But I think the opposite is true, that this most extreme act of violence was internalized in some way in this country. ... There was soul-searching, ostensibly, but in the end the assassination became a tool in our culture wars.

The political picture created now is far different than it was in 1992 when Yitzhak Rabin was elected.

A leading party with less than 30 seats is much more dependent on partner parties.

The metro camp is trying very hard to commemorate Rabin and do as many things as possible to mention his name, call new places and streets by his name, and preach his legacy. The retro are trying to negate all that. They're saying it's a not a trauma at all.

There was never a situation where the formal political map was in such disharmony from Israeli civil society.