Sabine Sterk
CEO of Time to Stand Up for Israel

Israel Through the Eyes of a Tired Alien

Photo credits: Sabine Sterk ( AI)
Photo credits: Sabine Sterk ( AI)

Confessions of an Alien Who’s Officially Done With Earth (But Still Somehow Ends Up Defending Israel)

A view from outside a planet that lost its logic

From a distance, Earth looks beautiful. Up close, it feels like a system that no longer understands its own rules. At some point, you stop asking who is right and start asking why everything is so consistently upside down.

I am an alien, and I don’t want to be on this planet anymore.

Not metaphorically. Not poetically. Literally, existentially, structurally done.

There is no energy left in me for this place. No energy for humanity, for its endless contradictions, its selective morality, its theatrical outrage. Everything here is upside down, inverted, twisted into something that no longer even pretends to make sense.

Take the Gaza flotilla situation. Just take that one example and try, honestly try, to explain it to a neutral observer from another planet.

You have a declared war zone. You have a naval blockade, which whether people like it or not is a recognized instrument in warfare. You have repeated attempts, not once, not twice, but over and over again, to breach that blockade. Not accidentally. Not out of confusion. Deliberately.

And then this is the part where my alien brain starts short circuiting you have people framing those attempts as peaceful, noble, humanitarian acts. As if repeatedly trying to cross into a restricted military zone is some kind of moral high ground.

From where I’m standing, breaching a blockade in a war zone is not a symbolic gesture. It is a hostile act. It is a choice. And choices have consequences.

If this were the first time, maybe you could argue misunderstanding. Miscommunication. Idealism gone wrong.

But ten times. More.

At some point, even an alien has to conclude this is not confusion. This is provocation dressed up as virtue.

And then comes Israel’s response. And this is where the absurdity reaches peak levels.

Instead of treating these incursions as what they technically are, hostile attempts to breach a military restriction, Israel goes out of its way to minimize harm. Intercept, board, arrest, detain, release. Forty eight hours later, everyone is back on the talk shows, back on social media, back to spreading their narrative.

From a purely strategic standpoint, it is baffling.

If I were in charge, and yes my ex once said I could be a general but never a spy because I do not do pretending, I would have made the rules painfully clear. Approach the blockade and you will be stopped. Ignore warnings and you become a legitimate target. Not out of cruelty, but out of clarity.

Clarity matters. Humans seem to have forgotten that.

Instead, what I see is a country trying almost obsessively to choose the good side of humanity, even when that humanity is actively working against it.

And here is where it gets interesting, because this instinct does not come out of nowhere. It reflects something deeper, something rooted in how different cultures and religions view human nature.

Christianity tends to say humans are broken but redeemable.

Islam says humans are born pure but forgetful.

Judaism, however, has always struck me as the most brutally honest of the three. Humans are both. They have a good inclination and a bad one, and life is about choosing between them.

No illusions. No romanticism. Just responsibility.

And yet, ironically, Israel often behaves as if everyone will eventually choose the good side if only given enough chances.

That is the contradiction.

Because if you truly believe in human duality, you should also accept that some people will consistently choose the other side. Not because they are misunderstood, but because they have made a decision.

Instead, what I see is hesitation. Restraint. A refusal to fully commit to the logical consequences of its own reality.

And then, just when you think it cannot get more surreal, internal politics enters the stage. Provocations, statements, reactions that only pour fuel on an already uncontrollable fire. If you are going to release people who openly oppose you, maybe do not simultaneously provoke them for headlines.

But no. This planet runs on contradiction.

Meanwhile, in European newspapers, you get full page articles about Israel stealing hummus. Hummus. This is where the global conversation has landed.

At the same time, accusations escalate to the most extreme levels imaginable. Claims so detached from reality that they would be laughable if they were not taken seriously.

And I sit here, as an alien, wondering how a species managed to weaponize both triviality and hysteria at the same time.

It would almost be impressive if it were not so exhausting.

So yes, I am done. Completely, thoroughly done.

But and here is where my alien brain goes off on one last tangent what if there were an alternative

What if Israel just started over

Not metaphorically. Literally.

Find another planet. Build from scratch. Cities, farmland, ecosystems. A modern version of Noah’s Ark, but with better engineering and fewer floods.

Call it Israel 2.0.

And here comes the part humans would immediately label, misinterpret, and condemn.

Make it exclusive. Not out of hatred, but out of coherence. A society built around shared values, shared responsibility, shared commitment.

Democracy stays. Elections every four years. Core systems like healthcare, education and finance structured and protected. Everything else decided through referendums.

No endless protests clogging the streets. No performative outrage cycles. You vote, you decide, you move on.

An army is not necessary. Just a police force to deal with actual crime. If someone really wants to cause chaos, send them back to Earth. Let them enjoy the system they seem so committed to defending.

Self sufficient. Stable. Focused.

And yes, bring animals. Even aliens appreciate biodiversity.

Would it be perfect. Of course not. Humans would still be human. The good and the bad would still be there, quietly competing.

But at least the rules would be clear. The contradictions reduced. The constant noise dialed down to something survivable.

Because right now, Earth feels like a place where logic goes to die and confusion is elevated to a moral principle.

So maybe the real question is not whether Israel should keep trying to win the approval of a world that fundamentally misunderstands it.

Maybe the question is whether it is time to stop playing a game that was never designed to be fair.

Anyway, if that new planet ever becomes a reality, I have just one request.

Can you take me with you

It was my idea, after all.

About the Author
CEO of Time to Stand Up for Israel, a nonprofit organization with a powerful mission: to support Israel and amplify its voice around the world. With over 200,000 followers across various social media platforms, our community is united by a shared love for Israel and a deep commitment to her future. My journey as an advocate for Israel began early. When I was 11 years old, my father was deployed to the Middle East through his work with UNTSO. I had the unique experience of living in both Syria and Israel, and from a young age, I witnessed firsthand the contrast in cultures and realities. That experience shaped me profoundly. Returning to the Netherlands, I quickly became aware of the growing wave of anti-Israel sentiment — and I knew I had to speak out. Ever since, I’ve been a fierce and unapologetic supporter of Israel. I’m not religious, but my belief is clear and unwavering: Israel has the right to exist, and Israel has the duty to defend herself. My passion is rooted in truth, love, and justice. I’m a true Zionist at heart. From my first breath to my last, I will stand up for Israel.
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