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| 主要な著者: | , , |
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| フォーマット: | Recurso digital |
| 言語: | 英語 |
| 出版事項: |
Zenodo
2026
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| 主題: | |
| オンライン・アクセス: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20284236 |
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目次:
- <p><strong>Episode summary:</strong> Most coverage treats Benjamin Netanyahu as a political force, not a human being. This episode explores what the people who actually know him say about his personality, his hobbies, and how his vision of Zionism evolved. From his father's Revisionist Zionism to the "frozen grief" of his brother's death at Entebbe, we examine the psychological drivers behind his leadership style. Former aides describe a man who is pathologically incapable of admitting error, a micromanager who runs parallel diplomacy, and a "brain in a jar" with no warmth. Discover how the personal explains the political.</p> <h3>Show Notes</h3> <p>This episode explores the personality and psychology of Benjamin Netanyahu, moving beyond his political persona to understand the man himself. Based on extensive reporting from sources like the New York Times Magazine and biographies by Ben Caspit and Ari Shavit, the discussion reveals a leader defined by a pathological inability to admit error. Former aides describe a specific crisis pattern: when something goes wrong, Netanyahu's first instinct is not to fix the problem, but to control the narrative, find the leaker, and wage a war of perception. This is described not just as ego, but as a strategic worldview—a belief that admitting a mistake would cause the entire political edifice to crumble.</p> <p>This worldview was forged in his childhood home, where his father, Benzion Netanyahu, a scholar of the Spanish Inquisition and disciple of Ze'ev Jabotinsky, raised him on the "iron wall" philosophy. The trauma of his brother Yoni's death at the Entebbe raid in 1976 cemented this outlook, creating a state of "frozen grief" that fuels his security decisions. Privately, Netanyahu is described as profoundly aloof—a "brain in a jar" who relates to people as instruments for his mission, lacking warmth or interest in personal connection. His wife, Sara, serves as his sole trusted confidant and gatekeeper, controlling access to the prime minister and influencing staffing decisions. The episode connects these personal traits directly to his political strategy, from micromanaging diplomatic cables to bypassing the Foreign Ministry with parallel channels.</p> <p>Listen online: <a href="https://myweirdprompts.com/episode/netanyahu-personality-psychology">https://myweirdprompts.com/episode/netanyahu-personality-psychology</a></p>