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Edward Herman on "anti-Semitism"
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Palestinians are "Semites," but the word antisemitism is never applied to prejudice against them, only to Jews. The restriction on the application to Jews, and failure to use it in reference to Palestinians, continues in the face of the fact that prejudice against Jews has sharply diminished in the West from the era of Hitler, and that the Arabs have displaced them as target of anti-"Semite" hostility. Thus the usage itself reflects power and deep-seated bias.
What is more, the use of "antisemitism" has long been an opportunistic ploy of supporters of Israel to counter criticism of Israel, with mentions of the Holocaust and allegations of prejudice against Jews used to elicit sympathy for Israel, supposedly once again being threatened by menacing enemies. But the fact is that Israel has created increasing numbers of enemies by refusing to leave the occupied territories, or to abide by the Geneva Conventions, or to halt the steady and increasingly brutal ethnic cleansing of the indigenous Palestinians in favor of Jewish settlers, many immigrants from abroad. By identifying opposition to Sharon and Israeli ethnic cleansing with "antisemitism," pro-ethnic cleansing activists have made "antisemitism" -- in their distorted and unacceptable sense -- a moral obligation for all decent human beings.
"Antisemitism" has been a complement of "terrorism" in the propaganda arsenal of the "friends of Israel," more properly designated the "supporters and underwriters of Israeli ethnic cleansing." The Palestinians have engaged in terror, but by any meaningful definition the Israelis have also, and the bias in treatment of the two has been staggering. The huge death rate differential over the years -- better than twenty Palestinian to one Israeli deaths -- and the steady racist bias in systematic house demolitions and removals, the seizure of water resources, and the rise to head of the Israeli state of a world class terrorist responsible for over a thousand Palestinian civilian deaths in a single episode, doesn't alter the deeply imbedded bias. Only the Palestinians terrorize; the Israelis retaliate and are the victims of terror.
Back in 1979, when world pressure on Israel to settle and end its "redemption of the land" by ethnic cleansing was severe, the Israel-based Jonathan Institute organized a meeting in Israel that brought together members of the Western elite -- George Bush, George Will, Senators Henry Jackson and John Danforth, Paul Johnson, Lord Chalfont, Jacques Soustelle, and many others -- to declare the PLO a terrorist organization linked to Moscow, and to declare Israel the victim. The organization met again in Washington in 1984 for another rousing session to make the same points, here with Secretary of State George Shultz, Jeane Kirkpatrick, Senator Moynihan, Daniel Schorr and Ted Koppel, among others present. This and many other Israeli-official U.S.-media efforts helped pin the terrorism label on the PLO and preserve Israel's right to ethnically cleanse by means of (unacknowledged) state terrorism.
For years in the United States, there was a tendency on the part of the hard-line supporters of Israel to conflate criticisms of Israel with "antisemitism." Such criticisms, and even criticism of policies that might not comport with Israeli interests, like a large military budget, were regarded -- in Stalinist lingo and mode -- as "objectively" antisemitic (most notoriously, in Nathan and Ruth Perlmutter's 1982 work on "the real antisemitism in America"). That tendency has become more marked in recent years, as the "friends" have become increasingly aggressive in attacking critics of Israel, and have even mounted attacks on blatantly pro-Israel media institutions like The Washington Post, The New York Times and CNN (all besieged with hostile messages and subjected to boycotts). The drive by the "friends" has been toward total closure; they are not satisfied that the NYT, WP and CNN are already hugely biased in favor of Israel (see the citations below), they want inconvenient facts suppressed and alternative viewpoints entirely blacked out.
The more aggressive campaign of the "friends" once again correlates with the demands of Israeli state policy. The open destruction of the institutions of Palestinian civil society, the more ruthless crackdown, use of firepower, curfews, and the open discussion of possible large-scale "transfer" -- meaning accelerated ethnic cleansing -- under the direction of terrorist commander Sharon, calls for parallel attempts to protect these ugly efforts from any Western constraint. The cries about a new "antisemitism" and a campaign to silence any criticism follows once again in the wake of this Israeli need. As Alexander Cockburn has noted, "there's a quick way of figuring just how badly Israel is behaving. There's a brisk uptick in the number of articles here by Jews accusing the left of antisemitism."
The aggression of the "friends" has been unique in its scope, intensity and effectiveness, and constitutes a form of low level terrorism that has cowed politicians, school administrators, and the media. Politicians had long been brought into line by the experiences of many who had crossed the pro-Israel lobby in the past; as far back as two decades ago, two Illinois Republicans, Senator Charles Percy and Rep. Paul Findley, were the target of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) in 1984 and 1982 respectively, and both were defeated. In 1986, Senator Jesse Helms was targeted, and only narrowly escaped. Since then his voting pattern has been consistently and ardently pro-Israeli. The recent easy defeat of two black congresspersons with "safe" seats who had been put on the lobby hit list -- Earl Hilliard and Cynthia McKinney -- offered a fresh object lesson to those who might have been inclined to question a blank check to Sharon. Indeed, Congress and the Senate continue to rush at every opportunity with almost unanimous votes against Arafat and in support of anything Sharon, the man responsible for the massacres of Qibya and Sabra/Shatila, might want.
There have been a number of dramatic recent cases of college administrator accommodation to the pro-ethnic cleansing lobby, and many more cases of pro-Israel ethnic cleansing activists efforts to stifle debate. Among the more notable:
---Dr. Sami Al-Arian of the University of South Florida was suspended from his job teaching computer science and taken to court for pro-Palestinian statements and allegations about terrorist associations, after an "O'Reilly Factor" attack, university donor financial threats, and a trustee's meeting from which Al-Arian was forbidden attendance and at which no one was permitted to speak on his behalf (this board of trustees was hand-picked by Jeb Bush).
---Harvard President Lawrence Summers publicly assailed the campaign for divestment of stocks in Israel claiming that the campaign was "antisemitic in effect, if not intent." This statement interpreted a very clear effort to punish Israel for its ethnic cleansing as antisemitism, and even implicitly challenged the intent of the campaigners. Presumably a cutback of the U.S. subsidy to Israel as a penalty for ethnic cleansing would also be antisemitic "in effect." Summers has internalized the propaganda line of the friends of Israeli ethnic cleansing.
---A full page ad in The New York Times of October 7, 2002, sponsored by the American Jewish Committee, and calling for the ending of harassment of "Jewish students," was signed by the presidents of more than 300 U.S. colleges and universities. Several college leaders refused to sign unless the ad extended the call beyond "Jewish students," but this request was denied by the AJC. This appalling ad was not only prepared by an interested party that refused to make the call to end harassment more general, it has been issued in a period when Jewish students and Jewish pro-Israel ethnic cleansing activists have been on balance far more the aggressors doing the harassing than victims of harassment.
---In a throwback to the McCarthy era and blacklisting publications like Red Channels and Counterattack designed to alert employers to "Reds," Daniel Pipes recently organized a Campus Watch site that listed academics allegedly biased in favor of the Palestinians. Pipes himself is a well-known pro-Israel ethnic cleansing fanatic, who is a regular speaker before hard-line Zionist groups and contributor to the Op-Ed page of The Wall Street Journal and The New York Post. This brazenly McCarthyite black-listing program was greeted in the media matter-of-factly, without the slightest indignation or condemnation, although we may be sure that a similar effort by pro-Palestinians listing Pipes and other hardliners as biased and implicitly unqualified for academic position would be treated differently.
There have been many other forms and manifestations of aggression against opposing viewpoints by the pro-Israeli ethnic cleansing cadres. On campus after campus, the Defamation League (nominally, Anti-Defamation League) and other of the cadres have complained when pro-Palestinian speakers have been invited to speak, on the grounds of bias, extremism, or lack of "balance." They sometimes force cancellations, or the addition of their own favored speakers, and they make venues (and the media) cautious in extending invitations in the first place. When speakers who represent anti-ethnic cleansing views do come, they are often harassed. Israeli academic Tanya Reinhart speaking at the University of Pennsylvania on September 30 was subjected to regular interruptions, vilification and threats.
And anyone writing critically about Israeli policy will be subjected to serious harassment as a matter of course. Professor Shahid Alam of Northeastern University, after writing an article on Israeli repression and calling for a boycott of Israel, was the victim of a press vilification campaign, followed by attacks by computer hackers who sent out false "email-spoofing" messages under his name. I and everyone I know writing along these lines has been subjected to spamming, email-spoofing, and virus attacks.
The friends of Israeli ethnic cleansing have been fighting a war on many fronts, and without scruple. Their power is evident in the fact that over 300 college presidents signed an ad in which Jewish students alone are victims of harassment. It is also evident in the staggering bias of the media, already hugely biased in support of anything Israel does, but pressed further by the attacks of the "friends" wanting still more -- for evidence on this bias, see the numerous case studies on the website of Palestine Media Watch (), the website of FAIR (http://www.fair.org, and my "Israel's Approved Ethnic Cleansing," Part 3, Z Magazine, June 2001.
Sadly, the success of the "friends" is also reflected in U.S. policy, which has given Sharon carte blanche to deal with the problem of "terrorism" (retail) by his own de facto terrorism (wholesale) carried out with U.S. weapons and diplomatic protection.
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Edward S. Herman is a Professor Emeritus of Finance at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, and a contributor to Z Magazine since its founding in 1988 and to ZNet. Herman is the author of numerous books, including a number of corporate and media studies. These include Corporate Control, Corporate Power (1981), the two-volume Political Economy of Human Rights (1979) and Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media (1988), both of which he co-authored with Noam Chomsky, as well as The "Terrorism" Industry: The Experts and Institutions That Shape Our View of Terror (1989), which he co-authored with Gerry O'Sullivan. Herman occasionally contributes a column to Swans.
For more information:
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cf...
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Look. We all know "anti-semitism" is a screwey expression. Everyone knows that the current definition of that phrase is meant to mean "hating of Jews" or "discrimination against Jews."
People who attack the word, instead of the actual issue, are idiots.
If you don't like the usage of "anti-semitism" then come up with a new word. THe issue is discrimination against Jews, not which word was picked to use to describe it.
People who attack the word, instead of the actual issue, are idiots.
If you don't like the usage of "anti-semitism" then come up with a new word. THe issue is discrimination against Jews, not which word was picked to use to describe it.
Yeah, of all the arguments associated with the Israeli/Arab conflict, this is always the one that strikes me as the most boneheadedly vacuous. Anybody with a dictionary knows what the word "antisemitism" means, and has meant in all the major languages for the last hundred or so years.
If you've got a problem with the word "antisemitism," blame a guy named Wilhelm Mahr, who used it in a famous bit of antisemitic propaganda around 1875. See, he was worried that, as European culture became more secular, people would lose their theological reason for hating Jews, and they'd need a new, secular excuse. So he invented this bullshit social force -- kinda modelled on electrostatic repulsion -- that good Europeans should feel in the presence of Jews. And he called it "Anti-Semitizmus." But (a) there was no Arab population to speak of in Germany at the time, but (b) there was a significant Jewish one, and (c) Mahr explicitly _said_ he was writing about Jews, which is why his word caught on meaning "hatred of Jews."
Here's another clue about language: words mean what they're used to mean, no matter what root are in the word. For example, what's the root of the word "December"? "Dec" -- meaning "ten." But December isn't the tenth month. The tenth month is October -- with a word root meaning "eight."
So if you're going to be suddenly pedantic about the word "antisemitism" not being exclusive to Jews if you pick it apart a certain way under a certain microscope, then -- to be consistent -- you should picket outside the printers of any calendar that insists that 8-ober is the 10th month, and that 10-ober is the 12th month.
@%<
If you've got a problem with the word "antisemitism," blame a guy named Wilhelm Mahr, who used it in a famous bit of antisemitic propaganda around 1875. See, he was worried that, as European culture became more secular, people would lose their theological reason for hating Jews, and they'd need a new, secular excuse. So he invented this bullshit social force -- kinda modelled on electrostatic repulsion -- that good Europeans should feel in the presence of Jews. And he called it "Anti-Semitizmus." But (a) there was no Arab population to speak of in Germany at the time, but (b) there was a significant Jewish one, and (c) Mahr explicitly _said_ he was writing about Jews, which is why his word caught on meaning "hatred of Jews."
Here's another clue about language: words mean what they're used to mean, no matter what root are in the word. For example, what's the root of the word "December"? "Dec" -- meaning "ten." But December isn't the tenth month. The tenth month is October -- with a word root meaning "eight."
So if you're going to be suddenly pedantic about the word "antisemitism" not being exclusive to Jews if you pick it apart a certain way under a certain microscope, then -- to be consistent -- you should picket outside the printers of any calendar that insists that 8-ober is the 10th month, and that 10-ober is the 12th month.
@%<
All that pointless blather about one paragraph.
This article is about a lot more than just semantics. It is about Israel's supporters use of their victim status to give themselves license to victimize Palestinians.
This article is about a lot more than just semantics. It is about Israel's supporters use of their victim status to give themselves license to victimize Palestinians.
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Airstrike targets senior Iraqi officials
Monday, April 7, 2003 Posted: 10:13 PM EDT (0213 GMT)
The 63rd Medical Company tested substances found in the drums to see whether chemical agents were present.
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U.S. troops storm Baghdad and occupy one of Saddam's presidential palaces. (April 7)
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U.S. troops find chemicals in Iraqi agricultural compound that may be used for weapons. (April 7)
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Atlanta Journal-Constitution reporter Ron Martz says central Baghdad has come under heavy fire from U.S. troops. (April 7)
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A British military spokesman says sources are reporting that the body of 'Chemical Ali,' has been found in Basra.
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U.S. MILITARY BRIEFING, MONDAY
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
• Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein "no longer runs much of Iraq" and plans for a new Iraq are unfolding.
• "[Saddam] is either dead or injured or not willing to show himself."
• "The Iraqi people are going to sort out what the Iraqi government ought to look like."
IRAQI INFORMATION MINISTRY BRIEFING, MONDAY
Iraqi Information Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf
• U.S. troops are beginning to "commit suicide on the walls of Baghdad."
• Denies certain buildings in Iraq's capital, such as the Al-Rashid hotel, were under coalition control.
• Blames Al-Jazeera TV network for "marketing for America."
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BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- The United States took fresh aim at Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and his sons early Tuesday, dropping a "large amount of ordnance" on a building in a residential neighborhood of Baghdad where intelligence reports had told them senior Iraqi leaders were meeting, U.S. officials told CNN.
The building, where intelligence reports said Saddam and possibly his two sons were, was destroyed.
U.S. officials said they don't know who they might have killed in the attack, but they said they believed the intelligence -- which U.S. officials received Monday -- was very good. Part of that intelligence was "human" intelligence, meaning from informants.
A senior defense official said only that the United States had "time-sensitive intelligence" involving leadership in Baghdad.
Explosions and machine gun fire were heard in Baghdad just after 5 a.m. Tuesday (9 p.m. Monday EDT).
The machine gun fire was coming from the direction of a presidential palace, according to a correspondent for the Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation.
It was unclear whether the building was in the Mansour neighborhood of Baghdad, where at least nine people were killed and 13 wounded in a blast Monday. That explosion also destroyed several buildings, including a restaurant and apartments, according to CNN sources who went to the scene.
Residents said they believed the damage came as a result of coalition air raids. The U.S. Central Command in Doha, Qatar, had no immediate comment on that incident.
U.S. forces took over at least two of Saddam's palaces in Baghdad Monday, sending a message, in the words of a top U.S. general, that Saddam's regime "is gone."
But the discovery of drums of what may be chemical weapons materials raised concern south of the Iraqi capital.
When more than 100 tanks and armored vehicles rolled into Baghdad, some toppled a 40-foot statue of Saddam that had stood over the parade grounds at Zawra Park, where the Iraqi leader traditionally addressed his troops.
There were "mass desertions" in Baghdad, with Iraqi troops abandoning their armored vehicles and fleeing, said CNN's Walter Rodgers, who is embedded with the 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry of the 3rd Infantry Division.
Sources told Rodgers that three battalions of the U.S. Army's 2nd Brigade of the 3rd Infantry plan to stay in Baghdad.
Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the entry into two of Saddam's palaces in Baghdad sends "an important message, I think, for the regime and the people of Iraq to understand: that this regime is gone."
At the same Pentagon briefing, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld announced that Saddam "no longer runs much of Iraq."
As to where Saddam was, Rumsfeld said: "He's either dead or injured or not willing to show himself."
"His forces continue to surrender and capitulate. His regime is running out of real soldiers. And soon all that will be left will be the war criminals," said Rumsfeld. (Full story)
But standing in the smoke-filled streets of Baghdad Monday, the ever-defiant Iraqi Information Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf refused to acknowledge the U.S. raids.
"The soldiers of Saddam Hussein have given them a lesson they will never forget," al-Sahaf said. (Full story)
Testing continues of suspicious material
U.S. officials had been concerned Iraq might unleash chemical weapons as troops moved into Baghdad, despite the claims of Iraqi officials that their country has no such weapons.
At an agricultural complex in Hindiya near Karbala, about 60 miles south of Baghdad, the 101st Airborne Division found what might be a stash of nerve and blister agents hidden inside barrels in underground bunkers. Initial tests at the agricultural site indicate the presence of non-weaponized chemical agents, said Brig. Gen. Benjamin Freakly.
"It's a liquid chemical, but it hasn't been put in a delivery means or anything that could be dispersed against our soldiers," he said.
It's possible the substances are pesticides, he said. Further tests are being done. (Full story)
Coalition planes have flown more than 30,000 sorties since the beginning of the invasion, U.S. Air Force officials said Monday.
Between Monday morning and Tuesday morning local time, coalition planes will have flown 1,700 sorties in that 24-hour period -- 500 of them strike sorties. Of those 500, 375 will have been strikes over Baghdad in support of coalition ground troops.
Smoke from Monday's explosion combined with black clouds coming from oil-filled trenches set afire by Iraqi fighters and a sandstorm, limiting visibility.
Meanwhile, some 25 miles east of Mosul -- the largest Iraqi city remaining under regime control -- coalition forces Monday were approaching the main highway connecting Mosul to Kirkuk, hoping to cut off those cities from each other.
The move comes as coalition forces consolidate positions in an effort to choke off and surround all major Iraqi cities, including those in the north.
According to defectors, there are no Republican Guard troops operating in northern Iraq, but there has been very active Iraqi artillery resistance during the coalition bombings, which have taken place almost every day for the past two weeks.
British claim control of Basra
An Iraqi missile slammed into the tactical operations center for the U.S. Army's 2nd Brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division in Baghdad, killing two U.S. soldiers and two journalists and wounding 15 people, Rodgers reported. The Spanish newspaper El Mundo said one if its reporters was killed, as was a German photographer. (Full story)
As Army forces moved in from the west, U.S. Marines approached the capital from the east -- and two were killed by Iraqi forces. The 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines came under Iraqi mortar and artillery fire as it tried to secure a bridge over a canal near the Tigris River on the southeastern outskirts of Baghdad.
The bridge was damaged and became dangerous. Engineers built a temporary replacement bridge capable of carrying the Marines' armored vehicles over the bridge before using explosives to knock out the central span.
U.S. soldiers search one of Saddam's palaces Monday.
British officials said the coalition had control of the southern city of Basra -- the scene of some of the heaviest fighting yet -- and discovered the body of the man responsible for enforcing Saddam's regime in southern Iraq. The body of Gen. Ali Hassan al-Majeed was found in the rubble of his bombed home in the city, said Capt. Al Lockwood, a spokesman for the British military at Central Command.
The general, a cousin of Saddam, was known as "Chemical Ali" because he allegedly ordered the use of poison gas to kill Kurds in northern Iraq in 1988, coalition officials say. (Full story)
"We believe that the reign of terror of Chemical Ali has come to an end," said Rumsfeld.
The Iraqi National Congress, a group that opposes Saddam's regime, said its forces have joined the military campaign. A unit called the 1st Battalion Free Iraqi Forces, made up of 700 troops, began deployment near Nasiriya in the south, and the number of forces in central and southern Iraq is expected to be swiftly increased.
Other developments
• U.S. officials say the voice on a tape broadcast Friday by Iraqi television is "most likely" that of Saddam Hussein. One official said weekend tests "show it is most likely Saddam, but we can't say it is 100 percent" because the quality of the recording is poor.
• U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan on Monday named a special adviser to coordinate with Security Council members on postwar Iraq. The adviser, Rafeeuddin Ahmed, is a former U.N. Development Program official. "I do expect the U.N. to play an important role" in postwar Iraq, Annan said.
• Rumsfeld said that plans for a new Iraqi government are already unfolding, and it will be the Iraqi people who "sort out what the Iraqi government ought to look like." U.S. plans call for a civilian administration, headed by retired Gen. Jay Garner, to help with the transition to a new Iraqi government.
• Police fired "marble-size" sting balls made of rubber to try to disperse protesters at the port of Oakland, California. An estimated 600 demonstrators were attempting to block two gates to American President Lines, a shipping company the protesters claimed was profiting from the war in Iraq.
• Gen. Tommy Franks, in charge of the invasion force now nosing into Baghdad, visited U.S. and British troops inside Iraq for the first time Monday, meeting with top officers, awarding commendations to two U.S. soldiers and saying he was "pretty damned impressed." He visited a British armored division and U.S. Marines, among others.
• U.S. Marines have seized the Iraqi Atomic Energy Commission headquarters east of Baghdad, where they found protective suits, masks and unidentified substances in jars.
• Irregular Iraqi forces, some wearing women's clothing, ambushed a U.S. Marine platoon of light-armored vehicles Monday in the central Iraqi city of Ab Diwaniyah, but the U.S. unit escaped without casualties, Marines in the firefight said.
• A convoy carrying Russian diplomats reached Syria on Monday, one day after coming under fire leaving Baghdad, a Russian journalist reported. U.S. officials said they are looking into the attack that injured five people. (Full story)
• President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair see an advisory role for the United Nations in a post-Saddam Iraq, a senior Bush administration official told CNN Monday. The two leaders will discuss details Tuesday at a news conference in Belfast, Northern Ireland, where they are meeting. (Full story)
CNN Correspondents Jill Dougherty, Art Harris, James Martone, Tom Mintier, Diana Muriel, Walter Rodgers, Brent Sadler, Martin Savidge and Barbara Starr contributed to this report.
EDITOR'S NOTE: CNN's policy is to not report information that puts operational security at risk.
EDITOR'S NOTE: This report was written in accordance with Pentagon ground rules allowing so-called embedded reporting, in which journalists join deployed troops. Among the rules accepted by all participating news organizations is an agreement not to disclose sensitive operational details.
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"All that pointless blather about one paragraph."
Nah, there's a heck of a lot more that's twisted about the article. But when he opens with what amounts to a declaration that either he's a ignoramus or else he thinks his reader is a gullible idiot, then why bother to pick the rest apart too?
@%<
Nah, there's a heck of a lot more that's twisted about the article. But when he opens with what amounts to a declaration that either he's a ignoramus or else he thinks his reader is a gullible idiot, then why bother to pick the rest apart too?
@%<
This is an excellent article. Please take the time to read it.
The article is about Israel's supporter's use of their victim status to give themselves license to victimize Palestinians.
BTW, many thanks to the supporters of Israel above who keep bumping this article to the top of the commentary list.
The article is about Israel's supporter's use of their victim status to give themselves license to victimize Palestinians.
BTW, many thanks to the supporters of Israel above who keep bumping this article to the top of the commentary list.
It's also pretty much wrong on all sorts of things. For example, it mentions the 1982 defeat of Paul Findley and implies it was because he was targeted by AIPAC. But that's not what defeated him. He was defeated by two things -- the 1982 national recession, for which Reagan was taking the blame and for which Republican Congressmen dropped like flies all across the country, and the way his district was redrawn (by his fellow Republicans, so don't blame Thuh Zionists) as part of the 1982 redisctricting, in a way that carved away some of his firmest support and substituted a blue-collar industrial town then undergoing record unemployment due to Ronald Reagan's embargo of heavy equipment sales to the Soviets.
Even _Findley_ said it was the redistricting that did him in. I know. I've talked to him. And I know because I grew up in his former district.
But the Zmag propaganda piece doesn't bother to mention any of that stuff, because it would rather support the bogey man of The Zionist Control of Everything.
But, hey, if the purpose of the article was to demonize The Zionist Conspiracy, and all you as a reader are really looking for is an excuse to demonize The Zionist, then the facts aren't really all that important, are they?
@%<
Even _Findley_ said it was the redistricting that did him in. I know. I've talked to him. And I know because I grew up in his former district.
But the Zmag propaganda piece doesn't bother to mention any of that stuff, because it would rather support the bogey man of The Zionist Control of Everything.
But, hey, if the purpose of the article was to demonize The Zionist Conspiracy, and all you as a reader are really looking for is an excuse to demonize The Zionist, then the facts aren't really all that important, are they?
@%<
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