Posted on 09/29/2001 12:39:21 PM PDT by Samir
The infamous scenes of Palestinians celebrating the attacks, appeared on CNN, get Matt Taibbi to examine the ethical aspects of TV journalism...Be Cool, America. War??? Think it Over
Looking at the situation after the attacks and possible scenarios of the US response, Matt Taibbi brings up some key issues that appear to be blindly ignored by mainstream American media...
Far Gone in 30 Seconds.
CNN Sentences Palestine To Death
By Matt Taibbi
taibbi@exile.ru
I dont know how long 30 seconds of videotape is. A foot? Two feet? It cant be much. And yet thats all it took for CNN, in one of the most outrageously irresponsible editorial decisions of our time, to sentence an entire nation to death.
We all saw the pictures. About an hour after the bombing, CNN using videotape purchased from the two largest news video production houses, APTN and Reuters broadcast scenes of Palestinians, mainly children, celebrating the attack on America.
The montage lasts exactly 30 seconds. There are five scenes in the sequence. They are, as follows:
1) A shot of a white station-wagon taxi pulling away from a storefront. The taxi pulls away to reveal a group of Palestinians in the Arab section of Jerusalem standing in front of the store. Though the taxi driver appears to be smiling, no one else is celebrating in the picture. The shot lasts about six and a half seconds.
2) The longest shot of the sequence. It features a group of children, two of whom take turns appearing directly in front of the camera, apparently shouting Allah Akhbar! and waving the Palestinian flag. The second child has a distinctly irrational, intoxicated gleam in his eye. This sequence lasts just over ten seconds.
3) The third shot, the shortest, shows a Palestinian man extending a plate with a pastry to an unseen person. There is a smile on his face. If this shot were broadcast at any time other than in the immediate aftermath of the attacks, it would be appear absolutely meaningless. But in the context, it and in particular the vaguely satisfied smile of the cafe worker comes across as fraught with meaning. This shot lasts about as long as it takes the man to walk some six feet to deliver the pastry about four seconds.
4) The second-longest shot. A matronly woman in glasses and a shawl, seemingly in her fifties, is beaming and pumping her two upraised hands in celebration. All around her, children are jumping up and down and cheering. The shot lasts about seven seconds.
5) The last shot. A white van containing three men in the passenger seat is honking its horn and moving through the street. All around the van, children are cheering. One jumps on the hood of the van, then jumps off.
My very first thought, when I saw those scenes, was that the shots were fakes. I had a very strong suspicion that the footage was old. This was not paranoia. It was a logical inference, based upon the circumstances surrounding the airing of the sequence.
As it turns out, the pictures were real. Despite rumors to the contrary that have been flying around the internet, these celebrations really did occur, and they really were captured by Western news agencies.
But the reasons reporters like myself were forced to independently confirm that fact (I went so far as to call the APTN bureau in Jerusalem, and contact the press watchdog agency FAIR, which had also inquired about the footage) were the same reasons that made this sequence so shockingly irresponsible. If CNN had not so far overstepped its bounds in running this sequence in the manner that it did, there would have been no reason to suspect the footages authenticity. If they had even in been in the ballpark of journalistic ethics, there couldnt have been any questions at all.
The television news business carries with it a set of ethical problems that are a world apart from the concerns of print journalists. Because they are so routinely ignored, few people particularly people whose only relation to TV news is as a consumer are even aware of them. They mainly involve problems of attribution and context. Very often, theyre exactly the opposite of the problems one encounters in print journalism.
Anyone who has worked as a print journalist knows he has certain advantages over the television reporter. A print journalist can walk around in the middle of a news event and not be observed. Because hes not operating a camera or concentrating on the logistical problem of getting someone to go on the air, he usually has much more time to simply watch and digest what is happening in front of him. A print journalist can recall something from memory, whereas in television, memory is useless.
More importantly, a print journalist always knows he can construct his narrative after the fact. He does not have to be concerned with the purely mechanical problems of story construction while he is covering the story. A print journalist does not lose his story if, for instance, he does not catch a defendant walking out of a courtroom. But a TV journalist covering a trial has to catch people going in and out of various buildings, walking their dogs, stepping out of planes all utterly meaningless events to the print journalist, but of critical importance to the TV journalist, who needs these moments to establish the outline of his story.
One last thing. Print journalists in some ways have much more room to lie. When a print reporter publishes a man-on-the-street interview, only God will actually know if that interview ever happened. There is no way to track down the those kinds of sources in print. But on television, you have to get a picture, and a picture is difficult to fake, particularly since it requires a conspiracy of many (the reporter, his cameraman, his producer, his editors) to make it happen.
On the other hand...
On the other hand, the very absence of a lengthy narrative instantly absolves the TV reporter of a great many ethical responsibilities. A print reporter has to work very hard to produce an effect. The most powerful print stories are almost always based on hard information, or specific quotes. But television, as the images last week proved, can change the course of history with a single picture. And unlike print, television does not have to explain its context in order to be effective not truthful or just, mind you, but effective, in stimulating a response.
In the case of the pictures last week, CNN had a responsibility particularly given the extreme gravity of the situation to provide an exact context for the footage it was showing. The man handing over the piece of pie why was he smiling? Who was he handing the pie to? The implication was obvious: this Palestinian was so happy about the bombings, he was giving pie away to strangers.
But how do we know that? Assuming it was true, CNN needed, at the bare minimum, to say so explicitly: Our reporter on the scene observed this man, Saleem X, handing a piece of pie to a stranger for free. X said he was glad America was bombed, and that everything was on the house today.
But there was nothing. All we were told, by CNN, was that these were pictures of Palestinians celebrating the attacks.
This kind of presentation makes it impossible for any individual, much less an entire nation, to defend himself against the media. The cafÈ owner has no deniability. He never spoke to the journalist. Indeed, there wasnt one there, just a cameraman. The cameraman, on the other hand, has total deniability. No one knows his name or will ever know it (APTN refused to release the cameramans name, and refused all requests to interview him), and, whats more, he wasnt responsible for how his pictures were used. CNN is similarly isolated from responsibility: it didnt take the pictures, and the only information it needed from its video service was that these were pictures of Palestinians celebrating the attack on America. Thats all it needed: one sentence worth of information about the story.
Therefore you get, in the end, a picture that in the context speaks literally volumes, and which may have actually finally engendered American hatred toward Palestinians, which rests on a single sentence worth of information.
But this is all standard television practice. None of what Ive described so far departs very much from the ordinary. What was extraordinary about the CNN transmission were three things: the lack of a time peg, the lack of balance, and the lack of editorial restraint.
The time issue was the one that made me suspect the pictures were faked. Given the situation, it seemed imperative that CNN establish on camera that the pictures were directly connected to the attacks in New York. Forget about a narrative attribution the proof here needed to be on the air.
The easiest way to do this would have been through an on-camera interview. Approach any one of the people in the picture and shout a single sentence a them: Are you celebrating the attack on America? A yes would have been enough, though a follow-up would have been better. Anything else is the television equivalent of an unnamed source, an assertion without proof.
You can use unnamed sources in print. Its an accepted practice, used most often as a way of supporting attributed fact-gathering. But you can not use unnamed sources to send a whole country to war against a particular nation. And thats what CNN did.
Another thing CNN could have done to peg the time would have been to film Palestinians cheering as they watched television reports of the attack. I cant imagine that this would have been too hard. Every television in the city must have been on. Its quite possible that they tried and failed to catch anyone celebrating. If thats the case, I think the world had a right to know, had a right to see pictures of people not celebrating. It doesnt even matter that well never know now (with APTN and CNN issuing flat no comments about the shooting done that day in Jerusalem and Nabluz). The world needed to know that day. The peculiar nature of TV journalism makes it essential not to screw up at the moment, because it is impossible to undo the damage of doing a bad job once its been done.
The irony here is that it would have been very easy to get a time-pegged shot of Palestinians reacting rationally and sensitively to the attack. Id guess that the vast majority of Palestinians would have been willing to go on the record saying that they sympathized with the victims. That would have been true even for the great number of Palestinians who believe they have excellent reasons to hate the United States. There was a candlelight vigil in East Jerusalem on the night of the attacks; Yassir Arafat gave blood; schoolchildren around the country took part in moments of silence in reaction to the attacks. And a large part of the nations public figures spoke sensibly and generously about the American victims.
CNNs decision not to show these reasoned responses underscores the anti-intellectual nature of television news and its ability to influence people in an anti-intellectual direction. A sudden outburst of emotion simply makes for better and more powerful television than a reasoned response. Conflict looks better on television than peace. The focus on this side of humanity (particularly when covering foreign peoples, who are more easily dehumanized) produces in viewers the habit of believing that emotional responses are more valid than reasoned ones.
The long-term effect of this kind of coverage was illustrated dramatically on the day of the attacks. Throughout the day, CNN restricted its visual reporting to a remarkably small number of video sequences. The number of images, in fact, was so small that I suspected and still suspect that there was some kind of government control, or at least a consensus between the government and the company, over which material would be transmitted. The actual attack on the World Trade Center was played over and over again, of course. There was footage of the Pentagon on fire, footage of the crash site in Pennsylvania, footage of the mysterious plane flying over Washington, footage of warplanes flying over New York, and significantly, these pictures of Palestinians celebrating in Jerusalem and Nablus. All of these pictures all extremely dramatic and/or inflammatory were interspersed with a steady stream of interviews with government and ex-government representatives, most of them Republican.
Amazingly, throughout the course of the entire broadcast of the first day, there was scarcely a hint of a reaction from an ordinary person, American or foreign. The commentary was restricted almost entirely to inflammatory images, warmongering questioning and commentary from television reporters, and right-wing government or ex-government spokespeople. In the first eight hours after the attack, there were only two people with even the vaguest associations with the Democratic party interviewed, Madeline Albright and William Cohen. And these two, it goes without saying, were hardly from the dovish side of the loyal opposition.
After showing the pictures of the Palestinian children, CNN commentators (in particular the unbelievably loathsome Jill Dougherty) would invariably begin asking their interview subjects what our military response was likely to be, how extreme it needed to be, and whether we had failed to be vigilant enough in the past in dealing with the terrorist threat. The stations obvious agenda was to rally its viewers around the very crudest response to the news: violence, and celebration of violence, needed to be met with more and more violence and a political clampdown.
The most dramatic result of the stations manipulation of the Palestine images came during an interview with former Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger. During part of the interview the station maintained a split-screen effect which showed the porcine ex-bureaucrat in one small box, while images from the days shocking events rolled on in a sort of endless montage in the other. The celebrating Palestine children were shown during one sequence. Soon afterward, Eagleburger dropped a bombshell comment. He was not referring specifically to the celebrating children, but his and the stations implication was clear:
There is only one way to begin to deal with people like this, he said, and that is you have to kill some of them, even if they are not immediately directly involved in this thing.
Only in the United States, a country which sentences minor criminals to death, would such journalism even be thinkable.
And that wasnt even the worst part.
Television has almost no probative value. Unlike reading, which requires people to assemble images and associations in their minds, television trains people to become completely passive consumers of information. Youre not supposed to look beyond the picture. Therefore you get this amazing phenomenon of an image without explanation. People are seen doing and saying things that appear to make no sense at all. The result can be more inflammatory than an outright lie and thats what happened in this case.
During the entire first day of coverage, CNN never once broached the question of what might have aroused Arab anger toward the United States. The station speculated endlessly that Osama bin Laden was the culprit, but it never once bothered to ask what might have been bin Ladens motive. The same held true for the shots of the celebrating Palestinians. No reason was offered. Instead, the station simply asked for Americans to rely on their own preconceived notions of Islam to form the motive for their behavior. The groundwork for that appeal has been steadily laid over the course of the last three decades since about the time of the formation of O.P.E.C., incidentally.
In general, American coverage of Islam tends to focus on two or three key themes that are offered as explanation for Arab hostility to America. The first is the poverty of Islamic countries; Muslims are inevitably portrayed as murderously envious of American affluence. The ency is almost always blind and irrational. To quote the New York Times analysis from September 16, Muslim extremists profess a hatred for the values cherished in the West as freedom, tolerance, prosperity, religious pluralism and universal suffrage. The second is religious fanaticism, as expressed in the endless America seen as Great Satan pieces. Muslims do not fear death because they believe in an afterlife; Muslims are all inspired to jihad by commandment from above; Muslims are willing to kill anyone, guilty or innocent, to recapture the homelands and rid the world of infidel, i.e. American values.
The third theme is anti-Semitism. Muslims are shown throwing rocks at Israeli soldiers for no apparent reason. The rock-throwing towelhead photo was one of the great cliches of 20th-century journalism. The reason they were throwing rocks, we were always told, is that theyre crazed anti-Semites. And we know who else was an anti-Semite.
But Palestinians have a very simple reason to hate Americans. Americans are supporting the occupation of their country by Israel. Israeli armed forces, the same people who are bulldozing neighborhoods and shooting into crowds, use American weapons even American missiles. The United States is basically a colonial aggressor to most Palestinians, some 360,000 of which are living as refugees in Lebanon.
But all of this got left out, making the situation much worse than it ever was.
The whole thing reminds me of this scheme I used to use to get free McNuggets at McDonalds. It worked like this:
You go to McDonalds with your friend. You convince him to buy a big 20-pack of McNuggets. Then, as soon as he sits down, you send him back up to the front of the restaurant to get napkins, or ketchup, or whatever. While hes gone, you flip open the McNuggets box and swipe five or six Nuggets. Then you replace the lid on the box. He comes back, opens the box, and thinks he only got fourteen nuggets, when he paid for twenty. Go complain to the manager, you say. Thinking hes really been ripped off, your friend then goes up to the manager and, with all the gall of a wronged person, angrily demands his six McNuggets. His act is usually so believable that he gets what he wants. It works every time just make sure you dont tell him until youre in the car on the way home.
American coverage of the Middle East works the same way. You cover an Arab-Israeli conflict for years, following a certain storyline. Along the way, you lie to your viewers about whats really happening, setting them up to think that Americas position in the Middle East is reasonable. Then something like the bombing happens, and you show Palestinians dancing in the streets. Americans then, quite naturally, go completely crazy with rage and demand total retaliation. The lie is in the missing McNuggets. If Americans knew that CNN had stolen them before, they wouldnt be rushing to the manager for justice now.
Probably no single film clip in recent history has had as much of an impact as the Palestine clip. Summing it up one way was Ehud Sprinzak, an Israeli expert on terrorism, who was quoted in Reuters, referring to the clip:
From the perspective of Jews, it is the most important public relations act ever committed in our favor.
Put it another way: in the 48 hours after the clip ran, Israelis shot and killed 13 Palestinians in the Jenin area of the West Bank.
Thirty seconds was all that took. Forget about anyone ever being reasonable when this is the way our leading journalists work.
That would be WAY cool!
You mean this one?
In thirty seconds we watched the United States of America attacked by Islamic Terrorists. You have yet to see our response.
If the people you claim to represent had any sense whatsoever they would immediately implement a cease fire in all their cities and put on sackcloth and ashes. Then they would plead for mercy.
I do not claim to represent the people of Palestine.
As it turns out, the pictures were real.
So it turns out he really WAS paranoia. I got news for you, the Western Media don't fake news footage like the Arabs at Al-Jazeera do.
I dont know how long 30 seconds of videotape is. A foot? Two feet? It cant be much. And yet thats all it took for CNN, in one of the most outrageously irresponsible editorial decisions of our time, to sentence an entire nation to death.
CNN did its job to report the news. If Taibbi wants absolute censorship, he's not going to find it in our media. In fact, we would have video of THOUSANDS of them celebrating in the streets, except for Arafat's terrorists' threatening of the cameramen's lives.
O.K.
He would have flunked Composition 101.
A vague rambling screed that fails to make any kind of coherent point.
We don't sentence people to death for minor crimes, so I guess he means we execute people under the age of 18 or 21. Well, heck, I made it through being 15 years old without killing anyone, and I knew it was wrong, and so can everyone else. If any 15-year-old brutally murders someone, they SHOULD be put to death.
Of course, for Taibbi to be so worried about the children, it certainly doesn't concern him to see the Palestinians using their children to attack Israeli soldiers, it only concerns him that the Israelis shoot back in self-defense! Even if you assume the Jews are evil, evil, evil, and murder Palestinian kids whenever they get the chance, then why--WHY--would the Palestinians keep sending their kids out to throw rocks at them?
She's celebrating a birthday!!!!!!!
(This article has raised an important area of concern, however. I certainly hope that the McDonald's Coporation gets reimbursed for those McNuggets that Taibbi stole.)
I'm with you.
Bottom line is that the footage is real.
As for the rest, what kind of ethics holds that the representation of the act is a worse offense than the act itself.
You call this ethics? Do whatever obscene crap you want, but if someone catches you at it, cut his head off? or is it just his hand, or maybe poke out his eye so he can't watch you celebrate mass murder anymore?...
Please oh wise one, enlighten us poor infidels....is it worse to do it, or to show it being done? ...Is it worse to kill 6000 innocent victims and dance on their still bleeding corpses, or to expose the obscene behavior of the supporters of the perpetrators to the civilized world?
C'mon, that shouldn't be hard for a smart little guy like you.
You don't have a case here, son. You might post something thoughtful here that will make us think that Islam is all peace and charm. But this isn't it.
I no longer care what happens to them, nothing you can say or do will make me care about them.
The Israelis may do whatever they want to the palestinians, you won't hear me complain.
We're Back [eXile #125]

What has surely been the most embarrassing chapter in the very embarrassing four-year history of the eXile is apparently at an end.
The intramural snafu which resulted in the ouster of the eXiles original editorial staff has been, to put it as vaguely as possible, resolved. Mssrs. Ames and McElwee, as well as yours truly, are back in control of this miserable newspaper.
For reasons that should be obvious to the reader, I am reluctant, at this time, to explore the issues surrounding the eXiles temporary collapse, and its sudden return. I should say, however, that the intervening period saw the rapid dissolution of many serious misconceptions on the part of all the parties involved.
For instance, certain figures in the publishing house Ne Spat, the majority interest in the eXile, were introduced to the difference between an offer of investment, and actual investment.
Kevin, Mark and I, meanwhile, were most unceremoniously sent hurtling into a nightmare previously never thought imaginable by any of usan utter vacuum of public outcry at our closing. Nearly a week passed after the initial announcement before we received a single letter of support. True, the letters did pour in later, in large enough numbers, but the white knights with fat wallets we expected would come to our rescue not only never came, they didnt even send a goddamn Hallmark.
It would probably not be accurate to say that Jake Sex Machine Rudnitsky had any serious illusions shattered by his experience as Editor-in-Chief. I doubt if even Jake thought he could competently run a newspaper by himself. Jake is being maintained on the staff for the simple reason that the sheer awfulness of his product was the single largest factor in ensuring our return. Advertisers threatened to walk en masse at first exposure to Jakes literary talents. I leave it to readers to decide whether or not we influenced his editorial decisions in absentia.
The full story of what happened last month will, I promise you, be revisited at a later date. Right now, though, Im frankly very tired of talking about it and, given the events of last week, feel sure no one is much interested in hearing about it at length. Suffice to say that were backand just in time, I might add. Imagine looking for a job at The Washington Post at a time like this!
About this war there are plenty of things to say about it, and we tried to get to most of the more important things in this issue. But there is one particular issue, now arising as a result of the war, which is specifically relevant to the recent eXile mess, and our return. This is the worldwide surrender of humor to make way for war hysteria.
Careful readers of the news will have noted this week that the cable channel Comedy Central has temporarily pulled the popular Daily Show, hosted by Jon Stewart. The channels explanation is that news parody is inappropriate right now, when the news itself is so grave. As one of the shows producers explained, Irony is dead right now. The channel is also carefully editing reruns of the Matt Stone/Trey Parker show Thats My Bush, removing any parts of the show which might be particularly offensive to our august leader.
Meanwhile, Americas leading humor publication, the Onion, announced this week that it is halting all new material, and that its next issues will be reruns of older, lighter articles. Apparently thats as opposed to their newer, more innovative, more dangerous material, which so violently shakes popular conceptions.
These organizations were all responding to the troubling rhetorical question: Who could laugh at a time like this? What kind of heartless monster would even dare?
Hey, we have no idea, either. If we meet the guy, we promisewell hang him from the first tree.
In the meantime, I guess youll all have to settle for the old eXile. Heartless? Maybe. But at least were not Stars and Stripes. No comic makes a good patriot. Hes too busy shitting his pants. Thats us. Back just in timeto shit our pants. See you in two weeks.
Matt Taibbi
"All Pakistani newspapers, all the papers in the area, they all write it here," shouted a protester at one rally, jabbing copies of articles proclaiming Israel's guilt, but offering no evidence. "They could not be wrong. They could not be wrong."
I think your story link is appropriate -- but your assumption that Samir would support bad journalism elsewhere is a long-shot. The story posted for this thread outlines CNN's unprofessional journalism. Your story outlines unprofessional journalism in Pakistan.
Is the only alternative to bad journalism that appears to manipulate the public to one false truth bad journalism that appears to manipulate the public to another false perception of truth? Perhaps good journalism is an option?
Samir did not offer an opinion on the story he posted. I see no posted evidence that he agrees with all or some or none of what is stated in the article. Yet posters here attack him. I suppose I will be called a Nazi for pointing that out? Discrediting the source of an allegation was lifted to an art form by the Clinton Administration. Now such argument/accusation has become legitimized?
Is it reasonable to assume that when a poster posts, he or she is in full agreement with the article/author? Is there any merit in this articles criticism of CNNs journalistic methods?
As angry as European nations get with the U. S. there were not celebrations in the streets of Europe after this attack. But there were such celebrations all over Palestine. This was an amazing event, and very worthy of coverage.
This article tries to downplay the significance of the event, but fails miserably. These were not isolated cases of a few confused children. These were massive celebrations involving people from all walks of life - and they celebrated the deaths of thousands of innocent civilians from a nation which continually sends them aid and argues their case against their own ally (Isreal). The reporters were likely as stunned as the rest of America in trying to cover this macabre festival.
The dream of a Palestinian state is dead. And the Palestinians themselves are the ones who killed it. Quit blaming the messenger.
Pure BS. Charlie Manson is still alive. There are inmates on death row that been there for years because of never ending appeals. Go to Afganistan and see how minor crimes are treated there. No appeal, no mercy.
That CNN should not have covered the story because the truce was inconvenient?
There were celebrations all over Palestine, Syria, and Lebanon for two-three days following the attack. They were reported by numerous print journalist. Two to three whole days. Other CNN photojournalists had cameras seized when they filmed those later celebrations.
30 Seconds? Maybe the Palestinians -- and others addicted to terrorism -- better watch "30 Second Over Tokyo." Or better, read A Torch to the Enemy by Martin Cadin. After they think about that, and that we do not plan to go in for mass retaliation they might be grateful that all they lost was their chance at a nation.
I doubt it, though. Jackels are not known for gratitude.
The CNN footage of the celebrations was the worst thing that could ever happen to Yassir Arafat. Instantly, Americans saw that at least some Palestinians thought that this horrific terrorist attack was great news.
It's been two weeks since the attack and there has been almost no Islamic leaders coming forward to denounce what happened. Arafat has made some gestures, but it hasn't been enough.
The bottom line is that there is a significant minority of arabs who hate America. After all, that's what their leaders have taught them for years.
CNN captured a few of them celebrating. I don't believe for a second that there weren't thousands of others who celebrated, too. They are the same ones burning our flag in Pakistan today, or marching in Iran.
This writer is complaining about something that is the truth, and lamenting that Americans discovered it.
Bump!
This writer confirms that the Palestinian "celebration" of the murder of 7,000 Americans took place. Does this "condemn all Paledstinians to death>? Of course not. It does, however, mean that a fair number of Palestinians and their "guests" like Hamas and Hezbollah, will shortly die for their involvement in and support of terrorism. It also means that the PA as it now exists will be destroyed. Perhaps sometime a rational Palestinian leader will arise, one who chooses live instead of death.
This writer is not concerned about the effects of this accurate video on all Palestinians, but only on the murderous cause of some Palestians.
The (More er Less) Honorable Billybob,
cyberCongressman from Western Carolina
The USA does not sentence minor criminals to death. Only murderers get the death sentence, and murder is not a minor crime.
America is not supporting the occupation of "Palestine". Israel has, since 1993, tried to negotiate with Arafat, and considerably arm twisting by successive American administrations on the Israelis, including the deliberate meddling in Israeli elections, only serve to refute this argument. Not once has Arafat tried to negotiate. The most recent offer came at Taba in January of 2001 (see map below). Arafat rejected it summarily and has not even made a counter proposal. If Arafat and the PA is not willing to negotiate the end of the occupation, there will be no end to the occupation. If Arafat is unwilling to draw a line on a map and make peace with Israel, how is Israel supposed to make peace with Palestine? If they withdraw in the face of violence, without knowing where Arafat is going to draw his lines, it will only encourage Arafat to escalate the violence and demand more and more. Israel will never withdraw until Arafat sits down and negotiates that line on the map.
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Don't ever show events that might anger the other side into a response.
An excellent (NOT!) approach to journalistic honesty and ethics.
Almost as good as not calling them "terrorists" because the Mass Murderers might get upset and not allow your journalists access to future events.
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