The Controversy of Israel: A Debate on Theocracy, Democracy, and Religion in Politics

I am against a theocracy and I’m against, like,
religion being in politics.
And that’s why I found it very hypocritical from Israel
saying that we are a secular,
democratic state at the same time just that we are a Jewish state.
What are you. Are you a theocracy
or are you a democracy? Are you something like,
for the secular, for everybody,
or you just like, or exclusively for the Jews?
And so that’s why. Why is it, like,
when the west talks about everything,
it’s Liberal, secular,
democratic? Only when it comes to Israel,
it’s biblical. Why?
You know, that’s the problem.
Try to convince me that Israel have more right in this land,
more than the Palestinian,
without using religion. They can’t,
because it’s a like the even that the Liberal Zionists,
they’re all about, oh,
we’re atheists, we don’t believe in god, but. Oh,
but it is, it is,
it is. The god gave them to their promised people.
Promised Land? Promised by whom?
Of chosen people. Chosen by whom?
The god. My god?
Your god? Who’s god?