- London Calling: H.L.A. Hart on place names Irfan Khawaja, Policy of Truth
- Use and abuse of the Temple Mount Michael Koplow, Ottomans & Zionists
- People can collaborate in free markets too Johnathan Pearce, Samizdata
- Brainwashing is sorcery Robin Hanson, Overcoming Bias
Israeli politics
Nightcap
- Boris & Donald: A special relationship Lippman & Toosi, Politico
- The looming end of Pax Americana Brian Stewart, Quillette
- A lesson for the Israeli occupation Michael Koplow, Ottomans & Zionists
- A new history of Charlemagne Charles West, LRB
Nightcap
- “This was an unprecedented right-wing victory” Michael Koplow, Ottomans & Zionists
- “The problem of disappeared states and regions is that they are still here” Jacob Soll, New Republic
- “The costs have proven steep” Evans, Gandy, and Watts, Aeon
- Thinking through the franchise problem Nick Nielsen, The View from Oregon
Nightcap
- Israel’s un-Machiavellian Prince Ben-zion Telefus, Duck of Minerva
- Macron’s Iranian G7 gamble Herszenhorn & Momtaz, Politico
- Why the French love to say ‘no’ Sylvia Sabes, BBC
- An ah-hah moment while shopping David Henderson, EconLog
Nightcap
- Japan’s new imperial era Thisanka Siripala, the Diplomat
- The sad decline of American democracy Scott Sumner, EconLog
- Understanding Israel Brent Sasley, Duck of Minerva
- The last struggle of the Yanomami Alma Guillermoprieto, NYRB
Geoffrey Wheatcroft on Zionism’s Colonial Roots
Today, Benjamin Netanyahu is seen widely as a leader of the Right (although in comparison with Avigdor Lieberman and others who have held office in Israel lately, Netanyahu could look moderate), and Israeli politics have long been categorized in terms of Left and Right, with the Revisionists cast as right-wing no-goodniks. That was so from the 1930s: with the rise of fascism, it became quite common to characterize Jabotinsky as a fascist, a word widely used by his Zionist foes. Rabbi Stephen Wise, a prominent liberal Jewish American of his day, called Revisionism “a species of fascism,” while David Ben-Gurion—the leader of the Labor Zionists in the Yishuv (the Jewish settlement in British Palestine) and then a founding father and first prime minister of Israel—referred to his foe privately as “Vladimir Hitler,” which didn’t leave much to the imagination. And to be sure, while Jabo called himself a free-market liberal with anarchist leanings, the oratory of Revisionism—“in blood and fire will Judea rise again”—and the visual rhetoric—the Betarim in their brown shirts marching and saluting—had alarming contemporary resonances.
Read the rest, it’s very good throughout.