The old Israel – the Israel that had season tickets to the Philharmonic and opera; that spawned Nobel laureates, award-winning writers and internationally acclaimed artistes; that slotted seamlessly into Davos and other soirees of the global elite – that old Israel is now flexing its withered and arthritic muscles in anticipation of yet another, probably its ultimate, existential battle.
Bibi Netanyahu and his gang of nihilists have declared war on Israeli democracy – nothing short of “a coup d’état”, according to former attorney-general and Supreme Court judge, Meni Mazuz – and these tired, old warriors are erecting the barricades to repel them.
At issue is the government’s so-called judicial reform plan, which would, according to its many critics, remove both the legislature (known as the Knesset) and the executive from the oversight of the justice system.
If the plan were to be passed, laws passed by the Knesset would no longer be subject to review by the Supreme Court and cabinet ministers would not be bound by the rulings of their legal advisers. The slim majority of the current coalition - like that of many of its predecessors - would suffice to pass any and every law, however morally repugnant.
The revolt of the old-timers is a magnificent sight – or it would be, were it not for a fog of hypocrisy so thick it bamboozles the mind.
Bear in mind that these eminent jurists, academics, former politicians and newspaper proprietors are the same people who told us – who ruled from the bench on many occasions – that Jewish supremacy and democracy are compatible.