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Strategies & Market Trends : Steve's Channelling Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Zeev Hed who wrote (14856)4/21/2001 11:49:07 AM
From: Mark Johnson  Respond to of 30051
 
From Zeevs link: <<<There are some simple facts which Powell and the decidedly anti-Semitic State Department know:>>

israelnationalnews.com

State Department is "anti-Semitic"...?...



To: Zeev Hed who wrote (14856)4/21/2001 1:42:28 PM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 30051
 
Another interesting opinion with a decidedly different point of view. Note that the author is Jewish as I am. Not all Jews see the Middle East as the "good" Israelis" versus the "bad " Arabs. There is in fact much more dissent on these issues in the Israeli press than in the American media.

I will not discuss these matters any more on this thread because it diverts attention form the main subject -- how to make money in stocks. But do want to make this point once loud and clear.

Published on Friday, April 20, 2001 by FAIR's Media Beat
Bias and Fear Tilting Coverage of Israel
by Norman Solomon

When the New York Times finally printed the name of a 12-year-old organization called Rabbis for Human Rights,
the mention had to be bought -- in a full-page ad expressing support for actions by the group, which is "the only
Israeli rabbinic association that includes Orthodox, Reform, Reconstructionist and Conservative rabbis."

Days before the advertisement appeared on April 8, the executive director of Rabbis for Human Rights had been
arrested while participating in nonviolent civil disobedience against Israeli demolition of houses. "Palestinian homes
are being systematically bulldozed all over the West Bank," said a bulletin from Rabbi Arthur Waskow, director of
the Shalom Center in Philadelphia. "In this case, there isn't any pretense of 'security interests' or 'military targets.'
The houses destroyed yesterday and today belong to ordinary Palestinian citizens whose only crime is the wish to
have a roof over their heads."

Groups like Rabbis for Human Rights, and Jewish American activists like Rabbi Waskow who vocally oppose Israeli
policies, get short shrift in U.S. news outlets. Meanwhile, the reporting on the Israeli-Palestinian cycle of violence is
badly skewed by an endless cycle of media bias.

Searching the Nexis database of U.S. media coverage during the first 100 days of this year, I found several dozen
stories using the phrases "Israeli retaliation" or "Israel retaliated." During the same period, how many stories used
the phrases "Palestinian retaliation" or "Palestinians retaliated"? One.

Both sides of the conflict, of course, describe their violence as retaliatory. But only one side routinely benefits from
having its violent moves depicted that way by major American media. The huge disparity in the media frame is a
measure of the overall slant of news coverage.

To help maintain pressure for a favorable media tilt, supporters of Israel have a not-so-secret weapon, brandished
most effectively as a preemptive threat -- the charge of anti-Semitism. Any Americans who speak out against
Israel's extreme disregard for human rights are liable to be in the line of fire.

Elie Wiesel, a Holocaust survivor and Nobel Prize winner, is a reminder that victims of tyranny are capable of later
aligning themselves with perpetrators of enormous cruelty. In March, he delivered a speech to a national
conference of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, one of Washington's most powerful lobbying groups.
Wiesel declared that anyone "who uses their Jewishness as a context to attack or condemn Israel -- that's
something I'm against." And he denounced criticisms of Israel as "anti-Semitism in Jewish leftist circles."

Such salvos are warning shots that Joseph McCarthy would have understood. To quash debate, just smear,
smear, smear.

Instead of trying to refute critiques of Israeli policies, it's much easier to equate criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism
-- a timeworn way of preventing or short-circuiting real debate on the merits of the issues. It is absurd and
dangerous to claim that bigotry is at the root of calls for adherence to basic standards of human rights. But the
ongoing threat of the "anti-Semitic" label helps to prevent U.S. media coverage from getting out of hand.

Last year, I had an interesting experience with one of Florida's daily papers, the Palm Beach Post. A reader's
letter, published in early June, charged that a column I'd written "had an anti-Semitic undertone" because it
criticized media spin for Israel. Eleven weeks later, on Aug. 25, the newspaper printed a second letter from the
same reader, objecting to a column I wrote about Sen. Joseph Lieberman. This time the letter was more emphatic
and sweeping, though less specific: "I have noticed in some of his previous columns, he is apt to express
anti-Semitic views."

The Palm Beach Post printed my weekly syndicated column 30 times during 2000 -- for the last time on Aug. 19,
six days before publication of the second letter accusing me of being "anti-Semitic." After that letter came off the
press, my column never again appeared in the Palm Beach Post. When I inquired, the newspaper's opinion-page
editor told me: "There was no connection."

Whatever the case may be, there's no doubt that journalists generally understand critical words about Israel to be
hazardous to careers. "Rarely since the Second World War has a people been so vilified as the Palestinians,"
comments Robert Fisk, a longtime foreign correspondent for the London-based daily Independent. "And rarely has
a people been so frequently excused and placated as the Israelis."

Fisk is asking his colleagues to search their consciences: "Our gutlessness, our refusal to tell the truth, our fear of
being slandered as 'anti-Semites' -- the most loathsome of libels against any journalist -- means that we are aiding
and abetting terrible deeds in the Middle East."

Anti-Semitism is a reality in the world. Like all forms of religious and racial bigotry, it should be unequivocally
opposed. The effectiveness of such opposition is undermined by those who cry wolf, using charges of
anti-Semitism as a weapon in a propaganda arsenal to defend Israel's indefensible crimes against Palestinian
people.



To: Zeev Hed who wrote (14856)4/21/2001 9:18:11 PM
From: ok1day  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 30051
 
Great article Zeev. Thanks

It is amazing how little was heard of the 10 month old Israeli baby who was deliberately shot to death in the head by a palestinian. Do you remember all the headlines and pictures of the Palestinian father who brought his son to the front lines and then tried unsuccessfully to shield him from the bullets? What the heck was he doing there anyway. Why would any father put his son in such danger??

But he was made a martyr and pictures all over the internet and papers showing how horrible the Israelis are.

Where were this reporters when the 10 month old Israeli was murdered in the streets ??

Nothing will ever change .....

Ossnat



To: Zeev Hed who wrote (14856)4/22/2001 12:12:40 AM
From: Webster Groves  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 30051
 
OT OT OT OT OT OT OT OT OT OT OT OT OT OT OT OT OT OT OT

Sorry Zeev,

I've always been an admirer of your trading talents
and generosity on sharing your knowledge with the thread,
but this Winston piece is something else.

As I read it, I first said "Yea, he's got a good point here", but as the piece wore on to be a diatribe against non-Jewish beliefs and a slap in the face to Israel's longest and closest friend - the US - I get the idea that Winston makes Sharon look like Joseph. How big a following in Israel does Winston have ?

-wg