Quote #151431
The Jew does not wish to be isolated. He fears being alone, without allies.
Meir Kahane
About This Quote
This quote needs no introduction—at least for now. We're working on adding more context soon.
Interpretation
Taken at face value, the line frames Jewish political behavior as driven by a fear of isolation and a desire for alliances—suggesting that security is sought not only through self-reliance but through coalition-building and external support. In Kahane’s ideological universe, such a claim typically functions polemically: it can be read as a critique of diaspora dependence and a call for a more uncompromising, self-sufficient Jewish power posture (often tied to his arguments for militant Jewish nationalism). The statement also generalizes “the Jew” as a single political-psychological type, a rhetorical move that compresses diverse experiences into a unified narrative meant to justify a particular program.




