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Weekly Update: Nachum Segal and Malcolm Hoenlein Discuss the Latest News
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Nachum Segal welcomed Malcolm Hoenlein of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations to this morning's JM in the AM for the Weekly Update. They discussed the latest news concerning Israel and the Jewish community around the world.
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Malcolm Homeline is with us. Yeah, the
whole world might be off. Well,
certainly in America, the whole country
might be off today, but not us. We're
here live on this July 3rd uh conference
of Presidents of Major American Jewish
organizations. We call it the weekly
update. Mr. Homeline, welcome back to JM
in the AM.
>> Thank you. It's almost good to be here
in New York. Uh be back, but uh much
better in your where the weather was
much cooler than it is in New York. Much
more bearable. Even in Tel Aviv, I
didn't sweat because it was beautiful.
The humidity was low, the sun was out,
but in Jerusalem, magnificent. I come
back here to this very warm welcome that
uh
>> Are you Are you on one of those
traditional Fourth of July weekend
American road trips or do you simply
have an air conditioner on in the
background?
>> I I I actually I do have an air
conditioner on and I will I You are so
sensitive.
>> I don't know. By the way, I don't know
if you should shut it five minutes from
now. You You might be fainting away on
the air if you shut it down.
>> Is it better now?
>> The sound is much better. I just feel
bad for you. We got to take care We got
to take care of you. You're a national
icon. You're a national treasure. We
need to take care of you.
>> It's absolutely true. But I'm willing to
sacrifice for the Jewish people.
>> I appreciate that and I'm sure they do
as well. Your thoughts? your thoughts on
this, the eve of the 250th
birthday of the United States of
America.
Well, I think it's very significant that
periodically we step back and when we
talk about all the problems we confront,
which is legitimate and they are serious
and I'm troubled by them and worried
about it, the future here, we also have
to take stock about how good America has
been and the overall condition of the
Jews and especially when you compare it
to to countries around the world and the
uh it's not something we should take for
granted.
Freedom is not something you take for
granted. Democracy is not. You see how
quickly it can collapse, you know, and
and as I said, I always rejected
comparisons to the Shaw, which I think
is a unique event and you diminish it by
comparing. But to say that that there
are lessons from 1931, Germany 32, 33, I
think is well placed that you have to
look back to history to to assess where
we are. America is different. But you
see how this cancerous
um DSA and anti-semitism
metastasizes
in society that people get elected who
can pronounce the the things that they
say, the positions that they take. And
and what the lesson from American
history is is that it requires
involvement. Democracy demands that you
be involved. So you don't complain
because you have no right to complain if
you're not involved. And you can't take
for granted that America will always be
the America of our youth or or America
of the past. It will only be so if we're
there, if we're involved, if we counter
the the horrible and ugly voices that
are are being raised and do it in smart
and intelligent ways, not by attacking
them, but I think by focusing on the
positives and building up our political
standing that the the campaigns that
these guys are on was well financed. We
have always more and more documentation
about how professional this was, how
planned this was for decades, for
decades with foreign funding and
domestic funding. You know, one study
that we found showed that they they
wanted to h to train a 100,000
journalists and filmmakers, 100,000
political scientists and lawyers to run
for office to influence public opinion.
And and they're well on their way. And
then they then give a a planned
in in a program about how to train
people to run for school boards, for
community boards, for city council, for
for Congress, etc. up until the White
House. And we have to do the same. We
have to show that we really appreciate
what America has given us and the
opportunities and to protect our
interests here. And uh you know nobody
can project long term what will happen
but for sure we can't take it for
granted. So maybe on this 250th
anniversary is a time for us to assess
our appreciation to America love of
America standards and principles. And we
go back to what the founding fathers
said and reminded and how much they
talked about the Jew return of the Jews
to their land and the the need for us
not to take for granted to get involved
to make sure voter registration goes
wild now in our community to make sure
that voter turnout is is immense. to
make sure that people learn to write, to
express themselves, to go online and
counter the lies and distortions that
are so common place
>> you know uh years from now
I don't know 20 30 40 years from now we
we might be in a place in this country
where people will never believe even
members of the Jewish community will not
believe that there was actually a major
vice presidential candidate who was
Jewish. and noticeably Jewish and
proudly Jewish and and did not shy away
from expressing his love for Israel and
support of Israel, etc., etc. And I just
and and I think you have to look at it,
right? It's some type of arc. It's some
type of apex. I'm sure as you get
further and further away from the year
2000, you think that way. Am I right?
That that was a a a certain level, a
certain height that the Jewish community
enjoyed in this country that we may
never get back to. Am I making too big a
deal of that or do you think it was a
real tipping point?
>> No, it's actually something we should
talk about and think about. Um, and as
you mentioned, I frankly did not focus
on it, but it wasn't just that he was
identifiable. He was a guy who was
shabbad, right? and and most communities
welcomed it and facilitated him being
able to walk to events and and and that
many in America saluted it and did not
uh I don't know whether today what what
the comparable response was not only for
his religious observance but the fact
that he was pro-Israel
>> um but but it showed us that the vast
majority of Americans and we should
never lose sight of this are not
anti-semitic and are not hateful and
they have to be educated especially the
young people, they're ignorant. They
don't know anything. And you know, every
study, every uh time somebody goes on a
campus and questions them, the river to
the sea, and they have no clue what
river, no clue what sea, and nor where
is where it is because they've been and
and um to to think the way that they do
and to give expression to it. And it's a
way of being anti- US,
anti-establishment
is to be anti-semitic.
and the you know the need for all of us
to to step back and to think about it.
The fact is that you still have many
Jewish members of Congress. And I still
think that the bulk of the American
people, and I I I see, by the way,
remarkable developments even in the last
few weeks in the black community, for
instance, wanting to heal the rips,
wanting to and leaders in the black
community convening to talk about how
they stepped into the battle on
anti-semitism.
And it it was a sort of a throwback to
to an era you and I knew and when we had
the black coalition for Soviet jury and
Hispanic coalition for Soviet jury and
we worked together where there were
always tensions and differences but we
understood the common agenda which has
have been broken and now I think many of
them as well are coming to terms with
this and trying to see how we work
together again. They will agree on
everything.
>> Right. Well, but not to be too cynical.
Is this black leadership that you're
describing those who feel threatened by
the socialist infiltration of the
Democratic Party or I'm being too
cynical?
>> Too cynical.
>> Okay.
>> Many many of them are are I mean, we
have leading pastors. I'm going this
week to the Christian United for Israel
where you have Christians of every
color, every creed
uh of the evangelical movement coming
together in in a larger number than
they've had in a long time. And with the
participation of the largest number of
Jews that ever have attended these
events, many of them Orthodox Jews in
fact,
>> and they have a minion there and they
have kosher food there and and um it's
out of respect and out of wanting to
build the alliance and strengthen it.
>> And and and there are plenty of of
minority leaders there. you're saying
>> there are minority leaders and and a
minority clergy
who who are there, but they're not there
because they're a minority. They're
there because they believe in the
strength of the US Israel relationship
and and what Jews mean and and that
those who bless the Jews are blessed and
those who curse the Jews are cursed. And
they really believe in I wish some of
our people believed a lot of what from
from God and and the things the lessons
that we should be learning as well. the
but but I do see it and and it's
spontaneous developments and not because
somebody from on high is coming in and
doing this. It's because a lot of the
people are are recognizing the danger
that this represents.
Uh finally before we go to news of the
day your thoughts as we get set for the
50th anniversary tomorrow of the rescue
at Antebby.
So, you know, again, it's something that
we put in the back of our minds, those
who who were alive then, and maybe some
young people read about it, but the vast
majority know nothing about what
happened at Tempi, the probably the most
daring rescue in history. Uh, and you
know, they didn't have all the
technology we have today. And the, you
know, of course, remembering Yon
Netanyahu, who who was the lone person
killed, and Mrs. Bah was the one of the
hostages who died in the hospital in
Uganda under very questionable
circumstances and and I've been to inbi
to see it and to you know it's it
remains as it was that day. The the
government in Uganda kept it as it was h
and you can see the bullet holes. You
see where all the exchanges took place
and it's sort of a national memorial.
Um, I think that the I was on the next
morning I I we drove home, my family and
I were driving home from the mountains
to come back because that morning we
were invited to be on the aircraft
carrier with the president in the
celebration of the of the 200th
anniversary
>> and it was in in uh in Manhattan
with the whole fla you remember there
was a huge came
>> operation sale. is absolutely right. And
we I sat right behind the president
actually and I could I watched his
reaction to it and the emotions of the
people and were, you know, nobody can
imagine what an aircraft carrier really
is like. It's like floating. It's like a
floating city. Uh it's so huge,
>> but you know, I assume I feel the
patriotism. I don't know that today you
they would do a thing like that.
>> Oh, totally. Well, they're doing it.
They're doing it today and tomorrow
around Manhattan, but it's not getting
nearly uh the love and attention that
you'd expect. And I assume
>> about the scale, right?
>> Yeah. And I assume that was President
Ford, right?
>> It was President,
>> right? Hey, I'm just trying to show
everybody that I know my American at
least at least recent American history.
>> Um
and uh and someone told us this week
that the at Antebi they renovated the
airport. It is now the uh fanciest u
most state-of-the-art airport in all of
Africa, but they didn't touch the old
terminal where the episode took place.
And it's funny because you know how
often countries want to whitewash
uh areas of certain episodes and that's
very common. And in this case, they kept
it the way it is. Isn't that
interesting?
It
>> it is. And and when I was there, one of
the things I noticed at the airport,
which was the old one, they had a prayer
room for Jews
and it was small. It was but it was and
and there was kabad with some food there
even as far as I recall. And there were
prayer rooms for others also. But the
fact that they had a a prayer room for
Jews, I thought was very interesting
>> and giving the setting.
>> Unbelievable. All right, news of the
day. Um so I mean there there are two
primary updates that we need to to get
to the audience. One of course is
Lebanon and one is Iran in terms of a
negotiation. Let's start with Lebanon.
There was some type of treaty agreement
new term memo of understanding between
Israel and Lebanon this week. What was
it? Was it of substance? And is it going
to help things going forward?
Well, it is substantive in the fact that
it took place and that you had a
government standing up to the pressure
fromah.
Is the agreement everything we might
have wanted or at any time? No. Uh not
necessarily, but it's an important step
forward and they they make commitments
there. Uh to me the most important part
was that um Israel's
presence in southern Lebanon is is
verified is is authorized. They didn't
demand that they withdraw from there
which of course makesah
boiling and they're boiling anyway that
there was even negotiations and
discussions with Israel and they say
that they reject the deal. But I think
that is it is significant and it enables
Israel to have some international
legitimacy in what it's doing as
legitimacy because they're chasing
terrorists. When we went after
Ponchovilla into Mexico, nobody
challenged it because you you were in
hot pursuit and hot pursuit entitles you
to, you know, to cross borders and and
do things. Um but again the you know we
look in the total context of things
Lebanon is one piece of the of the
bigger puzzle
and if they can in fact reach an
agreement and the fact is that there are
no disputes between Lebanon and Israel
there are no territorial disputes
there's no uh agenda Israel and Lebanon
had very good relations in the past if
you remember the good fence uh I went
through it many times when President
Jama was the leader leader of Lebanon,
the Christian, and he he was amazing.
And I actually hosted him when he came
to New York for the UN. They called me
and and I made the event for him for UN
diplomats and stuff because he wanted to
show uh the relationship and his
outreach. Uh so there is a history of
cooperation. Jews lived in Lebanon as
you know and Beirut was once the the
golden spot of the Mediterranean. All
the casinos were there and all the Arabs
used to come from different countries
and I visited there in the late 60s and
and subsequently many times I was there
during the wars and the people in
Lebanon generally were were more
sympathetic than and and anxious to have
relations and if you remember there were
um people in the Lebanese southern
Lebanon army uh I forgot the exact name
uh and they found refuge in Israel after
took over and could not stay there. So
they came to Israel and stayed there but
they assisted and aided Israel uh during
the the war during the conflict. So the
and you see the demunition of the
Christian population there
>> as it than most the rest of the Arab
world. So this agreement is significant.
How longasting and what what will come
of it we will have to see. But I think
as a as a initial step it's it's
important. and if some type of
agreement, treaty, ceasefire was
necessary with Lebanon in order to get
the negotiations to continue that the
United States is sponsoring with uh
Iran, well, not just sponsoring, but
directly involved with with Iran, etc. I
is this now satisfactory? Does this does
this uh uh treaty understanding that
happened this week, will that be
satisfactory to both sides to move it
forward with Iran?
Well, will never be satisfactory to
Iran. uh Iran wants Israel out
completely and as you saw during uh last
week's
some of the ridiculous proposals one
particularly annoying because it has
bigger significance was the proposal
that Yolani uh the head of Syria should
replace Israel and taking onah and even
the president made illusions to it and
said it and it's an idea that really was
born out of Turkey from what I'm told
and that it the goal was um very
different than what was said because the
they know that Galani doesn't have the
capacity and they they are angry that he
doesn't have the capacity to challenge
Israel uh on and get him out of Syria
and you know and that Israel retains
buffer zone and also corridor to the to
Sueda to the uh Drews community and
periodically you know goes after
terrorists. So they they really want
the involvement of Jalani of Shara to to
bring into into Syria that they should
be on the border and start taking on
Israel along the the buffer zone etc. So
the the Lebanon right now has been
blocking
uh some of the the weapons getting to
tobah
is still strong very strong and the army
there is not as strong as it should be
and there is a national force whether
they could actually take onah is very
doubtful uh but the people are tired of
the wars the people want a resolution
and I think the the uh fact that um you
have this step could be positive in the
long run.
>> Yeah, Natanyao actually used that uh
that angle this week in terms of
addressing the people directly and um
and and reminding them that Israel has
their best interest at heart uh against
the terrorists. America's one and only
Jewish moments in the morning radio
program heard on listener sponsored
digital radio around the world. I'm the
single network of course beloved NSN
app. So, has shipping traffic in the
straight of Hormuz picked up?
>> Well, 100 boats a day are going through.
From what we understand, they're going
along the Omani side. You know, there
are there are three actual routes in the
straits of Ramoose. One, one Oman, one
mill. The So, they're going along the
Omani coast, the coast of Oman. And
people should look at the map to
understand it. And um uh so they are are
going the Iranians have fired drones
repeatedly at different ships and
acknowledge that they did. Uh right now
I think in the last two days they have
not that I know of. Um but you know
they're they're still saying that they
want to charge and that they're going to
impose fees and they're trying to get
the Omanis to agree that they would
split some fees. uh Oman is uh
intimidated clearly by by Iran and has
played sometimes duplicitous role.
Uh so this it's not solved and it's not
resolved and they keep saying but you
got to look at the variety of statements
coming out of Iran how the the speaker
of of the parliament and versus others.
You see the split between the president
and the IRGC the leadership the military
leadership and a lot uh we will see this
weekend because it's the funeral of
Ayati and they're expecting 20 million
people to participate in the funeral in
Iran itself
>> and but what will be interesting is to
see the positioning of people the
relative power of the different elements
remember you have the Iranian army
which is weaker than the IRGC. The IRGC
we believe now is probably the dominant
force. Nobody knows if the sun is alive
or not. It'll be interesting to see if
he is visible at any point in real not
in AI and if
and if because somehow he magically
could sign all these declarations and
documents when nobody has ever seen
them. uh and the um uh you know the
rhetoric and what what you can hear you
can expect to see a lot of anti-Israel
but even anti-American
manifestations and statements. So people
I think should should watch that to get
a good indication of the direction. uh
the internal economic conditions as you
know are very bad and people there are
more demonstrations that are being
reported uh on economic grounds but that
becomes a more legitimate way than on
political uh expression. Um the sort of
Jewish life is becoming more public
again they had some weddings and things
which they sent pictures out about to
show the the quote normal normalizing of
of life. Um, so I I I think that uh you
know, Iran has not changed and anybody
who believes that they've changed, they
still retain so much of the capacity to
build miss ballistic missiles to support
the proxies and if they get the tens of
billions of dollars. We know where that
money will go. It will not go to the
people. It'll go to the leadership.
It'll support the IRGC and it will go to
again supporting Kamasa, etc. We see the
demunition of kamas. It's it's it's
hardly said, you know, they they say
that they destroyed 83% of the tunnels
in the areas that Israel controls in
Gaza, but it only underscores
what incred what incredible
infrastructure was there. Look at what
they're finding in Lebanon. 10
kilometers long
uh um 10 mile long actually tunnels with
all sorts of infrastructure built into
underneath Boford Castle built in along
the border near the border with Israel.
It's unbelievable to see it and to see
what they invested and how they were
able to do all of this and and if they
did it undetected that raises many other
questions. Uh, so you know, we have so
many moving pieces at one time. When
people tell me they're confused, I tell
them then you got it right because it's
it is very hard.
>> I'll confuse everybody now a little bit
more. I'd be remiss if I didn't ask you
for your reaction to the big news story.
Coming from the New York Times and being
cited by many uh US officials believed
Israel was plotting to kill Iranian
negotiators. any uh Israeli attempt to
kill Abbas Argarachi the foreign
minister of Muhammad Gobbalaf the
parliament speaker would have derailed
peace talks American officials feared
your reaction to this report by the New
York Times
>> people first of all we don't believe
anything that appears in the New York
Times uh ex except in uh maybe the
wanted columns the uh the uh
we have no evidence that is every every
leader was targeted and remember Agrai
was saying terrible things and and was
part of the establishment in in Iran.
Had they wanted to remove him, they
could have. He was not a hidden figure.
And so it's easy for them to make
accusations. Could it be that somebody
proposed it? Absolutely. Could it have
been one of the things on the drawing
board that you know amongst many many
options? Yes, it's possible. But did
Israel try to do it? No. and and uh you
know the the idea that this would derail
it. The Iranians are derailing it
themselves. They don't need any
assistance. But look at what Agrai says.
Look at at the at how uh how extreme his
his comments and his attacks on Israel,
the threats against Israel uh remain.
And you know, they do still have a big
missile capacity even though a lot of
them are underground. And they say the
United States can monitor it. You can
tell that they're going in there and
taking it out and that they're not going
to drill another entrance, you know, to
bypass the parts that were bombed, the
exits that were bombed. They are very
resourceful and they retain a lot of the
capacity. They certainly retain the
knowledge which is the most important
thing about how to build it and and
there are reports that they were about
to launch a ballistic missile a a
conventional missile uh campaign and
that was why the issue was forced at the
time that it was because they were about
to hit both targets in Europe but also
in the region of course Israel and look
to the degree to which they shot their
weapons not at Israel but at American
bases in even allied countries of
theirs, whether in Kuwait, whether in
Bahrain, whether in UAE, in Qatar. And
and we learn now how much damage they
actually did to some of the US bases.
And now do you know that there's talk
and this is a very interesting
development of the last week in
particular though it's been muted for a
long time uh by people that the uh they
want to move American bases
from uh Qatar where there are 100 miles
from Iran uh to other places further
away and especially Israel and I think
the experience during the war about how
well American troops got along and you
know the positioning of American uh
aircraft, especially the tankers and
other things at Benorian. They had to
force America's hand to take them out
because the commercial jets couldn't
land and there was no room to put them.
Seriously, this is not
hypothetical. I'm telling you what
really happened this week. that America
had to remove many of those jets out.
Many of those uh large cargo planes and
tank refueling tankers
because they were going to have Israel
would have had to cut the commercial
flights at a time when tourism is anyway
stressed. That would not have been a
helpful thing during the peak tourism
season of the summer. So they did move
it out. But there is talk about building
in a negv huge air force base and they
know that Israel can protect their skies
much better than UAE or other countries
have and certainly Qatar
>> and you just touched on tourism but
we're going to get to that in a second.
I want to wrap up with that topic. Um
there's a report that defense minister
Katz says 83%
of the kamas tunnels in the IDF held
part of Gaza have been demolished. Is
that is that figure believable?
Yes, I just mentioned it. Yes, that is
very believable. But it tells you how
much is there, how much infrastructure
that all of this time Israel has quietly
moved ahead in Gaza. They periodically
take out a terrorist leader, but they've
been consolidating their hold on the I
think it's more than half of the Gaza
that they control. I don't want to go
into the numbers, but um the area that
that was under their control. And you
see that the bord of peace has rejected
Qatar and other people's involvement
that they are still meeting so far. I
don't think that they've done much but
they're well-intentioned and they're uh
looking at the situation
I mean far more objectively. there. Even
this week, much to my applause, I'm sure
many others have said that ENRA should
not have a role in Gaza, that they don't
want them there because we know that
ENRA has been a front for for the
terrorists and many of the UNRA people
were involved in terrorist attacks. Um,
so yes, they what they found and and now
Hamas is trying to rebuild in the other
side and they're not getting the popular
support uh that they once had.
Um,
you last week obviously met with many
people in the Israeli government. I
won't ask you for details yet. At some
point I will. Did people sh did people
of note including maybe the prime
minister share with you the future of
Gaza? We're getting reports now there
are members of government in Israel who
are I wouldn't say insisting but are
certainly leaning toward the
understanding that wherever Israel is
now they will remain. Did you get that
feeling? Was it discussed at all?
Well, obviously Gaza is discussed and I
did have a chance to meet with many of
the leaders in Israel though I was there
for other things including uh a
wonderful new initiative of as they set
up a Kissinger Institute at Barilan and
brought people Israeli experts and
others to to with a elite group that
they're trying to train to be leaders
and to you know to I mean people who are
in key positions. Um so that was uh very
interesting and I haven't been on
Baron's campus in a long time. It's
really amazing and also the JNS
conference which had 200 speakers
including many influencers many of all
stripes black and white and Jewish and
non-Jewish and uh whatever who who came
there.
Um but um to your question, I think it's
irresponsible when people start talking
about building settlements in in Gaza
because it just evokes the debate and
and says, you see, this is Israel's true
intent. When Netanyahu has made clear
all the time that that they don't have
territorial aspirations in Lebanon,
etc., to say that we're there because we
have a legitimate defense need, that's
what we should be focusing on. And once
you introduce these other things, it
becomes the subject debate and everybody
points figures and members of Congress
get excited and uh uh it's it's it's
counterproductive
>> I think for the interests that all
people share and wanting to see Gaza
tamed and you know uh ending the
terrorism that it comes from there.
>> Uh a thousand days since the start of
the war and obviously in Israel they
they marked it um in many different
ways. A lot of people read about that.
Uh but back to the tourism a thousand
days later. Uh as I mean does it
basically come down to and now we can
see it a little bit more you know in a
uh larger sense because we're further
away from the start of the war. Does it
b is it basically coming down to price
and availability of airlines? Is that
basically it until we get back to the to
the era when multiple airlines are
regularly flying to Israel and
competition brings down the cost? Until
we get to that, do you fear we won't see
any real surge in tourism?
>> I think we are seeing a surge in
tourism. Actually, you cannot get a seat
on an airplane. Lal despite the um
excessive charge for seats, which is a
modest way of putting it. Um, and
there's so much anger and resentment
about it, but they're the only ones
flying in in in essentially now Aria is
flying in there. You can fly through
Europe and there are other alternatives
if you want, but it is almost impossible
to get seats to Israel. Uh, and the
hotels have not significantly raised
their rates. They're expensive because
they're uh good hotels, but you can get
cheaper hotels as well. And uh you know
the the number of people who told me
that they're going and want to go and uh
remains to me significantly high and I
think will get even higher and I think
for the
demand will be excessive especially
because you have a fiveday people will
go for sukot because they have five days
to do things in the country. Uh I'm
optimistic about tourism. You know there
are new hotels being built. They are the
hotels. Uh I was at the inbball and your
favorite and mine in in Israel and they
are doing quite well. uh sustaining it
throughout and of course they have
Shabbat with Israeli uh programs but now
it's mostly foreigners and uh they're
fully staffed fully operational and I
saw some of the other hotels they're not
all doing great and it's difficult and
people should still try to go if they
can it's a very important statement to
the people of Israel not to the just to
the tourism industry that we care and
that we you know come and we're not
afraid and not not uh intimidated by the
events and those who threaten. Uh I
still say and and this is an amazing
thing that people I heard it so many
times during the last two weeks that
people coming to Jerusalem especially
those who are not deeply involved saying
you know what I feel safe here. I do not
feel safe in New York anymore. I don't
feel safe walking on the streets in New
York, but I do hear despite the threats,
despite the dangers. So, I say I remind
people of that and go and experience
Israel. It's so amazing.
>> Yeah, but it's it's July 3rd and
American Jewish families ain't going to
be doing the traditional, you know,
summer trip. They need eight tickets on
an airline at a reasonable price. They
the hotels is not the issue. As you just
indicated, there are plenty of
unfortunately I could attest to the fact
outside of the inbball, there's plenty
of empty hotels that need the business.
But as long as these prices stay the way
they are, and as long as multiple
airlines continue to decide not to fly
to Israel, even with the Europe
connections, etc., I just don't see how
we're ever going to get back to that
point. Well, one of the things that
would help now and maybe we could start
a campaign here is all those who are
frequent flyers on American Airlines and
uh and use them fairly, you know,
doesn't even have to be regularly
because but they could they care more
about their frequent flyers, but people
who purchase tickets who fly, write to
them and saying, "I'm deeply
disappointed. I hope that you will
resume the flights to Israel. There's no
more security reason not to fly. We
don't have missiles flying. We don't
have any immediate threat." And uh and
as I said, if the American army finds
the safest place to put their stuff is
in their planes and stuff is in in
Israel, so American airlines can also
put their planes in in Tel Aviv. And uh
I I hope that we have to build up the
pressure and people should not resist
going. I know that it's it's more
expensive, but it's a great investment
and it means so much to the people and
it's a message to the world that Israel
is not isolated. Yeah, great point.
Great point. Uh, thanks so much for
joining us. Have a wonderful Shabas and
weekend and we'll speak please God next
week.
>> Well, I hope everybody has a fifth on
the fourth and has a really uh
>> He doesn't mean it. He doesn't mean it,
folks. He's joking.
>> I I don't agree. Okay. But uh uh
>> there's certain there's certain shs who
would not welcome that comment.
>> Right. And and I welcome those shoes
that don't don't serve it. I I I think
it's um you know it's a it's a wrong
value to give our kids and stuff.
Although good scotch is always welcome.
>> Yeah. I know it's a funny expression,
>> but but I I just seriously that they
should think about this and if their
kids are home and not in camp to talk
about it, but also, you know, and one of
the things I think is important is that
people should fly the American flag
where they can to show our our neighbors
and others that we care about America
and and what it has given us.
>> Yeah, you mentioned that last week. It's
a great suggestion. Thanks, Malcolm.
Have a wonderful Shabbis and a great
weekend.