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Pastimes : Religion on SI

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To: Kid Rock who wrote (650)9/6/1998 9:38:00 AM
From: Emile Vidrine  Read Replies (2) of 1542
 
Hi Tom,
Here is an excellent article by Joe Sobran. I hope to provide you with what I consider the best documented book on the origin of Zionism.

Why we few criticize Israel

by Joseph Sobran

WASHINGTON - People sometimes ask me why I'm so critical of Israel,
as if I should be devoting more of my attention to Sri Lanka, or perhaps
Zaire. But the question is always a little nervous, as it wouldn't be if I were
writing equally often about Sri Lanka or Zaire.

I could understand this curiosity if some other small, remote country were
one of the world's four or five military powers; if it received a quarter of our
foreign aid; if it were constantly on our front pages; and if its sympathizers
regularly occupied much of the op-ed space of The New York Times and
other major newspapers. But there is only one country of whom these things
are true, and that is Israel.

Nobody thinks it's odd that there should be 20 columnists who are
apologists for Israel; but apparently it is unfathomable that there should be
one or two who are critical of Israel.

But there's another reason that is both personal and professional. Israel has
a very powerful lobby in this country, with a highly accomplished
propaganda corps. And that lobby is not content with making the case for
Israel and putting fear into nearly all the politicians in Washington, who are
supposed to be representing the interests of the United States. It also tries to
shut up opposition in the free press.

I have felt its pressure. So have Rowland Evans and Robert Novak. So
has Patrick Buchanan. And a great many newspaper editors.

We still hear of the fear engendered by Joe McCarthy. But people talked
freely about that fear even 'at the height of Sen. McCarthy's career. I believe
that someday historians will look back with more wonder about the quieter
and more paralyzing fear engendered in our own era by domestic Zionist
power. The press was never afraid of Sen. McCarthy; it is very much afraid
of Israel's U.S. sympathizers.

One result is that the news we get from Israel is heavily self censored and
bowdlerized. The average American thinks of Israel as a "democratic"
country whose domestic troubles are due to unruly Arabs. Not one
American Christian in a hundred realizes that if he lived in Israel, he would
be the victim of official discrimination forced, like the Soviet Jew, to carry an
identification card effectively stigmatizing him.

If Israeli propaganda were true, there would be no need to Quash or
intimidate critics. The very act of trying to silence opposition is a kind of
confession in itself. Ring Lardner said it well: "'Shut up,' he explained."

Is there no case to be made for Israel? Of course there is. I have made it
myself. I would make it again -- if Israel had not become a threat to freedom
of speech and ethical debate in this country. But when you risk injury to your
career in the U.S. by defending the interests of the U.S., something is
seriously wrong. A proper parallel is not with Joe McCarthy, who at least
was trying to uphold America's position, but with the publishing industry in
New York during the 1930s, when a book critical of the Soviet Union stood
scant chance of seeing print.

Suppression is a good tactic, but a bad strategy. In the long run, the truth
has a way of seeping through. No matter how many clever excuses you
make for a Yitzhak Shamir, it's not a terribly good idea to have Americans
identifying Israel with Yitzhak Shamir. Israel was much better off when
Americans identified Israel with Abba Eban -- now in political exile for his
moderation.

And it isn't wise, in the long run, to make Americans afraid, in their own
country, to speak their minds about a foreign country. They will eventually
resent the colossal impudence of it. And the country on whose behalf the
suppression was enacted will bear the consequences.

Joseph Sobran is a nationally syndicated columnist who now
maintains a Website at sobran.com.

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