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A War Over Nothing?

A WAR OVER NOTHING?

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

28 June 2011

TEL AVIV –

An Android phone application continues to cause fierce debate in the Middle East.

“How many times have you paid nothing and got something back? Now we offer you a unique opportunity: pay something and get Nothing back! This application does absolutely Nothing. By purchasing it you will help us prove that Nothing is indeed worth Something!”

Nothing – which retails for $0.99 – was developed by Israeli programmer, musician and author Nir Yaniv. In the few days still its release it has already sold in the double figures and was featured on prominent Israeli news site Ynet. One customer described it as “the best App I ever got. It does exactly what it promised to do! Nothing!”

Nothing Pro, retailing for $9.00 and described as “lighter in size, easier on both the memory and the CPU, and it does Nothing way more smoothly and efficiently than the regular consumer version,” has since been released.

Now the tongue-in-cheek application – described by Ynet readers as, variously, “the stupidest thing I have ever seen” and “pure genius” – and resembling British artist Martin Creed’s controversial, Turner Prize-winning piece Work 227: The lights going on and off – has been co-opted in the Middle East’s always-bitter political conflict.

Right-wing blog The Elder of Ziyon has used the application to attack Palestinian politics, writing, in part, “I think that we can expand on this concept. for example, a deluxe edition of Nothing that shows: Every Palestinian Arab concession since 1988; Every example of Mahmoud Abbas’ “moderation”; Every Palestinian Arab “human rights group” that calls for an unconditional release of Gilad Shalit; Every benefit that a Palestinian Arab state would bring to the world,” and continuing further in that vein.

When reached for comment, a bemused Mr. Yaniv said, “I never dreamed that anyone would use the app for political purposes. In retrospect, given the nature of the internet, I should have known better.”

Plans for an iPhone version of Nothing have since been announced.

The first Israeli science fiction magazine?

I came across this a few months ago, and snapped a picture.  The dealer was asking around £50/$70 for it. Never seen one before.

Pit’om (Suddenly) – The First Science Fiction Magazine in Hebrew

Foreign Rights Sales for The Bookman

I don’t think I mentioned this before, but the contracts are signed, so…

  • Hebrew rights to The Bookman went to Rani Graff at Graff Publishing, via John Berlyne of the Zeno Literary Agency.
  • German rights to The Bookman went to Piper Verlag, via John Berlyne of the Zeno Literary Agency.

That is all!

We’ll Be Right Back

[Images from Walla News in Israel]

Some more pictures from Israel’s occupation of Gaza – but there’s nothing to see here, folks, Israel’s an honourable country with an honourable army – right? Right? Um, yeah…

We’ll be Right Back

Soldier having his picture taken in a Palestinian family’s kitchen

Fuck you, Israeli Cabinet

The Israeli cabinet (the rabidly right-wing, fringe-lunatic cabinet – which, for fringe, read vast majority of Israeli voters) has approved plans for a loyalty oath:

If passed by the Israeli Knesset, non-Jewish applicants for Israeli citizenship will have to swear allegiance to a “Jewish and democratic state.” Critics say the oath invites discrimination towards non-Jews.

The new ruling is expected to be passed into law in the next few months and will affect several thousand people a year,mainly Arabs who marry Israeli Arab citizens. Jewish people wishing to become new citizens of Israel will not have to take the oath.

To be honest, when I heard about it I thought it was so ludicrous I wasn’t even going to comment on it. Silly me. The Israeli government thrives of ludicrous, after all – not to mention insanely racist – and is now blithely headed further towards straight-on fascism.

The core tension at the heart of Israel is its existence as a “Jewish, democratic state” – an inherent paradox of intent that remains unresolved but creates a country that is neither democratic nor Jewish. How idiotic this is can be seen in the words of that grandest idiot of all, the great Binyamin Netanyahu himself:

“The state of Israel is the nation state of the Jewish people and is a democratic state in which all of its citizens, Jews and non-Jews, enjoy full equal rights. Whoever wants to join us has to recognize us,” he said.

Spot anything strange in that?

Anyhow, under the new law I won’t have to swear the oath, lucky me, since I wouldn’t be able to do it with a straight face anyway.

This is a racist law – but this is an inherently racist country, too. So before they pass another law to shut me up, let me just say: fuck you, Israeli cabinet. Fuck you very much.

Announcing the new Hebrew edition of The Tel Aviv Dossier!

I am delighted to announce the imminent release of the Israeli edition of The Tel Aviv Dossier, the supernatural disaster novel I co-wrote with Nir Yaniv. It is published by Odyssey Publishing and translated by Itamar Faran. The cover artwork is the same as the Chizine edition, by the extremely talented Erik Mohr.

Advance copies of the novel will be available for sale at Icon, the Israeli SF convention, from Sunday 26, with bookshop distribution to follow. Nir and I will be discussing the novel on Monday 27, 20:00, at the Eshkol arena.

How Much for an Israeli Prime Minister? (also some rules for living in Israel)

Been watching the news, and the on-going corruption trials and so on, and a guy on TV saying Israel was worse than either Italy or Nigeria in that regard (though it has less cappuccinos and less 419 scammers! a marvelous achievement).

And I was watching it, and I thought – but why are they all so cheap?

I mean, it really doesn’t take much to buy an Israeli PM! A couple of free trips to Europe and you’re sorted! Which makes me sad, because I’d like to think that, if I were prime minister, I’d ask for at least a summer house in Malibu and a bag of coke. And maybe a free packet of crisps.

Also on TV, the government is putting out an appeal for Israelis (link in English, check out the video…):

Going abroad? Meeting foreigners on a visit? Be ambassadors for Israel!

Many of us, whether we’re traveling or living abroad for an extended period of time, get involved in discussions with locals during which they bring up misconceptions and false information regarding Israel, without our having the tools and the correct information for coping with the questions or the barbs of criticism put to us.
At such moments, we’re seized with an urge to make the other person open their mind and especially their heart, and see us—see Israel—differently.

I am very glad indeed to be asked by my government to act as an ambassador. I am still looking into the renumeration package but I am told it includes strippers. In any case, here are some tips for living in Israel!

  1. Israeli drivers are – and there is no exception to this – assholes.
  2. You can get a fine for crossing a pedestrian crossing at a red light. Cars, meanwhile, are allowed to drive through when pedestrians have a green light.
  3. Butchers charge you extra to cut your meat. I mean, it’s not like it’s their job or anything.
  4. You have to carry an ID on you at all times.
  5. The banks charge you to deposit money. Forget about that strange foreign thing called earning interest.
  6. News begin broadcasting at 12:01am. News stop broadcasting at 11:59pm. Yes, you get a full two minutes which are news-free.
  7. Old women are mean.
  8. Chicken soup really does heal anything.
  9. You really don’t want to be an Arab and live here. Second-class status is something you can only dream about.
  10. On the plus sides, prime ministers come cheap!

How to Kill a Goy?

You have to admit How To Kill a Goy would make a good title for a book. As it happens, though, it appears to be a Rabbinical manual, no less, written by Rabbi Yitzhak Shapira, on when it is permissible to kill non-Jews.

It includes such gems as

When we encounter a gentile who has violated the Seven Laws of Noah and kill him out of concern for upholding the seven mitzvoth, no prohibition has been violated.

It also apparently says that

Anywhere where the presence of a gentile poses a threat to Israel, it is permissible to kill him, even if it is a righteous gentile who is not responsible for the threatening situation.

Shapira has been arrested by Israeli police on “suspicion of incitement to violence against non-Jews.”

I wish I could say it beggars belief or state that Shapira will most likely be convicted. I imagine he’d be set free fairly soon, though. Israel has a culture of killing – from the illegal assassinations of its opponents (there’s even a Wikipedia page, List of Israeli Assassinations, with the 2000s being a particularly busy time) to the page 7 killings of civilians in Gaza and the West Bank (so called since they end up being reported, if it all, buried somewhere on page 7 of the newspapers).

It’s a shameful place to be in, as a country.

Shapira is not a cause – he is a symptom. There is a sickness in Israel, an acceptance of moral wrong that, like a particularly virulent meme, keeps spreading. A weak and ignorant government, an apathetic-at-best, rabid-at-worst electorate and a discreditable Left of an ageing minority don’t offer much hope for the future.

Still, I like to think there is hope. In September I’m supposed to talk at a panel on Writing the Future of the Middle East. The future hadn’t been written yet. Israel can choose to follow the path it’s been following all along – towards more deaths, more uncertainty, more suffering and wrongness – or it could follow a path towards peace, and justice, and regional prosperity. I keep thinking that, one day, it would turn from the current path and follow the other. Still, right now, it’s hard not to realise that’s just, well – science fiction.

Stupid quote of the day so far

Ehud Barak, former army chief of staff, former prime minister, current defense minister and still, even after all these years, a moron:

Defense Minister Ehud Barak said in a press conference on Monday that while he was sorry for lives lost, the organizers of the Gaza-bound protest flotilla were solely responsible for the outcome of the fatal IDF raid earlier in the day.”

He called the flotilla a provocation, specifically called the IHH, an Islamic aid organization, “extremist supporters of terror.” - Jerusalem Post

Q: So when Barak calls the organisers “extremist supporters of terror” does that mean they voted for him in the last Israeli elections?

Q2: Can “They made us kill them so it’s their fault” be used as justification in a murder trial?

Q3: Is “moron” considered bad language? If so, should bloggers using it about Ehud Barak be shot?

What writers do

According to the BBC, Swedish author Henning Mankell was/is on board one of the ships.

I wish I had his guts.

I wish I wasn’t afraid of being shot.

What writers do and what writers should do are often different things. We’re not creatures of action, as a rule. Our method of confrontation is words on paper, not face-to-face. And to a great extent that is how writers should voice themselves. It’s what they’re good at, after all.

Right now on Israeli TV, one of the generals came on to explain that the IDF soldiers were attacked and therefore had to protect themselves. Let me repeat that. The IDF soldiers who attacked the ships were under attack and had to use force.

Orwell would have been so proud.

TV and newspaper double-speak is the order of the day. The soldiers had to defend themselves. The same general on TV said that, when the flotilla organisers were told not to approach Gaza, they replied in “an inappropriate manner I don’t want to repeat here”.

My God. Did they? Why not, I don’t know, shoot them? They made us do it, seems to be the consensus.

And they used bad language!

I hope they said Fuck you, just before you gave the order to attack.

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