published
in The Jerusalem Post on March 31, 2020 When Israel’s “everything will be ok” mindset hits the fan by Dan Ben-David For lack of an official slogan, Israel’s national
motto might as well have been the ubiquitous “everything will be ok.” It’s the common Israeli rebuttal, and the
underlying principle, that has guided the country’s policy-makers for decades. This is a country that sent its children to the
biggest war since its independence with empty storerooms, putting its faith on
their resourcefulness to pull us out of the Yom Kippur War. We paid an enormous price. This is a country that sent its medical teams
to war with empty storerooms against the most dangerous virus in Israel’s
history, assuming that everything will be ok because we Israelis are more
ingenious at making do than most. We’ll
only know the final price of this approach in the future. This is a country that gives a third world
education to roughly half of its children – who also belong to its fastest
growing population groups – and believes that everything will be ok when they
grow up. So what if reality (in Israel
and in the rest of the world) is that the ability to overcome a poor education
diminishes with age? Everything will be
ok. This is a country that built hospitals and managed
to add hospital beds at the exponentially increasing rate of its population
during the first decades after independence.
This same country lost its way in recent decades and enabled a free fall
in the number of hospital beds per capita (Figure 1). Since the 1970s, the number of unoccupied
hospital beds per capita has fallen to the bottom of the developed world
(Figure 2). Israel’s multi-year neglect of its health system
did not just culminate in empty warehouses for its medical staffs but reached
the medical staffs themselves. Today,
the number of practicing nurses per capita in Israel is one of the lowest in
the West (Figure 3). And when we look
ahead, the number of nursing graduates per capita is also near the bottom of
the developed world (Figure 3) – with all that this suggests about the need to
rehabilitate the system. It still has not dawned on the “everything will be
ok” country that when long run trajectories are neglected, they will ultimately
blow up in our face. When hospital
congestion overflows repeatedly into corridors and dining areas, and when there
is a severe lack in medical personnel and of equipment for them, this carries a
price. For example, the share of
Israelis dying from infectious diseases doubled over the past two decades
(Figure 4). No other developed country
has witnessed anything approaching this death rate. The unparalleled jump in Israeli mortality rates
from infectious diseases – even before the current epidemic – catapulted Israel
to the top of the developed world. We’re
not just leading the list. The share of
Israelis dying annually from infectious diseases is 73% higher (!) than the second place country (Figure 5). To provide some perspective of this debacle’s
magnitude: between 4,000 to 6,000 Israelis die each year from infectious
diseases (according to the national comptroller’s office). This compares with 250-350 people killed annually
on Israel’s roads. This is a nation that sees the writing on the wall
year after year, and yet, it continues to run under the omnipresent assumption
that everything will be ok. It even
leaves in office those responsible for the fiascoes. This is not something happening only in
healthcare but a phenomenon occurring in one realm after another. While the public discourse is being led
astray by the placing of trifle issues at the top of the agenda, Israel is
proceeding methodically along trajectories that are clearly unsustainable –
with all that this implies for the future of the country. This is a country that exempts a fifth of its
children from studying a complete core curriculum – behavior considered illegal
in every other developed country – because everything will be ok. As more and more Haredim (ultra-Orthodox
Jews) understand the importance of higher education and embark on the path to
academic studies, their dreams crash into the wall of reality when most have to
drop out – more than half (53%) of Haredi women and more than three-quarters (76%)
of Haredi men, according to the national comptroller’s office – because the
education that they received in their schools was the worst in the West. This is a nation that enables its Haredi
population, with 7.1 children per family on average (compared to the 3.1
national average), to disobey laws applying to the rest of the population,
because everything will be ok. So what
if the leaders of that society demand the right to obstruct their own
children’s future – and endanger the future of us all when in just two
generations half of Israel’s children will be Haredim (according to Central
Bureau of Statistics forecasts) lacking the ability to become physicians,
engineers, architects, physicists and all the other occupations that a modern
country must have? But don’t worry, everything
will be ok. Who will pay taxes in the future that their
leadership is preparing for them, and that our sycophantic leadership is
preparing for us all? Already today, 92%
of Israel’s entire income tax burden falls on the shoulders of just 20% of the
population, a steadily rising burden from the 83% of a decade and a half ago. When a country that pressures its army to lie
and fabricate data on the military conscription of Haredim because the
politicians are unwilling to impose on them what is required from the remaining
Jewish population, don’t worry, everything will be ok. The children of the future minority will
undoubtedly rush to the front lines and put their lives on the line to protect
all the rest who refuse to do so. When a part of society is allowed to serially break
education and conscription laws, then it should not come as a surprise when
lifestyles of law-breaking evolve into violation of health regulations. So what if the rest of us are forced into a
nation-wide clampdown to contain the virus – what does this have to do with
them? Israel’s hospitals are rapidly
filling up with Haredim infected by the virus, so good luck to your grandmother
(and to you) if you get infected.
Everything will be ok. Looking ahead, the “everything will be ok” syndrome
reaches far beyond the Haredim. This is
a nation that has been choosing, decade after decade, a leadership that is
taking it down an exceptionally steady path towards a one-state solution with
our neighbors, avoiding the fact that Israel will not be able to remain both
democratic and the home of the Jewish people.
And if we’re already talking about democracy, it is becoming clear that
many don’t understand the word or internalize the concept. This is a country with a justice minister who
excoriates the justice system that he heads, with a speaker of the Knesset who
violates Supreme Court rulings, and with a prime minister – the nation’s leader
– who constantly and vehemently disparages his nation’s legal and law
enforcement systems, not to mention his literal demonization of all who oppose
his ways. As if this were not enough, politicians – whose
primary flag in the recent elections, if not their only one, was the intent to
apply laws to prime ministers similar to those currently in place: prohibiting
persons facing indictments to become cabinet ministers – are now engaged in a
race with one another to enter the new government before the door shuts. So what if this comes at the price of leaving
in place a failed health minister who let the system deteriorate for
years? Everything will be ok. So what if this means naming a new speaker of
the Knesset who actively urged his predecessor to disobey supreme court
rulings? And so what if the new
government will be led by a person currently facing trial for bribery, fraud
and breach of trust who has tried – and continues to try – to take control of the
free press, democracy’s watchdog, and of the enforcement and legal institutions
directly responsible for defending democracy? Everything will be ok? No it will not! There’s a limit to everything. If the so-called “natural partners” at the helm of
the Israeli ship for the better part of the past half century have been leading
the country steadily towards that huge iceberg ahead, don’t be surprised if
your children decide to jump ship while they still can. For each Israeli with an academic degree
returning to Israel, almost three times as many (2.8) such persons left in
2014. By 2018, the number of emigrants
had surpassed the 4 person mark per returnee – and all this occurred before the
recent political fireworks in Israel.
Within just one decade, the ratio of Israeli physicians abroad to those
in Israel jumped by 50%. The actual natural partners are the majority within
the Right and Left, among the secular, religious and Haredim – and they include
the Arab-Israelis from whom a non-negligible number are selflessly treating
Jewish patients today, because this is the only country that we all have. Israel’s true natural partners are those who
know deep down inside that if we continue like this, then everything here will
not be ok. It is possible to do things differently. At the time of this writing, the new
government has not yet been finalized or sworn in. To those politicians rushing to join the
government, please think again. The
correct measures for dealing with the coronavirus can, and should be, supported
even from the opposition. It won’t be
the coronavirus that will bring down Israel but rather the “everything will be
ok” attitude that has enabled generations of leaders to play with fire and
endanger the physical existence of the only Jewish home we’ve had in 2,000
years. Each camp has its demagogues and
loonies. The time has come to keep them
away from the television screens and from governments that are literally
demolishing the future that so many of our parents, siblings and children have
given their lives for. Wake up!
It’s not ok – but it’s still not too late to change course. |