Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

Action

ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

Action

Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

Action

David Grossman

Ben Heine

Action

Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

Action

Dove

Ben Heine

Action

Two birds

Hoda Jamal

Action

Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

Action

Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

Action

Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

Action

Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

Action

Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

Action

Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

Action

Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘free-speech’

Israeli Court Granted Gag Order in Peace Now Price Tag Attack Because Suspect’s Father is Senior Shin Bet Official

Saturday, November 19th, 2011
hagit ofran death threat

Graffiti: 'Hagit Ofran RIP'

UPDATE:I have learned that there are likely two different sets of Peace Now attackers. The suspect described below who confessed to price tag attacks is the one who phoned a bomb threat to the Peace Now office.  It is thought another perpetrator vandalized Hagit Ofran’s apartment building and her neighbor’s car. This individual has not yet been caught.  Please keep this in mind as you read the account below written earlier.

UPDATE I: I had thought that there was only a gag order against revealing the name of the suspect in this case.  But after Rotter deleted my post with a link to this blog post, it appears there is a specific gag also revealing that the father is a senior Shin Bet officer.  That’s the way the national security state operates in Israel, protecting its own.

Israeli media are reporting (Hebrew) that the police have arrested a suspect in the Peace Now price tag attacks and death threats against Hagit Ofran.  The suspect has confessed to his role in phoning bomb threats to the Peace Now office and vandalizing Ofran’s apartment building with graffiti wishing her dead.  But the family has secured a gag preventing identification of the suspect.  When he appeared in court, the father, according to Haaretz, threatened the reporters and photographers there with jail if they published anything.  He then secured a gag from the court.

Two separate Israeli sources have confirmed that the suspect’s mother is a police officer and one of these sources also confirms that the father is a senior Shin Bet officer.  This explains why the father screamed in court at the journalists: “Do you who I am?” and warned them they’d end up in jail if they violated his son’s privacy.

No one should be surprised that the son of a Shin Bet officer and policewoman should be a right-wing terrorist.  After all, police officers were among the attackers at Anatot who mauled peace activists there.  The police are also the guiding force behind the closure of All for Peace Israel.  The force is riddled with right wing extremists like Meir Rotter, who publicly wrote that settler supporters should beat up activists at the Sheikh Jarrah protests.  The Shin Bet is a bastion of right-wing extremism as well and never seems to be able to capture Jewish terrorists.  Can you imagine if this suspect had been known to the Shin Bet as a potential terrorist?  How would they deal with the child of a colleague as a criminal?  Of course, they’d protect him.

However, in this case, the attacks were so public and egregious that the police couldn’t simply make the case go away.  Though they can make it go away once he goes to court, with a minimal charge and jail time (if any).  If the parents worry that their child’s arrest and possible conviction for these acts will tarnish their reputation they needn’t fear.  It appears that most officials in this far-right government or their offspring would love to do what this individual has.  So birds of a feather not only flock together, they cheer each other on.  The father and mother are more likely to receive promotions than be disciplined.  In fact, I half expect dad to get a plum new assignment as chief of the Jewish terror section.

I do not yet know the identity of the suspect.  But any Israeli brave enough to offer the information will earn the undying gratitude of Israelis and those around the world who still believe in freedom, the rule of law and democracy in Israel and elsewhere.

Israeli Police Silence Peace Radio Station

Saturday, November 19th, 2011
israeli police silence all for peace radio

All for Peace Radio's comment on its silencing by the Israeli police

Israeli police have just succeeding in murdering peace (Hebrew)–or at least the voice of peace that Israelis and Palestinians can hear on the radio.   Police summoned the Radio Kol HaShalom (“All for Peace” Radio, which is a play on Kol HaShalom, Abie Natan’s radio station which was called “Voice of Peace”) station director to a three-hour interrogation under warning (anything he said could be used to build a criminal case against him), during which they demanded that he sign a statement agreeing to cease broadcasts to Israel (not I presume to Palestinians, though it would be hard to beam a signal that reached one but not the other).  They also demanded that he call the station and direct the radio engineer to take the station off the air.  If he refused, he was told that police would raid the station and do it themselves.  Presumably, they’d confiscate the radio equipment which had taken months and months to arrive from abroad due to delays imposed by, you guessed it, the Israeli police, who didn’t want the station to go on air to begin with.

The blog post I linked to notes that staff of the station met a number of times during the seven years it was on air with officials of the ministry of communication, including the minister Eli Attias.  Not once did any civilian official complain about the station or threaten to take it off the air.  Now, all of a sudden, the ministry has decided that the “law” must be upheld.  It should be noted that the station has sought a license from Israel for years to broadcast and the government has never approved one.  This conveniently has allowed the authorities to do precisely what they did.  This is freedom of expression and a free press, Israel-style.

The station has been off-air since November 17th.  It had broadcast a mix of talk shows, interviews, and pop music.  I’ve listened to and been interviewed by the station and it wasn’t incendiary or politically radical at all.   It had a feel-good self-help orientation and attempted to promote fairly innocuous values of brotherhood and tolerance without engaging in political advocacy.  It did, however, explicitly endorse a two-state solution.  Apparently, that isn’t a political program endorsed by the Israeli police.

The station also endorsed freedom of speech and democratic values for both societies.  Apparently free speech and democracy are also threatening to the government censors otherwise known as the police.

Among the issues the station addressed was women’s rights and sexual violence, a criticism the pro-Israel crowd loves to point up as a “deficiency” of “Arab culture.”  The police never stopped to think that All for Peace might actually encourage Palestinians to believe that Israelis want peace.  Or perhaps that’s what threatened them because the police don’t believe in peace, but rather prefer constant tension and conflict.  After all, this would mean a career of full employment and high budgets for them.

In Palestine, All for Peace broadcasts legally and the PA has never had a problem with its programming.  One can presume though that if an East Jerusalem kindergarten can be shuttered by the police because its founders are alleged terrorists, that pop music that could be heard by both Israelis and Palestinians would be considered equally subversive.

The Israeli blog reporting this story closed with this passage:

It seems that during these days in which the Israeli Knesset is beset by a wave of anti-democratic legislation, the authorities saw fit to stop the broadcast of the sole station which enabled, in an open studio, deliberations on behalf of democracy.

All for Peace Radio was a small media fry in the Israeli pond.  It was no Channel 10 or Haaretz.  But it was the canary in the coal mine.  As went All for Peace so will go Channel 10.  Bibi Netanyahu prefers to control the media to the extent he can.  That is why all he may need to do is silence these media outlets for the others to get the message if they cross they line they’ll be punished as well.

The station will continue to fight for its right to broadcast and appeal the decision.  The next time you hear Abe Foxman and Alan Dershowitz crowing about Israeli democracy, remember posts like this.  On a related matter, I’m also tickled by Gershon Gorenberg’s new book which also touts Israeli democracy, according to this Amazon blurb:

Refuting…strident attacks [against Israel], Gorenberg shows that the Jewish state is, in fact, unique among countries born in the postcolonial era: It began as a parliamentary democracy and has remained one. An activist judiciary has established civil rights. Despite discrimination against its Arab minority, Israel has given a political voice to everyone within its borders.

To be fair, something Gorenberg wasn’t to me when he lied in calling me an anti-Zionist, Gorenberg does criticize Israel and its democracy.  But clearly he’s a liberal throwing a sop to all those classical Zionists who can’t bear the thought that they’ve lost the cherished Zionist dream of an exclusivist Jewish state.  He allows liberal Zionists to clear their conscience by conceding there are things wrong with Israel, while desperately clinging to the concept that Israel, as expressed in contemporary terms, remains fundamentally sound.

For those in the hasbara crowd who go through this blog with a fine tooth, these comments are not meant to be construed as a denunciation of Israel as a nation, but rather a criticism of the current undemocratic ways in which it is governed.  Contrary to Gorenberg (at least as represented in this blurb), Israel does not give a political voice to “everyone” within its borders.  It gives full voice to Jewish citizens and a muffled voice at best to Palestinian citizens.  That is why Gorenberg, Ethan Bronner, and the liberal Zionists do such a disservice to Israeli political reality and their readers beyond its borders.

Olympia Food Coop Files Anti-SLAPP Motion Seeking Dismissal of Stand With Us BDS Lawsuit

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

Yesterday, the Olympia Food Coop finally announced its legal representation and strategy regarding the lawsuit filed against it by Stand With Us in collaboration with the State of Israel and its Pacific NW consul, Akiva Tor.  Though the suit argued that the organization violated its bylaws in approving a BDS measure which excluded nine Israeli products from its shelves, the measure was meant to intimidate all U.S. businesses which attempt to pursue such policies.

The Food Coop, represented by the Center for Constitutional Rights and local counsel, Davis Wright Tremaine, have filed an Anti-SLAPP motion arguing that the lawsuit is a frivolous measure designed to impede the organization’s right to take a position on an important political issue of the day, that is also directly to its business (that is, refusing to carry Israeli food products as an expression of opposition to Israeli Occupation):

“We hope the court will strike down this effort to silence the Co-op’s principled stand on Israel’s human rights violations,” said Maria LaHood, Senior Staff Attorney with the Center for Constitutional Rights.  “Allegations that the Co-op Board acted beyond its power are a thinly-veiled attempt to stop concerned citizens from using a nonviolent and historical tool for social change.”

The group’s local counsel also made a statement defending the Coop board:

“This lawsuit, which seeks to penalize local citizens for exercising their rights as Board members to express views on Israel and the problems in the Middle East, presents a fundamental First Amendment issue,” said Bruce E.H. Johnson of Davis Wright Tremaine LLP, who drafted Washington State’s Anti-SLAPP law. “Our nation was born in the middle of a boycott of British goods, and boycotts have played an important role over the centuries in our system of freedom of expression, whether the subject is segregation on the Montgomery municipal bus system, lettuce picked by non-union labor, or apartheid in South Africa,” he added.

Until now, the Food Coop has been beset with false reporting by JTNews regarding the nature of the lawsuit and the figures pursuing it.  My expectation is that now, it will be able to vigorously defend and explain itself to the world.

I’ve reported here previously that Danny Ayalon, Israel’s deputy foreign minister acknowledged in an Israeli TV interview that his government was directly supporting such anti-BDS campaigns, implying the MFA was either directly funding the lawsuits or

The lawyer’s representing the Food Coop have released public statement (a synopsis of the case is here).  Olympia BDS has also published its own press release.

As someone similarly harassed by a libel suit, my attorneys attempted to use the California anti-SLAPP provision to strike that suit.  Our initially successful efforts were overturned by the Court of Appeal and we eventually won our case through a long, complicated and expensive (to my law firm, which represented me pro bono) trial.  My hope is that the current case can be disposed of without such waste of effort, energy and resources.  Clearly, the Israeli government and its SWU handmaidens seek to use the tools of lawfare to tie up their opponents in useless court procedures as punishment for speaking their minds on a matter of public import.

Meir Rotter, Radical Rightist Settler, Police Officer, Suppresses Israeli Palestinian Speech

Thursday, October 27th, 2011
meir rotter bullies azzam maraka

Israeli police officer and radical setter, Meir Rotter, bullies Azzam Maraka. Note tough-guy shades and knitted skullcap, among trademarks of radical settlers (Mondoweiss)

I’ve written here before about the extremist pro-settler views of Israeli police officer, Meir Rotter, who has often been known to provoke fights with Sheikh Jarrah protesters.  He is the son of Rabbi Rotter, who runs one of Israel’s most popular internet news portals, somewhat akin to the Drudge Report, if you can imagine Matt Drudge wearing a talit katan and knitted settler-style yarmulke.

Rotter, under a poorly concealed pseudonym, voiced anti-democratic, anti-State political views on the Rotter forum, and then denied that he was the one who wrote them though I proved he had.  Among other things, he incited violence against the Sheikh Jarrah protesters calling for them to be harmed.  File a complaint?  Fuhgedaboudit.  This is Israel.  No one cares.

Today, thanks to Mondoweiss, we catch up with Rotter in his new role as anti-Palestinian thought police.  He and his police colleagues have been doing their damndest to maintain the peace in Sheikh Jarrah by suppressing the worst, most violent impulses of the Palestinian natives.  Take for example, Azzam Maraka, a shopkeeper in the neighborhood who’s clearly trying to incite pogroms by hanging a picture of Recep Tayyip  Erdogan, Turkey’s prime minister in his shop window.  Maraka admires Erdogan because of Turkey’s participation in the 2010 Gaza flotilla and because he’s stood up for Gaza on the world stage.

Personally, I can’t think of anything more likely to destroy the State of Israel than subversive acts like this.  I’m glad Rotter agrees, as he and his colleagues have fined Maraka five times and a total of $650 (up till now, more likely to follow).

Just in case any of you were wondering on what grounds the Israeli Palestinian has been fined: supposedly shops are not allowed to hang signs in their windows on the street.  Er, actually, the “law” appears to apply only to Maraka as other businesses on the street displaying signs of the same size have not been targeted.  ’Democracy,’ Israel-style.  Free speech?  Never heard of it.

Imagine the level and quality of Israeli policing

Criminal Investigation Against Ben Gurion Lecturer for Facebook Post

Thursday, October 27th, 2011

After Facebook groups boasting of hundreds of Israeli members have sprouted urging the hanging of Israeli Palestinian MKs and real settler brutes have killed Palestinian farmers and maimed Israeli Jewish activists helping them, all of which ended in not just no criminal charges but not even an investigation, the State prosecutor will open a criminal investigation (and in English) against Eyal Nir, a Ben Gurion University chemistry lecturer.

Israeli Facebook incitement to murder MK Haneen Zoabi

His “crime?” He posted on his Facebook account, in response to a provocative far-right “flag dance” Jerusalem Day march through Palestinian East Jerusalem, that “someone should break the necks of these scoundrels.”  He linked in his post to a YouTube video in which marchers called “death to Arabs” and “Muhammad is dead” (this through the heart of the most Palestinian neighborhood in the city).  24 marchers were arrested.  None, I’m sure, were prosecuted.  Despite all this, instead of the marchers being considered provocateurs of violence, Nir is.

eyal nir facebook post

Eyal Nir's Facebbook post: 'Gangs of bandits roaming our land. I call upon the world to help break the necks of these scoundrels.'

A note on Nir’s Facebook posting–his reference to “gangs of bandits roaming through our land” was a sly reference to a defining speech by Yeshaia Leibowitz, Israel’s most famous 20th century public intellectual, in which he thundered:

“Against the gangs of bandits who roam our streets today, why can’t we form groups of people who will break their bones, as simple as that…and if you say that this is a call for a civil war, I say ‘yes’…and those who are afraid of doing so should not portray themselves as activists fighting against the threat of fascism in Israel”

All of which means that Prof. Nir was in essence paraphrasing one of Israel’s most distinguished academic figures of the past century.  Now let’s see the Israeli State prosecute the good professor for his incitment!  As usual, such prosecution will show the state police and justice apparatus and the far-right groups on whose behalf they act, to be utter fools.  Leading the state prosecution will be none other than Shai Nitzan, the legal “brains” behind the railroading of Dirar Abusisi.

Now, keep in mind that the very brutes who were flagrantly provoking violence by tramping through East Jerusalem are the ones who don’t just provoke, but commit acts of extreme violence, and they do so routinely.

So this is how Israeli society works, it offers immunity from prosecution to the far-right and comes down like a ton o’ bricks on the progressive activist communty.  This, of course is a travesty of democracy in which comments considered free speech in any other western society are criminalized.

Ben Gurion University, known for standing ‘firmly’ by its faculty and their rights of free speech as they did (faintly) in the case of Neve Gordon, issued a statement saying that the University had no role in this matter and that the legal process should proceed apace.  Another faculty member enjoyed receiving a death wish from a University trustee.  Not a word about free speech or academic freedom for Prof. Nir from Pres. Rivka Carmi and the spineless academocrats at the University.

Protest CUNY’s Rejection of Kushner Honorary Degree

Friday, May 6th, 2011

Lots of fallout from the CUNY board of trustees vote to reject an honorary degree for Tony Kushner, a campaign spearheaded by noted far-right pro-Israel Republican fixer Jeffrey Wiesenfeld, a board member.  CUNY has issued a mealy-mouthed statement telling the world that its atrocious treatment of Kushner shouldn’t be taken as a slight upon his literary achievements.  Well, how else should it be taken and what does all that mean anyway?  It’s totally beside the point.  The issue isn’t what CUNY thinks of Kushner as a playwright, but why an esteemed insitution of higher learning capsized at the first hint of controversy and trouble, when Wiesenfeld opened his big mouth.  Kushner demanded an apology and that’s what he should get.

No less arch pro-Israel supporters than Ed Koch and Jeffrey Goldberg agree on this, believe it or not.  Goldberg of course thinks it’s bad tactics (“for turning Kushner into a free speech martyr”), more than an act he disagrees with on moral grounds.  Goldberg, who doesn’t believe anyone who disagrees with his views on Israel knows what they’re talking about, oozes condesension in discussing Kushner’s Israel-Palestine views.  But the least you can say is at least he’s (barely) on the right side on this one.

Koch, to his credit, sees things as they are and says if Kushner can be denied a degree for criticizing Israel why couldn’t someone come along and take away Koch’s degree for his support of Israel.  The former mayor courageously adds that Wiesenfeld has outlived his usefulness and should be fired or resign from the board.

Steve Walt attacks the board for betraying the very academic principles they are in business to protect:

…The CUNY board blew it big-time [by] meekly cav­ing as they did is con­trary to the prin­ci­ples of intel­lec­tual free­dom that uni­ver­si­ties are sup­posed to defend.

The Times reports that a Yeshiva University history professor who received a John Jay College honorary degree in 2008 plans to return it in protest.

Jerry Haber published a post conveying e-mail addresses for every CUNY trustee.  I urge you, especially if you’re a New York resident, CUNY faculty, student or alumnus to run right over there and fire off a few e mails protesting this outrage.  Jerry has also crafted a draft letter to make things easier.

We should note the CUNY Hall of Shame includes the following trustees who voted “no” on Kushner (besides Wiesenfeld): Judah Gribetz, Peter S. Pantaleo, Deputy Mayor Carol A. Robles-Roman and Charles A. Shorter.  I wonder what Mayor Mike thinks of this act of cowardice by his own deputy mayor, which implicates both the mayor and city government in opposing Kushner.  That makes this an even bigger political issue than it otherwise would be.

Meanwhile, Jim Dwyer in the Times has some delicious bits about Wiesenfeld’s history including this:

Mr. Wiesenfeld was appointed a trustee of City University in the late 1990s by Gov.George E. Pataki, for whom he worked in the 1990s as a political fixer, an essential and often honorable function that can lead scrupulous people into a blizzard of trouble. In Mr. Wiesenfeld’s case, his work, and his actions, put him at the center of a scandal over paroles that had allegedly been sold to campaign contributors. He was never charged and said he had done nothing wrong. Nevertheless, a federal prosecutor described a memo Mr. Wiesenfeld had written urging leniency for a prisoner as “outrageous.”

I’m not sure why Dwyer gives Wiesenfeld the benefit of the doubt and calls the latter “scrupulous,” when his statements and history show him to be anything but.  But let’s give Dwyer the benefit of the doubt for writing an excellent column, which includes an interview in which Wiesenfeld says Palestinians have a “culture of death.”  Priceless.

Israeli Bloggers Linking to Tikun Olam Threatened With Criminal Offense

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011
the marker screenshot

The Marker article advocating criminalizing internet linking

Some in the Israeli media, legal and intelligence communities are trying to make Tikun Olam the blog that dare not speak its name inside Israel.

A bunch of nonsense has been published lately in Israeli media and blogs about the Yoav Even case and my breaking of the gag.  But an article that just came out in The Marker, Haaretz’s business publication, really takes the cake.  The reporters are shocked, I say shocked that when you insert Yoav Even’s name into a Google search the terms “rapist,” and “detained” display.  The odd thing is that I did precisely what the reporters did and I didn’t get any results even close to theirs.  No mentions at all of the word “rapist” or “detained.”  Just references to his work at Channel 2 and the like.

And if you insert the name of another media personality accused of rape five years ago, holy mother of God, similar terms come up.  I don’t know about you but it seems to me that these reporters need to do a reality check.  Since when does Google determine reality?  Last I checked, Google was a tool to aid users in obtaining information.  I’d never understood that Google was the ultimate arbiter of reality.

It reminds me of someone I recently heard bemoan the fact that in times past she could tell people who hadn’t heard of her to look her up in Google and she was so proud of the results that they would see.  But now, horror of horrors, people have said terrible things about her and her life is ruined, all because a Google search doesn’t bring up all the nice things she thinks the world should know about her.

Give me a break people.  Get a life.  If you must Google your name, why let it bother you if there is something published there that disturbs you?  Google is not God.  At least not yet.

The most chicken-shit thing of all about the article is that in referring to the role of this blog in breaking the gag they refuse to even name it as if poor old Tikun Olam has coodies.  I can marginally understand refusing to link to the blog (more of that shortly), but treating us as the blog that dare not speak its name??  Really?

But here’s what really irks me.  The reporters actually quoted an attorney, Chaim Ravia, who said that not only is it illegal for a journalist in Israel to break the gag, but it is a criminal act to LINK to any form of media anywhere in the world which breaks the gag.  Now, I’ve heard of wildly extravagant claims before.  Anyone who had to listen to Dick Cheney talk, for example.  The word draconian comes to mind.  But this goes far beyond the pale:

Links [by Israeli media, social networks, or bloggers] to foreign media, in my opinion, aid in the dissemination of the information forbidden by the gag, and likewise at the very least aid in the commission of a crime, if not actually being a crime.   Anyone who adds a link concerning information about the incident could, at the very least, be considered an accessory to violation of the gag order and, in my opinion, someone who indirectly violates the gag order.  If that individual does this knowing of the existence of the gag order then he has committed a criminal act [!]  People must be extremely careful in these situations.

There is a major fallacy in the lawyer’s account. As any Israeli journalist will tell you, you’re only bound by a gag if you or your publication receive the gag order. If you haven’t received it you’re not bound by it and can’t be prosecuted for violating it. Now, if a blogger does receive a gag order (and very few do), that would be a different story. But Ravia doesn’t even make this point.

But let all Israeli Google engineers breathe a sigh of relief.  The good solon relieves them of any responsibility for violating Israeli criminal laws because the algorithm is automated and not something they can control themselves.  Phew!

The next question asked of the attorney by the reporters is another doozy: is there anything that can be done to prevent the Google search engine from violating gag orders.  I kid you not.  These reporters are the journalistic equivalent of Big Brother.

To his credit, even a lawyer with very dumb ideas has a few drops of intelligence.  He responds that there is little one can do in such a case.  Baruch ha-Shem, finally someone within ounce of seychel.

Let me speak plainly: I am war with notions like this.  They are garbage.  I only wish I or someone could test this in Israel; could dare the police to arrest you for publishing a link to a foreign source like this blog.  Can you friggin’ imagine making the creation of a link a criminal offense?  Is this North Korea?  Iran?  And what does this philistine take us for?  Wards of the state who need to ask permission before we go to the bathroom?

In the age of the internet if you cannot link you cannot live.  I don’t mean this literally of course.  But I mean that the internet cannot live if we criminalize the act of creating a link. The link is the essence of free speech.  It should be sacred.

This is the dumbing of democracy, maybe it’s even the death of democracy.  Come let them take us away for linking to strivers for freedom outside our own countries.  Let them criminalize social networks.  Let them make us afraid to say our own names.

No link yet to the article.  But when I do link to it, do you think I might be arrested by the internet police??

Seattle Metro Bus Ad Controversy: King County Suspends Free Speech

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010
seattle israel bus ad

Seattle's anti-war bus ads

Like a good general, I have a rule I try to follow about blogging: I try to choose the terrain on which I will fight.  I like the terrain to favor me.  If my opponent chooses to fight on their terrain, I prefer not to engage unless I think it’s favorable to me.  That’s why I’ve declined to enter into the local fracas-become international cause celebre involving a series of Seattle Metro Bus ads which decry U.S. military aid to Israel and accuse it of committing war crimes during Operation Cast Lead.

Before entering this political swamp, let me make something clear: I have no problem with any of the issues raised in the ads, which is why I strongly attack King County executive Dow Constantine’s decision to pull the plug on them after an outcry from a local Israel lobby coalition.  I strongly support the right of the group which organized them to display them.  The issue of U.S. military aid to Israel is an important one as is the even more important issue of possible war crimes committed by the IDF in Gaza during the last war.

But I do have problem with both sides of this debate: both the advertisers and the pro-Israel baying chorus trying to take them down.  First, my problem with the ad.  If you want to make a political point AND influence people you make your argument coherent and plausible.  You don’t flaunt rhetoric.  You don’t score points.  You don’t shout when a calm voice will do.  There are thousands of different iterations of this ad which would’ve worked as effectively and made it harder for the pro-Israel crowd to get the ads taken down.

But the ad organizers went for the jugular.  They made their choice and undoubtedly are happy their ads were banned since it will play well to their constituency.  The other side will think it has won a victory and feel pleased with itself.  What it won’t realize is that any time you have to win a victory at the expense of fundamental constitutional principles of free speech and fairness, you’ve lost in the long run.  Meaning Israel has lost too.  And if your cause is Israel, then you’ve done your cause a disservice.

Now my much more serious problems with the smear campaign run by the local pro-Israel advocates including the Jewish federation, Aipac, American Jewish Committee and Stand With Us.  Here’s some of their rhetoric as mouthed by local King County Councilmember Jane Sprague, who’s dutifully repeating the Israel lobby talking points as all obedient U.S. politicians tend to do:

The ad reads “Israeli War Crimes Your tax dollars at work,” and has an image of a group of children staring at a destroyed building.  . Like many of you, I find the ad disturbing. Yesterday I sent a letter to the Executive and Metro officials demanding that they put a halt the ads…

We need to be mindful that inflammatory speech like this can affect many groups including our Jewish Community. I strongly believe in freedom of speech and our first amendment rights…Messages like these, that lack basic civility, can incite violence against minorities and various religious communities. We need to be able to protect those who can be hurt as a result.

What is “inflammatory” about this speech? That it accuses Israel of committing war crimes in Gaza? Major Israeli newspapers run stories virtually every day recounting stories of Israeli atrocities during the war and using terms like “war crimes” to describe them. Yes, I’d prefer to use terms like “alleged” or “possible” since the war crimes haven’t been proven in a court of law yet. But I find absolutely nothing wrong with putting forward a political argument in such ads claiming that Israel committed war crimes.

Now, as to whether U.S. taxpayers financed those atrocities with U.S. military aid: that seems incontrovertible. Israel’s military has used American weaponry liberally and even flagrantly in situations such as the mass firing of U.S. cluster bombs during the concluding hours of the 2006 Lebanon war, leaving Lebanese civilians to suffer the tragic consequences after the war ended as they unintentionally exploded the ordinance on their property and roads.

As to the ads “lacking basic civility,” well, excuse me but a cluster bomb in your backyard or an F-16 levelling your Gaza apartment building is a pretty uncivil message sent from the American people to Palestinians courtesy of the Israeli Air Force. Do the American people deserve the right to know about such things in bus ads? You bet.

But there is another deeply disturbing notion put forward by pro-Israel advocates in this message: that Israel=American Jews. That Americans somehow blame their fellow Jewish citizens for the acts of Israel. This is not only an offensive concept, it simply isn’t true.  America is not a place in which Jews will be blamed for Israel’s alleged crimes.  I reject this notion.

The anti-ad coalition views Israel and world Jewry as being inseparable, as being joined at the hip. But the vast majority of Jews in the world don’t accept this equation. I am a Jew, not an Israeli. Israel doesn’t speak for me, nor I for Israel. When Israel acts badly, I am not at fault nor do my fellow Americans see as such.

But it is convenient for Stand With Us and the rest of the Israel advocates to claim there is “no daylight” between Israel and us because then they can argue that hostility to Israeli policy=anti-Israelism and even anti=Semitism. Let me point out as clearly as I can: this notion is noxious. It is offensive. I utterly reject it as should all Americans and American Jews who care about Israel.

Israel doesn’t need all Jews to identify with it unconditionally. Israel need to become a normal nation in the Middle East. To do so, it needs to come to terms with its Arab neighbors. Having world Jewry’s identity confused with Israel’s will not help this process. It will indeed poison it. If you want to be a friend to Israel tell it to make peace with its neighbors and not presume all the Jews in the world think everything it does is honky dory.

King County’s executive has done a grave disservice to free speech in suspending these ads. Not only this, he has handed a victory to those sponsoring the ads.  He has given them the high ground. I hope they sue the county and get a judge to rule on this situation. It is really a contract dispute. The County signed a contract and then violated it. Grounds for reneging are specious. Metro approved those ads then took the Mideast Awareness Campaign’s $3,000.  After signing on the dotted line, they want to back out.  I’d love to see this tested in court.

Dow Constantine is a craven political coward.  Read the bullshit that he’s published under the name of the King County government:

“I have consulted with federal and local law enforcement authorities who have expressed concern, in the context of this international debate, that our public transportation system could be vulnerable to disruption.”

…Given the dramatic escalation of debate in the past few days over these proposed ads, and the submission of inflammatory response ads, there is now an unacceptable risk of harm to or disruption of service to our customers should these ads run.”

Yes, ads that are political speech and counter-speech will cause terrorism.  That’s what he’s essentially claiming.  Thank God, this is a view fully rejected by our nation’s Founders.  Speech is speech.  It is not an act and certainly not an illegal act.  What utter nonsense.  To retreat behind the skirts of a nameless federal bureaucrat who supposeldy told him to can an ad.  I want to know: which federal official did he consult and what did he say?  In fact, I’d like to file a Freedom of Information Act petition with Country government for every piece of internal information regarding this ad.  So, Dow Constantine, I’d be careful what you say and make sure it’s the truth.  You wouldn’t want to look awfully stupid if you mouthed nonsense like this, and were caught afterward doing so.

In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised if David Horowitz’s counter ads were deliberately formulated in the most vitriolic terms possible, knowing that by doing so they would virtually force Metro to cancel the original ad, which was their real purpose.  Really, who cares what the counter ads would say as long as they didn’t explicitly advocate illegality or violence?  I’d like to see fools like Horowitz and his ilk voice anti-Muslim views on Seattle buses so the entire city can laugh them out of town.  What’s the cure to bad speech?  More speech.  Not no speech.  What Metro is doing is saying Seattleites are delicate flowers who can’t withstand the furor of political debate.  Somehow they must be protected from opinions that are too hot.  Otherwise, what?  What would happen?  Would the Seattle explode in WTO type riots merely because of a few bus ads?  C’mon.  Who’re they kidding.

You’ve heard conservatives deride the “Nanny State.”  Well, here in Seattle we have the “Nanny County” protecting residents from the bad, bad man saying bad, bad things.  I say let 1,000 flowers bloom.  So what if some are weeds?  A weed here or there won’t kill us.  It’s the garden of debate that is important.