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What Voltaire Would Say About Recognizing a Palestinian State Today

Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations Gilad Erdan holds a picture of Hamas’ leader in Gaza Yahya Sinwar, as he addresses delegates during the United Nations General Assembly in New York City, US, May 10, 2024. Photo: REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
The 18th century produced countless geniuses who changed how we think in so many ways. Not least among them was François-Marie Arouet, better known by his pen name Voltaire. Like countless other savants in that era, he excelled at multiple disciplines – including history, philosophy, politics, and literature.
But most of all, Voltaire is remembered for his sharp wit. One of his most famous quips was about the Holy Roman Empire, the loose confederation of principalities and dukedoms in what later became Germany. “This agglomeration which calls itself the Holy Roman Empire,” he said, “is in no way holy, nor Roman, nor an empire.”
Voltaire had little patience for pomposity and pretension, and his description of the Holy Roman Empire — a sprawling, lumbering political entity that dominated Central Europe for centuries — cut straight to the bone.
It wasn’t holy — it was made up of competing Christian denominations, and the Church had long since lost control over its many local rulers. It wasn’t Roman — the connection to ancient Rome was tenuous at best, a grandiose title masking the reality of a Germanic confederation. And it certainly wasn’t an empire — it was a disorganized patchwork of feuding duchies and city-states that barely hung together under a distant elected emperor.
Which is why Voltaire’s line is so memorable: it captured, in one withering sentence, the absurdity of dressing up a dysfunctional, fragmented mess as something it plainly was not.
Which brings us to the present day, and the latest diplomatic fad sweeping Western capitals: recognition of a Palestinian state. In the past few weeks alone, Britain, France, Australia, and Canada have all rushed to declare that “Palestine” should now be treated as if it is a real, functioning country.
But here’s the problem: it isn’t. As Voltaire might have said, there is no state — and frankly, there is no Palestine. According to the 1933 Montevideo Convention, a state must have four things: defined borders, a functioning government, a coherent judiciary and military, and a permanent population. Palestine has none of them. What it does have is a fractured leadership divided between a corrupt, un-elected Palestinian Authority in Ramallah and a genocidal terror regime in Gaza.
And yet, astonishingly, rather than confronting the nightmare reality that Palestinian national aspirations are being driven by an absolutist bunch of thugs — a murderous death cult that unleashed the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust — world leaders have chosen to reward them by indulging in the fantasy of Palestinian statehood. And make no mistake: when the Palestinians say “Palestine,” they mean all of Israel, not just Gaza and the West Bank.
Incredibly, October 7th has become a kind of twisted diplomatic success for Hamas and its international cheerleaders. A bloody terrorist rampage has been transformed into a Willy Wonka golden ticket at the United Nations, while foolish Western governments cower in the face of Islamic minorities and progressive loudmouths in their own countries. It is the international equivalent of applauding an arsonist by handing him the keys to the fire station — and then wondering why the fires keep spreading.
History offers us plenty of examples of phantom “states” that were recognized — or kind of recognized — despite having none of the attributes of genuine statehood. Take Biafra, for instance. In 1967, the Igbo people in southeastern Nigeria declared independence. For three brutal years, Biafra functioned as a shadow state, fighting a bloody war with Nigeria that left millions dead.
A handful of countries recognized Biafra, but most of the world did not. And even those who toyed with the idea of recognition knew, deep down — or maybe not so deep down — that Biafra was never going to be a viable state. When it collapsed in 1970, the recognition evaporated as if it had never been offered.
Then there’s Transnistria — a sliver of land wedged between Moldova and Ukraine, which declared independence in 1990. It’s thirty five years later, and Transnistria still parades itself as a state: it has its own flag, an army, border controls, postage stamps, and even its own currency.
In fact, on paper, it looks far more like a real state than “Palestine” ever has. And yet — crucially — no one recognizes it. Because the world understands that Transnistria is just a Russian-backed invention, a geopolitical puppet masquerading as a country.
Which brings us back to “Palestine.” Like Biafra, it has no prospect of surviving the test of time. Like Transnistria, it is just a figment of its own fantasy and the political considerations of others. It’s totally absurd for such an entity to be recognized as a state.
If anything, by the usual standards of statehood, Disneyland has a stronger claim to sovereignty than Palestine. It has borders, border checks, its own security personnel, and a coherent government in the form of the Disney corporation. If the world is in the business of recognizing make-believe kingdoms, at least Disneyland delivers joy and entertainment — instead of terror tunnels and mayhem.
Parshat Re’eh contains a sobering warning that echoes down to our own time. Moses tells the Jewish people (Deut. 13:2): “If a prophet or a dreamer arises among you and gives you a sign or a wonder, and the sign comes to pass, but then he says, ‘Let us go after other gods,’ you must not listen to him.”
The Torah’s message is chillingly clear: appearances can deceive. Someone might come along and dazzle us with something that seems legitimate. But in the final analysis, legitimacy is not determined by wishful thinking. What matters is fidelity to truth.
The classical commentaries drive this point home. The Ramban notes that the Torah presents us with a scenario in which the false prophet’s “wonder” actually happens. He predicted it, and it came to pass. And yet, the acid test is not that it happened, but whether the prophet’s message aligns with eternal truth. If it does not, the wonder is not a wonder, it is a distraction.
Rabbi Obadiah Sforno sharpens this even further: the false prophet’s “achievement” dazzles the crowd in the moment, but it has no enduring substance. The appearance of success collapses the instant you measure it against what is real and lasting.
Malbim adds a more unsettling twist. He explains that such deceptions are not accidents, but a Divine test: will people cling to principle when they are confronted with a fake wonder, or will they be seduced by its allure?
It’s an uncomfortable question. Will the spectacle of international recognition – the pageantry of parliaments, diplomats, and foreign ministers standing before TV cameras declaring their recognition of “Palestine” – really deliver? It sure looks like progress. But in reality, it is a lie — a false prophecy that leads people astray, away from moral clarity and toward disaster.
Rav Samson Raphael Hirsch constantly taught that the Torah is our safeguard against the fashions of the age, when hollow trends dress themselves up as timeless morality.
That’s exactly the point. The false prophet doesn’t look like a villain. On the contrary, he speaks the language of hope and righteousness. But he is a villain, spreading poison and destruction. So it is with “Palestinian statehood,” which is presented as a historical justice, but in reality is the epitome of terror, corruption, and wanton bloodshed.
By endorsing something that does not exist, the West is in effect falling into the trap of a false prophecy. Seduced by the theatrics of recognition, they are ignoring the truth that what they are doing strengthens terror and undermines their own credibility. They have mistaken illusion for substance — and that, says the Torah, is the very definition of a false prophet.
As Voltaire himself put it, “Illusion is the first of all pleasures.” It’s time for the West to open their eyes and wake up from their dream.
The author is a rabbi in Beverly Hills, California.
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Netflix Premieres Adult Animated Comedy Series About Jewish Family

A scene from “Long Story Short.” Photo: Screenshot
Netflix premiered on Friday an adult animated comedy series from “BoJack Horseman” creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg that follows a Jewish family over the course of several decades.
“Long Story Short” revolves around Naomi Schwartz (Lisa Edelstein), Elliot Cooper (Paul Reiser), and their three children – Avi (Ben Feldman), Shira (Abbi Jacobson), and Yoshi (Max Greenfield). The series jumps between time, and viewers follow the Schwooper siblings “from childhood to adulthood and back again, chronicling their triumphs, disappointments, joys, and compromises,” according to a synopsis provided by Netflix.
The extended cast includes Nicole Byer as Shira’s partner and Angelique Cabral. Dave Franco and Michaela Dietz are recurring guest stars. The first episode starts in 1996 and focuses on Avi bringing his girlfriend home to meet his family the same weekend as Yoshi’s bar mitzvah celebration. The episode also addresses Jewish-related topics such as the laws of kosher and the Holocaust.
“I think the show in some ways is about Jewish joy, and I think a lot of Jews will enjoy having a place for the Jews, and I think a lot of antisemites might learn a thing or two,” Bob-Waksberg told Variety on Monday at the show’s premiere at the Tudum Theater in Hollywood, California.
“Long Story Short” – which is Bob-Waksberg’s fourth animated show (“BoJack Horseman,” “Undone,” and “Tuca & Bertie”) and his third with Netflix – was renewed for a second season ahead of its season one premiere. The showrunner told The Hollywood Reporter that “Long Story Short” is “absolutely the most explicitly Jewish thing by a wide margin.”
The show is already facing antisemitic criticism.
“We’ve never not had antisemitism,” he told Variety. “The harassment is already there. I don’t think there’s a Jew in Hollywood, a public, a visible person that doesn’t get constantly harassed on Instagram all day long. An article came out this morning, it was a profile of the show, and I stupidly skimmed the first few comments and they were all … just nothing I want to repeat. But it’s just a buzzkill.”
“People are going to want to talk about the greater global geopolitical issues that are happening around this show, but this show is not about that,” he added.
“Long Story Short” is also from “Samurai Jack” creator Genndy Tartakovsky and “Rick and Morty” writer Matt Roller. Bob-Waksberg is an executive producer alongside Noel Bright and Steven A. Cohen. Corey Campodonico and Alex Bulkley are co-executive producers.
Watch the trailer for “Long Story Short” below.
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Iran, European Powers Agree to Resume Nuclear, Sanctions Talks Next Week

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi speaks during a meeting with foreign ambassadors in Tehran, Iran, July 12, 2025. Photo: Hamid Forootan/Iranian Foreign Ministry/WANA (West Asia News Agency)/Handout via REUTERS
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi and his French, British, and German counterparts agreed on Friday to resume talks next week on nuclear and sanctions issues, Iranian state media reported.
The three major European powers have threatened to re-activate United Nations sanctions on Iran under a “snapback” mechanism if Tehran does not return to negotiations on a deal to curb its disputed uranium enrichment program.
German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul confirmed talks next week and warned Iran that sanctions would snap back into effect unless it reached a verifiable and durable deal to defuse concerns about its nuclear ambitions. He reiterated that time was very short and Iran needed to engage substantively.
Iranian state media said Araqchi and the British, French, and German foreign ministers agreed during a phone call for deputy foreign ministers to continue the talks on Tuesday.
During the call, Araqchi “emphasized the legal and moral incompetence of these countries to resort to the [snapback] mechanism, and warned of the consequences of such an action,” Iranian media reported.
The European trio, along with the US, contend that Iran is using the nuclear energy program to potentially develop weapons capability in violation of the Non-Proliferation Treaty. Iran says it seeks only civilian nuclear power.
The Islamic Republic suspended nuclear negotiations with the United States, which were aimed at curbing its accelerating enrichment program, after the US and Israel bombed its nuclear sites during a 12-day war in June.
Since then, inspectors for the International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN nuclear watchdog, have been unable to access Iran‘s nuclear installations, despite IAEA chief Rafael Grossi stating that inspections remain essential.
Iran and the three European powers last convened in Geneva on June 20, while the war was still raging, and there were few signs of progress.
Iran‘s state broadcaster said an Iranian delegation was due to travel to Vienna on Friday to meet with IAEA officials. It gave no further details.
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German Government Calls Recognition of Palestinian State ‘Counterproductive’

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz attends a joint press conference with Finnish Prime Minister in Turku, Finland, on May 27, 2025. Photo: Lehtikuva/Roni Rekomaa via REUTERS
A German government spokesman said on Friday that Berlin has no current plans to recognize a Palestinian state because that would undermine any efforts to reach a negotiated two-state solution with Israel.
“A negotiated two-state solution remains our goal, even if it seems a long way off today … The recognition of Palestine is more likely to come at the end of such a process, and such decisions would now be rather counterproductive,” the spokesperson said during a press conference.
Countries including Australia, United Kingdom, France, and Canada have recently said they would recognize a Palestinian state under different conditions.
Israel has responded that such recognition would be a “reward” for terrorism following the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023, invasion of and massacre across southern Israel. During the ensuing war in Gaza, Hamas has embedded its weapons and military operation centers among civilian sites, a strategy that critics have decried as employing the use of “human shields” against Israel.