Israel’s Democracy Is a Sham—and the World Sees It
The current standoff is just the latest symptom of a deeper rot. Netanyahu’s coalition, stitched together from messianic settlers, religious extremists, and authoritarian ideologues, has governed through repression, corruption, and brute force. Now, as ultra-Orthodox parties like Shas and United Torah Judaism bolt over demands to enshrine military exemptions for their followers, the government’s collapse reveals the farce at its core. A democracy in name only, Israel is in truth a theocratic ethnocracy where the rule of law bends to religious power brokers, and where equal rights are selectively applied.
The exemption crisis itself is appalling in its implications. While Israeli Jews—especially secular youth and religious Zionists—are forced into combat, many of whom return in body bags from Gaza or the northern border, tens of thousands of ultra-Orthodox yeshiva students have been shielded from the draft for decades. The Supreme Court recently ruled this policy unconstitutional. Instead of obeying the court, Netanyahu and his allies sought to override it with new laws, cementing the reality that Israel’s judiciary is expendable when it threatens entrenched privilege.
This brazen disregard for judicial authority mirrors Israel’s broader contempt for human rights. While the world watches in horror as Palestinians in Gaza are starved, bombed, and displaced in massive numbers, Israeli leaders deny accountability, censor journalists, and criminalize dissent. Entire neighborhoods have been razed, hospitals leveled, and aid convoys blocked. Children in Gaza die not only from airstrikes, but from hunger and untreated wounds. This is not the behavior of a democracy—it is the machinery of a state committing crimes against humanity with impunity, propped up by American weapons and European silence.
The world has taken notice. Israel is now widely regarded as a pariah state. Multiple international bodies—including the United Nations and The International Criminal Court—have condemned its policies. Leading human rights organizations like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have declared that Israel practices apartheid. In capitals across the globe, from Johannesburg to Dublin to Santiago, millions have marched in solidarity with Palestinians, outraged by the carnage and hypocrisy.
Even within Israel, many citizens are growing ashamed. A growing number of Israelis—especially secular professionals, academics, and young people—are quietly leaving or considering emigration. Some are disgusted by their government's unrelenting cruelty. Others fear the collapse of civil society under the weight of rising authoritarianism, racism, and militarism. Increasingly, to be Israeli abroad is to be met not with admiration, but with questions, criticism, or outright revulsion.
This is the legacy of Netanyahu’s reign. He has not only isolated Israel diplomatically, but morally. His cynical alliance with ultra-Orthodox and far-right extremists has hollowed out democratic institutions, gutted judicial independence, and normalized violence against Palestinians. Now, his government is imploding under the weight of its own contradictions, but the damage may already be irreversible.
Let us not pretend this is an internal Israeli matter. The so-called “only democracy in the Middle East” has become a brutal occupier, a religious autocracy, and a cautionary tale. Real democracies don’t deny basic rights to millions based on ethnicity. They don’t destroy hospitals, starve children, or attack journalists. And they certainly don’t protect sectarian privilege while demanding national sacrifice from everyone else.
Israel’s collapse isn’t just about political arithmetic or coalition math. It is about a society that has chosen apartheid over equality, impunity over justice, and supremacy over peace. Until Israel confronts this truth, it cannot heal. And until the world stops pretending otherwise, it remains complicit.