Showing posts with label Derechology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Derechology. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Note:I am writing as a Jewish thinker, not a Christian theologian. I am not arguing from within the Christian tradition about how it should read its own sources. I am arguing from outside — using a philosophical framework rooted in Jewish ethical methodology — that the theological genre examined here fails by standards universal to moral reasoning, standards that the strongest elements of Christian moral thought itself affirms. Where this essay engages Christian theology, it does so analytically, not confessionally.


The Uncontested Ground

A new theological genre has emerged in the wake of Gaza, and it has largely gone unanswered on the terrain that matters most.

Books like Christ in the Rubble by Munther Isaac, Being Christian After the Desolation of Gaza, and the anthology Theology After Gaza are not simply political critiques wrapped in religious language. They constitute a coherent theological system, with its own internal logic, its own epistemology, and its own account of what Christian faithfulness requires. Taken together, they represent a serious intellectual project, and they deserve a serious intellectual response.

They have not received one.

Christian Zionism, which is the natural constituency for a counter-argument, has largely responded to this genre by retreating to biblical geography. The land was promised, the return was prophesied, the restoration of Israel fulfills scripture. These arguments may be compelling within their own tradition, but against opponents who are arguing about justice and the prophetic tradition's concern for the oppressed, scripture-based Zionism is not playing the same game. It concedes the entire moral-reasoning space by default. Palestinian Christian theology has effectively occupied the moral high ground not because its arguments are sound, but because its opponents have declined to contest them on those terms.

That is the gap this essay attempts to fill.

The framework I am drawing on is Derechology, a system of moral reasoning I have been developing as a form of "moral engineering," applying structural insights from Jewish ethical methodology to construct universal, secular moral analysis. It is not a Jewish theology. It is a method, and methods can be used by anyone. My claim is that this framework can do what Christian Zionism has failed to do: engage Palestinian Christian theology on its own chosen terrain — moral reasoning, prophetic justice, and the ethics of violence — and demonstrate that its conclusions do not follow from the premises it uses to reach them.

I submit that Gaza theology replaces structured moral reasoning with a system in which suffering determines moral truth, moral categories are collapsed into one another, and conclusions are fixed in advance. This produces emotionally compelling but analytically unreliable moral judgments, and it does so not despite claiming the prophetic tradition but by systematically dismantling the analytical tools that tradition requires.


What Gaza Theology Is Actually Doing

The books in this genre are emotionally powerful, and the emotion is not fraudulent. Their authors have witnessed genuine suffering. Munther Isaac is a Palestinian Christian pastor who has ministered in Bethlehem while Gaza was bombed. The suffering of Gazans is real. A serious response cannot dismiss it, and this one will not. For the record: a framework that defended Israeli conduct categorically, without applying the same standards of scrutiny this essay demands of its opponents, would fail the identical test applied here.

But moral authority and emotional authority are not the same thing. The most consequential move in Gaza theology is not the reporting of suffering: it is the theological interpretation of what suffering proves. And that interpretation is where careful analysis must begin.

Across all three books, a single foundational axiom operates: moral authority resides with the victim. The framing in Isaac's book is explicit, that the divine presence is located with those under the rubble,  meaning not merely that God is present with the suffering (a theologically defensible claim with deep roots in the tradition) but that the victim's perspective generates moral truth. Suffering does not merely witness to tragedy; it testifies to guilt.

This is a significant claim. It is largely unargued but rather presupposed. And once presupposed, it does enormous downstream work: moral authority is relocated away from doctrine, law, and structured reasoning, and into the experience of those who suffer. The practical consequence is that disagreement with the victim's narrative becomes morally illegitimate rather than factually contestable: not an error to be corrected but a form of complicity to be condemned. Questioning the framework's conclusions does not invite rebuttal; it triggers indictment. This is not a feature of robust moral reasoning. It is a sign that the framework has foreclosed the inquiry it claims to be conducting.


The Epistemic Problem: Claims as Axioms

Jewish ethical tradition insists on emet — the obligation to truth — as a precondition for moral reasoning, not a byproduct of it. Of course, this is not a specifically Jewish insight; it is shared across traditions. The commandment against bearing false witness is foundational to the Hebrew Bible that Christians read as their own scripture. The prophetic literature is filled with condemnations of dishonest scales, of those who call evil good and good evil, of testimony that serves predetermined conclusions. Any framework claiming continuity with this tradition must audit its own factual premises before proceeding.

Gaza theology does not do this. It proceeds axiomatically.

Consider the term "genocide." In Theology After Gaza, it appears in the preface as settled fact — not a charge to be established but a characterization already in place. Genocide, legally and morally, requires demonstrated intent to destroy a people as such. The Genocide Convention does not define genocide as high civilian casualties in urban warfare. It does not define it as disproportionate force, collective punishment, or ethnic cleansing. It requires specific intent — dolus specialis — directed at the destruction of a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group as a group.

Whether that intent can be demonstrated in Israel's conduct in Gaza is a factual and legal question. It is not answered by casualty figures, no matter how high. It is not answered by quoting politicians making statements about destroying Hamas. It requires sustained evidentiary analysis of military targeting decisions, command structures, stated objectives, and patterns of action — analysis that distinguished legal bodies have conducted and contested without consensus. 

Gaza theology treats this question as closed.

This closure has a diagnostic consequence worth making explicit. A moral framework is falsifiable when there exists some possible evidence that could revise its conclusions. Ask of this framework: what Israeli action, conducted under the same conditions of ongoing Hamas attack, tunnel infrastructure, hostage crisis, and explicit genocidal intent from the other side, would not constitute evidence of genocide within this system? If the answer is that no such action exists — that the conclusion is entrenched regardless of what evidence might show — then the framework is not a moral analysis. It is a verdict with supporting documentation assembled afterward. Israel's policies of warning to the population to move out of harm's way, of facilitating thousands of tons of food and aid into Gaza during active hostilities, of pausing campaigns to allow vaccine distribution and hundreds of other examples, are either ignored or twisted by Israel's critics as more evidence of atrocities. The unfalsifiability is not incidental; it follows directly from locating moral authority in suffering rather than in structured evaluation of acts and intentions.

A methodologically rigorous audit asks: what definition (of genocide, of apartheid, of occupation, of colonialism) is being used? Is it stable? Is it applied consistently? Would the same standard, applied to comparable situations, produce comparable conclusions? These are the minimum conditions for moral reasoning rather than moral performance.


The Category Problem: Fusing What Must Be Distinguished

The most consequential analytical failure in Gaza theology is what might be called category fusion — the collapse of four morally distinct phenomena into a single moral object.

War involves organized armed conflict between parties with recognized combatants and rules governing conduct. Atrocity refers to specific violations of those rules: targeting civilians, torture, execution of prisoners. Structural injustice describes ongoing systemic conditions — occupation, discrimination, unequal legal treatment — that exist apart from active combat. Genocide is a legal category with a specific intent requirement.

These categories are related but not interchangeable. A war can be just even if it contains atrocities. Structural injustice can exist without genocide. Atrocities do not automatically constitute genocide. The legal and moral consequences of each category differ dramatically. (Whether Israel is guilty of atrocities or structural injustice are separate questions requiring separate analysis — neither, in any case, implies genocide.)

In the Gaza theology genre, these categories are merged. Once merged, any evidence of one becomes evidence of all. High civilian casualties — a feature of any urban warfare, especially when one party embeds combatants in civilian infrastructure — become evidence of genocidal intent. The existence of the blockade, a structural policy meant to protect Israeli civilians, is folded into evidence of elimination. October 7th is described as contextualized, reactive violence arising from oppression. Israeli military responses are described as colonial elimination. One side's violence is categorized as structural; the other's as atrocity. Crucially, neither categorization is argued, they are assumed.

This category fusion has a specific logical consequence beyond unfalsifiability: it makes the framework incapable of distinguishing better from worse conduct. If all Israeli military action is genocide by definition, then there is no meaningful moral difference between a strike that kills twenty civilians and one that kills two thousand, between targeting a Hamas commander and targeting a hospital, between a war fought with discriminating means and one fought without them. Moral categories exist precisely to make these distinctions. A framework that erases them cannot guide conduct. It can only pronounce verdicts.

The Christian traditions that Palestinian theologians draw on are not uniform on the ethics of war . Just War theory, developed in the Western Latin tradition by Augustine and Aquinas, is not universally accepted across Christendom. Eastern Orthodox Christianity, the tradition of a substantial portion of Palestinian Christians, has historically taken a more morally austere position: that killing in war, even when unavoidable, carries moral cost requiring penitential response. That tradition, if taken seriously, demands more rigorous analysis of how wars begin, who sustains them, and who bears responsibility for their conditions, not less. The categorical precision that Gaza theology abandons is not a Western imposition. It is what serious moral reasoning about violence requires, regardless of tradition.

Palestinian Christian theology claims the prophetic mantle while dismantling the analytical tools that prophetic justice requires.


Suffering, Agency, and the Prophetic Tradition

The liberation theology tradition from which Gaza theology draws its strongest arguments contains genuine insight. Its insistence that theology must not float free of material conditions — that a gospel indifferent to poverty, displacement, and political oppression is an impoverished gospel — has real roots in the Hebrew prophets, in Amos and Micah and Isaiah. To acknowledge this is not to concede the argument. It is to engage it honestly.

But liberation theology's core claim, that the locus of moral authority shifts toward the suffering, requires examination it rarely receives. There is a crucial distinction between saying that God is present with those who suffer and saying that those who suffer occupy a privileged epistemic position from which moral truth is generated. The first is a claim about solidarity. The second is a claim about who gets to define reality. The Gaza theology books consistently move from the first claim to the second without acknowledging that they have done so.

The Hebrew prophetic tradition, which Isaac invokes extensively, does not support this move. Amos condemns Israel for its treatment of the poor. But the poor in Amos are not exempt from moral analysis by virtue of their poverty. The widow, the orphan, the stranger — protected categories throughout the Hebrew Bible — are protected because of their vulnerability, not because vulnerability confers moral infallibility. The prophets address all parties as moral agents capable of faithfulness and sin, not as pure vessels of divine testimony insulated from evaluation.

There is a deeper problem. Gaza theology's reduction of Palestinian identity to victimhood is, paradoxically, a form of dehumanization. It removes agency. It renders the question of Hamas's stated intentions, Hamas's military tactics, Hamas's governance of Gaza, Hamas's explicit theological commitment to the elimination of Israel, and the documented participation of thousands of non-Hamas Palestinian civilians in the October 7 massacre, largely irrelevant to the moral conclusions the books reach. To take those questions seriously is to treat Palestinians as agents rather than as sufferers, which the framework cannot accommodate without disrupting its own architecture.

A moral framework that functionally exempts one party from analysis is not a framework for justice. It is a framework for a verdict already reached.


The Pursuer: Restoring a Missing Variable

Jewish law has long developed the concept of the rodef — the pursuer. The principle addresses a problem that moral philosophy in every tradition must eventually confront: what obligations arise when someone is not merely threatening harm as a single act, but is on a sustained trajectory toward it? The rodef is distinguished from the ordinary aggressor precisely by this trajectory, the ongoing direction of movement toward lethal harm that creates continuing moral urgency, increasing with every moment of inaction.

The reason to introduce this concept here is not to import a specifically Jewish legal category into a Christian debate. It is to name a variable that Gaza theology's framework structurally omits, and whose omission makes reliable moral evaluation of this conflict impossible.

Any serious moral analysis of the use of force must account for sustained lethal trajectory. The question is not only what happened in a specific strike or operation but what ongoing intention and capacity the force was responding to. This maps onto what multiple Christian traditions recognize as the problem of the unjust aggressor — the party whose ongoing threat to others creates legitimate grounds for intervention. What the rodef concept contributes is precision about trajectory rather than episode: the moral situation is created not merely by a completed act but by a sustained direction of movement that continues unless interrupted. Omit this variable and you cannot correctly evaluate the use of force. You can only evaluate its outcomes, which is not the same thing.

Gaza theology's framework omits this variable entirely. October 7th is described as the opening of "the genocide," contextualizing the massacre of 1,200 civilians — many tortured, many burned alive, many taken hostage — as a response to prior Israeli oppression. Even granting the political context, this framing treats October 7th as an episode arising from conditions rather than the expression of a sustained, institutionally embedded, explicitly articulated intent to destroy.

Hamas's founding documents call for the destruction of Israel and the killing of Jews. They are still in force, despite the 2017 revised document that softened some language. Hamas officials stated after October 7th that the operation was intended to be the first of many. Hamas's tunnel infrastructure — built under hospitals, schools, and civilian housing — represents a structural decision, made deliberately, to embed military assets within civilian populations. Under the laws of war and under basic ethical reasoning, moral responsibility for resulting civilian casualties rests primarily with the party that creates the shield, not the party that must confront it.

These factors do not play a meaningful role in the moral conclusions the books under examination reach. Hamas is not seriously evaluated as a moral agent with a record and a trajectory. Its governance of Gaza — including the execution of political opponents, suppression of civil society, and systematic diversion of humanitarian resources to military construction — does not inform the framework's judgments. Its explicit theological commitment to annihilationist war is not analyzed as a relevant variable. The omission is structural — the framework cannot incorporate this variable without collapsing the architecture that produces its conclusions.

Restoring the concept of sustained lethal trajectory does not predetermine the analysis. It opens it. It insists that all parties be evaluated as moral agents with intentions, capacities, and directions of movement. It asks whether there is an ongoing trajectory of violence that creates continuing moral urgency — a question that has an answer in this conflict, an answer that the Gaza theology genre is structurally prevented from seeing.


The Double Standard as Theological Method

The internal contradiction at the heart of Gaza theology is not incidental. It is structural, and it reveals itself most clearly in the response to October 7th.

Any moral framework is valid only if it applies identical evaluative standards to all agents. This is the minimum definition of a standard rather than a preference. Gaza theology fails it systematically, and the failure operates in both directions simultaneously: Israeli violence is evaluated without the context that might complicate condemnation, while Palestinian violence is contextualized in ways that functionally dissolve condemnation before it can form.

Consider how each side's violence is treated within the framework. Israeli military action is evaluated in isolation from the threats that produce it. The hostage crisis, the documented Hamas use of civilian infrastructure as military cover, the sustained trajectory of genocidal intent articulated in Hamas's own words — none of these factors play a meaningful role in the moral analysis. What plays a role is the outcome: Palestinian civilians died, therefore Israel committed an atrocity, therefore the theological verdict is condemnation. Context for Israeli action is not merely underweighted. It is structurally excluded.

Palestinian violence receives precisely the opposite treatment. The Kairos Palestine document, the foundational text of this theological movement, does not merely acknowledge Palestinian violence; it constructs a causal argument that transfers moral responsibility for it entirely to Israel. "If there were no occupation, there would be no resistance, no fear and no insecurity," the document states, presenting Palestinian violence not as the chosen acts of moral agents but as the mechanical outputs of Israeli input. Under this logic, Palestinian violence has no independent moral standing requiring evaluation. It is Israel's responsibility by definition, before any specific act is examined.

The October 7th massacre made this structural double standard impossible to conceal. Munther Isaac delivered a sermon the day after the massacre that described it in terms of Palestinian endurance — framing the murder of 1,200 civilians around "the strength of the Palestinian man who defied his siege." Later, under significant pressure, he offered a more qualified position: "What happened on 7 October was evil. No one can approve the murder and abduction of civilians and children. But I refuse to ignore the context. What happened on 7 October was the desperate act of people who have known nothing other than the siege of Gaza." 

The structure of that statement repays close attention. The condemnation is entered, then immediately bracketed by context — context that, within the framework's own logic, explains and therefore partially dissolves the moral weight of the act. That same contextual generosity is nowhere operative when Israeli military actions are evaluated. Israeli operations are not described as responses from people who have known nothing but rocket fire, tunnel infiltration, and the sustained genocidal declarations of their neighbors. Israeli context does not soften Israeli verdicts. Palestinian context dissolves Palestinian verdicts. The asymmetry is total and operates in both directions simultaneously.

The 2025 Kairos II document, issued more than two years after October 7th with full knowledge of what the massacre involved, confirms that this asymmetry is not a temporary failure of nerve but a settled theological position. It reaffirms "the right of all colonized peoples to resist their colonizers,"  framing resistance as simultaneously a political right and a theological calling. While including a caveat against civilian killings, the document consistently portrays resistance not merely as a political response but as a faith-driven act rooted in divine calling and religious conscience.  The caveat against civilian deaths is formal. The sanctification of resistance is substantive. When the two conflict — as they did on October 7th — the framework's actual priorities are visible.

This double standard is load-bearing to Gaza theology. Remove it and the framework cannot reach its conclusions, because those conclusions depend on applying maximum scrutiny to Israeli actions while granting structural exemption to Palestinian ones. Apply the same standard in both directions — evaluate both sides' violence in light of the threats each faces, the alternatives each had, the stated intentions each holds, and the moral agency each exercises — and the predetermined verdict dissolves. What remains is a genuine moral inquiry that might produce genuinely complicated conclusions. That, precisely, is what the framework is designed to prevent.

The test is simple: would the same contextual generosity extended to Hamas operatives carrying out October 7th be extended to Israeli military planners responding to ongoing attack, documented genocidal intent, and a hostage crisis? If not — if context humanizes one party while the other's context is structurally irrelevant — then what is being practiced is not ethics. It is weaponized false morality.

The prophetic tradition these books claim as their inheritance was not a tradition of selective indignation. Amos condemned Israel. Jeremiah condemned Judah. The prophets did not exempt their own people from moral analysis on grounds of historical suffering or national solidarity. The standard was consistent precisely because consistency was what made it a standard rather than a preference. Gaza theology, for all its prophetic self-presentation, does not meet the prophets' own test.


On Repentance: The Correct Order of Operations

The books in this genre conclude, consistently, with a call to repentance. Western Christians must repent of their complicity. The Church must reckon with its support for Zionism. The demand is urgent, the language searing.

The Jewish concept of teshuvah — repentance, literally "returning" — is among the most morally serious acts available to human beings. Christian theology has a direct parallel in the Greek concept of metanoia,  the change of mind and direction that stands at the center of the New Testament's moral vocabulary. Both traditions agree on the essential structure: genuine repentance is a complete turning, grounded in honest reckoning with what one has actually done, oriented toward genuine correction. It is not a performance. It is not the expression of solidarity with a cause. It is moral transformation, and both traditions insist that it must be rooted in truth to be real.

This is precisely why false repentance is not a virtue in either tradition. It is a corruption of the concept. To repent on the basis of a false account of what occurred is to perform the form of moral seriousness while evacuating its content. The Hebrew Bible is explicit on the related question of moral responsibility: accountability attaches to the specific acts of specific persons, not to inherited guilt or associative complicity. To demand that Western Christians repent for Israel's conduct on the basis of confessional solidarity — because many Christians support Israel — attributes guilt by association rather than by act. The prophetic tradition that Gaza theology invokes consistently repudiates exactly that move.

More fundamentally, the call to repentance in these books arrives before the moral work that would justify it. Casualty figures are cited not as data to be analyzed but as proof of what has already been decided. Expert claims — genocide, apartheid, ethnic cleansing — are treated not as conclusions to be argued but as premises from which to reason. The demand for repentance precedes rather than follows the establishment of truth, judgment, and responsibility.

In both Jewish and Christian moral understanding, the correct sequence runs in one direction only: truth, then judgment, then responsibility, then repentance. Gaza theology reverses this entirely. A call to repentance that bypasses truth is not moral seriousness. In the very prophetic tradition it claims to represent, it bears a closer resemblance to the false prophecy that tradition consistently and forcefully condemns.

The Gaza theology call to repentance is not a desire to improve oneself; it is a call to condemn fellow Christians under the pretense of religious imperative.


What This Framework Offers

This is not a defense of every Israeli military decision in Gaza.  Specific targeting choices, specific civilian casualty events, specific policy decisions can and should be evaluated on their merits by anyone willing to apply consistent standards. A framework that insists on methodological rigor applies that insistence to all parties, without exception and without predetermined conclusions.

What this analysis contests is the methodological structure Gaza theology uses to reach its conclusions — a structure that treats contested legal categories as settled facts, collapses morally distinct phenomena into a single object of condemnation, locates moral authority in suffering rather than in reasoned evaluation, functionally exempts one party from analysis, applies context asymmetrically in both directions, and demands repentance before establishing truth. These are not failures specific to writing about Gaza. They are failures of method that would corrupt any moral analysis to which they were applied.

Christian Zionism has not made this argument adequately, because it has been fighting on the wrong terrain, defending the legitimacy of Jewish sovereignty through scripture rather than defending the integrity of moral reasoning against its methodological opponents. Palestinian Christian theology has been permitted to claim the high ground of justice and prophetic tradition largely uncontested, while its actual methods have gone unexamined.

The concepts required for that examination are available across traditions. The obligation to truth that Jewish tradition calls emet is the same obligation enshrined in the commandment against false witness that both traditions share. The repentance that Jewish tradition calls teshuvah and Christian tradition calls metanoia both insist that genuine moral turning is grounded in truth, not performed ahead of it. The concept of the sustained lethal trajectory that Jewish law names with precision maps onto what multiple Christian traditions recognize as the unjust aggressor whose ongoing threat creates legitimate grounds for intervention. These are parallel developments from overlapping moral intuitions, and they are available to anyone willing to use them consistently.

The derechological contribution is to insist that these tools actually be deployed — honestly, symmetrically, and without predetermined conclusions. Not as an attack on compassion, which is genuine and morally required, but as a defense of the analytical conditions under which compassion can produce reliable moral judgments rather than misdirected ones. Mourning Palestinian civilian deaths is not only compatible with this framework; it is required by it. What the framework refuses is the move from mourning to verdict without the analytical work that the distance between those two things demands.

A grief that mistakes itself for a verdict is not justice. It is sorrow with a predetermined conclusion — and both the tradition these books invoke and the people whose suffering they describe deserve better than that.




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Monday, March 16, 2026

Integralism is back. 

You may not have heard the word, but you've seen its effects — in the post-liberal intellectual movement, in the Heritage Foundation's ideological realignment, in the network of thinkers who've concluded that liberal democracy doesn't just need reform, it needs replacement.

Integralism is not a new idea. It emerged from 19th and early 20th century European Catholic political thought, where traditionalist thinkers argued that civil governments had an obligation to operate under the authority of the Church — that the liberal separation of church and state was not a neutral arrangement but an active political error, a usurpation of the proper order of things. Its most visible expressions were associated with authoritarian regimes in Spain, Portugal, and Latin America. After the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s, the Church itself moved toward affirming religious liberty, which put official Church teaching at odds with integralism's core claims. The ideology retreated to the margins of academic theology, where it remained for decades.

The revival began quietly around 2012, when Oxford philosopher Thomas Pink argued that the Church had never actually abandoned its pre-conciliar political theology — that Vatican II had been misread. By the mid-2010s a small group of American academics had developed a modern version of the argument. The leading figures were Adrian Vermeule, a Harvard constitutional law professor; Patrick Deneen, a Notre Dame political theorist; Chad Pecknold, a theologian at Catholic University; and journalist Sohrab Ahmari. Their online home was a website called The Josias, where integralist political theory was developed and debated in relative obscurity.

Then the political disruption of the 2016 Trump election created a new audience for root-cause critiques of liberal democracy. Deneen's 2018 book Why Liberalism Failed became a significant seller in conservative intellectual circles. At this point the movement made a strategic decision: change the name. "Integralism" carried historical associations with European fascism and antisemitism that made it politically toxic in an American context. The movement's own leaders documented the transition, experimenting with "political Catholicism" and "Christian realism" before settling on "postliberalism" — a label that described what they opposed rather than what they proposed, and sounded considerably less radical. By 2021, Vermeule, Deneen, and their allies had completed the rebrand with a Substack newsletter called Postliberal Order.

Not every postliberal is an integralist. Postliberalism is a wider tent, encompassing Protestant nationalists, Orbán admirers, and various critics of liberal proceduralism who have no particular commitment to Catholic political theology. But a significant wing of American postliberalism overlaps with or descends directly from integralist arguments, even when it avoids the label. And that wing has acquired institutional weight. When Kevin Roberts, the newly appointed president of the Heritage Foundation, attended the 2021 National Conservatism conference and publicly aligned Heritage with the national conservative movement — reversing Heritage's own position from two years earlier — it signaled that this tendency had moved from academic journals to the commanding heights of American conservative institutions.

The diagnosis these thinkers offer is serious and deserves a serious answer. Liberal proceduralism, they argue, was never truly neutral. It embedded substantive commitments about autonomy, about the bracketing of transcendence from public life, about the priority of rights over duties — and then pretended those commitments were just the absence of commitments. The resulting society didn't stay neutral. It dissolved. Family breakdown, opioid deaths, pornography as a mass medium, institutional distrust at historic highs: integralists look at all of this and say liberalism did this, and patching liberalism won't fix it.

They're not entirely wrong about the problem. The problem is their solution. 

Their solution is a specific theological-political hierarchy: God, Church, State, Citizens. The state enforces moral order defined by the Church. Authority flows downward. Legitimacy is doctrinal. Correction, when it comes, comes from ecclesiastical hierarchy.

Any moral-political system needs an internal mechanism to recognize when its own principles are being used to justify persecution, scapegoating, or civic degradation — and that mechanism must function without relying on the goodwill of its current leaders. Call this the correction standard. It isn't a bar any particular system is guaranteed to clear. But any system that cannot clear it is not a moral order. It's an enforcement order waiting for the wrong enforcer.

I have pointed out that antisemitism is a metric to measure the morality of systems. Any political, moral or social system that allow antisemitism is not a moral system, by definition. The hatred of Jews or Judaism or the Jewish nation has been rationalized by sophisticated thinkers across centuries. It has attached itself to high-minded frameworks and emerged from them looking like a conclusion rather than a crime. 

That makes antisemitism uniquely diagnostic. A system that cannot identify why antisemitism is wrong at a structural level — not merely inconvenient, not merely regrettable, but a reasoning failure detectable from within the system's own principles — will also fail to identify other forms of systematic moral distortion. Antisemitism is the stress test precisely because it is so old, so elaborate, and so persistent. Pass it and your correction mechanism is real. Fail it and you've told us something important.

Integralism, unfortunately, fails it structurally.

Classic integralism places Catholic doctrinal authority at the apex of the political order. Jews are, by definition, outside that hierarchy. The best integralism has historically offered Jews is toleration as a subordinate category — the Augustinian "witness people" doctrine, permitted to exist in Christian society in permanently diminished civic status as living proof of the Old Testament's authenticity. That isn't protection from antisemitism. That is antisemitism, in theological dress.

The integralist regimes of the 19th and early 20th century didn't drift into antisemitism despite their principles. They expressed it through their principles. The framework contains no internal audit, no correction mechanism, no appeals process outside the hierarchy itself — which is to say, outside the historical source of the problem.

Modern integralists like Vermeule and Deneen don't espouse explicit antisemitism, and some actively disavow it. But good intentions are not a structural safeguard. Consider what has happened in the broader postliberal space. Candace Owens, who converted to Catholicism and has been warmly received in integralist-adjacent Catholic media, has made statements about Jews and Israel that are antisemitic by any rigorous definition. Tucker Carlson has platformed explicitly antisemitic voices, used demographic replacement rhetoric, and drifted toward treating Jewish institutional influence as a legitimate political grievance. 

Serious integralist thinkers would say these figures represent a hijacking — that they don't understand post-liberal ideas and shouldn't be held against them. But that response misidentifies the problem. The issue is not whether Owens and Carlson are integralist theorists. They aren't. The issue is that a movement explicitly claiming to restore moral order has shown no robust internal capacity to identify or repel antisemitic drift among adjacent allies — not when that drift serves broader anti-liberal goals, not when it's popular, not when calling it out is costly. That is not a hijacking problem; it is a correction mechanism problem. A framework that can be steered toward the oldest civilizational pathology in Western history, without its own principles generating an alarm, has told us everything we need to know about how it would function with state power behind it.

So where does that leave the right? It is philosophically exposed. 

The traditional conservative answer — call it fusionism — holds that free markets, limited government, and religious faith naturally reinforce each other, producing what its advocates called "ordered liberty": a society where people are free because their families, churches, and communities have formed them into people capable of governing themselves. It's an appealing vision. Yet integralists point to fifty years of family breakdown, addiction, and cultural dissolution and ask what exactly got ordered. The vision assumed its supporting institutions would remain healthy without political protection. They didn't.

A more sophisticated conservative answer draws on the political philosophy embedded in the American Founding — the idea that the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution already contain a moral order grounded in natural law, the self-evident truths that governments exist to protect rights inherent to human beings as such. This is more robust than simple fusionism because it doesn't depend on economic outcomes. But integralists mount a serious counterargument: the Founders' natural law was a product of Enlightenment rationalism, which is philosophically thinner than the centuries-deep tradition of Catholic moral theology going back to Aquinas. And the practical evidence is hard to dismiss — the Founders' framework has demonstrably failed to reproduce itself culturally across generations.

A third answer, Protestant nationalism, says integralism is a foreign import — that American Christianity is evangelical and biblical, not Catholic and hierarchical, and that restoring Christian moral culture doesn't require taking orders from Rome. This has real political force as a coalition argument. As a philosophical response to integralism it falls short, because it doesn't actually refute integralism's core challenge. It just asserts a different Christian preference.

None of these answer the question integralism is actually asking: where do the values that sustain a free society come from, and what do you do when they erode?

At this point, most people assume there are only two options: ground morality in God and religious authority (and fight out exactly which version of God and religion is the one people must follow), or accept the secular drift that integralists correctly diagnose as catastrophic. That is a false binary, and accepting it is what leaves the right philosophically defenseless.

The Enlightenment tried to derive morality from reason alone and produced frameworks too thin to sustain themselves culturally. But that failure doesn't mean the project is impossible. It means that particular attempt was insufficient. Rigorous moral reasoning doesn't require either divine authority at the top or secular relativism at the bottom. The assumption that it must produce one or the other is itself the error. There is a third path: moral reasoning that is transparent, auditable, pluralism-respecting, and capable of identifying its own failures — not because God commands it or because secular consensus endorses it, but because the reasoning holds and can be shown to hold.

What would that require? A framework in which authority comes from demonstrated coherence rather than institutional position. A correction mechanism that doesn't depend on the hierarchy being virtuous. A structure that accommodates genuine moral pluralism without collapsing into relativism. And — this is the test — a set of principles from which antisemitism can be identified as a reasoning failure, not merely a political liability.

That is the framework I am working on.

That framework doesn't yet have a prominent place in the debate on the right. It needs one. Because the alternative is a choice between liberal proceduralism that cannot defend itself and a theocratic politics that has already shown us, repeatedly, where it leads.

Any philosophy that cannot structurally guard against antisemitism is not merely incomplete. It is, by definition, an immoral philosophy — because it has no reliable way to distinguish moral order from moral catastrophe. That's not a Jewish complaint. That's a philosophical indictment. And it applies with full force to the most intellectually serious attempt the right has yet produced to answer the civilizational crisis it has correctly identified.




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Wednesday, February 25, 2026


I have not written about philosophy here recently because I have been deep in the weeds of my Derechology project, trying to turn my thinking into an actual book. The deeper I get into it, the more I find my arguments demanding sharper foundations. So early in the book I find myself doing something that feels almost embarrassingly basic: asking what truth actually is.

My position is that truth is real but that humans cannot access it completely through reason alone, though we can approach it. In other words, I am trying to prove that we cannot prove anything.

Yes, I hear the circularity. Stay with me.

The most obviously true statement I can think of is 1+1=2. Everyone agrees on it. Children learn it before they can read. It is the foundation of every calculation ever made. If anything is provably true, surely this is.

But is it?

Within mathematics, arithmetic rests on a foundation of axioms, starting points that are simply asserted rather than derived from anything more fundamental. Every system has to start somewhere, and mathematics starts here. Within that axiomatic system, 1+1=2 can be proven with perfect rigor. But the axioms themselves are not proven. They are chosen because they are useful and because the system they generate is internally consistent. The proof of 1+1=2 is only as solid as the unprovable assertions underneath it.

It gets stranger. Even within mathematics, 1+1 does not always equal 2. In arithmetic modulo 2, where numbers wrap around when reaching 2, 1+1=0. This is not a curiosity: it is the mathematical foundation of every computer ever built. It is a perfectly consistent system that describes real phenomena accurately.

And if you imagine a planet where two objects placed together always produce a third, the mathematics of that planet is not as fanciful as it sounds. Abstract algebra, a standard branch of mathematics, gives us a completely rigorous framework called an isomorphic field where you can create a system where 1+1=3. Define addition as a⊕b = a+b+1 and adjust multiplication accordingly, and every rule of arithmetic you learned in school still holds perfectly: commutativity, associativity, distributivity, all of it. The system is internally coherent in exactly the same sense that standard arithmetic is. The only surprise is that in this system the conceptual zero, the number that leaves everything unchanged when you add it, turns out to be -1 rather than 0. The whole structure shifts, consistently, and keeps working.

This is not a mathematical party trick. It demonstrates something fundamental: consistency does not pick out a unique truth. You can build multiple, mutually inconsistent arithmetic systems that are each internally valid. Standard arithmetic is not the one true math because it is the only consistent option. It is the one we use because it maps most conveniently onto the physical world as we ordinarily experience it. The choice was always pragmatic, not absolute.

But, you might reasonably say, mathematics is abstract. Out here in the physical world, if I add one marble to another marble I have two marbles. That is not an axiom. That is just what I can see with my own eyes.

Is it?

Consider what we are actually assuming when we count two marbles. We are assuming that a marble is a discrete object with a stable identity, that it neither combines with nor subdivides from other objects when we are not watching, that “adding” means placing in proximity without any interaction that changes the objects, and that we are counting objects rather than, say, colors or masses. These are all reasonable assumptions. They are also all hidden.

Start making them visible and the arithmetic gets complicated fast.

One blue marble plus one red marble is two marbles. But it is also still one blue and one red. Which answer you give depends on what property you decided to count before you started.

One marble plus one car is two objects. But you are sitting in the car, and the car is sitting on the road, and the road is resting on the earth. If we are counting objects in the scene, why do the car and the marble count but not the road? Because you drew a boundary around the system before you started counting, and that boundary is a choice, not a discovery.

One marble plus one car with your adorable five-year-old as a recent passenger is two objects plus however many marbles are wedged between the cushions, plus the candies he stashed in the cupholder, plus the air freshener, plus the brake lights. If we are counting all the objects in the system, where does the system end? When you said “one marble plus one car equals two,” you had already smuggled in a decision about which objects count. The arithmetic came after the philosophy, not before it.

One water droplet plus one water droplet is one larger water droplet. The arithmetic simply does not apply because the objects do not maintain their identity through the operation. The hidden assumption that objects stay discrete was doing all the work.

And one rabbit plus one rabbit, given a few months and a suitable habitat, may be much more than two rabbits. The arithmetic was never wrong, exactly. It just pretended that objects are static snapshots rather than ongoing processes, which real physical objects never actually are. Every object is a river, not a rock, and 1+1=2 works by freezing the river long enough to count it. One biodegradable cup plus one Styrofoam cup plus time equals one cup.

In every case, the apparent certainty of 1+1=2 dissolved when we examined the assumptions holding it in place. None of those assumptions are unreasonable. Most of them are exactly right for most purposes. But they are assumptions, not foundations. The proof was always conditional on choices we made before we started counting.

And if this is true of 1+1=2, the most obvious truth imaginable, it is surely true of every other claim anyone has ever made.

This is not itself proof that nothing is provable, or I would be contradicting my own argument. But it is a strong indication that absolute truth is normally inaccessible to humans through reason alone. We reason within frameworks. Every framework rests on axioms. No axiom is self-proving. The turtles do not go all the way down. At some point there is just water.

This should be paralyzing but it is not, because we already know how to live with it.

1+1=2 is true enough to build space stations. Newtonian physics is false in the sense that Einstein corrected it, but it is true enough to design train schedules without worrying about relativistic effects. The question is never whether a framework gives you absolute certainty. The question is whether it gives you adequate accuracy for the domain and the stakes involved. We build on good-enough foundations because we have no other kind.

This matters for a lot more than mathematics. A significant strand of Western philosophy, going back to the Greeks, is built on the assumption that human reason can access complete truth directly, that by thinking hard enough and carefully enough we can arrive at foundations that need no further support. If that assumption is wrong, then everything built on it needs reexamination. Our epistemology, our ethics, our political theory, our institutional design: all of it looks different once you accept that the foundations are chosen rather than discovered, adequate rather than certain.

Here is the consequence I find most interesting, and the one I will develop in the next piece.

If we cannot know absolute truth, then the trivial definition of falsehood as “not truth” becomes unintelligible. We do not have a fixed point to measure distance from. This means we need a separate epistemology of falsehood, a way of identifying and eliminating the false that does not depend on first establishing the true.

It turns out that while truth is not provable, falsehood often is. And building that epistemology of falsehood is something I have been doing, without quite realizing it, for the past two decades, in the very different context of debunking lies about Israel. The tools turn out to be the same.

More on that next time.



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

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Tuesday, December 23, 2025

In the 1930s, the United States faced a real, system-level crisis. The Great Depression produced mass unemployment, widespread poverty, and genuine fear that the existing order could no longer provide stability or dignity. When people lose trust in a system because it has visibly failed them, they naturally search for alternatives. Often, those alternatives are extreme.

At the time, the most radical options gaining traction were Communist and fascist movements. Both promised certainty, moral clarity, and decisive action. Given what was known then, and how desperate circumstances were, many Americans found elements of those arguments disturbingly plausible. The language these movements used was not obviously monstrous. It sounded moral, patriotic, humanitarian, and urgent. 

Only in hindsight is the danger unmistakable.


Today, we are seeing similar extremes gain traction within both major political parties. On the left, radical movements frame politics almost entirely through appeals to social justice, power hierarchies, and moral urgency. On the right, radical movements frame politics through appeals to nationalism, civilizational decline, and suspicion of institutions. The emotional structure of the arguments is familiar.

But there is a decisive difference between the 1930s and today: we are not living through a depression-scale crisis.

America today has serious problems, but they are not existential. There is no mass starvation. There is no systemic unemployment. Elections are held. Courts function. The stock market has controls to minimize the risk of a catastrophic crash. Deposits at banks are insured. Information is widely available. By nearly every objective measure, Americans are as prosperous, safe, and empowered as any population in history. That does not mean the system is perfect or just. But the system is functioning fairly well. 

So why are the extremes growing?

Because this time, the crisis is not the cause. It is the product.

Modern extremism depends on manufacturing a sense of catastrophe in order to justify radical solutions. Ordinary political disagreement is reframed as civilizational collapse. Institutional friction is labeled oppression. Incremental reform is dismissed as complicity. Everything is urgent. Everything is existential. And everything demands suspension of normal constraints.

America is not uniquely terrible - on the contrary, it remains, today, the greatest country on Earth. But extreme ideologies cannot survive without the perception of imminent disaster. So they use their platforms to convince the American people that things are on the verge of collapse and they are the only solution. 

This is fundamentally anti-American,.

The American system is built on a civic covenant. It assumes equal opportunity under the law, no religious establishment, the dignity of work, and the belief that individuals can improve their lives through effort within a shared framework. This vision was never perfect, and it was partly aspirational. But it was true enough to encourage responsibility, honesty, innovation, and unity across differences.

The extremes reject this American covenant.

On the far right, liberty is hollowed out into loyalty, institutions are treated as legitimate only when aligned, and minorities or dissenters are framed as threats. On the far left, justice is transformed into moral absolutism, disagreement becomes harm, and power is justified by outcomes rather than consent. In different ways, both sides abandon the American idea that legitimacy flows from process, pluralism, and correction over time. The idea of "We the People" does not exist on the extremes - on both sides, the people are pawns to be endlessly manipulated with propaganda and scare tactics. 

The choice is not right vs. left. It is whether America will be governed by reality or by falsehood.

Historically, extremist ideologies succeed not because they are persuasive on the merits, but because they share a common structural flaw: They are unfalsifiable. This means that no amount of evidence can disprove the ideologies - every shred of evidence is twisted into proof. Think about how climate change was used to explain both extreme heat and extreme cold: facts were twisted to fit the ideology, not the other way around. And the same applies to QAnon style conspiracy theories; no actual events can ever disprove the theory.

When an ideology cannot be meaningfully tested, corrected, or challenged from within, it ceases to be a political philosophy and becomes a closed system. Evidence against it is reinterpreted as proof of conspiracy. Dissent becomes betrayal. Institutions are delegitimized rather than improved. At that point, persuasion is replaced by enforcement.

This is where my Derechology falsification audit becomes useful. This identifies load bearing assumptions of the ideologies; if they are false the ideologies themselves are false.

On the far-Left, the load bearing assumption is that everyone is either oppressor or oppressed. For some it is boss/worker, for others it is white people/people of color, and for yet others it is colonizer/colonized. This binary is never true and without that assumption the entire edifice collapses.

On the far-Right, the load bearing assumptions is that America was meant to be a Christian country, or that the only workable moral system is Christianity. Neither of those are true. 

In both cases, the ideology becomes immune to correction. That is the danger.

Every major political party faces the same dilemma: how to remain inclusive without being captured by extremists. The usual approaches fail. Either the tent is so wide that it admits corrosive ideas, or boundaries are enforced arbitrarily and politically.

The falsification audit offers a third option.

Political winds shift - the definition of conservatism or liberalism has changed over the decades. A Reagan Republican is not the same as a Bush Republican or a Trump Republican. I strongly disagree that America should abandon Israel, but the opinion itself (if it is based on legitimate assumptions) does not fail this audit for the Right, at least in theory. 

Here are some rules that can be offered for both parties to reject opinions that are based on falsehoods.

If an opinion cannot be challenged without moral condemnation, cannot be disproven by evidence, treats disagreement as illegitimate and requires a permanent crisis to justify itself, then that  opinion is not to be considered. This allows and encourages debate among the valid positions within a party. It allows good faith debates between the Right and the Left. 

Foreign adversaries understand how damaging extreme partisanship is. They do not need to persuade Americans of alternative ideologies. They only need to amplify crisis narratives, erode trust in correction mechanisms, and reward the loudest extremes. That strategy works only when internal guardrails fail.

The solution is not moderation for its own sake, which cannot be clearly defined. It is epistemic discipline.

Ideas that cannot be tested cannot build. Movements that reject correction cannot endure. And political parties that cannot distinguish legitimate opinion  from propaganda will eventually collapse under their own contradictions. The particular ideologies are not nearly as important as the structure behind them - can they adapt to reality, are they corrigible, can they be defended on their own merits.

The future of America is at stake. 




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

  • Tuesday, December 16, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon


(This Chanukah thought is heavily based on my work on extracting Jewish wisdom for today's world, which I am calling Derechology.)

The Chanukah menorah is not only a lesson in the miracle of the oil. It is a lesson about how the world should be.

Greek philosophy, from which all Western philosophy is based, treats light as the primary metaphor for good and truth: knowledge is illumination, ignorance is darkness, and once truth is fully seen, order is expected to follow naturally.

Judaism approaches light very differently.

The Chanukah lights are not one large torch, but multiple distinct flames. This mirrors Creation itself: the first thing God did after creating light was to separate it from darkness. Light alone was not enough. God imposed structure around it.

Greek “holiness” (aretē, excellence) is about perfection, maximization, and the fullest realization of an essence.

Jewish kedushah is fundamentally different. As Rashi defines it, kedushah means separation - and as Ramban explains, restraint even within what is permitted.

Greek ethics seeks the fullest expression of capacity. Jewish ethics sanctifies the withholding of capacity.

This difference becomes concrete in halacha. According to Jewish law, the lights of the menorah may not be used for any purpose other than to be seen. Each flame has its own role. Using them instrumentally invalidates the mitzvah. When they are used only for the mitzvah and nothing else, they are holy - kodesh heim.

Kedushah means that things belong in proper categories and roles - sacred and mundane, human and animal, child and adult, man and woman, obligation and permission. Moral societies depend on such distinctions not to flatten human beings, but to assign responsibility, limits, and purpose.

Chanukah makes this unavoidable. The light is there,  yet we are forbidden to use it.

Greek philosophy assumes that absolute knowledge is attainable through reason alone. Jewish thinking holds that only God knows the full truth, and that human beings approach truth not through certainty, but through structure. The menorah has precise placement, strict order, defined timing, and limitations of use. It must be lit whether or not we grasp all of its history and symbolism. Actions and responsibilities are not dependent on complete understanding.

This rule is what makes morality possible. If moral action depended on full understanding, then anything could be justified once the story was told persuasively enough. We see that failure of morality everywhere today.

Structure is what prevents entropy -  and creating structure is how human beings imitate God, who created a bounded universe out of nothing so that we could complete His work by building moral order within it.

That is the Jewish answer to Athens.





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

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Monday, December 15, 2025


The murderous Chanukah attack at Bondi Beach should not have happened.

That statement is not merely moral. It is philosophical.

One of the dominant assumptions of modern Western thought is that history is moving, more or less inevitably, toward justice, tolerance, and moral enlightenment. Under that framework, acts of naked antisemitic violence are predicted to be fading into irrelevance. They are relics of a less educated, less inclusive, less enlightened past. When they occur at all, they are assumed to be marginal, residual, or explicable as temporary aberrations.

Bondi Beach is therefore not just a tragedy. It is a refutation of a specific belief: that history itself is doing the moral work for us. 

This belief has become accepted as fact in the Western world.  And that is dangerous.

Secular Teleology

Teleology is the belief that history has an inherent direction and an endpoint: that events are not merely unfolding, but unfolding toward something. In religious traditions, that “something” is redemption, salvation, or divine judgment. In modern secular thought, God is removed, but the structure remains.

Beginning in the Enlightenment, a range of philosophers secularized this idea. History was no longer guided by divine will but by impersonal forces: reason, science, economic laws, technological development, or moral awakening. The destination remained moral improvement; only the engine changed.

This secular teleology appears in multiple modern forms. In Marxism, history inevitably culminates in a classless society. With scientific or technocratic optimism, knowledge and innovation will dissolve moral conflict. Progressivism says social norms converge toward justice over time. Decolonial and liberation frameworks claim historical forces guarantee emancipation.

What these systems share is not policy content, but structure: history is treated as a moral agent, and the future as a validator of truth.

What is striking about secular teleology is not that it hopes for progress, but that it asserts inevitability. There is no historical law demonstrating that societies must become more just. There is no empirical data showing that hatred naturally declines with education (recent studies show the opposite.) We have no scientific principle proving or even suggesting that moral norms converge over time rather than fracture, mutate, or regress.

None of this is to deny that many things are better today than in the past. Local improvements exist. Institutional reforms can work. But inevitability is a faith claim, not a finding. It is asserted, not demonstrated. Once inevitability is assumed, evidence no longer tests the theory; it is absorbed by it.

Despite its lack of necessity, secular teleology has become ambient in modern Western thinking.

We speak casually about “the right side of history.” We assume that moral disagreement is generational rather than substantive. We expect that today’s taboos will expand tomorrow, and that yesterday’s hatreds cannot seriously return. We have inherited a narrative - in education, in media, in political speech - that simply has no factual basis.

 It is a narrative about how time works. And time doesn't really care about inevitable social justice. 

Backlash: The Non-Falsifiable Escape Hatch

Every dogma must contend with counterexamples. Secular teleology does so through the concept of backlash.

Backlash is presented as an explanation for regression: when hatred or violence increases, it is framed not as evidence against progress, but as proof that progress is succeeding and provoking resistance.

This logic allows even extreme historical regressions, including Nazi Germany, to be interpreted not as refutations, but as temporary backlashes against inevitable progress. This idea can even explain how the most modern, industrialized, culturally mature nation can choose genocide as its most important task. It is not viewed as a refutation but an inevitable temporary backlash against inevitable progress. 

When a theory claims to explain all evidence and counter-evidence as proof, the theory becomes non-falsifiable. If bigotry declines, progress is working - and if bigotry increases, backlash also proves progress is working. 

No possible outcome can count as disproof. At this point, secular teleology quietly shifts its theory of truth.

 It pretends to embrace scientific thinking, but instead of correspondence theory used by science,  it relies on coherence theory: only accepting new facts can be fitted into the existing narrative.

This is why regression is reinterpreted rather than confronted, and why warning signs are treated as misreadings rather than data.

Teleological Secularism as Religion Without God

Once history itself is sacralized, secular teleologies take on all the functional features of religion. They have an eschatology (“the arc of history”). a moral hierarchy (progressive vs. regressive), a theodicy (backlash), heresy (questioning inevitability), and even clerisy (authorized moral interpreters like academia.)

God is absent, but destiny remains. Redemption is promised, but vigilance is dismissed.

This causes major problems. A worldview that assumes history will take care of injustice becomes complacent in the face of threats that do not obey its narrative.

If hatred is supposed to be disappearing, early warnings are dismissed. If violence is assumed to be regressive noise, preparedness feels unnecessary. If time is the moral engine, human responsibility diminishes.

This is not merely mistaken. It is dangerous.

Antisemitism as the Persistent Falsifier

Every teleological system eventually encounters a fact it cannot absorb. For secular teleology, that fact is antisemitism. 

By its own logic, Jew-hatred should be declining steadily. Instead, it resurges repeatedly, often in morally confident societies, often clothed in the dominant ethical language of the era.

This is not new. Antisemitism has previously appeared as historical analysis, scientific racism, economic justice and anti-imperialism. Each time, it presented itself as progressive, enlightened, and necessary. Each time, it was treated as history moving forward.

This is a cycle, not an arc.

Modern secular dogma resolves the problem by redefining antisemitism as anti-Zionism and then recasting it as a progressive force rather than a regressive one.

If antisemitism can be reframed as resistance, liberation, or historical necessity, then the theory survives. Jews - not so much. 

The language gives this away: “right side of history,” “inevitability,” “everyone knows a Palestinian state is necessary,” “justice will prevail.”

These are not political arguments. They are teleological claims.

Groups like Bend the Arc are especially revealing. They explicitly invoke the moral arc of history as an authority that overrides Jewish historical memory and Jewish ethical vigilance. In doing so, they abandon Judaism's historically grounded skepticism of inevitability in favor of a secular redemption narrative that has repeatedly turned against Jews.

This is not a new error. It is an old one with modern language.

History Is Not a Straight Line

History did not begin in 1948 or October 7. It did not begin with colonial theory or modern nationalism. It stretches back thousands of years, and Jews have been unwillingly centered in its false redemptions more times than most societies can remember.

That is why Jews recognize false teleology quickly. It isn't cynicism; it is lived experience.

Bondi Beach did not violate history. It violated a false story we told ourselves about history.

When we believe that history will inevitably solve our problems, we lose all agency. We lose vigilance. And we lose the ability to analyze and protect ourselves against entire classes of very real dangers.

Judaism never taught that history improves automatically. It teaches responsibility, today, for all of us, to guard against the constant possibility of regression. It recognizes hate clothed in the garb of justice. 

Secular teleology promises moral comfort. It reassures us that time itself is on our side.

Bondi Beach reminds us that it is not. Antisemitism is not fading - it is accelerating. 

Progress is possible and historic improvement is real. But inevitability is a lie, and a costly one. When societies outsource moral responsibility to history, they stop seeing danger until it arrives fully formed.

Antisemitism has always been the warning sign. The question is whether we will finally treat it as such.

History does not bend. History doesn't even care.

That is our job.





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

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This blog may be a labor of love for me, but it takes a lot of effort, time and money. For 20 years and 40,000 articles I have been providing accurate, original news that would have remained unnoticed. I've written hundreds of scoops and sometimes my reporting ends up making a real difference. I appreciate any donations you can give to keep this blog going.

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