
I am honoured today to present a guest post by our good friend and prolific contributor to the weekly Great Mondaydact Browser Crashes, The Male Brain, aka Dawn Pine. I asked him recently if he would be willing to contribute a write-up about a topic that has crossed my attention: the impact on Israel’s socio-sexual hierarchy of the mass return of Jews from other countries and cultures. The answers that TMB provided may surprise you, as he is seeing this stuff on the ground every day living in Israel.
On a related note, Dawn mentioned to me that he is considering starting up his own blog in Hebrew to bring the wisdom of the red pill to Israel itself, where it is rare indeed to find and evidently desperately needed. Personal considerations are holding him back a bit. So if you have a moment or three to spare in your prayers, please send a good thought his way and let him know that you’re rooting for him.
I have edited the writing slightly for spelling and grammar, and any editorial insertions by me are noted very clearly below. Beyond this, the words presented below are Dawn Pine’s alone. As always, my deepest thanks go to him for his excellent contributions to this blog.
I sometimes, as a contributor, write guest posts for Didact’s blog. This is apart from the Monday compilation material I provide to him. Recently he reached out and asked me to write a post about Israel and the impact of Aliyah (Jewish immigration to Israel, translated as “going up to”) on the socio-sexual relations here. I know that Israel, as a nation and a place, is a source of curiosity for people globally, so I will try to shed some light on the topic.
Let us start with statistics. Over the past several years, the number of Olim (Jewish immigrants to Israel) was approximately 450,000 from 2000 to 2017. The following link provides the numbers and I took it upon myself to put it into percentages.
Out of the grand total of 439,656 Olim, Europe represents 63.3%. USA, Australia and Canada represent another 15.27%. However, out of the European part, this includes the Former Soviet Union (FSU), which together represent ~50% of the total, and thus we come to whopping ~28% or ~123,000 people.
[Didact: That statistic relates to the video that I linked to up above in my own comments, which features a lot of Eastern European Jews in Israel whose lives have been destroyed by crazy bitches. As TMB points out, the effect is actually relatively limited upon the rest of Israel.]
Since the population of Israel, has grown from 6.3 million to almost 9 Million, those immigrants represent less than 2% of the population. If that is the case, what can be their influence?
Well, there is some. The first is the acceleration of “Americanization” of Israel. Israel major cultural forces until the 1980s were Judeo-Socialist. The ruling party of MAPAI had a social-democrat orientation, and the USA became Israel’s friend only in 1968. There are major aspects of that “Americanization”, and I will focus on Gender-relations and socio-sexual relations.
Israel, as a “semi-multicultural” society (80% Jews from all around the world, and 20% Muslims, Christians and Druze – almost all Arabs) had a very strict socio-sexual hierarchy. At the top were the Ashkenazi Jews. They were founders of the nation, and comprised the elite. Following them were the Sephardic Jews (most came at the 1950s and went on to become the majority). All other races/religion had their own socio-sexual hierarchy.
There were currents changing slowly until the 1980s. “Mixed-ethnicity” marriages were not uncommon. A study from 2003 showed that in the mid 1990s about 25% of the Jewish kids were of “mixed ethnicity”. In the 1960s it was only ~10% and in the 1970s it was ~16%. What is even more “odd” is the case of Ethiopian Jews – 13% married outside their ethnicity. To compare it with the US, that is more than twice as high as the rate of Blacks marrying outside their race, which is less than ~6%. [Didact – Not that anyone who reads this blog needs to be told this, but your PR0N is lying to you.] Those people have been in Israel less than 30 years now, and not ~300 (as is the case with the USA).
The impact from Aliyah is minor. The actual impact and problem is the cultural imperialism and the close relations with the USA. The socio sexual landscape in Israel has changed over time in some ways, but also remained the same in others.
What changed?
1. Age of marriage
In the 1970s females married on average at the age of 21. Today it is 25. For males, it was 25 and moved up to 27. Females at the ages of 25-29 are 46% likely to be single (and it use to be 13% in the 1970s). This is part of the global trend of going to work, going to school and partying.
Effect – the rise of “Party Years” and “Epiphany stage”.
2. Divorce (my “personal favorite”)
Divorce rate in Israel is about 30%, which represent a major rise since the 1970s (it was ~7%). Jews divorce 3 times more than the other ethnicities. The funny thing is that only about 1 in 6 married couples will divorce within 15 years.
Effect – Same as the West.
3. Time elapsed between cultural effects
It’s kind of funny, but culture comes to Israel after a while. The 1960s reached Israel in the 1970s. The 1980s reached Israel in the beginning of 1990s. For example – MTV came to Israel only in the early 1990s. This “lag time” has shortened substantially due to the internet and mass media and is now measured in months.
Effect – crazy shit such as Political Correctness (to some extent) dominating the discourse.
4. Secularization
The elites used to be more conservative. In the 1950s the secular elites respected religion, and practiced it to some extent. Today secularization is so prominent that there is an anti-religion sentiment. Some of it is attributed to the religious parties, which practice their power to “force” semi-religious laws, but some of it is also due to globalization and consumerization effect.
Effect – Atomization, losing respect for tradition and rise of consumerism as a replacement.
What stayed the same?
1. Community
Jews and Israelis are community-oriented. The atomization of society is here, but since Israel is slightly larger than New Jersey, family is max 6 hours’ drive away. People choose to live near their parents and still share a strong sense of community.
Effect – People still have strong family ties and are less prone to craziness (cat ladies is rare in Israel).
2. Demographics
Israel fertility rate remains for the past 40 years ~3 children per women. It dropped to 2.8 in the 1990s and 2000s but went up again. This means that having children is a “Must”. The “No-Children” movement is so fringe, that virtually is non-existent (even though it is somewhat represented in the media).
Effect – Less need for 3rd world migrants. Good shape of demographic pyramid.
All
in all Israel from a socio-sexual perspective is more conservative
than the west. People want to get married and have a family. The
effect of Aliyah is less noticeable, but globohomo culture has its
influence.







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