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Goliath: Life and Loathing in Greater Israel

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In Goliath, New York Times bestselling author Max Blumenthal takes us on a journey through the badlands and high roads of Israel-Palestine, painting a startling portrait of Israeli society under the siege of increasingly authoritarian politics as the occupation of the Palestinians deepens.

Beginning with the national elections carried out during Israel's war on Gaza in 2008-09, which brought into power the country's most right-wing government to date, Blumenthal tells the story of Israel in the wake of the collapse of the Oslo peace process.

As Blumenthal reveals, Israel has become a country where right-wing leaders like Avigdor Lieberman and Bibi Netanyahu are sacrificing democracy on the altar of their power politics; where the loyal opposition largely and passively stands aside and watches the organized assault on civil liberties; where state-funded Orthodox rabbis publish books that provide instructions on how and when to kill Gentiles; where half of Jewish youth declare their refusal to sit in a classroom with an Arab; and where mob violence targets Palestinians and African asylum seekers scapegoated by leading government officials as "demographic threats."

Immersing himself like few other journalists inside the world of hardline political leaders and movements, Blumenthal interviews the demagogues and divas in their homes, in the Knesset, and in the watering holes where their young acolytes hang out, and speaks with those political leaders behind the organized assault on civil liberties. As his journey deepens, he painstakingly reports on the occupied Palestinians challenging schemes of demographic separation through unarmed protest. He talks at length to the leaders and youth of Palestinian society inside Israel now targeted by security service dragnets and legislation suppressing their speech, and provides in-depth reporting on the small band of Jewish Israeli dissidents who have shaken off a conformist mindset that permeates the media, schools, and the military.

Through his far-ranging travels, Blumenthal illuminates the present by uncovering the ghosts of the past—the histories of Palestinian neighborhoods and villages now gone and forgotten; how that history has set the stage for the current crisis of Israeli society; and how the Holocaust has been turned into justification for occupation.

A brave and unflinching account of the real facts on the ground, Goliath is an unprecedented and compelling work of journalism.

512 pages, Hardcover

First published November 27, 2012

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About the author

Max Blumenthal

8 books275 followers
Max Blumenthal is an American author, journalist, and blogger. He is a senior writer for Alternet and formerly a writer for The Daily Beast, Al Akhbar, and Media Matters for America. He is the author of two books including Republican Gomorrah: Inside the Movement that Shattered the Party (2009), which appeared on The New York Times bestsellers list, and Goliath: Life and Loathing in Greater Israel (2013).

Blumenthal joined Lebanon's Al Akhbar in late 2011 primarily to write about Israel-Palestine issues and foreign-policy debates in Washington, noting, upon leaving in mid-2012 in protest of its coverage of the Syrian Civil War, that it "gave me more latitude than any paper in the United States to write about ... Israel and Palestine". He ended his association with Al Akhbar in June 2012, over what he viewed as the newspaper's pro-Assad editorial line during the Syrian Civil War that he said was spearheaded by Amal Saad-Ghorayeb.

Blumenthal contributes weekly articles to Alternet where he has been a senior writer since September 2014. He focuses on the deepening crisis in the Middle East and its role in shaping political dynamics and public opinion in the US, particularly the special relationship with Israel. He occasionally covers domestic issues such as corporate media consolidation, the influence of the Christian right and police brutality. His reporting from the Gaza strip in 2014 was developed into a book, The 51 Day War: Ruin and Resistance in Gaza.

Blumenthal's articles and video documentaries have appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Daily Beast, The Nation, The Guardian, The Huffington Post, Independent Film Channel (IFC), Salon, The Real News, and Al Jazeera English, among other publications.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 105 reviews
Profile Image for Clif.
467 reviews186 followers
January 27, 2022
I'm a typical American in that I accepted "The Story of Israel" and cheered the Israelis on in the 1967 war without having the slightest idea of the situation in the Middle East. As far as I was concerned, Israelis were "just like us" and therefor worth supporting.

I accepted that there were two equally legitimate parties contending for land and that there was a drive to divide that land justly: the endless peace talks. But as Israeli settlers unilaterally took more and more land, I began to wonder what was going on. I also wondered why the entire world with the exception of the U.S. joined in condemning Israeli actions yet Israel simply ignored the world and under the protection of a reliable U.S. veto in the U.N., did as it wished even as it continually claimed to be a victim.

About four years ago I began a comprehensive study of Israel and its occupation of the lands that supposedly would go to the Palestinians. I discovered an eye opening map of the area created by the Israeli NGO, B'Tselem that astounded me. In fact, Israeli settlements peppered the occupied territory and it was obvious there was no remaining contiguous land that could provide a Palestinian state. See for yourself at http://www.btselem.org/map remembering that blue is Israeli and brown is Palestinian. By all means zoom in to see the saturation of brown areas with blue areas.

The map makes clear that the so-called peace talks have been a fraud, a cover for Israel to seize as much land as it can while claiming to be yearning for coexistence. Not only that, Zionism, the movement to create a Jewish state in Palestine, has never been anything else but an ethnic cleansing process. How in the world can the U.S., proclaiming liberty and justice for all, be covering for this outrage?

As a result of my research, I started a blog about ending the occupation, directed at non-Jewish Americans like myself, and I have actively contributed to demonstrations against Israel. I subscribe to the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz to stay up on what is happening over there.

I provide this lengthy introduction to let you know that I approached Max Blumenthal's book not as a naif, but as someone acquainted with the political personalities, the operations of the Israel Defense Forces and the social situation in Israel. With this education in things Israeli, I was very impressed with the breadth and depth of Blumenthal's account; he unzips Israel to reveal all and covers every single significant event, political and social movement, act of war and daily practice of Israelis regarding the Palestinians.

Without hesitation I can say that this single book would give anyone with an interest in the topic just as much knowledge as I have accumulated in my attempt to gather information over several years. Blumenthal not only writes from a careful study of the facts, he writes with the benefit of swimming in the stream, going into the country and interviewing Israelis and Palestinians of all opinions.

The result is a condemnation based on fact. The fact is Israel does not have a right to exist as a state exclusively for Jews. Prime Minister Netanyahu rails against the movement to deligitimize Israel, but his lament is futile as the project of Zionism to expel native people in order to replace them never was legitimate. Yes, the U.S. expelled the natives but the descendants of those natives are full citizens of the U.S. who may live anywhere they wish. Israel wants no citizens who are not Jewish and holds in the citizenry many American Jews who have moved to Israel to immediately pronounce it theirs exclusively, at the expense of the indigenous people who daily suffer every humiliation, beatings, imprisonment, attack by armed settlers, restriction upon restriction, prisoners in their own land.

Like a surgeon, Blumenthal deconstructs the elaborate propaganda that promotes Israel as both Jewish and democratic, making it clear that The Jewish State is on a road to ruin as it attempts to practice the apartheid that civilization no longer accepts, riding nationalism to new extremes under the protection of holocaust guilt, the financial and political backing of wealthy Jewish Americans such as Sheldon Adelson and the clout of the Israel Lobby in the United States.

The safe haven longed for by the Jews who first came up with Zionism has long since been provided by the United States, where any and all walks of life are open to Jews without limit. Israel, by contrast, only shows the abuse that comes with unlimited power over others, demonstrating Jews behaving badly, steadily eroding the sympathy they rightly inherited from the actions of the Third Reich. Israel marches daily toward greater emulation of the totalitarianism/racism for which it was to be an antidote.

The most worrisome thing is that Israelis have swallowed the fear mongering/"second holocaust" idea and truly believe that, even armed as they are with nuclear warheads and every kind of state-of-the-art weaponry from the U.S., they are victims and in danger from the impoverished and powerless Palestinians they oppress. That the U.S. has supported this outlaw state is shameful and proof that money and power far overshadow any lesson learned about injustice from the Indian Wars.

Any American would do well to be educated by this book that doesn't turn aside from the ugliness that Israel, try as it might, is failing to conceal. As the author states in the forward, his object is to show Americans what they are paying for. Read, and then write your people in Congress who, unless they hear from you, will continue to do the bidding of the Israel Lobby.

Jews have every right to live in Palestine, they do not have the right to it exclusively. The Jewish State has no long-term future, it is an anachronism. But extremism doesn't depart quietly. I shudder at what is to come.
Profile Image for Gary.
1,022 reviews257 followers
November 12, 2024
Yet again another trendy left non-Israeli Jew decides to jump on the 'burn Israel' bandwagon hoping to get ahead with his champagne socialist friends in the media and academia by writing hate-filled agitprop against Israel.
Now erroneously comparing Israel to South African Apartheid is not strong enough for the genocidal agenda of the Islamists and their hard left allies. Now all Israelis are labeled Nazis. The descendants of the Holocaust survivors are now to be in the popular mind no longer Jews but Nazis and the Palestinian terrorists who want to kill every Jewish man, women and child in the Land of Israel, are the new Jews!
Orwellian to say the least!
160 000 murdered by Assad in Syria in two years, tens of thousands of women and girls executed for 'sexual immorality' in Iran, Regimes that starve out their entries populations like North Korea and Zimbabwe . These do not prick the consciences of these obsessive maniacs with their bottomless hatred of anything and everyone Israeli.
But once the likes of Max Blumethal, Noam Chomsky or Norman Finkestein can identify all Israelis as Nazis, the stage is set for the genocide of Israel's Jews down to the last child. Ironically the real Nazis set up Europe for the Holocaust of Jews by demon zing them to such an extent that their mass murder was seen as a rightful act of justice. The BDS supporters, and pro-Palestine propagandists are doing exactly the same thing. Israelis are not to be regarded as human. Their slaughter is an act of justice and a fashionable process of progressive liberation.
The enemies of Israel want the physical elimination of the Jewish people from the Land of Israel. This constitutes anti-Semitism. The point is that they want a Judenreihn "Palestine" the same way that Hitler wanted a Judenreihn Europe. The anti-Zionists claim that they are not anti-Semites but that think the only country on the earth that must be annihilated is Israel. The anti-Zionists claim that they are not anti-Semites but that think the only country on the earth that must be annihilated is Israel. The anti-Zionists claim that they are not anti-Semites but that the only children on earth whose being blown up is okay if it serves a good cause are Jewish children. As regards the so-called 1 state solution favoured by so many sophisticated leftwing intellectuals today, we can discuss this all day and all night , but dismembering Israel into a single Arab dominated state means a second holocaust. It means methodical massacre of millions of Jews , of hundreds of thousands of Jewish children. Anyone who pushes for this '1 state solution' is actually pushing for a second holocaust. Denying a nation's right to exist is genocidal racism, akin to Nazism, hence in my opinion ,Anti-Zionism is Nazism. Only the hard-hearted, hate-filled and cowardly will deny Israel the right to exist and defend herself. One must always continue to ask why the powerful organizations, unions, church groups, academics ,governments etc advocate a boycott of Israel and only Israel, while not advocating any boycott or censure of States that do enrage in genocide or severe repression and persecution like China, North Korea, Zimbabwe,Syria Iran or Sudan. THEY NEVER have an answer!

And where is the mention made of the thousands of Israeli victims of the terror war by the 'Palestinians' on the Israeli people. In March 2008 Arab terrorists murdered eight young Jewish seminary students at study of the Torah.
Shortly after this a survey by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Media Research revealed that 84% of Palestinians supported the attack!
Itamar Marcus of Palestinian Media Watch points out that the leaders of the propaganda for Hamas and Palestinian Authority TV (with their televised sermons, cartoons, comic books and school books) have constructed a machine to incite mass murder similar to that of the Hutu journalists who spearheaded the genocide of Tutsis in Rwanda. "The Islamic refers to Jews as the sons of pigs and monkeys to be exterminated just as Hutu supremacists spoke of Tutsis as 'serpents' to be crushed.
Hamas and Hezbollah, two of the terorist organizations that work for the physical annihilation of Israel describe Jews as 'pigs', 'cancer'. 'garbage','germs' 'parasites' and 'microbes'.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in continually vowing to '"wipe Israel off the map" for which he is building a vast nuclear arsenal without the world or the Obama administration lifting a finger to stop him, uses the expression 'dead rats'
Not only do the rabid anti-Zionists who boycott and demonize Israel display gross and racist anti-Semitism , but they also responsible to a large extent for terror against Israeli women and children.
This is because Moral denigration encourages physical elimination
It is entirely in keeping in the character of Islamists or rabidly leftist anti-Zionists that they should carry a rabid hatred of Israel to the point of defending the killers of Israeli children.
There is certainly.
The mainstream and left-wing world media are also extremely culpable for fomenting mass killing of Jewish men, women and children in Israel.
As Claude Lanzmann director of the monumental film Shoah wrote "When 'settlers'
were killed it was intolerable to read in the newspapers stuck in a corner of the page 'settler women killed' or worse 'settler child strangled' as if the twofold stigma of Jew and settler made the murder understandable, justified it and dismissed it from our attention".

Thousands of Israeli Jewish men, women and children have died from bombs, bullets or knife attacks, and thousands of others have been maimed, blinded, orphaned, widowed and terrorized.

In 2003 on the Eve of the Jewish New Year, seven month old Shaked Abraham was shot dead in her crib by an Arab murderer who forced his way into her parent's house as the family was celebrating the New Year.

A ten-month-old Jewish baby, Shalhevet Pass, was shot in her father's arms by an Arab sniper in 2001.

The following year, a five-year-old girl, Danielle Shefi, was shot to death at point blank range by an Arab killer, while cowering under her parents' bed.

That same year, two boys, four- and five-years old, Matan and Noam Ohayon where shot dead together with their mother as she read them a bedtime story, in a kibbutz, by Arab terrorists.
In the summer of 2005 pregnant Jewish women Tali Hatuel and her four terrified little daughters were executed at point blank range by terrorists of the Popular Resistance Committees, one after the other after Tali's car had been spun off the road by gunfire.
Then there are the thousands of suicide bombing perpetrated by Arab terrorists in malls, restaurants, schools, buses and everywhere else where Jewish men, women and children in Israel gathered.Victims were killed, burned, maimed and shards of metal infected with rat poison lodged into their bodies.
Unlike a traditional war zone, the victims are often riding, sitting in schools or enjoying a meal.
So far 128 Jewish children have been killed, 9 of them less than a year old, 9 pregnant women have been murdered, 886 children have lost one parent and 31 have lost both. The youngest victim of terror was just one day old.At the Dolphinarium Disco on June 1, 2001, 21 Israeli teenagers were killed and 132 wounded, many maimed for life, after a suicide bomber blew himself up in their midst
Hamas claimed responsibility and celebrated the attack.
Meanwhile the Islamises and their hard left allies will attempt to silence us who speak up for Israel as a 'Fascist' or 'reactionary' , classic Stalinist language. And try to physically prevent Israelis from speaking or even performing music on university campuses.

And then 1700 Jews butchered on October 7 2023 in the biggest pogrom since the Holocaust, young women raped to death , children and families burned alive.

This is clearly a work of the most extreme and obnoxious hatred against all Israel's men , women and children and is filled with prejudices and untruths.
It is in fact an extreme form of incitement against the Jewish nation akin to Meim Kampf and the Elders of the Protocols of Zion

Profile Image for Mary.
838 reviews16 followers
November 29, 2013
Brilliant, infuriating, troubling, illuminating, depressing, inspiring - this book provoked so many feelings in me! It is excellent journalism; as another reviewer has said, even those who think they know a fair bit about the situation will find themselves learning a lot. Blumenthal narrates his experiences in Israel between 2009 and 2013, including interviews with people on all sides and all walks of life. What he ends up witnessing is a rather shaky democracy's plunge into unabashed, racist fascism. I had to stop reading this book frequently because it shook and upset me so much. But I am very, very glad I read it. I feel that I have a better understanding of the real facts in this sad situation - and also of the only possible way forward. Every politician, and every adult citizen, in America should read this book. We should know what we are supporting.

Addendum: I did say the book was illuminating and inspiring, not just depressing. I admire Israeli activist like Yonatan Shapira more than ever - and, as for the citizens of Bi'lin, Ni'lin and others peacefully protesting the wall and trying to go about their lives its shadow, they are beyond praise.
Profile Image for Marcy.
Author 5 books122 followers
December 12, 2013
What a truly engrossing read. Blumenthal does a tremendous job of showing the apartheid state if Israel in all its true colors. What I appreciate the most about this book is the way Blumenthal weaves together threads of Palestinian history and current events in context while simultaneously illustrating precisely how Israel has sunk deeper and deeper into a white supremacist state that targets African migrants with the same brutally racist means. I do wish there was a bit more skepticism about the role Israelis think they are playing in the unraveling of their state; if you look for this perspective it's there, but at times it's subtle enough that readers may not perceive it.
Profile Image for Murtaza.
712 reviews3,387 followers
April 3, 2014
In this book Blumenthal makes what seems to be a pretty compelling case that Israel is descending (or has already descended) into a form of fascism, driven in part by the occupation of the West Bank but also as a natural result of the states' founding ideology. The book is basically a series of vignettes, but there is a ton of research in here, both contemporary on-the-ground and looking through history. As he tells it Israel is becoming an increasingly racist and militarized state, intolerant of minorities and increasingly intolerant of any form of left-wing dissent. Racist laws, lynch mobs, state-sanctioned colonialism in the West Bank; the book does not paint a pretty picture at all.

Israel is interesting to me as a person born in Pakistan as it is the only other country in the world founded as an ideological state. The trends that Blumenthal documents in Israel also manifested slowly over time in Pakistan until it reached its present state of ultranationalism mixed with religious chauvinism.

Although Israel's path down this route may have been slowed by its economic success (no small part of which consists of American largesse), I feel like it's inevitable that it will end up as a Jewish version of Pakistan. It's just hardwired into the creation of the country; the idea of exclusionism and ethno-religious supremacy, even if - as in Pakistan - the founders of the country stressed the need for tolerating minorities within their own borders. Even worse, Israel was founded as a settler colonial project in a region which understandably has never accepted it and which it remains constantly in conflict with. These are not circumstances conducive to the development of a healthy, functioning society.

While I was pretty compelled by this book due to the sheer volume of research and the strength of the facts marshalled for his argument; I'll still keep my powder dry in making a decision about what Israel is until I can visit one day. I'm not sure if it'd even be possible given my ethnic background, work and past travels (In a way that itself is a bit of an indictment of the state), but I can't write off a place completely without experiencing it on my first and challenging my biases.

This is a good book, alot of it will already be familiar to people who follow the issue closely but it is nonetheless worthwhile and might perhaps even be revelatory to those who usually have just a passing interest.


Profile Image for David.
Author 1 book45 followers
August 18, 2018
I don't like Max Blumenthal, although I've never met the man. He's a leftist convinced of his own moral superiority, and quick to judge any rube whose world view or manners don't conform to his standards. He's the sort of fellow who calls someone "racist," after which analysis stops.

However, he's written an important and fundamentally accurate, if flawed book about today's State of Israel. Composed of short, readable vignettes of interviews and slice-of-life observations, most of which seem accurate--and are confirmed by independent evidence in many cases--the book depicts a country increasingly dominated by open ethno-nationalism, and deformed by the oppressive and unpleasant consequences of enforcing that against a dominated Palestinian Arab population.

The book rips the mask off the propaganda line that Israel is "the only democracy in the Middle East," a trendy, feisty start-up unjustly targeted by irrationally resentful neighbors. Likewise, he tears up the distinction between the post-1967 occupation and the events of 1948. In both cases, Israel won wars, dispossessed some Arabs from their homes, and reduced others to subjects of one sort or another.

That said, the book is flawed, and limited. It is flawed by an excess of editorial adjectives and leftist assumptions, which in fact detract from its message because they cast some suspicion upon the author's objectivity. It is limited because it does not subject the Palestinian side to the same scrutiny as the Israelis, and certainly one can find hostility and incitement on that side as well. It is further limited because of what it does not attempt--analysis as opposed to a series of journalistic vignettes.

That said, one cannot fault the author for his failure to write a different book. Someone else will have to do that.
202 reviews
October 12, 2016
Max Blumenthal's Goliath is a brave and important book. Blumenthal raises the alarm on a rising tide of racism and close-mindedness in modern Israel that is increasingly based in the ideology and policy supported by the country's youth. To draw attention to this cultural crisis and stimulate action the book features examples of some of the most disgusting manifestations of the shift in national attitude including an apparent paranoia concerning the prospect of Arab men gaining sexual access to Israeli Jewish women.

It is the more widespread and more prosaic fears among Israelis that are the most disturbing, however. Among observant Jews who are otherwise demographically aligned with the country's right wing base, the vast majority would have a problem with an Arab for a next-door neighbor. Moreover, traditionally more leftist secular Jews report that same segregationist view at a rate of about 47% (according to my best recollection).

Blumenthal considerably enhances the impact of his message by moving beyond disturbing poll data as well as poignant stories of these ideas in action in particular newsworthy incidents. In particular, he wisely showcases a primary source from an Israeli teachers' association expressing the widespread racist ideas among their students and worse still, the difficulty they are experiencing in opening their students' minds to different perspectives on such politically charged topics.

When as a culture you are losing the ability to think independently, consider diverse points of view, and consider the situations of people different from yourself with sympathy, your culture is in decline. Anyone who cares about modern Israel and Jewish culture could benefit from reading this book as a first step in actively trying to improve the current Israeli discourse on Palestinians and the Arab world.

Please be advised I read a free electronic copy of this book on NetGalley through gracious permission of the publisher.
492 reviews5 followers
April 26, 2014
Facts are cherry picked, re-arranged and deceptively presented to make a point. Blumenthal interviews the most extreme Israelis and the most moderate Palestinians, making the Israelis look like monsters, when the majority are fairly normal people. I love what Eric Alterman wrote on it. "The Israeli author and champion of its peace movement soon thereafter ends the interview and asks Blumenthal to please tear up his phone number. Here, our author attributes the response he receives, yet again, to Israeli myopia and lack of understanding of the way the world really works."

Max Blumenthal apparently knows better than anyone. So, why doesn't he make aliyah and run for government?
Profile Image for Yonis Gure.
117 reviews29 followers
July 31, 2014
Very disturbing read. This book rips through the veneer of propaganda in Israel and reveals the Jim Crow like racism at the core of the Zionist ideology. I truly believe that Israel needs to be the target of the next global movement that helped put an end to apartheid South Africa.

Free Palestine!
Profile Image for Ob-jonny.
237 reviews4 followers
November 1, 2014
This book was ridiculously informative about an issue that I new very little about. Every time I learned something absolutely astonishing I thought that there was nothing else that could be that bad. Then I learned something new that was equally crazy. There are so many topics and I can't list them all here. But the background is that Max Blumenthal wrote about what he saw when he traveled to Israel in 2009-2011. It started when he interviewed young Israelis during Obama's visit to Egypt in 2009. They called Obama all kinds of horrifically disrespectful names and said he didn't care about Israel just for visiting a Muslim country despite how the US props up their country by supporting their military. Obama has been very gentle and submissive with Netanyahu and so it was amazing to learn about how Israelis spoke about him. It just showed that something really crazy is going on there and the conservative majority are in kind of a state of madness. You can see the video of the Israelis cussing out Obama if you look hard and it is called "Feeling the Hate in Jerusalem". Blumenthal interviews Israelis and Palestinians all over and describes what life is really like there. Even Israeli citizens cannot protest against their government there without getting into trouble and sometimes losing their jobs or even being kicked out of the country. The protest movement is very underground and small and I just could not believe that free-thinkers would live in such fear. They talk about the history of Palestine and what happened during the establishment of Israel in the 40s. I had been taught that Palestine had been a desert that Israel turned into a land of plenty. But Palestinian cities like Haifa and Jaffa were once booming with all types of commerce before being nearly destroyed by the Israeli army. I just could not believe that it was allowed to happen in the modern era! Other topics are discussed like the Flotilla incident where Turkey tried to bring in aid to the Gaza Strip, and you'll learn in detail what really happened. Another fascinating but vile aspect of Israeli society is the multi-tiered racism. At the top you have the white Ashkenazi jews, then lower you have Russian Jews, then brown-skinned Middle-Eastern Jews, the Safardic Jews from Africa, then Palestinians in Israel, then at the bottom are Palestinians in the West Bank or Gaza strip. Israeli left-wing protesters are somewhere near the bottom of the ladder. You'd think that all Jews would be treated equal but in general the Ashkenazi elites consider the rest of the Jews "brown trash" and are usually given lower positions in the military. I just can't believe that they are so racist even against other Israelis given the history of the Jews. This is a must read if you want to understand the situation in Israel. Look up videos by Max Blumenthal and it should get you more interested what is happening out there.
Profile Image for Robert.
Author 15 books116 followers
December 20, 2013
Goliath: Life and Loathing in Greater Israel by Max Blumenthal revisits the Israeli/Palestinian dilemma largely from the perspective of Israel’s injustice to the Palestinians, both outside Israel’s borders and within them.

This is an overwritten if heavily researched, personal account that undermines its principal thesis with an excess of one-sided reporting, all of which contains elements of truth but nonetheless raises questions on page after page about whether these elements of truth tell the whole truth and whether they develop into a solidly built analysis.

The principal thesis is that the Israelis displaced the Palestinian people, took most of their land, keep taking their land in the name of Israeli security, and have carried out their policies with substantial brutality.

Setting aside the brutalities that occurred within the context of establishing Israel and then defending it in the 1967 and 1973 wars because all wars are horrific and can be detailed in such a way as to make one side or the other appear inhuman, Blumenthal provides many, many instances of Israeli discrimination against Palestinians that have, over a period of decades, oppressed them to the point that there is almost no need for a 
“two-state solution��� because there is already a “one-state solution,” meaning an apartheid state, where the Israelis are on the top, the Palestinians, inside and outside Israel, are on the bottom.

Blumenthal traces a sharp move to the Zionistic right in Israeli politics, culminating in the present government led by Benjamin Netanyahu, and portrays a boxed-in, demoralized, diminished Israeli left. He spends a good bit of time describing the ways in which Israel has battered and isolated the Gaza Strip, now governed by the anti-Israel Hamas party. He also spends a good bit of time presenting the Israeli right as utterly heartless, justifying itself by referring to what happened to the Jewish people in the Holocaust and vowing, “never again.”

The tragedy in all this is that the Holocaust did happen, six million Jews died, and that the result was a Jewish state that did in fact displace Palestinians, push them off their lands, and make them feel existentially wronged to this day, so many years later.

No one would want any of this to happen, but no one knows how to resolve it. Blumenthal presents an Israeli political class that has, in the interest of the Jewish state’s survival, no sympathy for the Palestinians’ plight. By the same token, many who have followed this conflict for a long time can point to instances of Palestinian aggression, or resistance, that have had ghastly consequences for Israelis.

Ultimately, this combination of stand-off and struggle has had negative impact on both Israelis and Palestinians. The circumstances of their existence have coarsened them both, and that’s understandable.

The underlying purpose of Goliath is no doubt to inform the American people that their Israeli “friends” are not liberal democrats and a bastion of freedom and stability in the autocratic, violent Middle East. Many details here are fresh and disturbing, but the overall “narrative” to this effect has been emerging for a long time.

Currently Secretary of State John Kerry is expending a lot energy on the Israeli/Palestinian conflict. He would seem to have two overriding motivations: first, simply to settle things in a non-violent way that both sides can accept; second, to demonstrate to the Arab/Muslim world that supports the Palestinians’ cause that the United States is an honest broker, a friend to Muslims as well as to Jews.

Kerry’s chances are slim. He indicates that any time left for a “two-state solution” may be running out. In this he’s probably right in one sense and wrong in another. If his efforts bear no fruit within nine months to a year, the Obama administration will have to take a step back and probably not readdress the question. That’s the sense in which he’s right. The sense in which he’s wrong is that time will go on, the tragedy of competing claims will continue to fester, and the idea that the Palestinians might one day govern their own sovereign, internationally recognized state won’t disappear any more than Israel’s determination to survive will disappear.


Profile Image for Kelly.
416 reviews21 followers
January 8, 2014
This is an eye-opener; at least it was for me. I was familiar with much of the political debate in America about the U.S.-Israel relationship, but never really understood how the right-wing worked inside Israel (and the surrounding Palestinian areas). Max Blumenthal has cut his teeth covering conservative movements and how they can metastasize from academic philosophies into cultural (and military) battles. In “Goliath” he applies the focus of his previous book, “Republican Gomorrah” (an expose of the right wing in the U.S.), to the post-1967 landscape of Israel-Palestine; this is an in-depth look at militant Zionism and the struggle to create an ethnically homogeneous, theocratic state, while simultaneously paying lip-service to democratic values.

Some reader reviews are harshly critical of Blumenthal personally, which seems predictable given the politically charged nature of his subject, but ad hominem attacks do nothing to address the realities that he describes. The most troubling indicators of proto-fascism in Israeli political life are not subject to opinion: they’re right there in the laws themselves. They’re also evident in videos posted online for all to see.

I have no doubt that there are other stories of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but Blumenthal is telling this one—and it’s certainly one that needs to be told. Additionally, the writing is unaffected, straightforward, and clear.
Profile Image for Jacqueline.
119 reviews12 followers
December 12, 2013
This is less a book than a series of vignettes - it feels like a series of blog posts, really. Well researched and fascinating posts - but chronologically messed up and without any narrative structure. So, that was a struggle for me.

The book IS of course totally one sided, which makes it easy to be dismissive...but we get the other side all day every day, and this side is "technically accurate" according to even Blumenthal's harshest critics.

A worthy read.
Profile Image for Spencer.
289 reviews9 followers
December 28, 2016
Max Blumenthal gives a view of modern Israel that is alarming and eye-opening. He describes how the state has become radicalized under Benjamin Netanyahu. We learn about the events since 1948 that have had a tremendous impact on Israel, its people and its ideology. Though an Ashkenazi Jew himself, Blumenthal feels that Israel under Netanyahu has become an extremely racist and paranoid state obsessed with the idea that they are under siege by their enemies, and the differences between Jews and Palestinian Arabs are irreconcilable and non-negotiable.

The Jews see the current situation through the filter that says Israel has always belonged to the Jews, it has never been called Palestine, and Arabs have historically never had any claim to land in Israel. The subject of Palestinian rights is not debatable. The situation is exacerbated by the fact that Israel's position in the world is seen through the experience of the Holocaust. They feel they are hated by Palestinian Arabs who are subhuman and inspired by radical Islam ideology, and the next Holocaust is just around the corner.

The Jews of Israel believe that they possess western ideals and morals, which are not shared by the rest of the Middle East, therefore they must isolate themselves from the intellectually, genetically and morally inferior Arabs. Jews, under Netanyahu, have come to believe that their biggest challenge is that of becoming a demographic minority in a state that is supposed to be Jewish. To that end they have embarked on a strategy that isolates the 2M Palestinians in Israel into ghettos and islands, walled off from greater Israel. Efforts are under way to deport as many as possible to countries such as Turkey and Venezuela, and annexing areas in the West Bank that are currently occupied by Jews.

These inclinations have always been present in Jewish Israel, but Blumenthal maintains that it has become much more extreme under the leadership of Netanyahu. The author goes to great lengths in documenting the excesses of the Jews over the years.

The main idea I got from this book is that Blumenthal feels that Israel is heading in the wrong direction, and if current positions and ideology do not change, the very existence of the state is in jeopardy. Blumenthal also suggests that the US might be mistaken in accepting the idea that Israel is "just like us"—and is the only democracy in the Middle East. They are just like us if you are a racist, believe in apartheid, and are a right wing militarist. They are a democracy only if you believe in the tyranny of the majority, and that minorities and those marginalized have no rights.

Looking at current events in Gaza amplifies many of the points Blumenthal makes. The book is certainly controversial and I'm sure there will be much push-back from those who flat-out reject many of the lessons of history.

Profile Image for Joe Sherman.
48 reviews1 follower
March 29, 2014
You owe it to yourself to take a fair look at the reality of Israel. The author is an American Jew who lived in Israel during the three years he worked on this book. It is not a pretty picture of modern Israel. Support of Israel is widely accepted as an unquestioned imperative by Americans and American politicians of both parties. This book will shake their assumptions. Rosenthal also offers a critical perspective on the history of Israel going back to 1948. It is a major ongoing tragedy leading to inexorable disaster. These are hard truths to face, but you must.
Profile Image for Adam Heff.
33 reviews5 followers
February 11, 2014
There is likely no rule in internet debate as well known as Godwin's Law. The semi-satirical law coined in 1990 by author/attorney Mike Godwin states (essentially) that the invoking of Hitler or the Nazis by any participant in a debate causes the participant doing so to lose the debate. But Godwin's Law is not without its detractors. Kevin Drum of Mother Jones and liberal firebrand Glenn Greenwald have each argued for its repeal. Noting rightly, that since WWII analogies are so universally known they can be extremely useful. So as the acts of the Nazis are universally condemned, and universally considered atrocities of the absolute worst kind, it becomes important that any use of a Nazi analogy had better be apt.

The power of Goliath: Life And Loathing in Greater Israel, by Max Blumenthal, comes in the slow realization that his provocatively chosen chapter headings (The Night of Broken Glass, The Concentration Camp) utilize Nazi analogies that are useful and apt. Blumenthal's book is a thoroughly reported look at the way in which modern Israel has devolved into a fascistic, racist apartheid state. Blumenthal spends years in Israel and Palestine, speaks to men on the street and men in the halls of power, and comes away with a portrait of a country in an identity crisis of its own making.

As Blumenthal explains it, the State of Israel was founded to be both democratic and Jewish. Yet as it annexed more land, and as its native and immigrant populations grew, it became clear that these two tenets were in tension. If Jewish Israelis failed to maintain a demographic majority in the country, then the Jewish identity of the country could be dissolved in a popular vote. This idea that indigenous (or immigrant) populations constitute a demographic threat, and thus an existential threat, to the country results in these populations being subjected to both public and private forces aimed at pushing them out of Israel's borders.

Goliath then argues that as the official, legislative, and policy efforts to disenfranchise Israel's Arab population came into maturity, living amongst state-sanctioned discrimination led Israel's Jewish population to cease to see Arab-Israelis as anything other than threats. Government acts of otherizing gave way to a universal acceptance as the Arab as the other. A reality that plays itself out in sobering public opinion polls that show majorities of Jewish Israelis unwilling to share apartment buildings with Arabs, for example.

Working hand in hand with these discriminatory policies, is a PR campaign built to show Israel and its allies that it is engaged at all times in an existential struggle. Far from being an occupation, or apartheid, the actions of Israel are necessary to prevent a “second holocaust” and to prevent the Arabs who would destroy Israel from gaining the power to do so. Goliath stands out because it cuts through so much of this hasbara spin and shows a Western audience what public life in the region looks like.

Though Blumenthal has been cast as an anti-semite, or a self-hating Jew by some for having the audacity to criticize the Jewish state, I think that the cold, hard facts of this book stand on their own. This is a familiar story of a people whipped into a nationalistic fervor, and told their entire lives that the problems of their country are the result of another group. Though it is a great, tragic irony that the perpetrators of this fascism are a people who were once victims of a starkly similar chain of events, that simply does not make the reality of this situation any less true.

Goliath is a dark, depressing, troubling, and lengthy look at the increasingly dire reality of Israel/Palestine. It's a region and a conflict that I knew very little more than the headlines about. I recommend the book, but I acknowledge that it may be controversial for some, triggering for others, and certainly a difficult read for many. But Goliath needs to be difficult, because the truth the book shares is a difficult one as well. And tragically, Godwin's Law does not apply.
Profile Image for Lee.
1,125 reviews36 followers
December 9, 2019
This book is a left-wing polemic on Israel. That is not necessarily something that prevents me from enjoying a book, but polemics are tough to like unless you agree with them. And, if you scroll through the other reviews, you will see how this works. Most readers rate it very highly, not because it is a good book, but because they already agree with it and are looking for someone to confirm their biases.

A handful of reviews shit all over the book, right-wingers who don't think Israel should ever be criticized. In other words, almost all of the readers of this book don't actually read the book, they just narcissistically use it as a text to massage the views that they already have.

I am giving this book one star because it is poorly argued.

Blumenthal frequently uses a variety of flawed attacks on those he disagrees with. He tries to undercut Avigdor Lieberman by reminding us that he was a bouncer in the Soviet Union. He suggests that Russian Jews are mostly not really Jews at all, and thus not really legitimate actors. He frequently compares the right in Israel to the American South, which is wrong for a variety of reasons, but, at some points, it is just factually wrong. "And like in the American South, polls of Israeli Jewish opinions demonstrated that racism rose in inverse proportion to levels of wealth and secularism. " Actually, racism existed in similar proportions in both upper and low-class Southerners. But that is not important to Blumenthal, because he is making an argument on feelings, not facts. He is trying to link Israel's immigrants of Russian origin with the racism of the American South to taint the group morally.

At one point, on pages 24-25, Blumenthal weirdly arguing that because Russia has lots of racists, that Russian Jews bring that with them when fleeing to Israel, a claim that both seems silly and mildly racists. Again, Blumenthal is writing a polemic, and those can be interesting, but only when grounded in facts. Blumenthal is so committed to his own views, that he does not bother with facts, rather he offers up a screed that has nothing to offer the reader looking to learn something, only something to offer readers who already know the answers to the question (and looking at the reviews, that is most readers).

Made it 10% of the way through this book.
Profile Image for Mila Antin.
3 reviews
January 20, 2024
As a Jewish American, it took me until I was 21 to realize what the hell this “Zionism” was and to unlearn everything i was taught about the homeland. I was Zionist without knowing it. I had very little knowledge of Palestine besides the fact that it was a scary place for Jews and they are an obstacle to our safety and freedom. You don’t really question it. But in 2019, I went on birthright and everything changed. I finally saw Israel for the oppressive state it is and my entire Jewish identity was ripped apart. It was difficult. I had no one to turn to - everyone supported Israel. If you didn’t, you were deemed a traitor. And terrorist.

For the last 5 years I’ve silently educated myself on the topic but this is easily the best book I’ve read about it. I’m upset it took me this long to read it. I think when you think about the occupation and the apartheid you assume the horrible things that Palestinians go through, but it’s not until you read and listen to the details they have to share when you really realize just how bad it is. Some of these stories made me cry. I can’t believe the things the occupation has done. It’s truly tragic and horrific. Sometimes in this situation, ignorance is bliss you kind of don’t want to believe that our people are doing what they’re doing to Palestinians. But ripping the bandaid off and hearing the stories of the constant trauma and oppression they face is a necessary part of being propelled into action and becoming passionate about this as a Jew. It’s our duty.

I still can’t believe we live in a world where we have to defeat this thing that feels so much bigger than it all. Goliath, for lack of a better term. Blumenthal developed an outstanding piece of journalism. He really showed how deep this racism and Islamophobia is baked into Israeli society and has been since the 90s. It’s only getting stronger too. And that’s something I never put together.
27 reviews1 follower
December 31, 2013
Max Blumenthal does an excellent job documenting how the Israeli government is moving more and more towards one of the most right-wing governments among western nations. Western being how Israel has not always seen itself, but has always sold itself. Starting from the Israeli slaughter of Palestinians in Operation cast Lead in December of 2008 to the present Blumenthal meticulously documents the progression of both the government of Israel and the greater public are moving towards a completely fascist state. The comparisons to Apartheid South Africa are valid when one considers the restrictions put on Palestinian's movement within Gaza and the West Bank, and in Israel. How there are two sets of citizenship rights for Jewish citizens in Israel, and Arab citizens of Israel. How one of the most fiendish violations of the Israeli blockade of Gaza on human rights is where Israel calculates in order to regulate the daily caloric intake of the citizens of Gaza by how much food Israel allows in. Israel has continually violated International Law, and UN Resolutions and obligations since its inception. Blumenthal interviews current members of the Knesset and presents evidence from Israeli's own historical archives to show that Israel has been carrying out a systematic genocide against Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank for the past 44 years. This book is a must read for anyone who cares abut human rights.
Profile Image for Bruce Nordstrom.
190 reviews3 followers
September 23, 2014
I finished this one last night, and it was a long read. I had to read a few chapters at a time, and digest them before going on.

Read carefully. This is the kind of book which might change your life. It will make you examine your feelings about the Middle East, and Israel.

Like most Americans, I am (Should I say 'Was?') a generally non-involved supporter of the state of Israel. I started to read this book, and I started to ask myself why. And I have to admit my support was based mostly on two books I read years ago. "Exodus," by Leon Uris (and don't forget the movie), and "The Source," by James Mitchener. Both works of fiction, written by American authors. Thinking about this, and some of the later chapters where author Blumenthal discusses how the Israelies ruthlessly brainwash their own people in the media, I began to wonder how non-biased these works are, and their value in shaping the American public opinion.

Remember I warned you.
Profile Image for Ross Bonander.
Author 22 books5 followers
May 29, 2019
Not a huge fan of Blumenthal's style but the book rises above any mild criticisms of style. It's an absolute indictment of Israel's appalling apartheid state and the decades' long ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians in the occupied West Bank. US taxpayers unwittingly make massive contributions to the overt, heartless, and racist subjugation of the Palestinians by an unchecked government free to do whatever it wants under the diminishing guise of a 'democracy' and a 'free society'. It is not hyperbole to say that, in far too many incidents, the way some Israelis talk about Palestinian Arabs can, word for word, be swapped out with the way Germans talked about Jews in the 1930's.
Profile Image for Barbara.
128 reviews4 followers
November 26, 2024
Couldn't finish. Maybe I'll pick it up another time.

Well researched and well-written (by a Jewish author), but I am disgusted by what I have learned. Every page reveals how sadistic is not only the Israeli government but also Israeli citizens by a mix of complicity in institutionalized apartheid, flippant verbal threats and humiliation of the Palestinian people, and collaboration in outright carnage through silence. There is no longer a Left in Israel. The oppressed have become the oppressors - and with relish.
Profile Image for Randall Wallace.
665 reviews652 followers
April 23, 2024
Israeli Shimon Tzabar rightfully placed a full-page ad in Haaretz that beautifully said: “Our right to defend ourselves against extermination does not give us the right to oppress others. Occupation leads to foreign rule. Foreign rule leads to resistance. Resistance leads to oppression. Oppression leads terror and counter-terror. The victims of terror are mostly innocent people. Keeping the occupied territories will turn us into a nation of murderers and murder victims. Let us get out of the Occupied Territories immediately!” Another nice quote: “The struggle is between those who seek peace and those who seek war. My people are those who seek peace.”

Netanyahu explained to a conference of Likud activists the essence of Hasbara, “It doesn’t matter if justice is on your side. You have to depict your position as just.” Could Hitler have said that any better?

Zionist Compassion: When a middle-aged woman approached Bronstein to ask what his demonstration was about, he explained, “Almost a million people were expelled before Israel was created.” “They can go fuck themselves in the ass!” she snapped in Russian-accented Hebrew. Zionist Chief Paranoid Fantasy: “If we put our weapons down, everyone will kill us. If Arabs put their weapons away, there will be peace. We’re a peaceful nation. We want peace.” “Sixty or seventy years ago, everyone wanted us dead (who knew the Nazis were EVERYONE?). “No matter what we do (short of ending the occupation and granting Palestinians rights and right of return), everything is against us – everybody. And we know we are right.” Who knew that although ALL humans are fallible, Zionists are “always right”? It’s good to be “chosen”.

Glossary: Netanyahu = Scaremonger-In-Chief. PEP = Progressive Except for Palestine (thus liberal, not progressive). Hill of Shame = Parash Hill where Israelis go to watch bombs drop on Gaza. Am Yisrael Chai = The People of Israel Live. Gideon Levy = the conscience of Haaretz.

In Israel, you have three systems of laws. One is democracy for Jews (80 percent of the population), a Judocracy or ethnocracy. In the second, you get racial discrimination for the 20% that are Israeli Arabs. “The third is apartheid for the population in the West Bank and Gaza.” Think of that as one government for the Palestinians and a separate privileged one for the settlers. Yum…

The 2005 Myth Exposed: Zionists trolls love to tell you how Israelis intentionally left Gaza in 2005, but not how “In 2006, Israeli forces simultaneously carpet-bombed the Gaza Strip and Southern Lebanon. Israel blanketed the Gaza Strip with more than six thousand artillery shells and missiles, deliberately destroyed Gaza’s main power plant, then bombed the access roads to prevent the plant from being repaired.” Zionist trolls will tell you how in 2005, “Israel withdrew its last settlers from the Gaza Strip.” But they won’t tell you how Gaza was then intentionally turned into “a quarantined ghetto that military administrators could keep ‘on the brink of collapse’ and where surplus humanity would be indefinitely warehoused.”

Fun Facts: David Ben-Gurion’s real name was David Gryn. “Since 1967, the State of Israel has detained at least 750,000 Palestinians in its prisons, including 10,000 women.” When this book was written Israel was “holding 4,500 political prisoners, including more than 200 children and 322 people jailed without charges (technically called administrative detention).” “Since the dawn of the occupation in 1967, according to the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions (ICAHD), the State of Israel has destroyed well over 26,000 Palestinian homes.” In the last week of Operation Cast Lead, the IDF killed 31,000 chickens – I guess the IDF can’t have those they are illegally occupying instead eating those chickens to stay alive. “Since 2000, not one member of the Israeli army has been charged with a capital offence.” The goals of BDS are ending the occupation, dismantling the wall, equal rights for Palestinians, and allowing the Palestinians Right of Return (see UN Resolution 194). “In the late 1990’s and onwards, ‘Death to the Arabs’ became a common chant in almost every football stadium in Israel.” Let me guess, if you disapprove of such mass shameless hate speech in a stadium, you must be a Jew Hater. It’s fun to be “chosen”!

IDF Women: “Israel is the only country in the world that requires women to serve in the military.” “Instead of earning respect by displaying military elan, as their male counterparts do, women soldiers are often induced into the role of ‘mattresses’, realizing their value to the state through sexual availability.” “They are used as props in pro-army propaganda, with comely female soldiers in full makeup appearing frequently on the covers of Israeli newspapers, presenting the military as a heavily armed Ibiza.” “Cases of Arabs raping female Israeli soldiers have always been extremely rare and are now virtually unheard of. In reality, young Israeli women are far more likely to be raped or abused by the male soldier assigned to them as their protector.” A Knesset Committee found in 2003 that “one out of three female soldiers had been sexually attacked during her service, and that at least 80% had suffered from sexual harassment.” Women are known as “the mattress of the unit”. Male recruits are known as ‘fresh beef’ or ‘meat’ while women get referred to as ‘fresh mattresses’. If you don’t appreciate your daughter in IDF being called a ‘fresh mattress’, you simply must be a self-hating Jew.

Zionists won’t tell you that what a Polish person in this book did – that “oppression is oppression, occupation is occupation, and crimes against humanity are crimes against humanity, whether they have been committed here in Warsaw or in Gaza.” Famed corporate PR shill Frank Luntz said the key for Israel is to constantly say it wants peace while it continues its perpetual war against the Palestinians – hooray for rhetorical devices that never stop the underlying problem! Where would Israel be today without decades of servile Arab quislings? The IDF: expecting heavily armed teenagers to treat a largely defenseless population with empathy.

Patriarchal Autocrat Ben Gurion said, “Any Jewish woman who does not bring into this world at least four healthy children is comparable to a soldier who evades military service.” What woman doesn’t like being told what to do by a guy who looks like Ed Asner with cotton candy for hair? Zionist women who managed to spit out ten kids were called “heroine mothers” and given awards. Comically though, that award program “was discontinued a decade later, however, when state planners discovered that most of those eligible for the prize were Arabs.” Imagine wanting a racist all-white population and find instead you have been rewarding non-whites to out-procreate whites. Ha ha… Zionist Labor chief ideologue Berl Katznelson said back in 1929, “The Zionist enterprise is an enterprise of conquest.” He also said, “It is not by chance that I speak of settlement in military terms.” This of course is because humans don’t give up their land to outsiders freely or without resistance.

Israeli Racism towards Africans: Zionists were furious when Sudanese refugees tried to enter Israel; “the asylum seekers greatest transgression was not being Jewish and white.” “In modern-day Israel the African refugee occupied a similar role as the devious Jew in Weimar-era propaganda and the criminal ‘nigra’ constantly invoked by racist Dixiecrats such as Strom Thurmond in the Jim Crow South.” The ‘greatest danger’ to Netanyahu involving African males was their “propensity for violating the sexual dignity of Jewish women, and by extension, of the Jewish nation.” How fascinating how closely Zionism follows the racist sexual tropes of Jim Crow America. At one Israeli rally against Africans, Max says a man in the crowd answered back, “All they do is reproduce! Deport them.” I envision another Zionist in the back shouting, “And how dare their penises be larger than ours!” A poll by Yediot Tel Aviv, showed “that 63 percent of Tel Aviv’s residents supported the expulsion of all non-Jewish Africans from Israel.” But if you do that, who will have sex with your Tel Aviv wife while you are at work?

Rarely mentioned is the threat to Israel by its Jewish citizens leaving Israel for less racist pastures: “The exodus of Israelis is the greatest and most immediate demographic threat the Jewish state faces.” “A 2007 poll of Israeli youth between the age of fourteen and eighteen found that more than half would prefer to live abroad and would do so if they had a chance.” One Israeli who left told Max, “We could have stayed, of course, but the fascism had gotten to be overwhelming. Thank God we left.”

This was a great book by Max. Everyone should also check out his amazing videos on both the Greyzone and YouTube (both on the web) and with Aaron Mate (son of the amazing Gabor Mate). Basically, this book was Max going around Israel and the Occupied Territories and talking to people and listening and reporting rather than hitting libraries & reading. Big Kudos to Max for this.
Profile Image for Greg Brown.
402 reviews80 followers
January 24, 2014

Cataloguing the current political situation in Israel, Blumenthal's Goliath is an important and damning work. Unlike most books on Israel-Palestine affairs, Blumenthal is less concerned with proving which ideology is right or wrong (or whether the definition of “apartheid” matches the situation), and more aimed at using the brute facts of the situation to illustrate the incredible devastation wrought by the Israeli right-wing. I regard myself as a pretty news-conscious guy of the Left, but so much of the book's events came as a shock to me; you do hear some about the plight of the Palestinians in publications such as the NY Times, but even then it's typically couched in what it means for US-Israeli relations. (The most famous book about Israel of the last two decades is specifically about the Israel lobby in US politics, side-stepping any discussion of the occupation itself.)



While Blumenthal isn't concerned with laying out a discrete comparison to apartheid, as mentioned earlier, the stories he tells makes it hard to not think of the parallels to a part of America's history that we're more familiar with: the Jim Crow-era South. Like then, Palestinians and Israeli Arabs face a mixture of both de jure and de facto structural racism, discrimination that not only depresses their economic futures but also exacts a deep personal cost such as police harassment, jail time, separation of families, and violent eviction from their homes.



Some of the stories are so stunning as to make me think of the Indonesian public in The Act of Killing: a sort of blasé indifference that's just as morally damning as if they were directly responsible. And in many cases, they are directly responsible through the universal conscription that makes many execute the practical roles of the occupation. Blumenthal especially indicts the Zionist Left in this aspect; they often willingly enter service as “change from within”, but whatever change they enact is impossible to see, and they often disengage afterwards from any sort of moral responsibility for their actions.



If the book has any flaws, it's in a messy structure. The book is a series of short chapters or episodes that illustrate aspects of the day-to-day reality in Israel and Palestine, sort of like The Forever War by Dexter Filkins. Unlike Filkins, though, Blumenthal isn't evocative enough (and succinct enough) to keep this technique from grinding the reader down. I had to take several breaks of a few days, since the book is so unremittently bleak. (It didn't help that I was concurrently reading a book on the AIDS crisis!) But under full consideration, the book is Important in a way that excuses the flaws, determined to thoroughly catalogue the current Israeli state of affairs, and warn of how it's spiraling out of control.


Profile Image for Beorn.
300 reviews62 followers
May 3, 2015
An important, deeply humanising though at times harrowing eyewitness account from on the ground in Israel-Palestine - both within the infamous Green Line and in the Occupied Territories - as the author travels & meets both Israeli and Palestinian activists from across the political spectrum, ranging from radical Israelis standing side by side with Palestinians against the state or those hardline right-wingers stoking the hatred which is on the rise in Israel.
Essential reading for anyone keeping an eye on the situation in the area, regardless of which side you are on or your protestations of neutrality.
As for the author, he has a manner of writing where the key participants are so vivid, you get a real feeling for them as people rather than just nameless figures in an endless conflict. It is this humanising approach, used across the board even for those the author disagrees with, which helps this book stand out.
Profile Image for Marsilla Dewi-Baruch.
126 reviews5 followers
April 30, 2020
Spectacular write up on the bludgeoning terror and cruelty of Zionism. The book tells day to day harrowing stories Palestinians have to endure which the world rarely pay attention to. Most of the news we hear from mainstream media only justify the actions done by Israel. But this book is something different. Very recommended for readers who wanna know the full scale of israel brutality.
Profile Image for Joseph.
13 reviews
February 7, 2014
A very important book that I recommend everyone should read and discuss.
Profile Image for Kathlyn.
187 reviews8 followers
May 15, 2014
One of the best books I have read on this subject: concise, accurate and engaging - and complete dynamite.
Profile Image for Thomas Ray.
1,506 reviews519 followers
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July 23, 2024
Goliath: Life and Loathing in Greater Israel, Max Blumenthal (1977-), 2013, 496 pages, ISBN 9781568586342, Dewey 956.9405

The state of Israel continually proves that it has no right to exist.
Profile Image for Amr Monzir.
11 reviews
September 20, 2023
In-depth analysis and captivating story-telling from inside the occupied territories.

As a person from Gaza, we rarely get to see exactly what's happening on the other side of the Gaza border, this book tells a story from all sides of Israel's political spectrum as well as activism, never shying away from laying out the truth brazenly as it is. To me, the book was enlightening.

Sometimes while going through the book, I would get so irritated that the things described are actually happening to Palestinians on the other side and we barely know anything about it, so no wonder the rest of the world doesn't either. So I would stop reading for a while before going back into it.
Now that I have finished it, I wish I had finished it when I first started it, because throughout the book Max brings up the names and backgrounds of many Israeli individuals who will in the later years from 2014 to today be extremely relevant in politics, with some getting positions as heads of ministries and prime minister roles as well.

While I find Max's position on the conflict in Syria extremely uninformed, in here, Max provides thorough analyses with robust research and referencing.
I am sure any person interested in an in-depth look at Israeli society and political power-dynamics would find much in this book.
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