Showing posts with label Israelly Cool. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Israelly Cool. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 December 2016

Tommy gun scandal



Tommy Robinson hasn’t been in the news recently. He hasn’t given another speech at the Oxford Union or been arrested for some obscure offence. Nor has he been caught hanging out with any of his allegedly dodgy advocacy groups or hobnobbing with any undesirables. (As far as I know) 
But I’ve just heard, belatedly, that he has been doing something unusual. He has been to Israel. 

Some people have criticised this trip. They say  it’s disingenuous, and that he’s somehow exploiting a cause to further his own racist agenda. Why take that attitude, I wonder?
His pro-Israel critics are at pains to distance themselves from him and his support, which they seem to regard as toxic. The irony is that both Israel and Tommy Robinson have been subjected to large amounts of unfair and unjustified  vilification, yet Marcus Dysch of the Jewish Chronicle fails to make the connection.

Tommy Robinson isn’t the most eloquent interviewer who’s ever been filmed, but it’s interesting, The press coverage of this, for what it’s worth, is varied. Some reports are sympathetic, others are plain pathetic. We all manipulate the facts, some more malevolently than others.

Saturday, 6 February 2016

Foreign press “Ignorant and quite lazy”

I was reading something in the Times (Jenni Russell) about bosses taking “sloggers” for granted. The pushy workers get all the credit, she says; she knows what she’s talking about, having served time as both slogger and boss. The hard-working, dependable ones assume that the boss is aware and suitably appreciative of all their hard work; but no. If you want to get ahead you have to shout: “See me!” As loud as you can.

I keep seeing things as an allegories for something else these days, but this simple truth resonated with me, having just read a piece by a young journalist who has been working in Israel since January 2014, Zenobia Ravji, featured on Elder of Ziyon, and here.

It’s the Israelis’ reluctance to boast, and the Palestinians’ continual manipulation of the media that has created this infuriating upside down status quo. The world sees Israel as a symbol of pure evil and the Palestinians one of righteousness and innocence.  

Have you seen the video that’s allegedly “gone viral” in which an actor pretends to be a blind man asking strangers for change? He’s approaching random passers-by and seems unaware that he’s proffering a high value note in exchange. The experiment is to see if people warn him of his mistake or pocket the extra cash. 
A similar experiment had been staged in Australia, when the ‘blind man” asked for $5 when the bill he was holding was for $100 or $200. Several strangers took advantage.

This time it was tried in Israel.    No-one took advantage. (I assume they wouldn’t have put it on the internet if the result had been otherwise, but it wasn’t, so they did.)

It’s the kind of thing that might surprise the world, whose prejudiced, negative perceptions of Israel and Israelis have been shaped by the Palestinians relentless media manipulation and the Israelis’ reluctance to participate in that particular circus.

Zenobia Ravji’s piece is worth reading. It’s about journalists so it’s extremely relevant to this blog. I urge you to read it in full.

Zenobia Ravji
“While traveling, I stumbled on a really eye-opening story—“everyday life” in the West Bank. In the U.S., I was exposed to images of violence and chaos any time the West Bank was mentioned in the news. So when I accidentally ventured into the West Bank during my travels, I had no idea I was even there. I was surrounded by tranquil scenes, modern infrastructure, and economic cooperation between Palestinians and Israelis. I guess this was too boring to make any headlines. 
I thought it would be interesting to show people the uneventful side of the story. This wasn’t to negate any social and political injustices of the situation. I just thought people should see the entire truth—not just soldiers, bombs, and riots, but also what’s happening when none of the drama is taking place.  
And it wasn’t just the normalcy of life in the West Bank that went unreported. Many of the human rights violations by the Palestinian Authority were never mentioned, such as the lack of freedom of speech and the press, and a complete neglect of the Palestinian people by their own politicians, who continue to exploit the peace process while pocketing European and American funding for a “free Palestine.” My work, however, didn’t consist of criticizing the PA. I thought I should leave that to the “real” journalists. It was their job, after all, to report such things.” 

“The Western media also flooded its coverage of the war with personal stories of Palestinians. There were significantly fewer personal stories on the Israeli side. There was a Pavlovian reaction to focus one’s reporting on the supposed “underdog,” which left Israelis voiceless. I wanted to know what Israelis were thinking. How did they feel about the war? The Western media refused to tell us. 
So after the war, I took it upon myself to get the detailed stories of Israelis and their experiences during the war. I started collecting stories with the goal of compiling them into a book. I covered the entire mosaic of Israeli society: Bedouins, Israeli-Arabs, Druze, IDF soldiers, politicians, activists, and more. I wanted to know how they felt and what they went through. I found anger and resentment toward their own government and deep sadness for the suffering of innocent Palestinians and their children. It was a very different picture than what the Western media painted. Perhaps they had not bothered to dig deep enough into the story. Perhaps they didn’t want to.” 

So, why does the Western media get away with such unprofessional and sometimes outright biased conduct? There are two main reasons: First, Israel is a democracy. Second, Israel fails to stand up for itself."

“I once had lunch in Jerusalem with an accomplished member of the foreign press. I asked her about her personal experiences as a journalist. She had been in the region for about a year. She told me that when she arrived, Israelis were not very friendly to her, but Palestinians were. This was a strong factor in her tendency to write articles that were anti-Israel and pro-Palestinian. In fact, during that conversation she spoke at length about Palestinian hospitality and how it was a major factor in her impression of the conflict. Arabs have a well-earned reputation for amazing hospitality.”

While it seems obvious that Israel’s failure to recognise the necessity of positive PR is hugely damaging (to itself) it should also be borne in mind that anything positive the Israelis do, like sending rescue teams to disaster zones, or treating its enemies in its state of the art hospitals is dismissed by its critics as “Washing”. I.e., trying to sanitise its image by doing good, purely to distract its enemies from its inherent malevolence. 

If anything could do with a good wash, it’s western journalism.


Saturday, 12 July 2014

How many children?

I’ve been quiet recently because people on other websites have tackled specific instances of unfair reporting more assiduously than I have been able to.
BBC Watch in particular regularly highlights errors and thoughtless statements made by interviewers and reporters, which are apt to compound misunderstandings and confuse the public in the name of clarification and impartiality. 

Yolande Knell and Jeremy Bowen have been particularly unhelpful recently. Knell is in Gaza to “tell your story” like Alan Johnston before her, but that shouldn’t mean spouting untrue propaganda such as the mistaken claim that shortages of vital supplies, particularly of medicine and food, are due to Israel’s malevolence. Israel doesn’t block medicine or food - such shortages are due to the way Hamas and the PA mismanage their affairs.

Elder of Ziyon is always a rich source of information about Israel and the surrounding region, the site is continually updated. Israelly cool the same. 
David Vance is usually sharp on matters concerning Israel and Palestine but Biased BBC is exasperatingly slow to load these days. 

Several people have detected a shift in the media’s presentation of the current escalation in violence between Israel and Gaza. Suddenly news reports are adding certain phrases into and onto their pieces. Hints that indicate that they have at last grasped the fact that Hamas is the architect of its own (the people’s) misfortune. “If you stop sending rockets into Israel from Gaza, all this would stop” they seem to be saying - sometimes they actually are saying it. I thought Kevin Connolly seemed a lot fairer than he used to be, and quite a bit fatter.

An edition of Hardtalk with Zeinab Badawi and Hamas spokesperson Osama Hamdan was unusual. Zeinab is hardly known for impartiality where the I/P conflict is concerned. Her tone of voice when speaking to Israeli spokespersons has been notably disdainful and harsh, but  the questions she put to Hamdan were reasonable, even if she let him get away with handfuls of fanciful and disingenuous remarks. “Why doesn’t Hamas stop sending rockets into Israel? was her opening gambit. Hamdan, with the kind of face you just long to punch, answered thus: “well the question I believe, is supposed to be why the Isra-elis stop the attack against the Palestinians? (Yes he did leave out “don’t” but we’ll put that down to language problems)
He kept prefacing his outrageous fantasies with “everybody knows,” which, of course is the diametric opposite of reality, and so much so that it was comical. Towards the end, after asserting that two of the three murdered Israeli teens were soldiers in the IDF,  he accused PM Netanyahu of orchestrating their kidnap and killing to provide an excuse for the Israelis to attack Gaza.  


Harry’s Place is the site for nuanced discussion, it’s like the Moral Maze on speed. You get criticism of Israel within an umbrella of loyalty and affection. Under present circumstances it’s almost too public  an arena for airing personal dirty linen. There’s currently a must-read post by Marc Goldberg, one of Israel’s many angst-ridden citizens who is normally wracked with a mixture of empathy for his enemy and loyalty to his country. The reality of the current crisis has had a temporarily galvanising effect on him, and his piece entitled “Hamas is this the best you can do?” clearly articulates the frustrating questions that trouble and mystify those who see Hamas for what it is. He speaks for a wide spectrum of Israel-supporters, uniting people who may not agree on much else.
“You are the Palestinian tragedy. You are the killers of your own people. You are the ones who are unable to create anything and for all your talk are barely even capable of destroying. Since the time you seized control of Gaza you have managed to do absolutely nothing to help your own citizens. Your disastrous management of Gaza has seen a blockade imposed upon you and poverty rivaling the worst slums on the planet. Your use of media and children’s camps to indoctrinate your own populace into hatred of the Jew at all costs has succeeded only in sickening right thinking people all over the world.You have insisted upon putting every means at your disposal towards attacking Israel when what you should have done was leave Israel well enough alone and concentrate on building up Gaza. But you knew that and you chose not to anyway.”
The principles in this kind of war could be likened to a football match - not that I know anything about football, or could care less. But there are two important factors each side has to attend to. Attack and defence. 
Israel devotes considerable resources to both. Hamas devotes what resources it has entirely to attack. 
For defence Hamas relies entirely on Israel’s reluctance to harm non-combatants. It exploits Israel’s preventative warnings, which give Hamas just enough time to assemble all available human shields to protect prospective targets, performing a collective act of deterrence.
That shows two things. One, that Hamas recognises Israel’s reluctance to harm non-combatants even though the rest of the world prefers to sneer at that claim, and two, it clearly shows that Hamas values the lives of its own civilian supporters even less than Israel does.

On Today this morning there were the inevitable ‘balanced’ reports, one from Israel, the other from a Palestinian. In the intro, James Naughtie included the BBC’s favourite ‘emote mantra‘  -  “In Israel no one has died” .  He also used an odd phrase  about mothers / babies / children who have been killed  “These people may well take a view of Israel which you don’t approve of ” , which I’d say rather makes light of the widely-held Palestinian view that Israel should be eliminated, but still.  
An Israeli spokesman, Yaacov Peri MK, was speaking from a wind-tunnel which seemed to be underwater. On my bedside radio it was borderline unlistenable, but it sounds more or less okay now. (Could they have cleaned it up before it was uploaded to “listen again?”)   
In the studio, though, was that rogue Manuel Hassassian, about whom I’ve written before. He made many questionable assertions, which I thought could have been more robustly challenged. “Mr. Peri is an occupier.” he asserted. “People are living in Gaza with no medicine, no food supplies in an area totally sealed” said he. “Israel is occupying the Palestinians” “Killing indiscriminately, as you have said” and so on.
James Naughtie apparently accepts that Gaza is so highly populated that Hamas is forced to launch rockets amongst civilians. Someone should show him how to use Google Earth. Surely the BBC knows about Google Earth?
The BBC seems to be left with the one and only remaining and persistent argument against Israel. The amount of Palestinian civilians that have been killed. The more babies children and women they can call upon the better. 

I saw Ron Proser being grilled on al Jazeera, after his speech at the UN the other day. 


The female interviewer tried to do a Jeremy Paxman by repeatedly asking him to state what she thought was a killer question. “How many children has Israel killed? “she asked, over and over again. That was the one and only weapon in the media’s propaganda war; a last resort. A trump card. But it’s one that doesn’t stand up to scrutiny. Because of course war is terrible. The more babies, women and children are killed, all the more reason for Hamas to stop firing at Israel.