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

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Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

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Joint Appeal for Peace

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Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

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Posts Tagged ‘jeffrey goldberg’

Somebody Tell Jeffrey Goldberg That Orrin Hatch Doesn’t Do Hip-Hop

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009


UPDATE: Jeffrey Goldberg would like all my readers to know that he knows hip-hop from borsht and is indeed a child of the Hood (in Hebrew that would be ben-Hood). I withdraw this particular claim in my article. But his taste in music still leaves much to be desired.

Ugh, why do they give me such good material?  No sooner does a settler leader claim that Jews aren’t popsicles then Jeffrey Goldberg cajoles a Mormon U.S. senator to write a dreadful Hanukah song, which Goldberg promptly (and erroneously) labels “hip hop.”

You’ve really got to see this video to believe it.  In it, Hatch, who wrote the lyrics (but clearly not the music which was written by a liberal Jewish composer specializing in Christian music–I kid you not), clearly seems uncomfortable with the music written for his song.  Unless it’s just his goyische Mormon woodenness exhibiting itself.

There’s far too much irony to go around here. First, Goldberg, who ignorantly claims that all Hanukah music is dreck, challenges Hatch to write a Hanukah song which turns out to be just that. Second, Goldberg calls a pure pop song “hip hop.” Perhaps someone should tell him that nice Jewish boys who’ve never gotten closer to the Hood than driving down the West Side Highway shouldn’t pretend to know anything about such things. Third, the song is performed by a bleached blond Syrian-American from Indiana.

I also take strong issue with the N.Y. Times reporter who calls this song “catchy,” unless you’re talking about it in the same terms as catching a case of H1N1. It also grieves me endlessly to learn that while this is Hatch’s first Jewish song “it won’t be his last.”

“Anything I can do for the Jewish people, I will do,” Mr. Hatch said…

I think you’ve done quite enough, senator. Now, can you just leave us alone to celebrate our holiday without the help of philo-Semites like yourself? Perhaps Jewish philanthropy, known for its fundraising prowess can raise a substantial sum and give it to the Mormon Tabernacle Choir on condition that Hatch never set foot in the realm of Jewish music again.

Mr. Hatch keeps a Torah in his Senate office.

“Not a real Torah, but sort of a mock Torah,” he said. “I feel sorry I’m not Jewish sometimes.”

Look, if we make you an honorary Jew do you think you could go away and adopt some other religion as your mascot??

He said his ultimate goal would be for his idol, Ms. Streisand, to perform one of his songs. “It would be good for her and good for me,” Mr. Hatch said…

Barbara, if you’re reading this, take the phone off the hook, screen your calls and mail and stay away from Congressional Christmas-Hanukah parties. Otherwise, you might be blackmailed into singing this piece of dreck at your next Kennedy Center concert.

This passage really gave me the willies:

In short, he loves the Jews. And based on an early sampling of listeners, the feeling could be mutual.

“Mutual?” Says who?

The online Jewish culture-news portal which Dan Sieradski so aptly calls “The Tabloid” is the beneficiary of this super shlock and its editor is kvelling (unjustifiably in my opinion):

“Watching Orrin Hatch in the studio, I said to myself that nothing this great will ever happen to me again,” said Alana Newhouse, the editor-in-chief of Tablet.

Well, I guess if you’re a Jewish Mormon-lover who admires old, white, right-wing U.S. senators who write corny, white-bread lyrics…

The reporter, Mark Leibovich, does the word “mensch” a deep disservice by calling Goldberg a “well-known mensch about town.” He’s no mensch in my book. And I don’t believe in using that term in a corny, sentimental way as Leibovich has done. It should only be used as a term of deep respect, one which Goldberg in no way deserves, at least not based on his published record.

Jeffrey Goldberg: Take That, You ‘Hard-Core Anti-Zionist Leftist!’

Thursday, October 29th, 2009
Jeffrey Goldberg: in his Israel lobby element

Jeffrey Goldberg: in his Israel lobby element

If you’re one of the supposed hard-core haters of Zion who’s attempting to turn J Street into a Manchurian Candidate of anti-Zionism, I’ve got news for you.  Jeffrey Goldberg has your number:

…The group [J Street] runs the risk of being hijacked by haters of Israel. I don’t doubt that most people who join J Street are motivated by love for the Jewish state, as a Jewish state, and anguish over its government’s decisions. But there are those who would like to use J Street to weaken the bonds between the U.S. and Israel. The challenge to Jeremy Ben-Ami, the founder of J Street, over the next year, is to keep the group pro-Israel in the face of concerted efforts to move it in the direction of the hardcore anti-Zionist left.

The level of paranoia in this statement reminds me of the fear with which anti-Communist liberals greeted the New Left during the 1960s.  They seemed to be fighting the battles of the 1930s to avoid allowing such groups to be hijacked by the Communist Party.  Instead of reacting to contemporary reality, they were acting out an old script.  Goldberg too seems to see enemies of Israel everywhere, even hiding out in the dark corners at the J Street conference.

I don’t know what Goldberg is nattering about.  Who’s trying to hijack J Street?  All of those so-called radicals, even some who attended the conference, are expressing skepticism about J Street.  They’re not attempting to bore their way in and take over from the inside.  Specifically, those bloggers at our I-P session who he’s attacked so intemperately have no desire to fulfill Goldberg’s paranoiac nightmare scenario.

I fear that Jeffrey Goldberg, along with J.J. Goldberg and other Jewish liberals like them are sinking further and further into dyspeptic irrelevance.

Goldberg Confirms His Own Irrelevance

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

I have good news and I have bad news.  The good news is that Jeffrey Goldberg is so overwrought about the Israel-Palestine bloggers session at the J Street conference that he has devoted a goodly portion of a post to pissing and moaning about us.  The bad news is that the utter banality of his “analysis” confirms even further his utter irrelevance to the debate over U.S. Middle East policy.

Someone who didn’t even attend the session (Goldberg) has determined through his well-placed proxies that it was a silly waste of time.  I always admire people so sure of their own powers of judgment that they don’t even need to have any first-hand knowledge of an issue or event to expound upon it with authority.  Poor Jeffrey,  he writes as if we gave him an ulcer:

I’m telling people who are worried about the hijinks at the unofficial J Street bloggers’ panel not to become overly bothered by it; it was a clownish event, and the people on the panel were marginal figures except in the rather circumscribed universe of anti-Zionists-with-Jewish parents (where they are giants).

Gee, where have I read that same term used to describe our session?  Oh that’s right, our other good friend on the Jewish right, Michael Goldfarb:

The “independent” blogger panel at J Street’s conference can only be described as clownish.

You can tell where Jeffrey Goldberg gets some of his “best” material.  From his partner in pro-Israel journalism, Goldfarb.

I’m going to come right out and call Goldberg a liar.  I wrote him a personal e mail after his last diatribe pointing out the diversity of our panel and that it contained bloggers with many different perspectives on the issues.  Yet he deliberately ignores what the two co-hosts of the session wrote to him, deliberately ignores the fact that I am a progressive Zionist and that Jerry Haber’s blog is titled The Magnes Zionist, for God’s sake.  This is intellectual bad faith.  Goldberg didn’t even have the courtesy to respond to my e mail.  Jerry, by the way, invited Goldberg to join our panel, which he declined to do.  You see, he’d rather take his marbles go home and complain about what nasty people we are than engaging with us in any sort of serious manner.

Goldberg hated the fact that J Street hosted a panel of Iran pragmatists, who he noxiously describes as “apologists.”  Here is what passes for “analysis” from Goldberg:

The panel featured Hillary Mann Leverett, who, with her husband, Flynt Leverett, is an apologist for the Iranian regime. [and] also included Trita Parsi, who also does a lot of leg-work for the Iranian regime…

I find it interesting that the Mujahadeen al Khalq, the radical Iranian anti-clerical group which supports violent overthrow of the regime and is listed as a terror organization, also agrees with Goldberg, calling Parsi a supporter of the regime.  This is a commonality of which Goldberg should be proud.  Any reasonable person who really heard (as opposed to Goldberg relying on second-hand reports) what Parsi said, and who followed the powerful testimony from Parsi and his group NIAC during the civil unrest that followed the fraudulent Iranain elections in June, would know that what Goldberg says is a despicable lie.  In fact, Parsi called those elections fraudulent at the conference.  I, as opposed to Goldberg, was there and in the room when he said this.  Somehow in the twilight world that is Goldbergland, calling the elections a fraud becomes twisted into apologetics on behalf of the regime.  Besides, you’ll notice that Goldberg never provides a shred of evidence for any of these claims.  Typical.

For Jeffrey Goldberg, if you don’t endorse Israel’s vision of an Iran that is an existential threat to Israel and the world, and if you don’t endorse draconian sanctions and the possibility of military attack if they don’t work–then you’re an Iranian apologist.

Here is more distortion from Goldberg:

…The consensus on the panel…was that Iran doesn’t think about Israel, doesn’t care about Israel, and certainly doesn’t want to obliterate Israel.

I blogged yesterday on what Trita Parsi actually said, which was far more nuanced than Goldberg allows.  Parsi, seeking to explain the disconnect among all the players and their delusions about their own importance and their own perceptions of how their enemy sees them, said this:

Israelis think about Iran 90% of the time and think that Iranians think about Israel 90% of the time.  They don’t.

No one on the panel said Iran doesn’t want to obliterate Israel.  No one said it does.  The subject simply was not addressed in that fashion, which would of course annoy Goldberg no end.  Here’s a guy who deals in absolutes who can’t stand when people a lot smarter and better educated on the subject than he, talk in a fashion that allows for far more grey, far more complexity and nuance.

Interestingly, Goldberg also ignores the racism, noted by Hillary Mann Leverett in her presentation on Iran, directed at Iran by pro-Israel apologists:

[They advance] the stereotype of Iranians as chronically duplicitous and unprepared to keep any commitment they enter into. …  Those stereotypes are simply not supported by the historical record. … They are fundamentally racist — if someone were to criticize Israeli diplomacy by referring to rabbis as lying and conspiring behind their beards, as far too many commentators accuse Iran’s mullahs of lying and conspiring behind their beards, we would rightly — and I’d be the first to — denounce that as an anti-Semitic stereotype.

When I first heard Leverett’s comment I thought it was very acute.  Goldberg can’t be bothered to address it.  Instead he misdirects in his response:

Rabbis aren’t in charge of Israel. Mullahs are in charge of Iran. This is a fact that probably does seem relevant to most people, though not to Hillary Mann Leverett.

We might leave aside the fact that fundamentalist rabbis, in fact, ARE in charge of many major aspects of Israeli life, though perhaps not decisions on whether to use nuclear weapons.  But the most important point to note here is, who is to say that Iran’s mullahs are pursuing a policy that is any less rational than Israel is pursuing?  Israel has started two horrific wars in the past three years killing thousands, including many civilians, in two different countries.  It has used sophisticated and powerful weapons of destruction (though not “mass” destruction) that have killed indiscriminately.  It has been sanctioned by international bodies and its own domestic human rights organizations for violations of human rights and international law.

Iran’s record in the past six months hasn’t been pretty either.  Nor are its support for Hezbollah and alleged support for Hamas, laudable.  But if we compare records of the two countries the mullahs appear quite a bit more rational than Israel’s leaders over that same three year period.  How can that be, Jeffrey Goldberg, Zionist champion, Israel’s defender, that Israel has more to answer for than Iran?  You’re worried that Iran wants nuclear weapons, when Israel already has them.  You’re worried that Iran is violating the Non-Proliferation Treaty provisions, when Israel refuses even to sign the Treaty.  Seems to me your concerns are a bit misplaced.  Worry about Iran?  Sure.  Worry about Israel?  Even moreso.

Jeffrey Goldberg on J Street and the Blogger Panel

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

Jeffrey Goldberg has finally broken his silence on J Street.  Well, not exactly silence, since he’s spoken glancingly about the national conference, though not in any detail.  He kept his powder dry for a story he published today which consists of an interview he did with Jeremy Ben Ami.  My initial reaction is complicated but mostly favorable.

First, a bit of background.  Goldberg is a bellweather Jewish journalist.  He buys into what I call the corporate Jewish consensus and has a lot of the bad habits that such Jewish I-P journalists have which I’ve written of here.  But he’s sophisticated enough that he sometimes has a trenchant and provocative perspective on issues and takes an independent view of things.  So his type of journalist plays a large role in the Jewish community.  If he hates you then it gives the radical right a license to kill.  If he holds his fire or even speaks favorably, then a whole host of enemies are disempowered.

So I think that Jeremy has done well by engaging Goldberg and attempting to explain J Street to him.  And Goldberg, considering the drawbacks to his reporting, has done a pretty decent job in this interview (with a few exceptions–more on that later).

I’d like to focus mostly in this post on the points where I take issue either with Goldberg or Ben Ami.  They begin with a discussion of the Walt-Mearsheimer book and Walt’s support for the J Street conference.  While Jeremy does well refusing to renounce Walt’s support, both Goldberg (who I expected) and Ben-Ami (who I didn’t) seriously mischaracterize the book’s central tenet.  Here is Goldberg:

Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer blame the organized American Jewish community for starting the Iraq War and even helping cause 9/11? It’s a statement of fact, it’s in their book.

This is a typically lazy Goldbergism.  You reduce an argument to a slogan or sound byte.  The authors of The Israel Lobby don’t blame “the organized Jewish community” for the Iraq war.  They blame “Jewish neocons” for the war.  That is even overstating it.  They blame Jewish neocons for providing some of the key intellectual underpinning for the movement leading to the war.  And they claim that the reason for such Jewish neocon support was a sense among them that this would support Israel’s aims in the region.  Now, you can argue with this thesis from various angles.  But it seems to me that it is at least in part accurate and certainly deserving of serious debate instead of derisive dismissal.

As for blaming the American Jewish community for “helping cause” 9/11, that too is reductionist.  Walt and Mearsheimer say that the festering nature of the unsolved Israeli-Arab conflict has allowed Islamist extremism as represented by Al Qaeda to flower.  If there was no Arab-Israeli conflict, there might still be an Al Qaeda, but one of its strongest recruiting tools would be eliminated.  That’s what these authors really say.  You can compare that to Goldberg’s mischaracterization and see how far he is from the truth.

Jeremy too wildly mischaracterizes the Walt-Mearsheimer thesis in this passage:

…When the analysis of that lobby…essentially says that all of American foreign policy is controlled by this one lobby and this one interest group, to me, personally, this does smack of the kind of conspiracy theories contained in the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. This notion that somehow Jews control this country, they control our foreign policy, that there is some diabolical conspiracy behind the scenes, this is when you cross that line.  I believe that the analysis in the Walt and Mearsheimer book and article crossed that line…

Personally, I think Jeremy should be ashamed.  Apparently he hasn’t read the book.  If so, he should.  At least then he could speak more intelligently about it.  The book argues not that all of U.S. foreign policy is “controlled” by Jews (that WOULD be anti-Semitic).  Rather it argues that U.S. policy relating to Israel has been largely controlled by the lobby.  As for the claim that Walt-Mearsheimer says Jews control this country, that’s astonishingly dumb.  I know it sounds good for Jeremy to say this to Goldberg’s audience who has preconceived notions about the book.  But currying favor with such an audience doesn’t mean you’re entitled to take liberty with the facts.

I myself have taken issue with certain elements of the Walt-Mearsheimer thesis here.  So I’m not saying it is torah l’Moshe mi’Sinai.  No, it is fallible in some parts.  But it remains a serious thesis worth engaging.  And the problem is that neither Goldberg nor Ben-Ami nor virtually any of their pro-Israel critics engage it seriously or factually.

I can understand too why Ben-Ami felt compelled to defend the Law of Return given who his audience was for this interview.  But Bernie Avishai has it right on this one, I’m afraid.  There should be a carefully defined, limited Right of Return which can be exercised under certain conditions.  But aliyah should be an immigration process as it is in all other countries.  It should not automatically be a right of any Jew who wishes to exercise it to become a citizen immediately on arrival.  Though there certainly should be cases in which such a Right would be exercised.

If the Law of Return IS an automatic right then I simply don’t see how you can ask Palestinians to constrain their own Right of Return.  Once again, this is a question of two competing rights.  If you want to achieve an equilibrium between peoples and respective rights, then both sides will have to accept compromises of their basic rights.

I have to admit that on reading Jeremy Ben-Ami’s account of our blogger session at the conference, I felt a little like Jesus, when he finds out he’s been denied by the apostle Paul; not to mention that Goldberg completely misrepresents our effort:

JG: On another subject, you’re giving some space at your conference to a group of bloggers who range from the anti-Zionist Max Blumenthal to the anti-Zionist Helena Cobban.

JB: There’s a lunch. They’ve asked us that, since there is a lunch, can we have a room where we who are bloggers on this issue can sit and talk to each other? I mean, give me a break, I’m not giving them any approval whatsoever, and there’s no sanction to their beliefs.  I’m just saying, sure, there are seven free rooms on the floor, use one. I’m not going to say, “No you can’t eat lunch together.” I mean really.

JG: They’re not eating lunch together. They’re having a program.

JB: I don’t even know what the program is. They can go into a room – wait, who’s speaking?

JG: Helena Cobban and a bunch of others, I think.

JB: Oh man, come on, Jeffrey. I’m letting them have a room for lunch.

First, Goldberg as usual falls into what I call the lazy journalist’s habit.  Instead of doing any research or thinking for himself, he accepts a characterization he’s read somewhere or makes a snap judgment that enables him to dismiss a phenomenon that deserves more attention than he’s willing to give.  Helena Cobban certainly is not a Zionist, but neither would I call her an anti-Zionist in the sense that she is opposed to the existence of the State of Israel.  While I’ve never queried Max Blumenthal specifically on his views, I’ve never read him to express anti-Zionist views.  Goldberg is simply slapping a label on someone so he can put them in a box and be done with them.  Unfortunately, the reality of their views is more complicated than he’s willing to allow.

Not to mention that Goldberg lists only two of our twelve bloggers, who range from me, a progressive Zionist to Jerry Haber, an Orthodox Jew and supporter of Judah Magnes and Martin Buber’s views on resolving the Israeli-Arab conflict.  Our panel will also include Dan Sieradski, another progressive Zionist who just finished a stint working for JTA.  We will also have a Gazan blogger, Palestinian-American, and two Israelis.

I wrote this in an e-mail to Goldberg:

You seem to have focused on the panel members who would support a preconceived notion you have about the ideological danger of this panel.  But you’ve left out the true diversity of this panel, which is what makes it a significant event.

Which brings me to a major problem I have with your work sometimes.  It can be lazy and reductive.  Instead of probing an issue you often take shortcuts and use slogans…Instead of attempting to understand what we might be trying to do you dismiss it with the vague claim that there will be anti-Zionists on the panel.  That prevents you from having to actually grapple with the issues we will discuss.  And that is unfortunate.

I feel a bit sad that Jeremy Ben-Ami felt he had to deny us in order to protect J Street.  But it doesn’t bother me terribly much.  I think our panel stands on its own two feet and doesn’t require public recognition or acceptance from the group.  In fact, Jeremy in the interview gave us all the recognition that is necessary.  The fact that they have allowed us to use a room during the conference is all that we need.  Our effort at illuminating the role that the blogosphere plays regarding the I-P conflict will stand on its own and the utility of what we do will prove itself.

Let me also praise what I found a masterful answer Jeremy provided to a provocative question often asked by the pro-Israel right, which claims that by attempting to understand why Palestinians turn to violence against Israel, we are essentially justifying it.  I’ve always found this claim noxious and J Street’s director lays it to rest:

JG: …You once said Israel is treating Palestinians in a way that forces them to become terrorists. Could you go into that a little bit more?

JB: …Ehud Barak, in 1999, when he was running for prime minister, said “If I was a young kid growing up in the Palestinian territories, I’d probably be a terrorist, too.” There is a sense of hopelessness, there’s a sense of a lack of future in the Palestinian territories and particularly in Gaza. When an Israeli kid grows up, he wants to launch the next big start-up, they want to make a billion dollars by having an IPO out of their garage, by having the next great idea, right? In Gaza, the kids are growing up wanting to be the next great suicide bomber, and that’s where martyrdom comes in, that’s where fame comes, that’s where family honor comes from, because there’s no other path. So we have to recognize that this is a part of the climate in the Palestinian territories. This is not blaming Israel for terrorism.

JG: Well, it is.

JB: No, it’s not blaming–

JG: Israel is creating conditions for the Palestinians to become terrorists, you’re saying.

JB: In order to solve a problem, you must be able to rationally analyze its causes and discuss the best solutions. And if we can’t have an open and an honest conversation about the role that the conditions in which kids are growing up in the territories plays in their development and what they’re growing up to be, then we’re not going to solve the problem. I’m not casting blame. This is a terrible conflict and there is really absolute hatred and anger about suicide bombing and rockets and terrorism and violence — that is not the way to achieve your hopes and your dreams and your aspirations, and I condemn it and we condemn it, but that’s not enough to really solve the problem. And then I can just close up the doors and say, ‘Well we solved the problem because we condemn the tactics of the other side’ — no, we actually have to solve the problem, so we say, ‘Okay, let’s talk about the problem.’

Here, Goldberg actually asks a very sharp question and Jeremy answers it beautifully:

JG: Are you surprised, pleased, unhappy with the level of controversy that this conference is obviously generating in the Jewish universe?

JB: …I’m very pleased about the controversy. One of the goals of J Street is to open up debate and discussion on these issues, to be able to talk about some very difficult things openly, that there are a lot of people who would prefer you not to talk openly. So the fact that this is actually getting such play means we’re actually fulfilling our mission, so I think that is terrific. What I’m not happy about is that I think it is very bad for our community, very bad for the Jewish people, that some of those who don’t want us to be having this conversation have gone over the line in the way in which they personally attacked and used lies and smears to try to make their point.

In this closing passage of the interview, there are several problematic issues that deserve addressing:

JG: The thing I’m worried about with the conference is that I think most of your supporters are well-meaning, left-of-center Jews who love Israel and are tortured by the various dilemmas, who do stay awake at night worrying about this. But there are others who are glomming on to you guys as a cover, just using you to advance another agenda entirely.

JB: I hope that we have a very strong left flank that attacks us, that Jewish Voice for Peace and other groups that are consistently upset with us for backing Howard Berman’s sanctions plan and for refusing to embrace the Goldstone report and for standing up for the right of Israel to defend itself or for its military aid — I hope we get attacked from the left because I would characterize J Street as the mainstream of the American Jewish community.

I find the italicized sentence to be noxious.  I presume Goldberg is talking precisely about our blogger event and some of our panel members.  To say that we are exploiting J Street’s success in order to promote an anti-Israel agenda is objectionable.  That isn’t what our program is about.  It is about finding solutions to the conflict that actually provide Israel with security and stability instead of the current slow bleed and daily doses of murder and mayhem.

Regarding Jeremy’s reply to the question, I also object to it.  He is using Jewish Voice for Peace as a convenient foil thus allowing him to say to those on his right: “See, we’ve dissociated ourselves from THEM.  Aren’t you glad we’re not them?”  That does a terrible disservice to the legitimate role that JVP places in this debate.

The very bona fides that Ben Ami raises in this passage to prove J Street’s pro-Israel, Zionist street cred are the points I find most disappointing about the group.  Its embrace of Iran sanctions is unconscionable because they simply will not work and J Street has to know that they will not work.  There comes a point in political issues when life and death is at stake and you have to stop grandstanding.  On the Iran sanctions issue, J Street is triangulating instead of dealing in pragmatic policy.

I can accept a certain amount of tactical maneuvering from the group in order to prevent itself from being demonized by Aipac, the rest of the Israel lobby and the Jewish neocons like Goldfarb.  But the tactics and maneuvering must not be allowed to become the whole show.  There has to be a moral core that J Street upholds and on which it will not compromise.  To my mind, it has not done so.  And I view our role as keeping it honest in that regard.

Gay Porno Hasbara

Saturday, July 25th, 2009
Youve come a long way, Israel baby--welcome gay porno (Lucas Entertainment)

You've come a long way, Israel baby--welcome gay porno (Lucas Entertainment)

If Tablet Magazine is to be believed, the Jewish world has come a long way baby because the gay porno industry has made the first pornographic film with an all-Israeli/all-Jewish cast.  As strange and disturbing as I find this article on many levels, it is this passage which disturbs me most:

This week, Michael Lucas is making what he calls “a bold move to promote Israeli culture and tourism.” His website extols the virtues of a country rich with natural wonders, intriguing museums, liberal politics, and friendly locals. More than a biblical theme park, Lucas’s Israel is a tourist destination, a place where lovely beaches beckon and muscle-bound men have sex with each other.

Lucas—a porn actor and director, and founder of the New York-based gay porn production company Lucas Entertainment—sees his new film Men of Israel as a tool, if you will, to promote tourism, at least among gay men.


Make no mistake, this is not a one-off promotion by an odd-ball Jewish gay pornographer.  This is part of an orchestrated hasbara campaign spearheaded by groups like Stand With Us, who promoted Israel during the latter’s Gay Pride Festival as a natural ally of gays around the world.  The angle for SWU (and there always IS an angle with groups like this) is to trumpet the alleged homophobia of Palestinian/Arab society compared to the alleged freedom and tolerance of “western” Israel towards a gay lifestyle.  Never mind that Israel is less tolerant of gays than the average western country.  That matters little for the hasbaraniks of SWU.

Articles like the one in Tablet make clear the danger of choosing such bedfellows for Israel.  Remember the last major ‘heartthrob’ Israel embraced?  Those evangelicals like John Hagee, who supports a nuclear attack against Iran and claims the Holocaust was a message from God to Jews to become Zionists?

Does anyone in their right mind think that Israel will benefit from a close association with the gay porn industry?  And what was the Tablet editor who commissioned this article thinking?  This is a newsworthy story?  Bizarre, disturbing–yes.  But newsworthy?  But hey, I’m not complaining.  This blog thrives off chronicling the bad judgment of some of my fellow Jews.

Interesting to note that the film has been promoted by those connoisseurs of the gay lifestyle, Jeffrey Goldberg and James Kirchick (who Eric Alterman’s calls Marty Peretz’s “mini-me”). Goldberg takes the typically hasbarist line of comparing Israel’s supposedly tolerant attitude toward gays with the Arab world’s supposedly homophobic approach (I Bet Ahmadinejad Wouldn’t Let This Happen in Iran). This is why Goldberg is the Israeli foreign ministry’s favorite “liberal” (I use the term VERY loosely) Jewish journalist.

Jeffrey Goldberg, Willing Tool of Israel’s Perception Management Campaign for Iran War

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

Here and in Comment is Free I wrote about the Israeli ‘perception management’ campaign here in the U.S. to persuade us that war with Iran is both necessary, inevitable, and salutary for the world.  This campaign takes many and varied forms.

Jeff Goldberg is too smart for that.  He’s a talented enough writer to pen his own propaganda subtly advocating war with Iran.  What I don’t get is that in this U.S. political climate in which a Democratic administration is ascendant and the foreign policy message is pragmatism, deliberation and negotiation, Goldberg has thrown his lot in with Netanyahu and the Jewish rejectionists.  I guess he knows which side his bread is buttered on and he’s managed to find a publishing niche at The Atlantic and N.Y. Times as Bibi’s amanuensis.

Goldberg has a new Bibi profile in the Times Week in Review which is utterly horrendous.  He even goes so far as to call Iran Amalek, which is interesting in that Obama’s Jewish opponents in the last election likened HIM to Amalek and Haman, two of the Jewish people’s most potent existential bogeymen.  This is suave and effective pro-war propaganda and therefore we must expose the noxious role Goldberg plays in the Israeli campaign.

Goldberg’s reporting is telling not only for what it INCLUDES, but for what it OMITS.  Goldberg acknowledges Bibi’s reputation for cynically throwing over his allies when it’s expedient to him and concedes there are those who believe the politician is using such an approach on Iran (besides exploiting the issue in order to delay dealing with the Palestinian morass).  But then he immediately dismisses this possibility by saying Bibi is firm and sincere (with no proof provided):

But this [theory of Bibi's cynicism] is to misread both the prime minister and this moment in Jewish history.

Note the invocation of “Jewish history,” which both elevates and distorts the true meaning of the Iranian threat.  First, Iran’s alleged threat has little, if anything to do with JEWISH history, though perhaps a tad more to do with ISRAELI history.  The conflation of the two is a deliberate misrepresentation on the part of pro-Israel writers like Goldberg.  Second, it is arguable that Iran is little more than a chapter in Israel’s history and certainly arguable that Iran now or in the near future can play any role as an existential threat to Israel.  To paraphrase Walter Mondale’s riposte to Ronald Reagan during a presidential debate: that’s what Jeff Goldberg won’t tell you.  I just did.

“Amalek,” in essence, is Hebrew for “existential threat.” Tradition holds that the Amalekites are the undying enemy of the Jews. They appear in Deuteronomy, attacking the rear columns of the Israelites on their escape from Egypt. The rabbis teach that successive generations of Jews have been forced to confront the Amalekites: Nebuchadnezzar, the Crusaders, Torquemada, Hitler and Stalin are all manifestations of Amalek’s malevolent spirit.

If Iran’s nuclear program is, metaphorically, Amalek’s arsenal, then an Israeli prime minister is bound by Jewish history to seek its destruction, regardless of what his allies think.

Here, once again, Goldberg engages in a willful propaganda campaign demonizing Iran. When you invoke a religious injunction as he has done, you withdraw Israeli policy from a volitional, political space and transfer it to the realm of theological obligation. This is not far from the craziness of the settler movement, which divorces settlements from any political context and insulates them from debate, walling them off in a religious domain that can neither be questioned nor rationally analyzed.

Even if we debate this issue in religious terms, where is the evidence that Iran IS Amalek? Have Iranians expressed a desire to exterminate the Jewish people? Have they even expressed a desire to exterminate physically the Israeli people?

Muslims have a right to blame Israel for its oppression of the Palestinians. They have a right to be angry with Israel for its policies. They do NOT have a right to set off a nuclear weapon on Israeli soil or kill Israeli civilians. They don’t have the ability (nor the desire, I would claim) to do the former, and to the extent that they have done the latter they should be condemned. But such condemnation must always be understood in context of aggressive Israeli policies toward Palestinians.

Iran is NOT Amalek.  The children of Israel did nothing we know of to deserve Amalek’s murderous attacks.  That is how the Bible justifies the genocidal command to annihilate Amalek.  Iran, and Muslims, while they have no right to kill Israelis, certainly have a right to denounce them in strong terms.  This is far from Amalek.  And that is the danger of abusing theological categories for political purposes.  What Bibi is doing is a toxic distortion of Jewish history.  As a Jew who loves and studies the history of my people, I deeply object to his falsifications.

We know what happens when politicians attempt to impose political solutions on scientific or medical problems (think Terri Schiavo).  Virtually the same thing happens when political partisans impose religion on politics.  You abuse both religion AND politics and destroy the ability for your society to see plainly the issues at hand.

In the following passage, the best I can say for Goldberg is that it is Bibi who lies about Iran’s record instead of the reporter:

“Iran has threatened to annihilate a state…”

Iran has not launched a war against a neighbor in generations and isn’t about to start now.  Iranian radicals have stated that Israel should “disappear.”  Certainly a noxious concept, but where is the claim that Iran will do the deed?  This is an inconvenient fact that Bibi would have you gloss over.

Here again Bibi invokes Nazi analogies that hold no water:

…One lesson of history is that “bad things tend to get worse if they’re not challenged early.”

This is the case only if you are talking about Adolph Hitler and Nazi Germany.  But this is not true if you are talking about a dispute between two countries which each have legitimate interests and grievances to adjudicate.  Iran is NOT Nazi Germany.  Precipitate action of the sort Bibi advocates will not stop evil, it will only turn a dangerous situation into a maelstrom of regional violence and possibly war.

Bibi and his political handlers have been tremendously active devising preposterous scenarios for Iranian domination of Israel and the region.  Here is an entertaining sample:

Mr. Netanyahu doesn’t believe that Iran would necessarily launch a nuclear-tipped missile at Tel Aviv. He argues instead that Iran could bring about the eventual end of Israel simply by possessing such weaponry. “Iran’s militant proxies would be able to fire rockets and engage in other terror activities while enjoying a nuclear umbrella,” he said. This could lead to the depopulation of the Negev and the Galilee, both of which have already endured sustained rocket attacks by Hamas and Hezbollah.

To believe this delusional scenario, you have to imagine Hezbollah and Hamas not only fully armed with medium range, accurate missiles to hit the Negev and Galilee, you have to imagine the two movements fully unleashed to launch such a massive attack on Israel.  There are no circumstances in which I can imagine either condition unless Israel itself has launched a pre-emptive strike against Iran.  Ironically, it is Israeli aggression that could launch the kind of depopulation Bibi is prepared to blame on Iran.

The narischkeit continues:

…A nuclear Iran “would embolden Islamic militants far and wide, on many continents, who would believe that this is a providential sign, that this fanaticism is on the ultimate road to triumph.”

Muslim Pakistan has nuclear weapons yet somehow this prospect has never happened.  Even Islamists in Pakistan do not talk of using their nuclear weapons in any other way than to defend against an attack from India.

At this point in the essay, Goldberg enters new and even more pernicious territory.  He begins:

To understand why Mr. Netanyahu sees Iran as a new Amalek, it is essential to understand two aspects of his intellectual and emotional development: The scholarship of his father, and the martyrdom of his older brother…

Yonatan, who was killed while leading the 1976 raid on the Entebbe airport in Uganda to free Israeli captives of Arab and German hijackers, is perhaps the most venerated figure in the post-Warsaw Ghetto Jewish martyrology…

Since when is the death of an IDF officer in combat martyrdom?  Since when do we use such loaded religious terms (“martyrology” is another term from the Jewish prayer book) to describe what is, in reality, a death on behalf of a nation and not a religion.  Once again here we see Goldberg slipping sacralizing concepts into political discourse.  And once again, this is noxious and unacceptable misappropriation of religion for partisan political purposes.

Goldberg also slips the Warsaw ghetto into the discussion in order to elevate Yonatan’s death from a mere combat casualty to a religious sacrifice in service to the fight against Nazis everywhere, whether they be in the Warsaw ghetto, Entebbe or Teheran.  This is deeply twisted, dishonest journalism and Jewish historiography.

We have explored in depth here the hysterical views Bibi’s father holds towards Arabs.  You won’t find a word of this in Goldberg’s piece.  Instead, you will find a celebration of Ben Zion Netanyahu’s historical scholarship minus any of its noxious political repercussions.

Delving into the scholarship, this is how Goldberg summarizes it:

Benzion Netanyahu argued that Spanish hatred of Jews was not merely theologically motivated but based in race hatred (the Spanish pursued the principle of limpieza de sangre, or the purity of blood) that reached back to the ancient world.

If the reporter’s characterization is accurate, there are several problems here.  First, to posit that Spanish hatred of Jews is NOT inspired by Christianity; but instead goes farther back in Spanish consciousness to “the ancient world,” you’d have a slightly inconvenient matter to explain.  Why was the history of Jews in (pre-Christian) Moorish Spain relatively benign and even fruitful?  How do you explain the good relations between Moors and Jews, the integration of Jewish poets, scholars, bankers and political advisors into the fabric of Muslim Spain?

This is, of course, Netanyahu refuses to acknowledge because his “narrative” suggests that Arabs harbor deep-seated hatred of Jews.

Goldberg suggests another deeply distressing notion embedded in the elder Netanyahu’s historical work:

The only rational response to such sentiment, in the Netanyahu view, is militant Jewish self-defense.

Now, that’s an interesting phrase.  Clearly, one man’s “militant self-defense” is another’s “militant offense.”  If you read my earlier posts about Netanyahu’s contemporary views of Arabs you will understand that “self-defense” has nothing to do with his world-view.  From his perspective, there is no point in self-defense since Arabs are perfidious through and through.  You might as well show them who’s boss by hanging a few in the village square to let them know what’s in store if they step out of line (and yes, this is an example of something he actually believes).

Not a peep from Goldberg about these notions.  I wonder why?

In the following passage, Goldberg’s peroration reaches the level of pure megalomania:

…Destiny has chosen the Netanyahus to expose and battle anti-Semitism — before it reaches the point of genocide.

How many leaders in history have had similar views of their own “chosenness,” their own personal destiny to lead their people to greatness or some other major national achievement?  I say beware the one who believes his political career is fated.  They are the ones who will lead their peoples and the world into the maelstrom.  This is deeply scary stuff.  And what especially distresses me is that Goldberg has absolutely no journalistic distance from it.  He is essentially Bibi’s stenographer putting the great man’s words into a  public forum.

At the conclusion of his profile, Goldberg attempts to draw lessons for Bibi’s meeting with Obama.  They are riddled with odd notions:

[If Iran achieves nuclear weapons] it would mean that the 30-year-struggle between America and Iran for domination of the Persian Gulf will be over, with Persia the victor.

I had no idea the U.S. was struggling for “domination” of the Persian Gulf?  Did you?  Certainly, I was aware that we have struggled with the Iranians in 1979 and that since then relations have been fraught with conflict.  But a struggle for regional domination?  That’s Goldberg’s locution.  Not mine and not anyone else’s I know.

One of the most disturbing passages in this essay is the following:

…By the end of this year, if no progress is made, Mr. Netanyahu will seriously consider attacking Iran.

Given the access that Goldberg has been provided, we can be sure that this threat is genuine and an expression of Israeli intent.  This means that, considering Bibi knows the U.S. opposes an Israeli strike, that Israel is prepared to go to war against America’s express directive.  I don’t think such a thing has ever happened in the entire history of U.S.-Israel relations.  Unless you count the Sinai war, after which Eisenhower hectored Israel and her allies into an abject retreat.

In publishing this piece, the N.Y. Times has allowed itself to be co-opted by the Israeli propaganda machine advocating war against Iran.  This is a terribly sad development in the Times’ journalistic history.

Lies Jeffrey Goldberg Told Me (About Gaza)

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

The title of this post came to me as I was trying to assimilate Jeffrey Goldberg’s typically beside the point column in today’s N.Y. Times. The only thing I can say for it is that it’s not as wrongheaded as most of his work about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict usually is.

But the following passage brought to mind the title of the Canadian Jewish film, Lies My Father Told Me, because here Goldberg shows that he’s laboring under terrible delusions and completely misunderstands the current political environment in Palestinian society, especially Gaza:

“There is a fixed idea among some Israeli leaders that Hamas can be bombed into moderation. This is a false and dangerous notion. It is true that Hamas can be deterred militarily for a time, but tanks cannot defeat deeply felt belief.

The reverse is also true: Hamas cannot be cajoled into moderation. Neither position credits Hamas with sincerity, or seriousness.

The only small chance for peace today is the same chance that existed before the Gaza invasion: The moderate Arab states, Europe, the United States and, mainly, Israel, must help Hamas’s enemy, Fatah, prepare the West Bank for real freedom, and then hope that the people of Gaza, vast numbers of whom are unsympathetic to Hamas, see the West Bank as an alternative to the squalid vision of Hassan Nasrallah and Nizar Rayyan.”

Goldberg actually believes that Fatah can lead the Palestinian people to “freedom?” How? What has it achieved on this long road to freedom so far? And you’ll notice that he only goes so far as to say that Fatah’s “friends” among the nations should “help” prepare it for freedom. Prepare? What does this mean? How long will this process take before anyone actually deigns to give Palestine its freedom? Really, Goldberg is quite ridiculous.

Further, Goldberg calls feebly on Israel and the U.S. to “help” lay the groundwork for such freedom. Like they’ve “helped” up till now? In the past eight years, tell me one thing Israel in particular has done to help Fatah appear to be a more attractive choice to the Palestinian people?

But the portion of this passage that really takes the cake is the one in which Goldberg claims, with absolutely no proof whatsoever, that there are “vast numbers” of Gazans who are “unsympathetic” to Hamas. Perhaps Goldberg might want to take a walk in the streets of Gaza right about now, if he could avoid being hit by one of his country’s missiles, and ask the average Gazan whether they are “unsympathetic” to Hamas. This notion is part of the Israeli delusion that by bombing Gaza back to the Stone Age this will somehow turn the Gazans against Hamas. Anyone with eyes in their head can foresee that the only party they will turn against and blame in this situation would be Israel.

What do the Times’ editors see in this guy? They print the propaganda and delusions of Benny Morris and Jeffrey Goldberg as if they were oracular wisdom about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It’s little short of sickening.

Jewish Axis of Evil: Clarion Fund and GOP

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Seth Hettena has done some interesting research into Clarion Fund’s 990 report.  He’s discovered that a number of the group’s board members have longstanding and deep ties in partisan Republican circles:

Peter Feaman, a Florida trial lawyer. He’s also the author of Wake Up America! about the dangers of fundamentalist Islam. Feaman has been active in GOP political circles. He has run for the Florida house and serves as the Republican state committeeman for Palm Beach County. He was a delegate to the 2008 GOP convention.

Nina Cunningham, founder of Quidlibet, a legal research consulting firm in Illinois. She has given more than $33,000 to GOP candidates and causes in the past three election cycles, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. She is the Illinois State chair of the Republican Jewish Committee’s women’s committee.

I’ve reported previously here on various Republican connections with Clarion Fund:

  1. the Republican Jewish Coalition mailed free copies of Obsession to every Jewish and Christian clergymember in the U.S.
  2. Clarion hired Republican consultants to arrange screenings of the film in Arizona and Michigan
  3. Clarion distributed 28 million copies of Obsession in the weeks prior to the election, after one of Clarion’s websites derided Obama’s national security experience and praised McCain’s.
  4. Aish HaTorah’s co-founder has extensive business and political ties with Republican national leaders, especially Tom Ridge as well as Ileana Ros Lehtinen and others.

In other words, Clarion Fund is practically a bought and paid for arm of the Jewish wing of the Republican Party.  Aish HaTorah, in turn, as Jeffrey Goldberg has noted, is practically an arm of the rightist settler movement.  All this leads one to believe that a group of far-right Israeli-American Orthodox Jews have teemed up with Republicans in order to kill two birds with one stone.  They can exploit fears of Muslims and Islam to drum up American Jewish support for a pro-settler/pro-Israel political agenda AND flay the Democrats, who allegedly are soft on terror, specifically Muslim terror.

It’s seamy and nasty, but utterly in keeping with the lies and histrionics which characterize the Republican Jewish right and the Orthodox pro-settler right.

Among the dumb concepts that George Bush created (or his speechwriters) was an “Axis of Evil” consisting of three countries.  An axis only has two ends, not three.  So rhetorically what Bush said seems a mangling of the language.  In this post, I originally wanted to include Clarion Fund, Aish HaTorah, the Settler movement, and GOP in my Jewish Axis of Evil.  But that was way too many axes, so I had to slim it down to only two.