Muslim and Jewish Women in Nazareth

'We can live in peace'...John Lennon (photo: Dafna Tal)

Mahzor

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 ‘little-green-footballs’

Charles Johnson, Political Baal Teshuva?

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

By God, there’s something strange going on over at Little Green Footballs.  Charles Johnson, after a long period involving huge amounts of turmoil and combat among his Lizard followers, has turned away from his far-right Islamophobic rantings and penned an amazing post, Why I Parted Ways With The Right.  If I didn’t know better, it might be likened to political teshuva.  Here are his reasons:

1. Support for fascists, both in America (see: Pat Buchanan, Robert Stacy McCain, etc.) and in Europe (see: Vlaams Belang, BNP, SIOE, Pat Buchanan, etc.)

2. Support for bigotry, hatred, and white supremacism (see: Pat Buchanan, Ann Coulter, Robert Stacy McCain, Lew Rockwell, etc.)

3. Support for throwing women back into the Dark Ages, and general religious fanaticism (see: Operation Rescue, anti-abortion groups, James Dobson, Pat Robertson, Tony Perkins, the entire religious right, etc.)

4. Support for anti-science bad craziness (see: creationism, climate change denialism, Sarah Palin, Michele Bachmann, James Inhofe, etc.)

5. Support for homophobic bigotry (see: Sarah Palin, Dobson, the entire religious right, etc.)

6. Support for anti-government lunacy (see: tea parties, militias, Fox News, Glenn Beck, etc.)

7. Support for conspiracy theories and hate speech (see: Alex Jones, Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Birthers, creationists, climate deniers, etc.)

8. A right-wing blogosphere that is almost universally dominated by raging hate speech (see: Hot Air, Free Republic, Ace of Spades, etc.)

9. Anti-Islamic bigotry that goes far beyond simply criticizing radical Islam, into support for fascism, violence, and genocide (see: Pamela Geller, Robert Spencer, etc.)

10. Hatred for President Obama that goes far beyond simply criticizing his policies, into racism, hate speech, and bizarre conspiracy theories (see: witch doctor pictures, tea parties, Birthers, Michelle Malkin, Fox News, World Net Daily, Newsmax, and every other right wing source)

And much, much more. The American right wing has gone off the rails, into the bushes, and off the cliff.

I won’t be going over the cliff with them.

Frankly, I’m so astonished I don’t know what to say.  But one thing Jewish tradition tells us is that if someone’s repentance is sincere you have no right to question it or doubt the penitent’s sincerity.  And I don’t.  I don’t want to make too much out of this but to me this is something akin to Saul’s conversion at Tarshish.  Charles Johnson was the epitome of the pro-Israel neocon.  He could always be counted on to bash Islam and Arabs.  He’s even smeared me one or two times.  I saw him not as the intellectual leader of the movement, but more as the tough drill sergeant fighting the good neocon fight in the trenches.

Now Johnson calls himself an “independent.”  That’s all right by me.  I’d rather have him as an independent than a neocon.  But what does it all mean?  Of course, you can see in Johnson’s turning (the original meaning of the word teshuva) a statement about the meltdown occurring within the Republican Party amidst internecine warfare between the right and the farther right.  Those like Johnson who’ve retained a certain amount of reason and common sense have come to a parting of the ways with the incipient insanity.  That’s the way the [little green foot]ball bounces.

I think it also signifies the end of the War on Terror and the Bush national security agenda.  People like Johnson are beginning to understand that the 9/11 era is over and our country is returning to a more normal set of political priorities.  While this by no means that Obama’s political agenda will succeed (though it can’t hurt that neocons are deserting the sinking ship), it does mean that the ranks of the far right are thinning.

“So may it be His will.”

For an even more powerful indictment of the Republican right from a former fellow traveler, read this by Andrew Sullivan.  For a more cynical and funny critique of Johnson’s conversion by someone who detests him read Dennis the Peasant.

Hey, is it too much to ask that a few Zionist liberals like the Goldberg boys, Jeffrey and J.J., and Tom Friedman will have a reverse-Benny Morris-like change of heart, abandon their own political and moral infirmities, and come on over to our side?

Charles Johnson Axed from Pajamas Media Management

Monday, December 3rd, 2007

Charles Johnson (Little Green Footballs founder) and Roger Simon created Pajamas Media together in a self-congratulatory media frenzy several years ago. There was much talk about how PJM would become THE address for the conservative blog world. Readers and advertisers would pour in. Jewish entrepreneurs Aubrey Chernick and Jim Koshland sank $7 million into the venture with big expectations. They also recruited a few liberal bloggers like David Corn and Marc Cooper to give them a veneer of bi-partisanship though I note that both of them are gone.

I don’t know enough about their business model (Dennis would say “what business model?!”) to say whether the project succeeded or failed. Alexa ranks the site 51,000 which, while being semi-respectable doesn’t come near ranking of the liberal media news sites Huffington Post (3,000) or Talking Points Memo (21,000), the conservative Drudge Report (1,000), or the centrist Politico (12,000). But the truth is that aside from Michelle Malkin and Little Green Footballs they never attracted the big name right-wing bloggers that might’ve brought them the readers they expected.

From Dennis the Peasant, the blogger scourge of the PJM enterprise, comes the welcome news that Johnson has stepped down (or been booted) from PJM management responsibilities. Dennis speculates that Johnson’s wild-eyed antics as political bomb-thrower have not endeared him to the VC investors Chernick and Koshland:

I have a feeling that it has finally started to dawn on those same venture capitalists that Little Green Footballs, and therefore Chaz, wasn’t exactly enhancing their reputations amongst the sane folk of the world. If you know what I mean. Charles and LGF have always been out there, it’s just that now they’re both so far out there that it can’t really be ignored anymore.

This begs the question if LGF and Johnson embarrass PJM why do they continue to carry his blog at all? Why not just sever ties cleanly? Could it be that LGF’s Alexa ranking of 25,000 has a lot to do with that? Most PJM bloggers rank far lower than PJM itself. LGF and Michelle Malkin are among the only bloggers with a higher ranking than PJM, much higher. So I’m guessing that PJM can’t afford to lose the readers than LGF provides to pump up the site stats for advertisers.

The only thing that would make me happier to know that Johnson has been booted from the PJM pantheon is to read PJM’s death notice.

Now a word on Chernick and Koshland. Chernick is worth approximately $845 million (according to the L.A. Business Journal 2007 listings) after selling his Candle Corp. computer company to IBM and starting a disaster preparedness company, NC4. He also started a venture capital firm, Ignition Capital LLC. Pajamas Media is clearly very small potatoes for Chernick.

As of 2000, he was a trustee of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, an AIPAC-affiliated pro-Israel think tank. He is listed as a “Visionary Partner” in Stand With Us’s 2007 fundraising diner program. SWU is a stridently pro-Israel advocacy group which, among other things, features Rachel Neuwirth harpie-buddy Alyson Rowen Taylor among its staff. Chernick was the dinner chair for the American Freedom Alliance, a group devoted to fighting anti-Americanism including among Muslims. Safe to say that Chernick harbors strong right-wing pro-Israel views. I think my original suspicion that PJM deliberately chose to feature harshly pro-Israel blogs among its founding partners is borne out in Chernick’s own personal views on Israeli politics.

Jim Koshland is a partner in DLA Piper, the Silicon Valley venture capital firm. He is a scion of San Francisco’s wealthiest Jewish family which founded Levi Strauss. Though the Koshlands are known for having liberal politics, I’m guessing that Chernick is the guiding force behind the PJM investment. Personally, I don’t see what Koshland gets out of associating with this project except an opportunity to partner with Chernick in future deals.

Aussie Dave: Using Defamation Claim to Repress Blog Speech

Sunday, June 10th, 2007

Aussie Dave has written once more laying out some of his alleged legal claims against me. Seems he wants to charge me with defamation. I thought it would be worthwhile, if only for a primer in slander, libel and defamation law to examine his claims:

If I do sue you, it will have nothing to do with your political views – as heinous as I find them – and everything to do with defamation.

How about you run this past your lawyers?

“Which brings me to Johnson’s Little Green Footballs, a nominee in the Israel Advocacy category. How does a blog written by a non-Jew and non-Israeli get into a Jewish and Israeli Blogging Awards competition? I guess if you really stretch you could say that Charles always is looking to uphold the most extreme right wing viewpoints offered within Israeli politics. So perhaps that rates him an “honorary Israeli” designation. But seriously, one of the main reasons Charles gets nominated is that he in turn invited Aussie Dave to join him in Pajamas Media (see the latter’s profile). So it’s only natural that Dave would return the favor.”

Looks a lot like an unprivileged statement of fact that is harmful to my reputation, and published as a result of malice on your part.

Then there’s your false assertion I was booted from Pajamas Media.

And I haven’t even looked into the possible copyright violation yet, but it doesn’t really matter. You have repeatedly defamed me. And the onus would be on YOU to prove the truth of these statements, as a defence to a defamation claim. Which will be kind of hard to do, since they are utterly false to begin with.

I want a public, unqualified apology on this blog, with you acknowledging that you have no basis for making these statements.

As for the first claim that he wouldn’t be suing me for my “heinous” political views–let’s laugh that one off. Everyone knows that this is at the heart of his animus towards me.

The salient portion of his quotation from this blog post is this: “…One of the main reasons Charles gets nominated is that he in turn invited Aussie Dave to join him in Pajamas Media (see the latter’s profile). So it’s only natural that Dave would return the favor.” I made what I considered a reasonable inference based on a pattern of facts (i.e. LGF is run by a non-Jewish, non-Israeli author who nevertheless is nominated and wins the Jewish and Israeli Blog Awards). How else would you explain Charles Johnson’s presence in a competition dedicated in its title to groups of which he is not a member (i.e. Jewish/Israeli)?

As to whether or not Aussie Dave was “returning a favor,” let’s look at a not dissimilar situation. Marc Cooper was one of the few liberal bloggers included in PJM (he’s no longer affiliated). He edits LA Weekly (not sure if he’s still the editor). Michael Totten is one of the right of center bloggers at PJM. Marc blogs at PJM, Totten gets published at LA Weekly. Accident? I doubt it. Result of corrupt inside-dealings? No. But just the kind of internal back-scratching that goes on in these sorts of situations. It happens all the time. And hey, it’s entirely possible that Cooper actually likes Totten’s writing, though God only would know why he’d want to publish someone who largely cheers U.S. Mideast policy.

Instead of blaming me for pointing out something that many might find obvious, he should defend LGF’s inclusion in the award competition and tell everyone how proud he is of his buddy Chuck’s fine contribution to the Israeli-Palestinian debate & let it go at that. The fact that he doesn’t–that he makes a wild-eyed inflation of my claim by charging that I’ve called him “corrupt” says reams about his malice toward me.

The way I see it, Dave’s gonna have a hard row to hoe. He has to prove I claimed something was true while having “knowledge of falsity or with reckless disregard for the truth.” The fact that I believed what I said to be true about JIB is an awfully big legal hump to get over. Besides, I was expressing my opinion (strong, for sure) about the Awards and last I checked people were entitled to have opinons that differ with Dave’s. And by the way, if anyone goes back over our colloquy they will find that I made a number of comments which I believed in good faith but which Dave pointed out to me weren’t true. In the very few instances when that occured, I admitted as much here. So if I acted entirely out of malice, how do you explain that Dave?

Further, I’ve asked him to provide proof of his claim that he resigned from Pajamas Media and was not dropped. I’m willing to say what he said was true IF he presents the evidence. But he’s refused to do it here. You give a guy a chance to prove what he’s saying is true that would also show a small bit of good faith on my part and he refuses to give you the satisfaction. That’s Dave all over.

Further, my critique of the way he ran JIB claimed that the process was almost guaranteed, whether intentionally or not, to result in victory to right-wing blogs like LGF. And guess what happened? Those blogs did win. AD thinks I believe there was a blatant conspiracy to achieve such a result. I don’t believe that. But we all wear ideological blinders to a certain extent (Dave much more than others). The best of us try to transcend those preferences or prejudices we might have to embrace a more dispassionate view of the facts. But we all come with preconceived notions. My claim is that JIB, when he ran it, was replete with them and that this virtually guaranteed a certain outcome.

Now, the larger issue here is: can someone like me criticize someone like Aussie Dave without getting charged with a lawsuit? Can someone criticize the ideological leanings of a blogging contest without getting a lawsuit, or the threat of one, slapped on them? This gets at the issue of using blogs and the law as weapons of political intimidation. And it bleeds over into the issue I’ve made one of my mini-theses here: cyber-bullying.

Dave outghta get over this obsession he has with me as the bete noire of the Zionist left. So I said a few things about him that ticked him off. People write those sorts of comments at my blog all the time and I don’t turn around and threaten them with lawsuits. Do they piss me off? Sure. Do I respond strongly, even vehemently in my own defense. You bet. That’s part of the give and take of argument over the interet. But if I went after every person who ever said anything false about me I’d be in court till kingdom come and people could rightly accuse me of misusing both the courts and bullying my opponents–precisely what Aussie Dave and Rachel Neuwirth (and their allies Jewlicious and Steven Plaut) are doing.

Of course, I’m not counting people who post my images at their site to demean me, those folks I will pursue.

And as for that “public, unqualified apology” the bully’s looking for–in your dreams, in your dreams. I’m not Chaim Seidler Feller who provided Neuwirth a similar apology after four years of her legal intimidation. No sane person wants a lawsuit on their hands. I don’t relish spending a year or two fighting this one in court. But if I have to this is a helluva lot more worthy cause than Paris Hilton’s court appearances for her various improprieties.

French Teacher’s Assault Against Islam

Sunday, October 1st, 2006

Someone please explain to me the difference between these threats–the first two from Muslims directed against a French teacher who insulted the Prophet:

“You will never feel secure on this earth. One billion, three hundred thousand Muslims are ready to kill you.”

One of the threats came from a contributor to Al Hesbah, who wrote, “It is impossible that this day pass without the lions [jihadists] of France punishing him.”

The contributor called on his Muslim brethren in France to follow the lead of Muhammad Bouyeri, who murdered the Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh after he made a film denouncing the plight of abused Muslim women.

“May God send some lion to cut his head,” the contributor said of Mr. Redeker, whom he described as a “pig.”

The following threats and boasts come from the Little Green Footballs (a stridently pro-Israel/ anti-Muslim site) comments section:

When is someone goimg [sic] to finally walk up to Ibrahim Hooper [executive director of the Muslim-American group CAIR] and put a bullet in his brain?”

LGF[since deleted]

Goat-fucking koranimals. Unlike my last war, this war, I may have to consider collecting a necklace of ears.
/loading more magazines/gotta finish post-FTX refit and weapons check.
LGF [since deleted]

How in heaven’s name does one side see itself occupying the high ground in this dispute? As far as I’m concerned, the Islamists and Islam-haters are both deeply tainted by hatred and barely repressed violence–even to the point of borderline homicidal rage.

The NY Times reports that a French high school philosophy teacher penned an especially virulent anti-Muslim commentary (French original here and English translation) in the conservative Le Figaro. For his trouble, Muslims have threatened and intimidated him so that he has gone into hiding:

Robert Redeker (French language site), 52, wrote in the center-right daily Le Figaro 10 days ago that Muhammad was “a merciless warlord, a looter, a mass-murderer of Jews and a polygamist,” and called the Koran “a book of incredible violence.”

…Mr. Redeker compared Islam unfavorably to Christianity and Judaism, although he admitted that the history of the Catholic Church was “full of dark pages,” and he criticized the hostile reaction to the pope’s remarks.

“Jesus is a master of love; Muhammad is a master of hatred,” Mr. Redeker wrote, adding, “Whereas Judaism and Christianity are religions whose rites forsake violence and remove its legitimacy, Islam is a religion that, in its very sacred text, as much as in some of its everyday rites, exalts violence and hatred. Hatred and violence dwell in the very book that educates any Muslim, the Koran.”

…“Islam tries to dictate its rules to Europe: opening swimming pools at certain hours exclusively for women, forbidding the caricature of this religion, demanding a special diet for Muslim children in school cafeterias, fighting for wearing the veil in school, accusing free thinkers of Islamophobia.”

What I find most deplorable in the argument against Islam is the historical amnesia that all anti-jihadists have about western religions. Every single one has dark strains of violence running right through their heart. How can we Jews see ourselves as pure as the driven snow when we have a story like the Rape of Dina in our canon? Or how about that would-be act of quintessential child murder: Abraham’s near-sacrifice of Isaac. Or the genocide committed against the Amalekites, Moabites and Jebusites? Or the murder of 29 Palestinians by Kahane follower, Baruch Goldstein? Christianity has the Crusades and Spanish Inquisition in which Jews were killed by their hundreds of thousands.

How can any reasonable human being (and one can assume that a philosophy teacher should have enough knowledge of sources to be aware of these events) then make this lulu of a statement:

Judaism and Christianity are religions whose rites forsake violence and remove its legitimacy…

Would any person who loves his or her religion wish that their tradition better lived up to its values of peace and love? Sure. Would any person work their tail off to ensure their religion lived up to these values in the contemporary world? You bet. But which person who is knowledgeable about religious history could make such a statement with a straight face? It is either a lie or an ignorant swindle as a statement of history.

It’s also worth dwelling on the twisted logic of Redeker’s commentary. When Muslims ask to be allowed to honor their traditions in a public setting they are viewed in the same way conservatives view homosexuals who demand protection against discrimination: somehow they are asking for special rights Thus by asking for the right to observe their rituals French Muslims are somehow imposing them on non-Muslims, a preposterous notion:

Islam tries to dictate its rules to Europe: opening swimming pools at certain hours exclusively for women, forbidding the caricature of this religion, demanding a special diet for Muslim children in school cafeterias, fighting for wearing the veil in school, accusing free thinkers of Islamophobia.

If Muslims believe that the sexes should be separated in public settings like swimming pools, then why is it an imposition for public pools in heavily Muslim neighborhoods to observe separate hours for men and women? As a non-Muslim I can swim at other hours if I wish or I can swim in a sex-segregated pool with Muslims.

Why does Redeker have the temerity to call halal (a set of Muslim rituals that specify permitted and prohibited foods) a diet as if Muslims were merely trying to lose weight. No, these are sacred rituals which all believing Muslims must observe just as believing Jews observe Kashrut. In our own society, efforts are often made to honor ritual observance in public settings like schools, prisons or airline flights. Why is it chutzpah for Muslims in France to expect similar respect?

Why should the concept of wearing a chador freak out French conservatives so? In this country, we allow Jewish children to wear kipot and Muslim girls to wear special clothing to public school. Why is this issue considered so divisive in France?

I realize that France prides itself on being a secular Republic from which religion is supposedly banished. Allowing Muslims to be treated any differently than any other religion would, in the view of some, contribute to the toppling of some of those cherished Republican values. But if France is anything like this country, I would bet that despite the French desire to insulate public discourse from religion–that Christianity has plenty of opportunity to make its presence felt outside the bounds of the Church.

Though I do not know France as well as I know Israel or the U.S., I’d be willing to bet that Muslims there are not asking for any privileges that are not already available to Christians or Jews.

Redeker graces himself with the moniker “free thinker” when he is anything but. He is an hidebound intolerant demagogue. And if Muslims are calling him an Islamophobe I think they are right. He is needlessly afraid that Islam will somehow cause the disintegration of his precious French culture, when it will do nothing of the sort. In fact, the values and traditions of Islam will enrich the French if they’d only relax and give it half a chance. And the converse is also true, that French Muslims will be changed for the better by their experience as members of French society.

Instead of being at war with each other, they should try living together and learning from each other.

Another tired old Cold War rhetorical trick is to equate any movement you don’t like with Communism:

As in the past with Communism, the West finds itself under ideological watch. Islam presents itself, like defunct Communism, as an alternative to the Western world. In the way of Communism before it, Islam, to conquer spirits, plays on a sensitive nerve. It prides itself on a legitimacy which troubles Western conscience, which is attentive to others: it claims to be the voice of the oppressed of the planet. Yesterday, the voice of the poor supposedly came from Moscow, today it originates in Mecca! Again, today, western intellectuals incarnate the eye of the Koran, as they have incarnated the eye of Moscow. They now excommunicate people because of Islamophobia, as they did before because of anti-communism.

This is nothing more than hysterical nonsense: Chicken Little saying “the sky is falling.” It posits a west so weak and tottering that a mere puff of wind from the Muslim faithful would be enough to send it crashing to earth. I believe that the west is much more resilient than Redeker gives it credit for. We have weathered worse threats in the historic past and we will weather threats in the future. None of them need threaten the existence of a liberal, enlightened and tolerant western liberalism.

Redeker fancies himself as someone whose arguments are so powerful that “western intellectuals,” “useful idiots” all (Redeker’s stale phrase), must “excommunicate” him from the club. If I were one of those intellectuals I wouldn’t even give him the satisfaction of expelling him. I’d just point out his idiocy in a public space like this one and move on.

I must caution that I do not approve of the violent Muslim response to Redeker. It is impermissible. No violence of any kind is acceptable in the midst of religious debate. All that being said, I do believe that people who make such irresponsible statements should face moral (not physical) consequences.

As I wrote about the Muhammed cartoons incident, our Supreme Court ruled that a man cannot falsely yell “Fire!” in a crowded theater and expect that his speech will be protected under the First Amendment. The dope in the theater, just like Redeker, is engaging in “unprotected speech.”

Redeker’s commentary falls into this category because it is base incitement to religious hatred. He certainly had a right to make stupid, unfounded accusations. But he also has a right to expect that he will make his opponents extremely angry. So this self-pitying complaint by him to fellow French conservative philosopher, Andre Glucksman, seems obtuse and self-serving:

It’s quite sad. I exercised my constitutional rights, and I am punished for it, even in the territory of the Republic. This affair is also an attack against national sovereignty – foreign rules, decided by criminally minded fanatics, punish me for having exercised a constitutional right, and I am subjected, even in France, to great injury.”

Yes, he has a constitutional right to say stupid things. But he has no right to expect that he will not face consequences for his stupidity. And as this French government official stated:

Education Minister Gilles de Robien…cautioned that a “state employee must show prudence and moderation in all circumstances.”

I find attractive the notion that in a society there are many sources of friction among the groups which comprise it. It is wise and prudent to attempt to find a way to navigate the shoals of this sea of divergent opinion without provoking our neighbors to fury. It is the interests of all of us to try to live together in temperance and tolerance and not to provoke our fellow merely because we can.

I am in favor of a free exchange of ideas. But I am also in favor of a certain degree of prudence and moderation especially when you know your views will stir great enmity. But Redeker appears to believe in complete license when it comes to expressing his views. This is chutzpah of the first magnitude.

I strongly disagree with Elaine Sciolino’s characterization of the debate in Europe:

The Redeker case is the latest manifestation in Europe of a mounting ideological battle that pits those who believe Islam and the Prophet Muhammad can be criticized in the name of free speech against those in the Muslim community who believe no criticism can be tolerated.

I think this is far too charitable to the Redekers of the world. I do not view what they are doing as criticizing Islam in the name of free speech. Rather, they are deliberately insulting Muslims because they detest their religion. They are at war with Islam because they view Islam as being at war with them. They dress up such incitement as free speech and drape themselves in their national flag and constitutional rights. To me, this is mere window dressing for their real intent which is the creation of a pliant western Islam or its banishment entirely from western society.

As for the second half of Sciolino’s statement: while SOME Muslims believe no criticism of Islam can be countenanced, I’m certain that this is NOT the view of the majority of Muslims. The vast majority of Muslims believe that their religion should be accorded the same level of respect as other western religions like Christianity or Judaism. They also believe that their religion, when attacked, should be characterized fairly and accurately. This is something none of the Muslim haters manage to do in their diatribes. I’d be pissed too if I was a Muslim. As a Jew, I sometimes get pissed when my own religion is misunderstood or mischaracterized especially in a public setting. Why is it treif for a Muslim to feel the same way?

There is nothing wrong with criticizing religions. I criticize my own and other religions here in this blog regularly. But I always try to do so by being as accurate as I can in characterizing the beliefs I am criticizing. I try to avoid the luridness and vitriol which characterizes diatribes like Redeker’s or Little Green Footballs. Why can’t the Islam-haters give the religion the respect it deserves even as they criticize it?

Jewish and Israeli Blog Awards Winner: Little Green Footballs (What a Surprise!)

Thursday, February 16th, 2006

The Jerusalem Post and Aussie Dave have announced the winner’s of the right-wing Jewish blogfest, the JIB Awards. Undoubtedly, one of the most surprising outcomes was that Little Green Footballs, the blog that never met a Muslim it didn’t hate, won in the only two categories in which it competed. But nothing was fixed according to Dave. You see anyone could vote and all you had to do was persuade enough people to vote for you. The fact that LGF has 100,000 visitors per day didn’t necessarily mean they had to win, did it?

abu graib tortureNew Abu Graib torture photos–they bore Charles Johnson to tears (photo: SBS/BBC News)

LGF won in the ‘Israeli Advocacy’ and ‘Mega Blog’ categories. You know, I like that term ‘Israeli Advocacy.’ Makes it sound like you’re David taking on Goliath in defending Israel before the world. But personally, I think “advocacy” is just a euphemism for “propaganda.” Go ahead, read something over at Charley Johnson’s blog-shmatte. If you’re a reasonable person you’ll have to admit that the hot doo-doo he serves up over there is pure propaganda. Here’s a random sample of one of his recent headlines: Abu Ghraib, the Endless Hamster Wheel. Here’s a shock: New Abu Ghraib abuse photos anger Arabs. You wouldn’t want to admit that Arabs might have a right to be a tad upset at seeing prisoners’ bodies covered by excrement (one of the delightful features of this new batch), would you? LGF is all attitude and distortion with little concern for truth or fact.

As for the other winners, as I’ve written here before, there isn’t anyone much to the left of Attila the Hun. Well, yes CK of Jewlicious (which won two categories) boasts that he’s a “liberal” though I’ve critiqued that claim…so there is one winner somewhere to the left of Attila. The one blog I WAS rooting for, Jewschool, placed second in two categories. Clearly, virtue and quality are not rewarded in JIBA.

So hats off to JIBA. Mazel tov, Dave, you’ve done it again. Celebrating propaganda and mediocrity in the pro-Israel blog world.