TEL AVIV – The outrage sparked by the European Union’s decision to label Israeli goods made in eastern Jerusalem, the Golan Heights, and the West Bank is being voiced in myriad ways. Following the Paris attacks, some condemned Europe for being obsessed with boycotting Israel instead of fighting terror. In an op-ed on the Paris massacre, David Suissa, president of the Jewish Journal, wrote, “Europe will need a lesson in the priorities of labeling. Label the terrorists, yes. Label their ideology, yes. Label the allies who can help you fight them, yes. Just stop labeling Israeli tomatoes.” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu lambasted the labels, saying the EU “should be ashamed.” He compared it to the Nazi-era practice of boycotting Jewish businesses and forcing Jews to wear yellow stars. The Jerusalem Post reported that in “outright defiance of European boycott threats,” one winery in the Golan Heights decided to print the Israeli flag on the caps of bottles headed to Europe. Pro-Israel advocates point out that the EU does not label products from disputed areas such as Tibet, Kashmir, Northern Cyprus, and Crimea. When Lars Faaborg-Andersen, the EU ambassador to Israel, was asked why the Jewish state was being subjected