Opinion A MIX OF IDEAS Editorials are posted and archived on JNonline.us . Greenberg's View Editorial Obama Befuddles Israel Over P.A. Aid B crack Obama continues to put the terrorist-laden Palestinian territories on the same political plane as Israel — doing a grave disservice to Israel and America. Following a meeting with Palestinian Authority (RA.) President Mahmoud Abbas on June 9, the American president announced he would budget another $400 million to improve conditions in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank while not calling out the terrorist leadership in the Gaza Strip and the terror-tolerating leadership in the West Bank. That's outrageous. Obama called the situation in the Gaza Strip "unsustainable but was more inclined to call for Israel to ease its block- ade of the Hamas-run strip than condemn llamas for keeping its citizens in forced poverty. The blockade is aimed at prevent- ing weapons and bomb-making materials from being smuggled to llamas under the guise of humanitarian aid. Abbas had the chutzpah to call the nine deaths aboard the Turkish-flagged Mavi Marmara trying to run the blockade on May 31 "a massacre despite evidence that the Israeli sailors acted in self-defense after boarding the ship and being con- fronted with violence precipitated by supporters of IHH, a Turkish group with proven ties to Hamas and Al Qaida. In their meeting, Obama and Abbas discussed what Obama called "a better approach to Gaza." Abbas, a founding member of the P.A.'s Fatah party, made sure he got a slice of the booty for the West Bank. Obama pledged $400 million "for housing, school construction, busi- ness development — not only in Gaza, but also in the West Bank:' The increase is on top of Obama's 2009 pledge of $900 million to the Palestinians. Gaza disburse- ments go through international agencies vetted against ties to Hamas. Helping lift innocent Palestinians from poverty is one thing; doing so while see- ing Israel's defensive acts in the same light as violence perpetrated on Israelis by Palestinian terrorist factions is something else. It's abhorrent. Fatah's terrorist wings, the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades and Tanzim, have killed more than 600 Israeli civilians over the past 10 years. Fatah itself, meanwhile, has rejected all of its obligations under the 1990s Oslo Accords and the 2003 Roadmap for Peace. Abbas said he would consider direct peace talks once U.S.-brokered proximity negotiations with Israel had "progressed" on the "core issues" of borders, Jerusalem TH5 JEWS SHOULD GO BACK TO POIAND AND GERMANY! and refugees. Given his and llamas' approach to all three issues, direct peace talks aren't in the cards. Obama gave direction to both sides. He pressed Israel to curb settlement growth and recognize "some of the prog- ress that has been made by the Palestinian Authority when it comes to issues like security" On the Palestinian side, he said, "I was very frank with President Abbas that we have to continue to make more progress on both security as well as incite- ment issues:' As a precondition for continued U.S. aid to the P.A, however, Obama should have demanded an immediate end to incite- ment against Israel in P.A.-controlled mosques, news media, schools and youth camps. Abbas told Obama that he is the only Arab leader to centralize Friday sermons and remove imams who incite against Israel and that the P.A. has dis- missed hundreds of teachers and preach- ers who peddled anti-Israel invective. But Abbas whitewashed that he has barely dented the Palestinian armor of hate, reinforcing the seeming P.A. strategy to win a Palestinian state alongside Israel as stage one toward eliminating the Jewish state. By awarding humanitarian aid to the Palestinians without tough demands for changed behavior, President Obama in effect is rewarding unmitigated hatred of Jews. ❑ Reality Check Collapse Of The Tax Man I t is rather difficult to catch a politi- cian in reflection, or even in mild surprise. I had the chance to do that, however, several years ago. I had been chosen by the Detroit News to accompany Shiawassee County Drain Commissioner Robert Tisch on his rounds for the day in the Republican gubernatorial primary of 1982. He was vehemently against any new taxes and called himself "Tisch, the Tax Cutter." He referred often to his son who had moved to South Carolina because he couldn't afford the property taxes here anymore. His attitude was ebullient as we met at his office in Corunna. A quick stop near Lansing at Mickey D's for lunch and we were on our way. Then it was on to Kalamazoo and anoth- er, more formal meal at a downtown hotel. Tisch counted the house and I could tell it was nowhere near what he had anticipated. Still, he soldiered, hoping the day might yet bring better things. We made our way eastward on 1-94 across the state until we came to a bowling alley in one of the Downriver towns. The parking lot was jammed. You could almost see Tisch and his tiny entourage perk up as we pulled in. This was it. They had been out there the whole time, just waiting for the man and the message to show up together. We were ushered through the alley por- tion of the building and taken into a back room. And it was like we had never left Kalamazoo. In a room holding 10 tables, barely three were filled. I watched his face crumble. He answered a few questions about the evils of taxation, but I could see his heart wasn't in it anymore. This was not the day he'd had in mind. We drove back across the metro area to Channel 7. There was dead silence in the car. No doubt Tisch was trying to figure out who had asked me along on this fool's errand. More perfunctory answers from the candidate on a local interview show, as he was just starting to understand that he had absolutely no chance. The two of us climbed into the back seat as his driver pulled out of the lot and start- ed back to Corunna. He closed his eyes for a moment and then waved towards the skies. "I was in Algeria during the war',' said Tisch. "There were nights out in the desert when it looked exactly like this. Stars from horizon to horizon, and you get an idea of how really tiny we are. "What was I back then? A teenager. I made up mind that I wanted to accom- plish something important when I finally got home. When the tax issue came along, I said to myself, 'This is it." But no, as it turned out, it wasn't. The years kept rolling along and all he had to show for them was appearances at local bowling alleys. He dropped me off at my car in Corunna. We waved our goodbyes, and I never saw him again. Tisch died in 1997. Maybe he deserved better. Maybe not. ❑ George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor614@aol.com . June 24 • 2010 33