Playing Siskel and Ebert on Global Voices


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5 Responses to “Playing Siskel and Ebert on Global Voices”

  1. lisoosh says:

    Cute intro, nice to see two facets of the spectrum being represented, no matter how difficult that may be.

    Such a shame that it is just an English language round up (all of the blogs, not just Israeli ones). I can’t help feeling that so much is left out…..

  2. Yael says:

    Hey Lisoosh, thanks :) Actually, there won’t just be an english round-up. Another contributor, Gilad, is going to be covering the hebrew blogosphere (translating into english for the rest of the world) and he should have his first roundup up soon. Someone is also going to cover the Russian blogosphere within Israel as well –it is quite large.

  3. John says:

    Now, I agree that the vast majority of Israelis seems to be right in demanding that Olmert and his government should resign. But, again my concerned question: who else is there who should take over? What is the use of new elections if it will be the same faces again? Peres, Perez, Bibi, for all it’s worth may Olmert would just be a candidate again?
    The vibes I get from the Israeli public is that they want to get rid not so much of individual persons but of that type of politician that has plagued the country since…. well, may be since it began. But where do you find a different kind of politician?
    Therefore I wonder, what good will it bring if Olmert is just being replaced by another Olmertbibiperes type?

    Of course I know there is no easy answer to this, so let me ask another question: who is most likely to succeed Olmert?

  4. Yael says:

    John –you’ve hit the nail on head in the minds of many people (see Carmel’s post on why she didn’t go to the rally over on gnblog.com). We don’t have any seriously good options but even most of the not-good options are better than Olmert and his current cabinet. Bibi would be a disaster (our educational system and poverty level is a direct result of his policies that were put into place) but might well get elected if we had full new elections tomorrow.

    What would be the best option as of today would be for Olmert to step down and someone else within Kadima to take his place, for Peretz to resign and someone within Labor take his place –until new elections.

    Personally, I think Ami Ayalon of Labour is the best option on the table for a new government and I’m very much hoping he will beat the crap out of Barak (who we know to be a disaster but not as much of a disaster as Peretz –or Olmert) in the primaries. He’s clean on the corruption issue, hasn’t had ties with big-business payouts, he is strong on social issues (kibbutz raised), and he has strong military experience which, sorry to say, is critical for this country’s leaders as we’ve discovered to our regret.

    But we don’t just need new leaders. We need a whole new way of our government functioning.

  5. treppenwitz says:

    Lisoosh… Hey stranger! As Yaeli pointed out, we are looking to Gilad to provide a glimpse of the Hebrew speaking blogosphere.

    John… I have heard this point made at least a dozen times and I have to tell you it is frustrating. You see, the reality of the Israeli political scene is a revolving door of the same tired old actors. However, while some of the ’same old faces’ waiting in the wings may seem incompetent (or at least not up to the task), the present crop have removed all doubt as to their inability (or perhpas unwillingness) to act in our best interest.

    Yes, part of the push to oust Olmert and Peretz (and others) comes from a desire to punish those who spent the currency of our national youth so cavalierly last summer. But it is also born of a need to give someone - anyone! - else a chance to do better.

    We may think we have seen what the others have to offer, but we really haven’t. Bibi was hamstrung as Prime Minister by the shackles of the fatally flawed Oslo accords and Peres has never really had his shot to lead. I’m at the point where I would rather see either of them as PM than have to listen to Olmert and Peretz tell me (and the rest of the Israeli public) that we should go eat cake.

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