Posted on 10/20/2002 1:46:17 AM PDT by MadIvan
An article by a first-year student criticising what he regards as the anti-semitism tolerated at the United Nations appeared in last weeks Yale Daily News, the paper for the elite American university. If the article was typical fare the response to it was not. The author had touched a nerve and a torrent of anger was unleashed.
I recently attended a forum focusing on the Israeli/Palestinian issue, wrote one respondent. Both sides made valid points but there was a heated exchange when the pro-Israel side initiated the anti-semite slur. I am sick and tired of Jewish people always smearing those that merely disagree with their views as evil.
I never thought Id say this but a lot of what the so-called white supremacists are saying (is) proving more accurate than I feel comfortable admitting.
Then there was the recent Not In Our Name rally in Central Park, demonstrating against a potential war against Iraq. Around the edges of the rally copies of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, the classic forged document of 19th-century anti-semitism, were being sold. According to the New York Sun, this peddling of anti-semitic tripe was not entirely accidental.
One protester said: There are interest groups that want Israel to dominate Palestine. If Bush goes with them and is too critical, he might lose their support . . . the international financiers have their hooks in everything. Ah, those international financiers. Remember them? Americas anti-war movement, still puny and struggling, is showing signs of being hijacked by one of the oldest and darkest prejudices there is. Perhaps it was inevitable. The conflict against Islamo-fascism obviously circles back to the question of Israel. Fanatical anti-semitism, as bad or even worse than Hitlers, is now a cultural norm across much of the Middle East. Its the acrid glue that unites Saddam, Arafat, Al-Qaeda, Hezbollah, Iran and the Saudis.
And if you campaign against a war against that axis, youre bound to attract people who share these prejudices. Thats not to say the large majority of anti-war campaigners are anti-semitic. But this strain of anti-semitism is worrying and dangerous.
Earlier this year there were calls for Americas universities to withdraw any investments in Israel. A petition at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard attracted hundreds of signatures, prompting Larry Summers, the president of Harvard, to say that serious and thoughtful people are advocating and taking actions that are anti-semitic in their effect if not their intent. He said views that were once the preserve of poorly educated right-wing populists were now supported in progressive intellectual communities.
Summerss argument was simple: why has Israel alone been singled out as worthy of divestment? Critics cite its continued occupation of the West Bank. Theres no question that Israels policies there are ripe for criticism and that to equate such criticism with anti-semitism is absurd. Similarly, its perfectly possible to argue against Israels domestic policies without any hint of anti-semitism. But to argue that Israel is more deserving of sanction than any other regime right now is surely bizarre.
Israel is a multiracial democracy. Arab citizens of Israel proper can vote and freely enter society; there is freedom of religion and a free press. An openly gay man just won election to the Knesset. Compared with China, a ruthless dictatorship brutally occupying Tibet, Israel is a model of democratic governance. And unlike Chinas occupation of Tibet, Israels annexation was a defensive action against an Arab military attack.
Compare Israel to any other Middle Eastern country Syrias satrapy in Lebanon, Mubaraks police state, Iraqs barbaric autocracy or Irans theocracy and its a beacon of light. To single it out for attack is so self-evidently bizarre that it prompts an obvious question: what are these anti-Israel fanatics really obsessed about?
The answer, I think, lies in the nature of part of todays left. It is fuelled above all by resentment of the success western countries, and their citizens, have achieved through freedom and hard work. Just look at Israels amazing achievements in comparison with its neighbours: a vibrant civil society, economic growth, technological skills, an agricultural miracle.
It is no surprise that the resentful left despises it. So, for obvious reasons, do Israels neighbours. The Arab states could have made peace decades ago and enriched themselves through trade and interaction. Instead, rather than emulate the Jewish state, they spent decades trying to destroy it. When they didnt succeed, Arab dictators resorted to the easy distractions of envy, hatred and obsession.
Al-Qaeda is the most dangerous manifestation of this response; Hezbollah comes a close second. But milder versions are everywhere. And what do people who want to avoid examining their own failures do? They look for scapegoats. Jews are the perennial scapegoat.
This attitude isnt restricted to the Middle East. In the West the left has seized on Israel as another emblem of what they hate. Theyre happy to see Saddam re-elected with 100% of a terrified vote, happy to see him develop nerve gas and nuclear weapons to use against his own population and others. But over Israels occasional crimes in self-defence? They march in the streets.
Ask the average leftist what he is for, and you will not get a particularly eloquent response. Ask what he is against and the floodgates open. Similarly, ask the average anti-war activist what she thinks we should do about Iraq and the stammering begins. Do we leave Saddam alone? Send Jimmy Carter to sign the kind of deal he made with North Korea eight years ago?
Will pressurising Israel remove the nerve gas and potential nukes Saddam has? Will ceding the West Bank to people who cheered on September 11 help defang Al-Qaeda? They dont say and dont know. But they do know what they are against: American power, Israeli human rights abuses, British neo-imperialism, the racist war on Afghanistan and so on. Get them started on their hatreds, and the words pour out. No wonder they are selling the Protocols of the Elders of Zion in Central Park.
Such negativism matters. When a movement is based on resentment, when your political style is as bitter as it is angry and your rhetoric focuses not on those murdering party-goers in Bali or workers in Manhattan but on the democratic powers trying to protect them, your fate is cast. A politics of resentment is a poisonous creature that slowly embitters itself. You should not be surprised if the most poisonous form of resentment that the world has ever known springs up, unbidden, in your midst.
You have, with your own words here, admitted that you purposely hi-jacked the thread. The U.S.S. Liberty was and is in no way germane to the real subject of Sullivan's article.
Point of fact, YOU were the first one to bring up the subject of the Liberty in post #7. It had not been mentioned until then. Therefore, the only thing that made it remotely "germane" is due to what you brought into this thread.
Why read it? You apparently know, so save us the time and tell us.
Israeli lying. Hmmm...
No, but I guess it does excuse us for entering one of our ships into a war zone. Right?
On the other hand, if you read it and report, maybe they will believe you. And you will also have an answer to your original question, from a source that you may believe more than me.
That's correct. However, you knew the mentioning of the Liberty was a hot-button issue, and invited the hi-jacking.
Thought you thought.
Remember how Ronald Reagan had the Navy shoot down Libyan planes to make the point that we had a right to fly in international space?
It's knee-slappingly hillarious.
The only empirically proven point is that you succeeded in hi-jacking the thread. That's a fact.
The point of the article by Sullivan is that in many respects the contemporary left is anti-Semitic.
To introduce the Liberty incident is to throw a stinking red herring into the thread to deflect and disrupt the discussion.
I was too young to pay attention at the time.
Now, let's say you and Nix 2 are having a fistfight. I run up to see what's going on. In my run, I get too close and get a left hook from Nix 2 right across my grill.
Who is to blame?
Why don't you blame the person who called me a Jew-hater when I participated in the discussion on a Liberty thread a few weeks ago? That's what made the issue a sore point for me, and caused me to bring it up here, once the discussion turned to frivolous charges of anti-Semitism.
Is there some reason why a charge like that should not be mentioned on a thread like this as a classic example of the misuse of the charge?
So let it drop already!
To introduce the Liberty incident is to throw a stinking red herring into the thread to deflect and disrupt the discussion.
Thank you, Q. That's my point.
But it's nothing new. There have been many threads concerning American blacks on these boards that always get hi-jacked by someone. For example, it can be about blacks and a story of successes in business. Government handouts are mentioned and the thread is hi-jacked. It can be about taking the conservative message to American blacks, then the subject of affirmative action hi-jacks the thread. I could go on and on.
To be sure, I think that the subject of the Liberty is important. I'm a vet, and I don't like the needless deaths of our soldiers. But what I find offensive is the fact that we have some here who use their deaths to serve nefarious intentions.
That's the true insult.
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