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By controlling key political positions, we will control legislation. By controlling key media positions, we will control what people think. With a generation or two to work with, we will control America. |
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In Our Hands by Joseph Sobran
ONE ISN'T SUPPOSED TO SAY THIS, but many people believe that Israel
now holds the White House, the Senate, and much of the American media
in its hands. This is what is known as an anti-Semitic conspiracy
theory.
The odd thing is that it is held by many Israelis. In an essay
reprinted in the May 27th issue of The New York Times, Ari Shavit, an
Israeli columnist, reflected sorrowfully on the wanton Israeli killing
of more than 100 Lebanese civilians in April: "We killed them out of a
certain naive hubris. Believing with absolute certitude that now,
with the White House, the Senate, and much of the American media in our
hands, the lives of others do not count as much as our own..."
In a single phrase -- "in our hands" -- Shavit has lighted up
the American political landscape like a flash of lightning.
Notice that Shavit assumes as an obvious fact what we Americans
can say publicly only at our own risk. It's surprising, and refreshing,
to find such candor in an American newspaper (though his essay was
reprinted from the Israeli paper Haaretz).
The prescribed cant on the subject holds that Israel is a "reliable
ally" of the United States, despite Israel's long record of double-dealing
against this country, ranging from the killing of American sailors to constant
espionage and technology theft. The word "ally" implies that the
relationship exists because it's in the interests of this country,
though Israel's lobby is clearly devoted to the interests of Israel
itself, and it's childish to suggest otherwise.
You expect that from the Israeli lobby; lobbies are lobbies, after
all. But it's unnerving that the White House, the Senate, and much of
the American media should be "in our hands," as Shavit puts it. Bill
Clinton, a lover of peace since his college days, raised no protest when
the Israelis drove 400,000 innocent Lebanese out of their homes in
"retaliation" for rockets launched into Israel (wounding one Israeli) by
a faction over whom those 400,000 had no control.
Congress, of course, was supine as usual at this latest extravagance
of Israeli "defense." Congress too is "in our hands."
A recent article in The Washington Post likened the Israel lobby's
power to that of the gun and tobacco lobbies. But there is one enormous
difference. Newspapers like the Post aren't afraid to criticize the gun
and tobacco lobbies. They will say forthrightly that those lobbies seek
goals that are dangerous for this country. They don't dare say as much
of the Israeli lobby.
But much of the press and electronic media are "in our hands"
in a more active sense: They supply misleading pro-Israel propaganda in
the guise of news and commentary, constantly praising Israeli "democracy"
and ignoring Israel's mistreatment of its non-Jewish minorities -- mistreatment
which, if any government inflicted it on a Jewish minority, would earn
it the fierce opprobrium of our media.
No decent American would think of reducing American Jews to the
status of Palestinians in Israel. The idea is almost absurd. Yet Americans
are taxed to subsidize the oppression of Palestinians, on the flimsy pretext
that they are helping an "ally" in America's own self-interest to be hated
and despised by the whole Muslim world.
All this is interesting less for what it tells us about Israel
than for what it tells us about America. Frank discussion of Israel is
permitted in Israel, as Shavit's article illustrates. It's rarely permitted
here. Charges of anti-Semitism and a quiet but very effective boycott will
be the reward of any journalist who calls attention to his own government's
-- and his own profession's -- servitude to Israeli interests.
Very few in America are doing anything to change this sorry state
of affairs. Shavit wrote his article in the desperate hope of turning back
his countrymen and his government from a morally and politically perilous
course. At least he can hope. It's harder for us, when our own government
isn't in our hands.
Joseph Sobran is a nationally syndicated columnist who now maintains
a Website at http://www.sobran.com
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