
of Saadat. Never.
We never walked all the way with the Egyptians, with the Palestinians, as was part of the
original Camp David framework.
And we rejected it.
Even when a couple of years later, Oslo, De Oseksmachina, out of nowhere, Oslo came to the world,
as problematic as now we know de facto that Oslo was at the time, when it was launched, it was an
eruption of hope, it was again an offer for a different language. We didn't grow into it.
So Israel does not have a vocabulary or state of mind to talk peace. Now, there is a different layer
that I'm not at all sure we are. It's too early in the conversation between us, but this is the
transformation from eternal Judaism that was a religion of powerlessness.
And if I would like to use what's Lav Havel terminology,
we had the power of powerlessness,
and we transformed into Israelis
with the power of the almighty,
and we feel much more threatened.
Well, there's a paradox.
So as Israel has become more objectively powerful,
it has felt more threatened, more endangered.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
It does seem like if you were to, just as an outsider, it does seem like Israel is more threatened.
And it does seem like if it had continued on the trajectory from the Sadat talks or from Oslo in the way that you suggest, it would be less threatened.
I think objectively that's probably true.
Or maybe both.
Maybe at the same time, we have opportunities and the threats are better threats, so to say.
Let's look at numbers just for a second.
When I was a student, I mean at elementary school, a pupil,
we were told that in 48, the year in which the state of Israel was born,
seven Arab armies invaded the just-born state of Israel.
So 48, it was seven versus one.
In 67, 19 years later, it was only three out of the seven, Jordan, Egypt, and Syria.
Six years later in 73, it was only two out of the three, only Syria and Egypt.
Ever since, as broken as it is and as Chile as it is, with Egypt, we have a peace agreement.
And Syria, in a very good day, is a dysfunctioning threat.
So you can, and the Palestinian issue that was not there in 48, the way it is, today, was born
along the road. So you can say, listen, in eight decades, 48 to 26, from seven armies to half a problem,
which is the Palestinian one, this is an evolution. This is a positive progress. And in a way,
it is. And this is before we count in the potential of Saudi Arabia, the potential of the
Emirates, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. On the other hand,
two elements emerged as well.
The first is Israel that at least in two, three stages in its life,
was fully accepted among the family of nations.
48 and its euphoria, 67 and the eruption of redemptive feelings all over the world, maybe,
and the atrocities of October 723,
three times that Israel in conflict time, this is beside Camp David, beside Oslo,
beside other positive peace agreements, but in a conflict situation, that Israel was well received
and well accepted in the world.
And then we must ask ourselves, how was it wasted?
How comes that two years ago, three years ago, Israel, three years ago, in 23,
Israel was so well sympathized with all over the world and now so despised.
So the threat of being rejected, of being a world pariah,
maybe it's not a military one, but it's a deeper one.
It's an existential one.
And the other is assuming that the Iranians would have had a nuclear capability.
that very soon will lead to a chain of reactions
that others will have nuclear weapons in the Middle East
without using the weapons,
but in Middle East with mass destruction weapons
is a different scale of a threat for many,
but for Israel especially.
So I will say, yes, we have better relationship with many,
and the situation is not 48, is not 67, is not even 23.
But the threats are not gone.
They were transformed and different and require different strategy and philosophy and value
system to address.
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How did this war start?
How did?
This current war, this month old war against Iran, there's debate in the United States about how it started, whether or not the United States was pursuing its own interest, defending itself from Iran, or whether President Trump followed the lead of Prime Minister Netanyahu.
What's your view?
If we go back to your initial introduction or your immediate question you bombarded me with without any introduction,
okay, you said, we have no clue what's going on.
So we do not know, we don't yet have information, neither about the launching of the campaign,
neither nor about the continuation of it.
So in the world with no information on a realm of not,
no information between me and you, we can look at the gestalt.
We can look at the frameworks of what happened.
The details Tetris-like will fall in.
And I will say the immediate trigger was an awful one.
Ah, we had an opportunity.
Since when you declare a war because there is an opportunity.
I mean, that's the worst opportunistic reason I've ever heard in my life.
my father was a very wise man used to say about one of his colleagues.
That's a man of principles.
Principle number one, opportunism.
And I say, what kind of a principle is this one to declose such a world war?
In a volatile reality that China is out there waiting for something
and Russian Ukraine is ambushing us.
And now you have to have another front.
So the immediate trigger that we had an opportunity, I would say whatever was the opportunity,
using it was an unjust immoral trigger.
The larger frame is Netanyahu life mission.
I take it that it requires more than one Tucker Carlson and more than two hours between you and me,
or five hours or as long as we can tolerate each other.
in order to understand this figure.
He's a very, very interesting individual
and a very, very significant leader of a state in this time.
Significant, I hope it's natural enough
because I don't have much of sympathy to his leadership.
However, he's there, he's significant.
Where his life mission is coming from,
and I will say that it has two drivers.
One is very Jewish and one is very conservative.
The very Jewish is, in a way like my mom,
my mom believed that the world is divided 50-50,
50% Jews and 50% to hate the Jews,
which means she believes we are something like 3.5 billion.
people with the Jews, okay? And the rest of you, whomever you are, do not like us. So this notion
that the entire world is against us and you cannot trust nobody but ourselves is embedded in
the Jewish conscience ever since. Maybe even since the Bible, since biblical time, but for sure
later on and the exilic period instilled it into our psyche. So we do. We do. We do. We do. We do. We
do not trust and therefore we're not being trusted in a way. There is a dialogue of not trusting here.
So Netanyahu is part of this classic Jewish paranoia. The entire world is against us.
At the same time, he is a very kind of a 70s, 80s, 90s, conservative and your hobby,
neocon. To say we are the children of light and that all of those
offsprings of darkness and our life mission is to push them back. Our
life mission is to fight them. It's never compromised, never realize if there is
somebody out there that we can communicate with. Maybe they are not a
monolithic group of people. Maybe like us that are divided, they're dissected,
there is a diversion, there is a richness of expressions in ideologies and values and religious
manifestation. No, no, no, no. They are all of them. And when you listen to Netanyahu,
Huntington through Netanyahu, he is the leader of our civilization of light,
versus whomever is the civilization of darkness. So he is built-in classic Jewish paranoia.
that many Jews have.
Some of it rightly so, some of it molded into it.
And part of it is part of a world view that you know better than I do
because you explore it almost a couple of times a week.
And this is the mistrusting Christian West,
who does not trust anybody but it's off.
and when you look at some of their attitude towards Europe itself,
does not even trust itself.
So where this war started, it started with an opportunity and a frame of mind.
How do you think Prime Minister Netanyahu sees President Trump?
He's afraid of him because he's unexpected.
I don't know if the term whimsical is a right one,
is unexpected.
I believe the more I monitor
the actions of
the president, that there is
a kind of a worldview behind it.
Not always
articulated the jury,
but de facto I can realize
I can realize some things
there. So first, Netanyahu
is fearful of the unexpected.
The second,
Netanyahu is so talented that he took the disadvantage and made it his prime advantage how to
puppeteer the president. So I will say he has a dual feeling, a fear, and a know-how,
how to use this fear for his advantage. Now, look at the patron.
how many American presidents so Israeli prime ministers as their elder brothers,
like Clinton and Rabin,
George W. Bush and Ehud Olmert, maybe not elder brother, but an experienced one,
Golden Mayor and Nixon.
So there is there a kind of older younger brother relationship
between Israeli prime ministers and American people.
presidents that Netanyahu, with his vast experience and malicious intentions,
knows how to use also this leverage point in order to promote his agenda with this American
president.
How do you think he did it?
What were the leverage points?
I heard you with this, how you call him the prophet, the Canadian, the Canadian, the
Canadian profit this weekend.
Yes.
Okay.
It's interesting.
I'll tell you something very funny in a second, if I may.
He came with fourth theories, how it happened.
I'll tell you something very, very simple.
It's a chemistry between two charmers.
Listen, Tucka, I cannot stand you.
But you're a nice person.
So I talk with you.
Okay.
I mean, you know.
I'll take that as a half-compliment.
Yes.
Of course.
I mean, it's a one and a half.
And you know my position.
And despite or in spite my positions, we're talking.
Yes.
So there is something there at a very personal chemistry that simply worked.
And Netanyahu is a brilliant campaigner.
Listen, when you walk out of the room with Netanyahu, check your sleeves.
whether you have your hands into them still.
Maybe he stole your hands out of your sleeves.
This is how talented it is.
He is.
He picked his pocket.
And so did Trump to him.
They use each other.
I don't understand.
I mean, I understand half of that explanation,
but I don't understand what President Trump
or the United States could conceivably gain from this.
It seems like 100% law.
to me. It's more
a question to you as an American
than a question to me as
far away
a subject of the American
Empire or the American influence
zone, okay? Yes.
I'm sure
that there is a profit
here. Now, is
the profit, for example,
a place in history
as much as
many
authoritarian
leaders, since they do not trust their people to commemorate them after the pass away,
so they commemorate themselves while still alive, make sure that our libraries on them
and cultural centers and bridges and airports and you name it, okay?
Still history plays a role.
And when you think of Trump coming from Manhattan with so many,
many Jewish associations around him. He's familiar to the Jewish talk of New York. He is familiar
to the rhetorics of Jews and their association and affiliation with Israel. He understands
the many of them sees Israel under a permanent threat of extinction. Saving Israel before the base,
before the Christian Zanis, saving Israel.
He's historically speaking, is almost prophetic.
Listen to his rhetorics after Gaza.
I put an end to 3,000 years of a conflict.
I don't know when the counting began.
And still counting.
Okay.
Nonetheless, it's a state of mind.
It's politics and history.
Mixed.
And Netanyahu, as a child, as a son,
of an historian
understands this
how to play this card.
So you believe it's likely
Netanyahu said to Trump, you will be
recorded by history as the man who saved the Jews.
This is on the positive side
and on the negative side is
you do not want to be recorded as the one
that under his God and in his shift
something so awful like
the Second Holocaust happened to the Jews.
there are two sides of this moon.
Yes.
The dark one and the one a bit more illuminated.
Publicly, you speak about the linden side of the moon.
I mean, in dark rooms, you speak about the dark side.
Yes.
We are under permanent threat.
Save us.
You said a minute ago that what the Israeli government is done in Gaza has
permanently, or at least for the moment,
made Israel into a pariah state international.
How is Gaza seen within Israel?
In order to touch such a volatile issue,
I need a very, a very brief introduction to offer you my frame,
my own framing of this last couple of years.
Whatever Israel did to the Palestinians,
since day 100 years ago, all the wrongdoings
the transfer, they expelled, the demolition of four, 500 communities,
the knock by the tragedy, the catastrophe of the Palestinians,
whatever we've done to them.
All wrongdoings does not justify the first step
and the first step towards atrocities committed by Hamas on October 7th.
I agree.
None.
Right.
And whatever Hamas did on October 7th.
to the Israelis, brutal, awful crimes against humanity in the bodies of my friends and my colleagues
and my fellow citizens, whatever the Hamas did to us does not justify the moral crimes and maybe
even crimes against humanity that Israel exercises in Gaza ever since. You have two crime scenes.
Do not annihilate each other. Do not balance each other. Do not justify each other.
You have to deal with Hamas crimes and with the Israeli crimes,
simultaneously as difficult as it is,
and sometimes as paradoxically as it is.
Now, this is how I see it.
Most of Israelis are not in my place.
Most of Israelis, regardless of October 7th,
I mean, even much before October 7th,
do not really know where Gaza is.
Yes, it might be five minutes away from a doorstep.
Might be 40 minutes drive from Tel Aviv.
But it's beyond the mountains of darkness.
I don't know. I don't know. I don't know where is it.
I haven't been there ever.
When you look at the Israeli media up until October 7th
and 10 times more after October 7th,
you never see Gazian people.
You see tunnels.
You see cement.
You see rockets.
You see demolitions.
You see Hamas troops running here and there.
You never see the individual Gazian people
as if there are no people there.
And the report is never about the humanitarian side of it.
The report is always about insurgences, terrorists,
etc.
Gaza, as the
hopefully expressed
by my president,
Herzog said,
in Gaza, there are no
innocent people.
God forbid
to live in such a situation
that you do not believe
there are no innocent people
the other side.
Even Abraham the Patriarch
believed that in Sodom and Gomor
the innocent people
and God negotiated with him.
But we are better than God.
and we are worse than Abraham,
which simply write off
any innocence in Gaza.
And ever since, it did not improve.
So in a way, Gaza, it's not a blind spot.
Blind spot is, it's too technical.
Gaza is the moral abyss
in which Israel collapsed into.
I find it's so striking what you just said because Israel is such an international country.
I mean, I don't know what percentage of the population was born somewhere else.
And, you know, people are always in and out of Israel.
I mean, it's hardly, it's not Central Africa.
It's right of the Mediterranean.
It's very international, as I said.
So it's interesting that many Israelis don't have a sense of what's happening just right at their southern border.
What do they think when they read about it?
There's so much international controversy about it.
When you pull up the Internet, someone's getting.
mad about Gaza, how do Israelis respond to that? You put here two topics. The first is media report.
Yes. And the second one is, where is the existential reality of Israelis? Who are we?
When she asked you the economist editor, the right to exist, and you exploded, what is that right to
exist, okay?
And I said to myself, Tucker,
don't, don't, don't,
don't get mad at her.
The question is a different one.
The right to exist
from the point of view of being a Jew,
not from being part of the
international community.
Is Israel justified
according to the norms?
It tells itself it is.
The only democracy in the Middle East,
the most moral army in the world,
etc., etc.
there it implodes.
Now, let me try to answer your question.
First, about the international reports.
Most of us listen to Hebrew media only and read Hebrew media only.
And the Hebrew media filters most of the non-Hebrew expressions.
We do not speak English.
I mean, even listen to me with my Arnold Schwarzenegger accent, okay?
I mean, we don't speak English.
We don't speak French.
Okay, we don't speak German.
And if we read something about it, they're all anti-Semites.
And the weaponizing of anti-Semitism into a kind of a thick filter
that enables us to reject any kind of legitimate criticism,
is part of the system here.
So media-wise, we hardly hear the international situation.
Hardly hear it.
The question of what does that mean to us?
I would say as follows, up until the Second World War,
90% of the Jews in the world were Christian-born Jews,
what we call Ashkenazi.
Yes.
And 10% were...
born in the Muslim sphere, what we call Sfaradim. So it was 90% Christian world Jews and 10% Muslim
world Jews. Today in Israel, it is 5050, which means the old perception that Israel is an
offspring of the West of the Christendom demographically doesn't work. Because at least half of the
Jewish Israelis, not to talk about the 20% of Palestinians with Israeli idea.
But from the 80% Jews, 50% were born or offsprings of Muslim world jewelry,
which do not share the same legacy and the same heritage and the same tradition that Jews shared with you,
which is the evolution of the West. I'll take it a step further.
Yes, many of us were born in so many other places, our parents or grandparents.
But most of us were born here.
And here is a very strange place.
On one hand, we're not Europe anymore because we got disconnected.
And on the other hand, we never got connected to the region.
So we are kind of a stand-alone island, totally disconnected from the region.
region, refusing to get connected. When normalization was offered to us only two, three years ago,
it was a threat. We never dwelt into the strategy. What should be our relationship with the region?
So much so that in a way we resemble a lot the kingdom of Jerusalem of the Crusoe.
foreigners coming from the outside, circling ourselves with a kind of self-sege wars and never
integrate. It is not right because there were interaction between the regional Muslims at the time
and the Christians at the time. But nonetheless, the kingdom as a political entity never wanted
to be part of the region. After 200 years, it expired.
The state of Israel, born out of the ashes of the Holocaust, for sure,
but earlier on was born out of the nation-state idea of getting secular Europe,
with its solutions to its national groupings,
came to the Middle East, which is not part of the nation-state thinking,
didn't go through the processes of secularization and revolution,
the Industrial Revolution, the French Revolution, the American Revolution, the British Revolution,
never went through them in order to get where we are today,
and therefore didn't find any hooks to get connected.
So we lost our Western hinterland,
and we never ceded enough in order to grow to be part of the local fauna.
so we are isolated.
I think many, I don't know what they think now,
but for most of my life in the U.S.,
many Americans regarded Israel as a kind of European-ish country.
That was always my opinion.
Some of them felt that Israel was almost part of the United States,
not in a sinister way, but we've got so much in common.
51st state, Golden Mayor, I think, was from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
She grew up in Milwaukee.
Right, okay.
As they used to say at the time, the woman who made Milwaukee famous.
Smoke Chesterfield cigarettes, American cigarettes.
I mean, it felt very American.
What is the view, would you say, of most Israelis now toward the United States?
We love it.
We admire it.
We want to be to move there.
And we think you are so childish and naive.
Why?
Because this is what you are.
Okay. I mean, I'm not sure I would disagree with you at all, but what about American strikes Israelis as childish and naive?
Israelis, let's begin with a smile because it's a heavy stuff, okay? You know why we Israelis do not make love in the street?
Because then everybody will come and give you advisors. Here, everybody is a prime minister. Everybody's a diplomat. Everybody's a strategist. Everybody's a strategist.
Everybody is Tucker Carlson.
Everybody is everything.
Everybody is Napoleon.
We know better.
And when we think about
first begin with the West in general,
okay, how don't you understand
that immigration brings you down?
That you compromise your own very existence.
How don't you understand
that the Muslim
tidal wave
of immigration is going to compromise your very entity.
Leave aside, I don't think that many Israelis understand the exchange theology.
I'm not at all sure that they are exchange theory.
But speaking, generally speaking, you ask Israelis,
how many Muslim you think there are in Europe?
Something between 30 to 50%,
which is far away from the numbers.
So what do you think about America?
what do you think in America?
Oh, wow, wow, wow.
What do you know?
Michigan in the last elections just show us
how big is the Muslim minority.
Obama?
Hussein Obama.
So you don't understand your own reality, so to say.
This is the kind of the experience.
Everybody gives advises Israeli reality at a daily.
The second is it's very, very difficult for us, very difficult for us to understand the fairness of the game.
If you ask me, what does that mean to be an American?
I can give you five different answers.
One of them is, since you have a constitution and everybody is equal in front of the constitution,
or supposed to be, equal in front of the constitution, there is a furnace.
in the game. You cannot trick me, you cannot look down at me, you cannot abuse me. I cannot
abuse you on the other hand. We don't understand it. We Israelis will live in a reality that constitution
is a threat. Equality to all citizens, not just Jews and Arabs, but for the sake of it,
Orthodox and non-orthodox is a threat to the very existence of the state.
So on one hand, as if we have shared value foundations, but when you try to translate this
values into practical reality, here the gap grows. We cannot accept. We cannot accept.
the American Wall of Separation between Church and State.
Impossible for us.
As much as the definition of Jewish and democratic
is hollow in a good day and deceiving in an average day.
It's a stupid definition, but we believe it's possible.
And we cannot accept it that you are not Christian and democratic.
You're democratic first.
Ah, only democracy?
Too weak, not for us.
And then I'll take it to maybe to the last stage, okay?
We don't care, we hardly care, unfortunately, and it pains me about American jury.
When Netanyahu said a couple of years ago, there are Democrats, they don't support my position anyway.
Let's go with the Christian Zanis.
That's our political backbone.
They are the best friends we have.
And giving up on American Jewry,
beside many other things that we don't respect them
when it comes to the law of return,
when it comes to accepting the reform
and conservative movement, religious expression,
which is totally rejected by the religious establishment in Israel,
etc., etc.
When we look at America,
we see two things,
and we don't accept.
except both.
On one hand, we see
as if this is
the total
definer, the absolute
definer of the democratic movement,
the wokes.
All Democrats
are woke. And on the
other hand, all the right
winger are hating
Jews like Taka Carlson.
That's it.
So in between,
what's in it for us,
Okay, Silicon Valley, technology, economy, profit, but not the values, not anymore.
Is this a religious war from the Israeli perspective or from the Orthodox Israeli perspective?
This one in Iran now?
Never defined this way officially.
I would say it's the second, me personally, who observed the same.
situation and try to intellectualize it in order to comprehend.
Yes.
I will say it's the second stage of religious war.
It works since.
Up until October 7th, the conflict between us and Palestinians,
which is bloody and malicious and awful, especially awful because it could have been resolved
so many times before, was a political conflict between two national communities?
communities. So political conflicts and national conflicts, as difficult as it is, we know what to do with that.
October 7th was the first round of the full-scale religious war. Jewish fundamentalism at the Israeli
government and Muslim fundamentalism at the Hamas government. And the philosophy of Hamas and the
ideology of the Israeli government and some of its leading ministers was out in the open,
with rabbis and chaplains in the army and ministers and members of Knesset, expressing it loud and clear.
So October 7th was first chapter of the deterioration of the political conflict into a religious one.
This one in Iran, which is three years later, which historically speaking is maybe the same period.
It is so fast.
I mean, what is it three years in human history?
It's nothing.
It's not even a coma.
Yes.
Yet when you live it day in and day out, it's difficult.
It's heavy.
It's sirens.
It keeps not sleeping.
It's sleepless nights and fear.
But it's a different.
Trent one. The war in Iran now, for my point of view, is the first religious fundamentalist
war, world war, Jewish fundamentalism, Christian fundamentalism, and Jewish fundamentalism
at the battle at the battlefield. It feels that way to me. And unfortunately, I'm sorry?
It feels that way to me watching this. That's exactly what it feels like.
And the problem of you and me as much as I take it on many other things,
we are other side of the other side of the street,
on something like that, which is such an existential problem to our ideologies
and our identities and our values,
never mind where are you in the other disagreements between us,
we are watching.
We're just watching.
We didn't yet come forward and offered an alternative,
a comprehensive, attractive, spiritual and political, ideological,
and maybe even a scatological alternative that fights them.
I ask myself, with a shame, I cannot tell you how much.
We didn't yet open the chapter of what,
Jewish settlers are doing in the occupied territories in the West Bank.
Daily crimes against innocent Palestinians conducted by wild savage settlers, ignored by the army
and by police and supported by members of Knesset and members of the cabinet, daily.
I'm full of shame.
but the utmost one is
where the heck are the rabbis?
Where are the spiritual leaders?
Maybe they're not coming
because they are the inciters
because they are behind it
because they support it, because they promote it,
because it promotes their messianic
ends of the day,
eschatological philosophy.
And this is, as I said earlier,
where classical Judaism implodes into Israelisness.
How important is the rebuilding of the temple
to the people you're describing,
to the cabinet ministers,
to the rabbis who are not speaking up against
what's happening in the occupied territories?
Is there actually an effort to do that, do you believe?
For the people in the street,
not the rabbis, not the people engage,
not those you ask question about to the masses,
it's an unissue.
Yeah, I figured that.
It is as if a kind of a, I mean,
Disney World in Orlando.
Right.
Okay.
Yeah.
I mean, do there whatever you like.
I mean, just give us a break, okay?
So for the masses, they are not there.
On the other hand,
since 67, at least five.
I'm not at all sure that not more.
at least five attempts to remove the mosques from the temple mount were done by these groupings since 67,
which means that when you come to address this question,
it is not so much about the numbers who support the removal of the temples and the removal of the mosques and the rebuilt of the temples.
it is about the dedication and the readiness
and the fanaticism of those who are ready to act.
Let me just say I'm embarrassed.
I did not know there had been five attempts
to get rid of the Dome of the Rock and Al-Axa.
So these were plots to blow them up?
Is that what happened?
Yep.
Yep.
Huh.
Yeah.
Yeah.
to the perpetrators, to the plotters?
The most famous one
is the 80s, what is called
the Jewish underground.
A group of
settlers from the same
educational system that I
grew up, that I was
brought up on.
Some of them are friends and friends of families,
and people from the same school I went, etc.
I mean, pretty like me
people. Yes.
who were caught, sentenced, sent to jail,
and got a political deal a couple of months or two years later,
and few of them, if not many of them, became prominent,
prominent Israeli figures,
one of the most important newspaper editor in Israel, Macorichon,
advisors to ministers, members of Knesset, you name it.
Well received back into society, not excommunicated and not excluded, not excluded, not excluded.
So much so that today sits in jail for life, Igor Amir, who assassinated the prime minister.
And there are constant voices, even within the Knesset, even within the government and the Netanyahu's coalition, calling for his release.
So as for your question, what is the support?
The supporting the public is very small.
The dedication of the fuel is very intensive.
What would happen if the Alexa complex were destroyed?
Adam, Tucker, let's move on.
That's how I feel, but I mean, I don't live there.
You do.
So you see that as a profound change in world history, if that were to happen.
I'm not at all sure that we are not, we are not already into this profound change.
Like this war with Iran, combined with October 7th, combined with other things,
we're in the middle of a transformation of world order.
To what next order or disorder, neither you nor me know, no.
And maybe we don't share the same vision of what should it be.
But we're in the middle of a transformation here.
Now, this issue of the temple, the issue of the mosques will be, morally speaking, a coin with two sides.
On the Israeli side, if and when this will happen, God forbid, that will be the end of justification of the existence of the state of Israel.
And if this, God forbid, will happen, I'm afraid it will trigger the masses all over the Muslim world
that this might topple down few regimes and bring to power different powers and different regimes
that the entire world order, the way we knew it, will not be recognized by us anymore.
it is much more dangerous, volatile, and explosive than a nuke.
Yes.
That is certainly my read on it.
I don't think you're overstating it.
Of course, no one can predict the future, but that seems very likely.
Do you think, my other sense, again, I'll allow you to have the more definitive word on it,
but is that if there was ever a time, it could happen, it's right now in the middle of this war.
The only thing I will say is that I hope that the attention of the prime minister is given to that also.
Yes.
That's the only hope I have.
I trust him.
My trust is very minimal.
And this isn't a very good day.
I hope that he understands if something like that happens in his shift.
it's bigger than him.
And I hope he pays attention to it.
I feel the same way about him, but I agree with you.
I don't see why he would want this.
Here we go to something else.
Netanyahu is a well-read person.
He is not an alphabet.
He reads books.
He understands.
He knows.
He has a fish.
You can agree with him, you can disagree with him, but at least he's an interesting, interesting partner.
He knows what he's talking about, okay?
What happens to him in the last couple of years is that he does not behave politically according to his wisdom.
He behaves according to his political survival instinct rather than according to his ideology and philosophy.
So between political survival or conservative right-wing,
decent right-wing conservatism,
if he was the right-wing conservative,
I would say, I will oppose you, but I respect you.
The minute it's the personal survival instinct only,
I don't accept it and I don't respect it, and I suspect it.
And the fact that in his cabinet, there are so many influential ministers who promote this agenda and create daily provocation around the mosques troubles me.
I take you a step further.
How many times did you in your analysis say, listen, there are so many fanatics in politics, et cetera, et cetera, but the Israeli army is a moderate one.
They are usually the sound of reason.
Okay, this is the perception we have.
But pay attention.
Most of the generals and the high apoculars of today are people who were brought up,
educated, shaped, and molded at the previous times of Israel,
under Rabin, under Peres, under Menach and Begin, even under Ariel Sharon.
in a much more responsible country.
The people who climb up now the leather,
the military ladder, a different kind of people
who were brought up under the chaotic,
problematic value system of Netanyahu
in the settlements,
educated with this kind of messianic mission,
to use the army as a tool to accelerate redemption,
and a day will come that you will see a chief of stuff
with this kind of agenda.
You already have the head of the shinbet
of our secret service coming from these circles.
So to trust the Israeli army,
to be the moderator for good,
is might be a mistake.
Pay attention.
Things have changed so fast there.
I mean, from an outsider's perspective,
it's just a very different country
from what it was even 15 years ago.
That's how it feels to me.
It is right.
And in order to understand the shift,
our says follows.
When was your first time here in the region?
25 years ago.
Make me the 2000.
Yeah, exactly.
Okay.
2000 was the end of the tale of secular Israel.
Israel of 48 was, as Bernie Sanders called it socialist,
but let's call it European-wise, social and democratic.
A very young democracy, but with a prospect to move on for a better, more developed democracy,
and very secular.
Israel of today
is democracy in deficit
in a good day,
harsh capitalist
to the level of
libertarian anarchy
almost sometimes
and very religious.
So Israel of 2026
is not Israel of 48,
not Israel of 67,
and not Israel of 2000s.
Different society,
different society, different
leadership, different rhetorics, different ethos and pathos. And the real struggle today
between the political forces, yes, it's very personal. My personality, your personality,
my leader, your leader, okay, that's granted. We have it in every political system. Imagine
politics with no ego. So boring. Okay, God forbid. So thank God we have some ego left. But the
The undercurrent is the warming cold war between religion and politics,
between the Jewish and the democratic.
That's the real deep struggle.
Will Israel, by the end of the road, will be Jewish religious,
that their religion is defined by this kind of people?
Or will it be back a kind of a liberal democracy?
And let's not argue now what is the definition of this liberal democracy, but much more secular in the thinking and therefore speaks with the language of reason.
And this is the real political struggle in Israel today. I'm hopeful, by the way. As difficult as it is, the pendulum will come back.
But we have to understand what the fight is all about.
Do you think, given Israel's moves since this war, in the last month, right, both in West Bank and in Lebanon,
do you think that Israel will have different borders by the end of it, will control more territory by the end of this?
As much as there are enough people who buy into your suspicion that we want to, we want.
Israel from the Euphoratus to the to the nine.
This is actually your question, right?
How real is the Greater Israel Project?
It's just hard to know.
It looks real, but I don't know.
No, I just wanted to show you that I'll listen to you.
You see?
Okay, this was just a show off.
I'm just quoting the Torah.
That's it.
Yeah, okay.
So as much as there are these elements,
which are the same elements,
that were behind the killing of its Hakrabian and the underground to remove the musks
and those who harassed the Palestinians now, etc., etc., etc.
I do not believe that in any future that both of us will be part of it,
Israel will have any legal and legitimate borders but the 48, 4967 borders.
There will be so many attempts.
There will be so many provocations.
There will be so many manipulations by all of these people.
It will never work.
So much so that are also all-heartedly believe
that some were by the end of the process,
most of the settlements and the settlers from the West Bank
will be removed as well.
Yeah.
That's not the trend that we see from this vantage.
Why would you predict that?
Most of Israelis want to have good life.
As much as Netanyahu came with his prophetic vision of Super Sparta, we still prefer Athens.
I mean, because of the Suvlaki, because of the Halumi, because of the, because of the,
of whatever. Of course. We prefer
everyone prefers Athens to Sparta.
Of course. You see.
So as much as the democracy
in Athens was a little bit,
how shall we put it?
Not updated.
Yes. Okay?
The original version was a little bit limited.
But yet the division of Athens
as the place of aesthetics
and philosophy and wisdom and reason
and democracy, the seeds of Western democracy,
most Israelis would like to have good life.
We want to live.
We want our children to live.
Tucker, I cannot tell you how much I cried
when my kids went to the army.
I was standing there when the bus took them.
And I remembered my mom telling me,
me, Kiddo, when you grow up, there will be peace and you will not have to serve in the army.
And I did have to serve in the army.
And then I said the same thing to my kids.
And between my wife and myself and my kids, we have more than 30 years of service in the family.
Now we have grandchildren.
And one day soon, they will have to serve.
because we are citizens of the place,
we are partners to the responsibility.
And I know that the day in which my grandchildren generation
will stand up and say,
we are ready to defend the legitimate Israel,
but we're not ready to sacrifice our life
or to sacrifice the life of others on the altar
of this craziness, this day is close.
That's very reassuring.
I'm sorry?
That's a very reassuring thing to hear.
I'll give you a moment that you were there with me in that moment.
When October 7 erupted like a volcano,
covered the entire city of Naples, so to say,
the Israeli Naples.
We were all under the dust.
What was the first thing that came back to the table to state solution?
As much as Trump said, I made it, I mean, I solved it.
And Netanyahu, like Houdini, made it disappear.
It came back to the table and it is still there.
And you cannot ignore it.
And you should not ignore it.
And therefore, the pressure from within and from the outside and the reality
and the options, I hope will be offered to all of us after this round with Iran will be over.
There will be new options.
Some of them awful, some of them promising.
Eventually, Israelis will say we are ready to serve the needed, but not the fantasies.
Are you concerned that Israel, if this continues at the current pace,
will be hit hard enough by Iran
that it responds with nuclear weapons?
The first time I thought about it
was when you started to raise the issue in your programs.
And I had a feeling that you are really troubled by it.
Very.
And I had a feeling that not your trouble
that Israel will be nuked or will nuke them
because the effect
on so many other fronts
and the nuclear race that will start right afterwards
will put all of us in a real threat.
So I fully, I started to think about it.
I'm not so much troubled by Israel nuking them
because Israel has two strategies.
Since we, as Jews, we could never compromise with one opinion.
So we said, yeah, let's have two opinions.
So we have one conventional army
that is order to win, never mind what,
and then we have the non-conventional capability,
which is order to win no matter what.
And I believe that every threat yet in the region,
we can address with conventional power and setting.
Yet, if there should be a way out of it,
you promote in the last couple of weeks,
you promote the issue of all the sides
who sit together around the same table,
talk respectfully to each other
with no patronizing and with no arrogance.
Just talk to each other.
I say something as well.
Yes, of course.
I'm a dialogueist.
I talk with you.
Okay, we're talking.
I want the outcome of this war
to be a Middle East
clean of weapons of mass destruction to all, Israel denied bombs included.
Now it is clear that Iran must have North Korean strategy in order to protect itself.
It didn't start with us. It started with the Iraqis.
Then they said, listen, the only way we can protect ourselves is to have this kind of supra capability.
So in order for Iran not to have it, and therefore Saudi not to run after them,
and then Egypt will say, what about us?
And then the Emirates or the Qatar is buying something from Pakistan.
And then, and then, and we should make sure that by the end of this negotiation,
whatever we give to whom, because this negotiation you give, you take, you negotiate,
the outcome should be a process, a Middle East clean of weapons of mass destruction,
which will be imposed on Israel as well.
Who could impose that?
President Trump.
Overnight.
It's hard for me, I mean, again, as someone who would love to see,
would be grateful to see what you just described.
I want that.
It's hard to see Netanyahu ever accepting that under any circumstances.
That's right.
That's right.
It's difficult.
it's not easy.
But as my wise father
that was mentioned once already in this
program used to say, he doesn't
believe in sticks and carrots.
He believes in carrots and carrots.
And then he said, even a carrot can cause
some pain sometime.
I mean,
there are ways to do it.
There are ways to secure it.
There are ways to guarantee it.
It opens a whole new
window, so to say,
about can you trust America today?
What the Gov states
that both of us are curious about them?
Yes.
Okay, something is happening there.
What will they say if America will walk away
from this conflict and leave them alone
at the mouth of the Iranian lion or the Israeli lion?
That's right. Not good.
Not good.
What Japan will say.
That's right.
What South Korea will say.
What India will say.
say.
And, and,
and, and, and, and,
Taiwan,
Singapore,
all of these
important places.
If you cannot
trust America,
so it's
self-reliance.
Self-reliance
means an immediate
ornament race,
which is bad.
So, in order to
prevent the world
to go into a
new race like that,
and this is the entire
world,
and we know
who will be the profiteers of it.
All of those who export death
and weapons of hatred to all over the world,
in order not to make these industries,
industries of hatred and industries of suspicion
and industries of death,
in order not to make them profitable,
the only way to come positively out of this conflict
is to begin here.
at home. Here is the first region which is clean and we move on. And these are the guarantees we
Americans are giving you that nothing bad will happen to you if a threat like this one day
will stand in front of you. So America in order to do anything is not just about the oil
prices, which is important by itself. I mean, if you live in the suburbs for so many years,
and you want to drive to your pharmacy or to your supermarket,
the price is crucial.
I don't, I don't, I consider it very seriously
as a daily existential issue for the American citizen.
But if you want a world to be pacified and calmer,
you need to restore not the trust in the markets,
but the trust in America.
Again, we strongly agree on that.
What would happen if no American leader was able to restore that trust or the United States couldn't afford to remain a stabilizing force globally because it's expensive?
What would happen to the world?
The simple answer is I have no clue.
The little bit more augmented one is somebody else will walk.
somebody else will grow into this responsibility.
Will it be China?
That with all the problems that Chinese are having,
they're about two things.
They're very much about continuous stability
at home and abroad.
And they hardly ever initiate a war.
They play games.
But they don't declare wars.
the way we declare wars every now and then.
So maybe China will grow into it.
Maybe there will be a different world coalition
of interested parties
who would like to see something like that.
And this is a very, very ambitious end,
what about Europe?
I saw your vice president there,
and then I saw your secretary of state there.
One with a little bit more abrasive style, the other one a little bit more subtle one, saying the same thing.
Europe, you're done.
And I say, I'm not at all sure.
The good old continent was done so many times and rediscovered itself.
And re, can you say rebirthed itself?
Yes.
How do you, how do you, re?
reproduced itself, okay?
I'm out of it.
Okay, reproduced itself so many times in history.
And I have a feeling that this mechanism of renewal,
which is the cradle of the Western civilization,
Western civilization is European first,
and only then the rest of the Christian Anglo-Saxon, et cetera, et cetera.
And I have a feeling that Europe has the power.
to renew itself and to grow up into it.
And remember that Israel and Turkey and Iran and Saudi Arabia are the next door neighbors.
It's not far away from a Florida place.
No, it's not.
And I take Mark Twain, I take Mark Twain wisdom who said that every now and then America declares a war in order for Americans to study geography.
I understand.
Okay. Did he really say that? That's pretty good.
This is what I read. Okay. And if he did not, let's give it to him.
Yes, I agree. He deserves it.
You know, in the world, you either, you say either Bernard Cho or Gaucho Marx or Oscar Wilde or Mark Twain.
We have a limited palette. Yes. No, I agree.
Yeah, one of them did it. Okay.
And I say for Europe, it is much more natural at what sense.
When you look at the Middle East, the Middle East of today, with all of its fragility
and all of its volatile forces is the leftover of two poisonous European fruits,
the Holocaust and colonialism.
And I'm not at all sure that Europe went yet through the process to internalize it,
to grow up to the challenge.
What do we do about it?
Do we have any kind of historic responsibility?
And with America walking away, this America, walking away from NATO and walking away from so many things,
maybe it's time for Europe to recalculate its position in history.
So I have to end, and I showed on this at the beginning, but I just want to make sure that you get credit for this.
I want to read a line that you wrote immediately after the beginning of this war, and you wrote it in the Israeli press, because it's just so oppression.
And you're describing your prime minister, Netanyahu, and our president Trump, you said,
neither he nor Trump has the faintest idea why they want, what they want to happen here after day one.
You saw that at the very beginning that this was a war without a strategic goal.
And I think that's proven true.
How were you, here's my question.
How were you treated when you said that?
What was the response to that?
And what has your life been like in Israel over the last month?
Because I don't think you're in the majority in your opinions.
I left the Knesset voluntarily some 20 years ago.
and ever since I dedicated most of my life to think,
to write, to read, to lecture, to teach,
to offer alternative narrative to Israel.
Is it is not?
And with each and every book of mine and each and every article of mine,
in a way I'm pushed further away from the mainstream.
This is not just about the
death wishes and the threats and the pushbacks in the streets. It's not about that.
It's about the loneliness of having an opinion. Yet, I'm a Jew. What does that mean?
Being a Jew is many things. One of them is to be dedicated to the culture of this agreement.
When you look at the Talmud, that's the most important Jewish writing, a creation, that's the oral Torah.
This is the development of the written scripture.
It's thousands of pages.
So boring, Tucker, you cannot imagine.
My goat ate your tomato.
Your cucumber heated my wife.
I mean, what kind of...
But it's not about goats.
It's not about cucumber.
it's not about this.
Jews for centuries,
so did I, so did my father,
so did my grandfather,
studied the Talmud because the
Talmud documents obsessively,
not just the decision
and the verdict of the majority,
but the position of the minority.
With the assumption that a day will come,
that the majority will wake up
and realize how wrong they were,
we have already
ready made
the strategy
prepared by the minority
to become the new majority philosophy.
So being in a minority
and a Jew,
it's not a problem.
So were the prophets.
So were the rabbis.
So were the intellectuals.
So what? It's a responsibility.
And I see my role in life
and it's not alone.
You never do things like this alone.
is to offer first thinking, which is different than the parameters of the public discourse,
and to be courageous enough and expressive enough for people to know there is an address out there.
There is somebody out there who thought about it and is not afraid, so shouldn't we be afraid.
look at my t-shirt.
Okay?
I went abroad a couple of months ago.
I'm going with that.
I said, listen,
every ultra-autodox has his outfit
that you recognize like an Amish, okay?
Yes.
Every setter has his or her outfit,
which is an M-16 rifle and something else, okay?
I have my uniform.
So I'm in the airport, comes to me a guy and says,
Boog, don't you think it's about time to change your shirt?
He said, why, it's stinking?
He said, no, no, no, no.
No, no, peace is thinking.
Okay.
And of course, for me, it was an opening for a deliberation, for a discussion.
So, yes, many times I'm alone, and yes, many times I'm even lonely, but I'm full of hope.
And I offer hope for other.
And when my daughter asked me, Daddy, how do you feel?
She asked me the talker's question, how do you feel?
I said, what's the problem, dear?
I'm in a majority.
I agree with myself.
At home, we all think the same, so it's a majority.
All my friends think like me.
It's a majority.
Politically, I support people like me.
So we are the majority.
The fact that they have more numbers, that's marginal.
Bottom line is, sometimes Tucker being a Jew means being an alternative.
Well, I like your alternative.
And this conversation has really been a blessing for me.
So thank you very much for taking the time to do it.
And I hope a lot of people see this.
Thank you very much for your time.
Thank you.
And giving me the opportunity.
Thank you very much, Zucker.
Thank you.
