German psycho

A reply to the Initiative Sozialistisches Forum

MOISHE POSTONE ONCE REMARKED about the German left: “No western Left was as philo-Semitic and pro-Zionist prior to 1967. Probably none subsequently identified so strongly with the Palestinian cause. What was termed ‘anti-Zionism’ was in fact so emotionally and psychically charged that it went far beyond the bounds of a political and social critique of Zionism.”1 Postone’s diagnosis, that the Israeli-Arab conflict served as a projection-screen for the psychological needs of the German left, is just as valid for the new political current which, since the outbreak of the Al-Aqsa Intifada in autumn 2000, has come to identify itself completely with the state of Israel. [Read More]

Book Review: Karin Bauer, ed., *Everybody Talks About the Weather -- We Don't: The Writings of Ulrike Meinhof*

Book Review: Karin Bauer, ed., *Everybody Talks About the Weather -- We Don't: The Writings of Ulrike Meinhof*
New York: Seven Stories Press, 2008. DON DELILLO BEGINS a short story from 2002 with a woman in a New York museum staring at a painting of Ulrike Meinhof after her suicide. He writes, “She thought of Meinhof, she saw Meinhof as first name only, Ulrike.”1 Who is this “Ulrike” that the Left has known? They know that she was a founding member of the leftwing terrorist group Red Army Fraction (RAF), dubbed by the media the Baader-Meinhof Gang. [Read More]