Every year, a number of tourists visiting          Jerusalem go bonkers, declaring themselves to be the messiah or          suffering other psychotic episodes. Less well known, but more important,          is the deranging effect that the Holy Land has on the rest of the world,          day in and day out.
     
       The impact of Holy Land-Related Derangement Syndrome on the Muslim world          is well-known, but here are four examples of Jerusalem Syndrome playing          out in America.
     
       1. Haaretz         reports:
                             
                           New          Christian pro-Israel lobby aims to be stronger than AIPAC 
        By Shlomo Shamir
      
       NEW YORK - Televangelist John Hagee told Jewish community leaders over          the weekend that the 40 million evangelical Christians in the United          States support Israel and that he plans to utilize this power to help          Israel by launching a Christian pro-Israel lobby.
      
       The lobby is slated to launch in July, during a Washington conference in          which hundreds of American evangelicals are slated to participate, Hagee          said at a meeting of the Conference of Presidents of Major American          Jewish Organizations, which represents 52 national Jewish groups. He          also discussed the lobby with Israel's consul general in New York, Aryeh          Mekel.
     
       Hagee said his group would be a Christian - and more powerful - version          of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), a large          pro-Israel lobby, and would target senators and congressmen on Capitol          Hill. A quarter of congressmen are evangelicals, and many American          legislators represent regions that include a large evangelical          population, he said.
      
       Hagee - the founder and senior pastor of the evangelical Cornerstone          Church in San Antonio, Texas, that claims an active membership of more          than 18,000 - said the lobby's activities would be a "political          earthquake."
          
                           
To be more powerful          than AIPAC would be powerful indeed. I once interviewed spokesmen for          various lobbies -- the Arab, Muslim, Armenian, and Turkish -- and they          all said that they fashion themselves on the lines pioneered by AIPAC, that AIPAC was their          professional role model as the 800 pound gorilla of foreign lobbies, and          they all dreamed of someday having as much clout as AIPAC. Exactly how          much need there is for a second AIPAC is less than crystal clear, since          the first one seems to be doing fine. As Dana Milbank wrote in the Washington          Post last year:
                            
                   
How much  clout does AIPAC have?
Well, consider that during the pro-Israel lobby's annual conference yesterday, a  fleet of police cars, sirens wailing, blocked intersections and formed a  motorcade to escort buses carrying its conventioneers -- to lunch.
The annual meeting of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee has long  produced a massive show of bipartisan pandering, as lawmakers praise the  well-financed and well-connected group. But this has been a rough year for AIPAC  -- it has dismissed its policy director and another employee while the FBI  examines whether they passed classified U.S. information to Israel -- and the  organization is eager to show how big it is...
Another fact sheet announced that this is the "largest ever"  conference, with its 5,000 participants attending "the largest annual  seated dinner in Washington" joined by "more members of Congress than  almost any other event, except for a joint session of Congress or a State of the  Union address." The group added that its membership "has nearly  doubled" over four years to 100,000 and that the National Journal calls it  "one of the top four most effective lobbying organizations."
                            
                           
The Rev. Hagee          didn't mention whether his organization would facilitate treasonous          espionage against the United States, like AIPAC did in the Larry          Franklin affair.
     
       Of course, a big part of what drives the Christian fundamentalists'' obsession with          Israel is that wacky Left Behind eschatology that believes that          the fulfillment of Likud's plans will set off the Rapture. Granted, it          will be tough toast for the Christ-rejecting Jews when Israeli dominance          triggers the Apocalypse, but until then, the Book of          Revelation-worshippers are all for Israel kicking ass.
     
       In the world of politics, can something be too stupid to be true? I          guess not.
     
       2.          But sometimes the Jerusalem Syndrome doesn't even have to have anything          to do with actual Jews. If you are as deranged as appears to be Utah Congressman Chris          Cannon, President Bush's point man in the House on pushing through Open          Borders, well, even Mexicans qualify as the Lost Tribes of          Israel. The  Denver Post reports:
                             
                           
Utah         is the most Republican state in the country. But the state's more than         95,000 undocumented immigrants can legally drive with a "driving         privilege card" created last year. They can go to any public         university or community college and pay in-state tuition.
     
       Many of the state's otherwise conservative lawmakers are major players         nationally in pushing for a more open immigration policy. In 2003, no         less a conservative stalwart than Sen. Orrin Hatch sponsored the Dream         Act, a bill that would have removed federal penalties for states that         want to give illegal immigrants a college tuition break...
     
       Political observers seeking to explain the state's unusual embrace of         immigrants point to a variety of factors, many involving the state's         dominant faith.
     
       Over the past several decades, the Mormon Church has sent thousands of         Utahns to Latin America on two-year missions to preach and proselytize,         creating strong links between the region and people who went on to         become some of the state's top policymakers. Utah Republican Rep. Chris         Cannon went on a mission in Guatemala in the 1970s...
     
       But one of the strongest influences, experts say, is embedded in the         central doctrine of the Mormon faith, a force with enormous influence         over both politics and society here. The Book of Mormon teaches that a         lost tribe of Israelites known as the Lamanites landed on the American         continent in 600 B.C. and they are the forefathers of the native peoples         of Mexico and Central and South America.
     
       Many Mormons see the tens of thousands of Latin American immigrants who         have arrived in the seat of the church as guided by the hand of God in         order to be converted, critical players in an unfolding religious tale         of biblical proportions.
     
       "Mormons have the Book of Mormon, and the Latin American,         aboriginal ancestry is relevant to their views. Those notions, if         sometimes misunderstood, are at least widely held," said Cannon, a         four-term congressman and member of the Church of Jesus Christ of         Latter-day Saints.
     
       "The Mormon Church has taken a position that is pretty clear. They         are a proselytizing church, and they view the people coming to Utah as a         great group of people to convert," Cannon said.
     
       That faith has helped fire actions on the issue from Salt Lake to         Washington. Cannon is in many ways the mirror image of Colorado's Tom         Tancredo, the Littleton Republican who has crusaded for a federal         immigration crackdown. The Utah lawmaker was the architect in 2003 of         AgJobs, an unsuccessful bill in Congress that would have legalized         500,000 farm workers nationwide.
          
         
It's hard to tell          from this if Rep. Cannon really believes Joseph's Smith's sci-fi          anthropology, or whether he's just cynically playing coy to persuade          Mormons to back the agenda of the Low Wages Lobby.
      
       3.          Meanwhile, in the real Holy Land, they recently had an election, as you          might have heard if you didn't spend last week in a cave. Israeli          elections seem to get more coverage in the American national press than          any American state election not involving Arnold Schwarzenegger.
     
If I          was an Israeli citizen, I would have voted for the winning Kadima Party          organized by Ariel Sharon before his collapse, but I'm not, so I don't          spend a lot of time thinking about Israeli politics. It's a country with          a population only two-thirds of Los Angeles County's, and it's just not          that important.
     
It's safe to say          that in recent years, Sharon arrived at sensible conclusions such as the          need for a border fence to keep out terrorists, and for evacuation of the more useless Israeli          settlements on Palestinian territory. The defeat of Likud by the Israeli          voters was a real thumb in the eye to the  American          neocons, and it          couldn't have happened to a nicer set.
      
       Here, however, is one interesting aspect to the election that hasn't          gotten much coverage:
      
       American traitor Jonathan Pollard's old handler is a new political power          in Israel's Knesset. Dave          in Boca, who has a lot of inside sources on this kind of thing,          reports:
                            
                           
The         Pensioners' Party has come out of nowhere to win seven seats to the         Knesset under the leadership of Rafi Eitan, a well-known figure in         Israel's turbulent history, who at 79 years old is playing his third act         in a lifetime full of skullduggery.
     
       Eitan was the mastermind of the kidnapping of Adolph Eichmann from         Argentina, resulting in that Nazi war criminal's trial and execution for         war crimes during the Second World War.
     
       Then, in a less glorious episode, Eitan set up Jonathon Pollard as a spy         who stole US secrets which informed observers say Israel subsequently         traded to the USSR for spy info on its enemies in the Middle East. This         was the reason that recently-deceased Caspar Weinberger reportedly gave         for ordering Pollard to be kept in a maximum-security facility for life         with no hope of parole or early release.
     
       Reports that Rafi         Eitan has a document that Israel never handed over to the Americans         after Pollard's conviction is not likely to lead to Pollard's release,         say these sources. The case for keeping Pollard in prison lies not only         on his extensive         spying for Israel, but also on the allegations         that
       
                    Pollard's           information led to revealing the identity of American spies operating           in the Soviet Union.         
         There         are reports that other information that the Israelis handed the USSR was         also harmful to American foreign policy interests and that the harm done         has led to the US's tough stance on Pollard's imprisonment.                           
 
                           
Do you think          anybody ever mentioned any of this to the Rev. Hagee's congregation?
     
       4. Speaking of bizarre religious obsessions, the "debate" over          immigration has been notable for the lack of debate as the arguments put          forward by immigration restrictionists are ignored and their proponents          demonized as "angry" "rabble-rousing"          "haters.". The pro-illegal immigration supporters, on the          other hand, are driven largely by a wholly emotional          irrationality.
     
       From whence does this hatred of facts and logic about immigration          spring? When reading economist Paul Krugman's 3/27 NYT column          "North of the Board," an admirable mea culpa on his part for          all the hatred he has spewed at immigration restrictionists over the          years, one of the prime answers became clear. Krugman wrote:
                            
                           
"Give          me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe          free," wrote Emma Lazarus, in a poem that still puts a lump in my          throat. I'm proud of America's immigrant history, and grateful that the          door was open when my grandparents fled Russia.
     
               In other words, I'm          instinctively, emotionally pro-immigration. But a review of serious,          nonpartisan research reveals some uncomfortable facts about the          economics of modern immigration, and immigration from Mexico in          particular. If people like me are going to respond effectively to          anti-immigrant demagogues, we have to acknowledge those facts.
     
       First, the net benefits to the U.S. economy from immigration, aside from          the large gains to the immigrants themselves, are small.... Second,          while immigration may have raised overall income slightly, many of the          worst-off native-born Americans are hurt by immigration — especially          immigration from Mexico.
                            
                   
From my experience of  dealing with Krugman via email, he's a nasty son-of-a-gun, but I have to  compliment him on finally developing the intellectual honesty to admit that his  overwhelming urge to vomit abuse at immigration restrictionists has little basis  in facts.
So, where, does this mindless passion that has been so prevalent in the media  over the last week originate?
To be frank, much of what we see in the press appear to be examples of  Jewish-American ancestor worship, a bizarre religious urge to make Ellis Island  into a sacred site. Other groups, such as the Italian and Irish, share this to  some extent, but Jews with their vast talent at nostalgic myth-making seem much  more taken in by their own concoction than are Catholic ethnics, who are,  sensibly, more focused on the future than the past. On the right, the main  cheerleaders among journalists for massive immigration have been Jewish neocons  like William Kristol, John Podhoretz, Tamar Jacoby, Michael Barone, and James  Taranto.
Is unchecked immigration good for the Jews? Of course not. It will bring in more  anti-Semites and terrorists, like Egyptian immigrant Hesham  Mohamed Hadayet, who murdered two Jews at the Israeli El Al Airline counter  of LAX on the July 4, 2002. Nor does it make sense for America to hold open the  gates to the whole world just in case anything happened, God forbid, to Israel.  If it did, Israeli Jews would immediately get a special deal as refugees, not as  ordinary immigrants, like Cubans did. Granted, Jews suffer less from economic  competition with illegal immigrants than any other ethnic group due to their  high average IQs and educational levels, but, rationally, security concerns  should be high on their priority list.
No, the ferocious resistance of so many Jews in the media to thinking sensibly  about immigration (there are, of course, numerous honorable exceptions such as  Robert Samuelson, Dan Stein, and Steven Steinlight) is rooted in  nostalgia.
Now, nostalgia is a pleasant luxury, but can Jews, even in America, really  afford to give up thinking "Is it good for the Jews?" in favor  of "Was it good for the Jews?"
 UPDATE:  5. Hasidic riot last night in Brooklyn: WNBC  reports:
UPDATE:  5. Hasidic riot last night in Brooklyn: WNBC  reports:
                    
                   
Claiming  police had mistreated a 75-year-old man after a routine traffic stop, hundreds  of residents stormed the streets and set fires as officers in riot gear fanned  out to clear the crowd. 
 
 
Images:  Hasidim Protest Man's Arrest 
 
 
Police  denied mistreating the man, Arthur Schick, after he was pulled over Tuesday  night in the Borough Park section of Brooklyn for talking on his cell phone  while driving. Police said he resisted the officers during the stop, which  occurred around 6:30 p.m., and was arrested with two other people who meddled in  the incident.
Protesters set small fires and blocked streets in the Orthodox Jewish  neighborhood while Schick's car sat parked in front of the bakery bearing his  family's name.
Dozens of young Orthodox Jews in traditional black suits and hats gathered on  street corners in the neighborhood, which sees very little crime. Charred  garbage pockmarked the streets.
Police officers herded away onlookers, who yelled back angrily. The crowd had  mostly dispersed by late Tuesday night. 
 
 
Reader Comments:
  
 
As a  recently apostate/quit/on-hiatus evangelical Christian, the fate of the Jews in  general and Israeli ones in particular, during a Left Behind-style Rapture often  takes one of these forms:
1) They are all genetically exempt from judgement through Yahweh's original  covenant with their ancestors.
2) A whole bunch of them will become Christians/Messianic or  "Completed" Jews as in the greatest hopes of the Jews for Jesus  ministry. This is sometimes caused by a world-wide wave of anti-Jewish  persecution.
3) Most of them in Israel are done for though 144,000, (probably all men as  specified in the Book of Revelation) are delivered from whatever tribulation the  anti-Christ doles out on Israel.
That advantage from Hagee's perspective of his proposed Evangelicals for Israel  group is more cash and an Israel lobby that is overtly pro-Christian. I've never  looked into it, but I'd imagine AIPAC is kind of uneasy about Christians who may  be obsessed with converting Jews.
 *
  
 
Steve,  some of us have been working for years to get Chris Cannon out of office.
Most of us who have been doing that believe in Joseph Smith's "sci-fi  anthropology". Not surprising--Cannon's district is over 80% Mormon.
Your question presents two answers that are not mutually exclusive: having  talked to Cannon several times, I believe he both accepts Mormon theology AND  cynically applies it to justify his pro-amnesty position.
Some of us think his justification is both politically and theologically wrong.  We oppose amnesties, unlimited immigration generally, illegal immigration  specifically, etc etc. In other words, sir, there are (or were) a whole lot of  Mormons on YOUR side of the issue.
Republican Mormons in Utah who oppose amnesty have already been betrayed by our  party and our Congresscritters. It isn't any fun to also be stabbed in the back  and insulted by someone we thought was an ally.
 *
  
 
I'm an  evangelical Christian myself, but in the old-fashioned sense--one who believes  that God still expects us to spread the good news among the nations. The oddest  thing about the fiercely pro-Israel evangelical Christians is their treatment of  Jews as the one group not in need of conversion to be saved. I hope that this is  due to a certain theological reading of Revelation, leading them to believe that  the Jews will be saved by God's grace somehow in the end. I'm not a biblical  scholar myself, but there seems to be disagreement among theologians on this  point.
But to be fair to the evangelicals who strongly support the secular state of  Israel, I think there is more to it than "end times" tunnel vision.  I've heard a number of sermons in evangelical churches on the Christian duty to  look after the welfare of the Jews in general, in part because of past  persecution. Many evangelical churches try to model themselves after the 1st  century church, which was strongly Jewish in tradition. I suspect that feeling  an emotional tie to the Jews of today is like reaching back into the past for  them. I see the sin of pride lurking, though, in believing that the God of the  Old Testament, the deliverer of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, David, etc. needs  Americans to protect his people above all others.
 *
  
 Most  of my relatives are Mormon and are instinctively pro-immigration. Hispanics are  among those most inclined to convert to Mormonism, so Mormons have positive  feelings about them. Many Mormons in the mountain states are farmers who enjoy  the cheap labor too. Mormons like to see the these new little congregations of  Hispanic Mormons spreading rapidly through their neighborhoods. Eveidently, the  American Catholic Church has a similar attitude: it favors open borders in order  to fill the pews. But Mormons' immigration feelings are not that difficult to  change. All I have to do is share a few facts from VDARE, and their natural  conservatism does the rest. Just tell them they join the church just as fast in  Mexico. All I have to do with my Dad, for example, is to remind him how 90% of  the inmates housed at the county jail where he works are Mexican.
 *
  
 
You  underrate the evangelicals, I think. An evangelical pro-Israel lobby needn't be  predicated on radical eschatology...
What this actually is, is an evangelical anti-Islamic lobby. Can't call it that,  of course - too "intolerant", and folks would far rather be  "for" something than "against" something else. So...let's  get together and be "for" whatever Moslems hate most - which is the  state of Israel.
As a bonus, philo-semitism is a public contradiction of  left-wing stereotypes about evangelicals, and critics are hard-pressed to come  up with arguments they can make in public against...supporting Jews. Let the  liberals find out what it's like to be aligned against a minority immune to  criticism.
I think it's brilliant, personally.
 *
  
 
Lots of readers have  written in to say they are sure that Michael Barone is Catholic by upbringing. I  haven't been able to find anything on Google on the question, one way or  another. Can you? Remember, being Italian is not absolute proof of Catholicism.
NYC mayor Fiorello LaGuardia,  for example, was an Episcopalian with an Italian father and Jewish mother. No  wonder he was such a political powerhouse in NYC!
Here is  Barone discussing his ancestors and schooling in detail. He mentions his Irish  Catholic grandmother, but not the religion of his Sicilian ancestors. He  attended a public school and elite (i.e., non-parochial) private schools.
 
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer