UN Israel's 'biggest ever' protests as Benjamin Netanyahu's government persists with reforms

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Israel's 'biggest ever' protests as Benjamin Netanyahu's government persists with reforms​


Hundreds of thousands of Israelis demonstrated across the country on Saturday night in the 10th consecutive week of protests against their hard-right government's controversial legal reforms.

The demonstrations come as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government prepares to press on with its legislative agenda next week, shunning calls for a pause to allow for negotiations on the divisive plan.

The judicial overhaul is a cornerstone of Mr Netanyahu's administration, an alliance with ultra-Orthodox Jewish and extreme-right parties which took office at the end of last year. Critics say it threatens democracy and would result in less checks and balances.

The latest protests saw up to 500,000 people take to the streets, according to organisers. One journalist was among the people questioned by police for making anti-Netanyahu statements and at least three protesters were arrested.

The Israeli Haaretz newspaper reported opposition leader Yair Lapid said in a speech during demonstrations that Israel "is facing the greatest crisis in its history".

"A wave of terrorism is hitting us, our economy is crashing, money is escaping the country. Iran just signed yesterday a new agreement with Saudi Arabia. But the only thing this government cares about is crushing Israeli democracy," he said.
The biggest demonstration, in the coastal city of Tel Aviv, drew some 100,000 protesters, according to estimates given by Israeli media.
Many of them were waving blue and white Israeli flags.

"I'm demonstrating because the measures that the new government wants to take represent a real and immediate threat to Israeli democracy," one protester, tech entrepreneur Ran Shahor, told AFP.

Demonstrations were held in other cities and towns in the country of more than nine million.

Some 50,000 Israelis protested in the northern city of Haifa and 10,000 in Beersheba - the biggest yet in both - according to Israeli media.
The rallies broke up without major incident, although police arrested three protesters who were blocking traffic on Tel Aviv's ring road. Social media also suggested one man had been arrested for confronting protesters with a hammer, while local journalists reported other onlookers through eggs at the crowds.

The chair of parliament's law committee, Simcha Rotman, has scheduled daily hearings on parts of the government's reforms from Sunday through Wednesday ahead of votes.

Justice Minister Yariv Levin has said the coalition plans to pass key elements of the reforms before parliament goes into recess on April 2.
The proposed legislation would give more weight to the government in the committee that selects judges and would deny the Supreme Court the right to strike down any amendments to so-called Basic Laws, Israel's quasi-constitution.
The government has been pushing for changes that would limit the Supreme Court’s powers to rule against the legislature and the executive, giving the Israeli parliament (the Knesset) the power to override Supreme Court decisions with a simple majority of 61 votes out of the 120-seat Knesset.

These provisions have already been endorsed by lawmakers at first reading.

Israeli President Issac Herzog - who, in his largely ceremonial role, has tried to broker dialogue - on Thursday called on the coalition the halt the legislation, dubbing it "a threat to the foundations of democracy".

Another element of the reforms would give the 120-member parliament power to overrule Supreme Court decisions with a simple majority of 61 votes.
 
So far as to my limited understanding, the liberal international banking (((cartel)))'s lgbtpuppets are making a big stink about Nethanya trying to un-poz Isreal.

I'm sure a native can explain better. On one hand, they are just getting a taste of what the world had been drinking, but on the other hand, Israel becoming a globohomo superfortress would be rather bad for stability in the region, as it would be double haram and no doubt put an end to any reconciliation possible with the kebabs.
 
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Iran just signed yesterday a new agreement with Saudi Arabia.
How is this any of your business, unless you know you are fucking over your neighbors and if they ever stop bickering amongst themselves they might start dealing with the one country screwing over the whole region.

I used to believe the majority of Israeli Jews can't be as bad as their government, then I found out there are many orthodox and greater Israel fanatics who are even worse than their government. I still held on to the believe that there are some moderate Israeli Jews, that was just me projecting they all know exactly what their government is doing and usually only criticize it if they aren't hawkish enough.
 
Can an Israeli give me the rundown on who’s Jewing who?
Not an Israeli but... yes.

To be more specific and less memetic, Israel has the same globohomo shit going on the rest of the world does to the point Tel Aviv has been declared the gayest city in the world. Not San Fran, but Tel Aviv. You also have a lot of the same weepy-mopey "muh oppressed Palestinians" nonsense you have here from various returned Jews adding their voices to things, and so recently they made common cause in their parliament, the Knesset, to toss out Netanyahu, who is basically an Israeli centrist, and have since weaponized the judicial system to try and toss him out again after he managed to undo their power play by forming a new coalition. Sound familiar? Currently he's fighting back and attempting to defang the judiciary because that's the easiest thing he can go for at the moment because fuck those guys, and now they're sobbing to the international media about what an anti-democratic meanie he's being to try and get external pressure on him to resign.
 
Can an Israeli give me the rundown on who’s Jewing who?
not a jew but here's some relevant background information:

their supreme court is very powerful.
new members to the court are appointed by a committee.
that committee is made up of a combination of government officials, members of parliament, sitting judges on the court, and bar association leaders.
the way this is all structured has the effect that the court judges alone have enough power to veto any candidate they don't like from passing the committee.
imagine if the US supreme court judges could veto a new judge being appointed to their court after the senate and president already approved him. that's how it works in israel.
critics say that the court having this kind of control over its own composition makes it undemocratic, nepotistic, and corrupt.
defenders say that this is a good thing because it makes the court ultra independent from the government.

netanyahu and his right wing allies don't like the court because the court currently leans left, so he is now trying to give parliament veto power over the court.
netanyahus opponents (leftists) don't like parliament because parliament currently leans right, so they want their court to be remain independent of it.

tl;dr if this reform goes through, then the leftoids in israel will lose a LOT of power, that's why they're so up in arms about it.
 
not a jew but here's some relevant background information:

their supreme court is very powerful.
new members to the court are appointed by a committee.
that committee is made up of a combination of government officials, members of parliament, sitting judges on the court, and bar association leaders.
the way this is all structured has the effect that the court judges alone have enough power to veto any candidate they don't like from passing the committee.
imagine if the US supreme court judges could veto a new judge being appointed to their court after the senate and president already approved him. that's how it works in israel.
critics say that the court having this kind of control over its own composition makes it undemocratic, nepotistic, and corrupt.
defenders say that this is a good thing because it makes the court ultra independent from the government.

netanyahu and his right wing allies don't like the court because the court currently leans left, so he is now trying to give parliament veto power over the court.
netanyahus opponents (leftists) don't like parliament because parliament currently leans right, so they want their court to be remain independent of it.

tl;dr if this reform goes through, then the leftoids in israel will lose a LOT of power, that's why they're so up in arms about it.
And I thought US courts were gay.
 
not a jew but here's some relevant background information:

their supreme court is very powerful.
new members to the court are appointed by a committee.
that committee is made up of a combination of government officials, members of parliament, sitting judges on the court, and bar association leaders.
the way this is all structured has the effect that the court judges alone have enough power to veto any candidate they don't like from passing the committee.
imagine if the US supreme court judges could veto a new judge being appointed to their court after the senate and president already approved him. that's how it works in israel.
critics say that the court having this kind of control over its own composition makes it undemocratic, nepotistic, and corrupt.
defenders say that this is a good thing because it makes the court ultra independent from the government.

netanyahu and his right wing allies don't like the court because the court currently leans left, so he is now trying to give parliament veto power over the court.
netanyahus opponents (leftists) don't like parliament because parliament currently leans right, so they want their court to be remain independent of it.

tl;dr if this reform goes through, then the leftoids in israel will lose a LOT of power, that's why they're so up in arms about it.
IIRC the Poles had a similar fucked-up judiciary carried over from their time as a Soviet puppet where the judges hand-picked their successors because the courts themselves picked their new members, which also lead to no end of kvetching about muh judicial independence thanks to the government trying to fix that situation.
 
This was the second biggest uproar in Israel since Hoishel dropped his bag of quarters.
Oy Vey! My cousin Chaim got crushed to death in that and I was barely able to yank out his fillings! I couldn't even search his pockets before I was forced to flee for my life from a greedy mob.
 
A reminder that elections have consequences, and that by definition, these protesters are just a loud minority. Having lost an election to people spelling out their intent to do just this! OC you will never hear the MSM in the west openly point this out.
 
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I read this in an article earlier with the byline "Is this what democracy looks like?"

Well, increasingly yes. Seems that if you can't trust the election process the other workings of democracy kick in.
 
Meh, seems alright. Judges can be soft on degenerates and those engaged in subversion, even sedition. It's not too radical.
 
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