This point needs some elaboration. Every demonstration directed toward the government has to carry with it a threat. In a democracy, the threat is that we will turn the incumbent government out. In a parliamentary democracy, there is the additional threat that we will bring the government down in mid-term and replace it with a government led by the opposition. It is not clear if Israel was ever a democracy. It is not really a democracy today. The media, the courts, the Histadrut, the universities, the banking and capital system and the intellectual elite in general, serve the post-Zionists as slavishly as Pravda ever served Stalin. Those institutions function to ensure democracy only when the government is led by the Jewish nationalists: the Zionists. The army and the police have also been thoroughly politicized to serve the post-Zionists.
In such circumstances, the threat can only be that the violence of the police will be met with massive violence by the public. The Arabs have prevailed over the government and the army because they have not hesitated to employ massive violence and to pit their own willingness to suffer casualties and imprisonment against the willingness of the Israeli soldiers and police to do the same and to suffer the universal opprobrium in the media and the diplomatic corps. If Jews in Israel are unwilling to do that, then there is no point in demonstrations directed toward the government. Rather, all demonstrations must be directed toward the public at large.
We would emphasize, therefore, the need for dignity, probity and substance in these activities. Our weapons are truth and the patriotic love of our country and our people. The goal of this activity is to reach and persuade the population, not to alienate it by being hateful or undignified. Neighborhood seminars and meetings, for example, sponsored by local residents can be effective in combating the sense of alienation from the demonstrators. Speakers should be introduced by the resident who invited that speaker. The face to face campaigns launched by the “Orange” resistance to the expulsion from Gush Katif and northern Shomron were highly effective. The goal is not to radicalize and exploit and that should be readily apparent.