David         Brooks argues         in The Weekly Standard that Europeans don't like Ariel Sharon's         Israel because the Jewish State is "bourgeois" and Europeans         suffer from "bourgeoisophobia." I think, though, David         is just using the word "bourgeois" here to mean "good,"         rather than what it actually means. Sharon, himself, would be offended by         being called bourgeois. He sees himself as the embodiment of more ancient virtues: he entitled his autobiography         Warrior, not         Businessman.  The entire Zionist project was distinctly         antibourgeois. It was heroic, romantic, anti-capitalist, socialist, collectivist,         risky, nationalist, militarist, agriculturalist, trade unionist,         anti-individualist, ethnocentrist, feminist, myth-driven, and on and on. If the Zionists         had wanted to be bourgeois, they could have made a lot more money         by moving virtually anywhere else in the world, or even by  buying Baja California          from Mexico. The Zionists tried to de-bourgeoisify Jews by creating         a national economy in which Jews would hold all the jobs, including         farmer and soldier, rather than just the bourgeois middle-man-minority         jobs at which they made much money, but also elicited dangerous         resentment from other peoples.
From an ideological standpoint, it's more         than a little strange that the mouthpieces of the American big business         Right in America are so attached to this offshoot of the 19th Century         European romantic nationalist Left. The neoconservatives should be         complimented for rising above narrow doctrinaire prejudices to warmly         embrace a country founded on principles they oppose. Ideological purity         isn't everything.
What the neocons shouldn't do is distort the nature of Israel to paper over the contradictions in their own views. For example, Larry Kudlow writes in NR: "A free-market Israel has every right to defend itself." But, Israel's hardly a free market paragon - it ranks a mediocre 56th out of 123 countries on the Economic Freedom index. And, surely, Larry also believed that Israel had every right to defend itself back in 1980 when it ranked a miserable 93rd out 107 countries in economic freedom? What nation shouldn't have a right to defend itself? So, why do Brooks and Kudlow make up transparently obvious rationalizations like this? Why not just admit that there are other things deserving of loyalty in this world besides bourgeois values and the free market?
 
 
 
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