Pollard Ready to Wage War on Jewry!
Sanctifies the State; Decrees "All must serve..."
We imagined that our last installment on the bogus one would be our last.
Alas, there must be another…
Jonathan Pollard continues to reveal his true colors to the Jewish world, this time via an interview with the Jerusalem Post. [2 articles follows below]
If their reporting is accurate, Pollard intends to run for a Knesset seat in the next election. Why? Because he believes that’s the way a leader (which he considers himself to be) brings his goals to fruition.
And what are his goals?
Here’s the bogus one in his own words —
“My goal is to unite those in the ideological right who love Israel and want to contribute to the state. National service, whether in the IDF or another framework, is a critical issue for me. Everyone, without exception, must serve the state in some way.
If you 1) love Israel, and 2) want to contribute to the state, then Pollard’s your man. His goal is to get everyone to “serve the state” — without exception!
Why?
Because the state is meant to be served!
Or is the state meant to serve its citizens?
I’m sorry, I’ve forgotten.
Oh! — and weren’t Jews meant to serve G-d, and only G-d?
Hmm…
By the way, since when is “serving the state” a Jewish value?
Like what? — Like China?
Cuba?
North Korea?
Now, get a load of this —
He emphasized his stance that those who do not serve should not have the right to vote, adding: “You can pray and study Torah, but you cannot refuse to contribute to the state.”
Hold on a second, he’s going to let us pray and study Torah?
That option is open to us?
But service to the state is not optional?
That’s a must?
And if we don’t…?
Then we can’t vote!?
He thinks we care!
He actually believes we care about voting!
Sorry, Jonny-boy. We’ve been residents in the Land of Israel for nearly 25 years and we’ve never once cast a ballot.
So good luck with your threats.
Real Jews don’t waste time voting in Israeli elections.
And they couldn’t give a rat’s bucket if you deny them that right.
In case you hadn’t noticed, we’re not Americans, Jon-Jon.
And we serve only Hashem, Master of Legions.
You remember Him, don’tcha…?
The Guy who freed you from jail…?
Maybe try a run for the 26th district of NY. You know, Buffalo and thereabouts.Dean Maughvet
savethehilltopyouth@substack.com
* * * * * *
Of all news sites, Pollard chose the JPost:
Former Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard considers running for Knesset
Former Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard wants to offer an alternative to Naftali Bennet and Benjamin Netanyahu when the next Knesset elections occur.
Jonathan Pollard, the American-Israeli who served 30 years in a US prison for espionage on behalf of Israel, is actively exploring a potential entry into Israeli politics when the next elections for the Knesset occur.
In recent weeks, Pollard has reportedly been holding meetings with various political figures, including current ministers, Knesset members, and emerging candidates. Among those he has met are Brig.-Gen. (Res.) Ofer Winter, a polarizing figure in Israeli politics, and National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.
Pollard has expressed a desire to become a voice for right-wing ideological voters who feel alienated by the current direction of Likud and seek an alternative to former prime minister Naftali Bennett. His target audience includes both religious and non-religious voters who do not identify with sectoral parties like the Religious Zionist Party.
Source: https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-835199
ALSO READ:
“…Jonathan Pollard wants to enter the Knesset, send Gazan Arabs to Ireland (2/24)
Jonathan Pollard is eyeing the Knesset alongside Itamar Ben-Gvir. He calls to annex Gaza, send Gazans to Ireland, and rename the IDF.
We grew up writing letters to Washington for his release. It’s therefore somewhat surreal to be sitting across the table from Jonathan Pollard in Jerusalem, where he is gearing up to run in the next national election – whenever it might take place.
“Look, you are either part of the solution or part of the problem,” he says matter of factly. “You cannot just sit on the sidelines and criticize. If you believe in what you are saying, you must participate.” Pollard has been eyeing the Knesset ever since he landed back in the country with his late wife Esther four years ago. He had spent 30 years in prison in the US, seven of them in solitary, accused of spying for Israel against America. He then lived under house arrest and other restrictions in New York from 2015 until 2020.
Whether you agree with him and his politics or not, he’s become a local celebrity. If he runs, he would want to be on Itamar Ben-Gvir’s Otzma Yehudit list. He says Ben-Gvir has an undeserved bad reputation.
“He’s never been allowed to realize some of his projects,” Pollard states. “He says some pretty wild things sometimes,” Pollard admits. “He’s a man of high emotion. But I trust him. I believe his heart is in the right place.” Pollard was offered to run with Ben-Gvir in the last election – in fact, for about 24 hours the country thought he was going to – but ultimately, in the shadow of the loss of his wife, who had died only months before the election, Pollard says his head just wasn’t in the right place.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also offered him a top slot in the 2021 election when Netanyahu failed to take the crown, but he decided against running then, too.
“A friend of mine had called me and said, ‘Be aware, do not get involved because Bibi is not going to win,’” and he would have burned a lot of bridges, Pollard recalls. He knew that if he joined the prime minister back then and they lost, he might never be able to run again – so he didn’t.
But Pollard has long had close ties with Netanyahu – who stood on the tarmac when Pollard landed in Israel in the winter of 2020, amid the pandemic.
“The landing was hysterical,” Pollard says, shaking his head. “Bibi had promised [former US president Donald] Trump in writing: no publicity. I should have known better, but I saw all the cameramen when we were coming in for the landing. I turned to Esther, aleha hashalom [may she rest in peace], and said, ‘What do I say?’ She leaned back and said, ‘I’m retired. This is on you.’”
Next thing he knew, the co-pilot – mindful of COVID restrictions – ran down the plane’s stairs and instructed Netanyahu to grab the luggage. He then put his hands on the prime minister and demanded, “Do you speak English?”
Pollard recalls the prime minister was laughing – the co-pilot had mistaken him for an airport employee.
“Bibi thought this was the most hysterical thing you ever heard,” Pollard says.
A new love blossoms
We’re sitting at the Waldorf Hotel’s dairy restaurant, King’s Court. Pollard is a regular here, and the staff all come by to shake his hand. They nod in admiration and repeatedly check in to ensure everything is okay.
The restaurant off the lobby is beautiful, well lit, and modern with plush seating we sink into on a dark, rainy Jerusalem evening. It’s also quite fitting for Pollard: In 1935, the British government leased the building to serve as office space. The Peel Commission, established in 1936 to investigate the unrest in Mandatory Palestine, held its sessions in the former Palace Hotel’s large hall.
Various testimonies, including those of the high commissioner and his secretary, were given behind closed doors. Jewish community leaders who wanted to know what was being said sought the help of the hotel engineer, and microphones were installed inside the electric light fixtures above the meeting table. A hidden recording device recorded the discussions onto reels, which were transferred daily to representatives of the national institutions.
Over bites of salad – each of us, including Pollard’s new wife, Rivkah, tried a different salad variety, and all were tasty – we talk about everything from Pollard’s roots to prison stories to the books he read when confined to a cell. We learn that his grandfather was a dairy farmer on New York’s Hudson who, during Prohibition, stocked up on barrels of whiskey rolled down the river. Pollard grew up in Texas.
Pollard has a hearty but modest laugh, and his long white beard shakes like Santa Claus with a “ho-ho-ho” when he gets excited. He loves whiskey and wine, and especially wine grown in the State of Israel.
But mostly, he loves two women: his late wife and his new one.
He met Rivkah, a single mother originally from Birmingham, UK, at the Malha Mall when he was shopping with Esther. Rivkah was trying to get a book written about her father, and they started talking. The conversation lasted about an hour, and Esther just stood there smiling. When they parted, Esther asked Pollard: “Do you like her?”
“I am an old, married guy, and I know a trap when I hear one,” Pollard says. “So I said, ‘Why do you ask? That’s kind of inappropriate.’ And she said, ‘Well, I’m not gonna make it, and I want you to be happy.’”
Esther was dying of breast cancer, and not too long later, when she went into the hospital that one last time, she kept telling Pollard he had to marry Rivkah.
“It was tough to hear this because I didn’t want to lose her. And I suddenly realized, you know, I could try to save eight million Jews, but I couldn’t save one,” Pollard ruefully says.
But six months later, he took Esther up on her offer and reached out to Rivkah.
“I was scared because it had been a while since I dated. And I was thinking, ‘She is a beautiful woman; there’s no way she’s gonna look at this old goat.’ I invited her to lunch at Piccolino,” Pollard remembers. “After we exchanged pleasantries, I just said, ‘Do you want to get married?’ And she looked at me, and I saw she thought about it. And she said, ‘Yes. What would you like for lunch?’”
Pollard admits that he was madly in love with Esther for 40 years, and it was hard to contemplate loving somebody else. “It was almost like betrayal,” he says. “But by pushing our shidduch, she gave me the freedom to love and marry again. She got me out of prison with God’s help. She brought me home, and the last thing she did was give me my wife.
“She is very much alive with us.”
Pollard’s post-prison pursuits
Today, Pollard is focused on building four early-stage start-ups he imagined in prison. They deal with seawater, synthetic protein, renewable energy, and energy storage. Right now, they are all self-financed. He’s also helping raise Rivkah’s seven children.
“There’s nothing in prison that ever scared me half as much as having to deal with four Israeli girls, 11, 14, 16, and 18,” Pollard says fondly as he takes a bite of his fruit salad, and Rivkah bats her red eyelashes. “I admit that I’m a coward regarding the 11-year-old. All she has to do is look like she’s going to cry, and whatever she wants is fine.”
Pollard is working on these companies because he believes Israel is vulnerable to dependence on offshore natural gas and food imports.
“I feel we have to develop small modular reactors that can be buried, hardened, and dispersed so that we develop a system of microgrids around the country, and the grid is basically a backup,” says Pollard. He also talks about a plan for low-enriched uranium, which he states is the future.
Pollard also admits that he is “extraordinarily depressed” over what happened on Oct. 7, primarily because it was so avoidable.
“From the moment I got here, I never talked about judicial reform. I talked about military reform because it was my impression - and unfortunately, it’s been borne out - that the military was incapable of thinking offensively. And we now know what the consequences are.”
He says the IDF should be renamed the “Israeli Army” and change its mentality. He also believes Israel will need to annex Gaza if it wants residents to return to the South.
“I say we move the resident Arab population out [of Gaza],” Pollard maintains. “I don’t care where they go. My preference is for Ireland. I think the Irish deserve it.” Irish MP Richard Boyd Barrett has even donned a keffiyeh, he notes.
There’s just enough time for some prison stories that make Stephen King’s Shawshank seem like a cakewalk, best not published in a family magazine. Pollard shares how he got through his days in a small cell, where he rigged up a radio (though it was against the rules) and read stacks of books; Esther also regularly sent him news clippings. The top three books that made the biggest impact on him: The Time Traveler’s Wife; The Dovekeepers; and As a Driven Leaf.
“I saw the best and the worst,” Pollard affirms.■
Source: https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-788364
6 comments:
His attitude seems to h ave shifted 180 degrees from his oriiginal opinions.
Quite disappointing, especially reading about how every Israeli citizen must
'serve' the State. That is the most unJewish, unTorah statement for a G-D fearing Jew. I think most were under a totally different impression of him and
his ideaology. Whether his ego and desire to be a politician has completely changed him or he is naive enough to believe he can change things where more than 75 years of many different leaders could not and they knew they could not. The whole infrastructure of the state is leftist and G-Dless with the help of the coverup of many ultra religious who are in it also only for their power and greed.
The only one who will save us is Hashem and through His loyal servant, Moshiach, will we reach our ultimate and final Geulah with the whole world then realizing there is only Hashem and everything else is hevel.
Izzy
Izzy, thank you for your comment. Yes he has changed. I heard him say in one of the interviews with the Rabbi, that he had been "warned". Now that he has a youngish and beautiful wife and family to care for, his reality has changed.
Wow, how disappointing. But, everything is m'Shamayim and H' is showing us there is no one to lean/rely on but Him and it will be His servant, Moshiach tzdkeinu to lead us and the world to our Geulah Shleima!
Izzy
He says that his sweet wife Esther, passed away now, told him to remarry. What if he just made that up. He is an old man, and should stay out of politics.
Trust no man... only Gd....
First of all, I do not like the disparaging tone of Dean Maughvet's articles.
Further, the latest article in JPost does not sound like an interview.
We do not know who ordered it and why ?.
A lot of things in such articles could be misquoted,, quoted partially and etc.
I am surprised how fast people jump to conclusions.
I think we need sometime to let the person explain himself fully.
Victoria
Post a Comment