As settler power declines in Washington and Tel Aviv, the U.S. and Israel face a moral and civilizational reckoning, illustrated by a significant emigration of Israelis driven by insecurity and a collapsing Zionist promise. Independent assessments indicate a historic loss of human capital, with many seeking futures abroad, while Gideon Levy suggests that Israel must adopt a single democratic state model. The U.S. grapples with its own identity crisis, shifting from a welcoming immigrant nation to one plagued by paranoia and exclusion. Both nations confront the limits of coercion in their settler-colonial projects, risking internal decay and loss of legitimacy.
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