The evil of banality – when blaming Israel becomes commonplace

The evil of banality – when blaming Israel becomes commonplace | JPost | Israel News.

( Painfully true… – JW )

04/08/2014 21:44John Kerry

John Kerry Photo: REUTERS

John Kerry’s peace process crusade has triggered moral vertigo in a region where false moral equivalence enables Palestinian extremism.

Desperate to scare Israel into compromise, convinced that democratic Israel can be bullied more easily than the fractured, autocratic Palestinians, Kerry and company have targeted Israeli wariness more than Palestinian intransigence.

In that spirit, last week, The New York Times ran a cloying, overly-sentimentalized article about a freed Palestinian murderer trying to rebuild his life. This week, its foreign policy columnist Thomas Friedman outrageously compared Sheldon Adelson, a Republican billionaire who happens to disagree with Freidman, with Ali Khameini, the Iranian ayatollah who would happily kill Friedman. A half-century ago Hannah Arendt said Adolf Eichmann’s plodding, fill-in-the-dots bureaucratic amorality reflected the “banality of evil.”

Today we are seeing the evil of banality. Genuine bad follows when otherwise good people join the conventional pile-on that overly faults Israel while excusing Palestinians.

The Times profile “Remaking a Life, After Years in an Israeli Prison,” was terror porn. Using relativistic comparisons and focusing on every life’s banal, meaning mundane, aspects, the article humanized a freed terrorist and implicitly excused his crime – although in fairness it also introduced readers to his victim, Israel Tenenbaum, a 72-year-old Holocaust survivor. Still, “Muqdad Salah is a man in a hurry,” we learned, eager to compensate for his lost years.

This murderer is “one of 78 long-serving Palestinian prisoners freed from Israeli jails,” who are “Demonized as terrorists by Israelis and lionized as freedom fighters by Palestinians” – there being no objective standards.

These nice “middle-aged men” now work hard at “earning their first driver’s licenses, leveraging $50,000 grants from the Palestinian Authority to build apartments or start businesses, searching for wives and struggling to start families.”

Predictably, the Times found an accidental terrorist.

Despite being treated as a Palestinian “hero,” poor “Mr. Salah” reported of his crime: “I wasn’t planning it… I didn’t intend to kill him.”

Did the New York Times call Osama bin-Laden and his al-Qaida thugs people “demonized as terrorists by Americans and lionized as freedom fighters by Muslims?” Did any features follow poor “Mr.” bin-Laden on the lam, unable even to patronize his favorite hummus place?

Similarly, I saw no articles disrespecting the Boston Marathon victims by wondering how comfortable the younger bomber, Dzohkar Tsarnaev, is in his jail cell. What kind of Internet access does he have? Have his feelings been hurt by all the anger against him?

The article notes that “Mr. Salah was welcomed…  by a cacophonous crowd in this village of 4,000 near the Palestinian financial hub of Nablus.” That proves that the PA celebrates killers. And if Palestinians have a “financial hub,” maybe there is more autonomy and better Palestinian quality of life under Israeli rule than the propagandists admit.

While this Times article was morally obtuse, Thomas Friedman’s column was obscene. Called “Sheldon: Iran’s Best Friend,” its tagline was “How Sheldon Adelson and Iran are both trying to destroy Israel.”

Really? Adelson is “trying” to destroy Israel? Adelson, an American patriot exercising his right of free speech, is an “ally” of the Tehran terrorists who squelch free speech? I understand. Sometimes as a columnist, your own shtick shackles you.

Friedman thought he found a clever way to show that Israel’s most ardent supporters unknowingly aid Israel’s enemies by perpetuating a status quo Friedman abhors. But what might have worked as a rant over drinks seemed mean and amoral in print.

In 1940, Franklin Roosevelt’s supporters did not compare Wendell Willkie to Adolf Hitler even though Willkie, a wealthy corporate executive, opposed FDR. Today, Friedman (and I) would object if someone called Barack Obama a Hamasnik because both the president and those Islamist hooligans oppose Israeli settlements.

Politics is not mathematics. The transitive property “a = a” cannot equate genocidal theocrats like Hamas and Khameini with democrats playing politics like Obama and Adelson. (Yes, that sentence may mark the first time Obama and Adelson are compared favorably or that Adelson is called a democrat!) Friedman’s diatribe also incorrectly called Israel’s settlements “colonialism.” Colonialism involves settling foreign areas, as England did with India. Israel’s legal, historical and ideological ties to the West Bank should force even Israel’s critics to use different words.

Friedman echoed Kerry’s camp in boosting the boycott movement as a threat to Israel, suggesting BDS is “gaining adherents.” These are vague weasel words.

The movement for conservative “red” states to secede from the US is also “gaining adherents” – one at a time in a nation of 300 million-plus – does that convince Friedman America should separate?

I want Kerry to succeed. I wish Israel was leading the peace process, tapping its collective genius to solve this problem whereby the intractability of continued Palestinian intransigence nevertheless does not negate the impracticality of perpetual Israeli control over millions of unwilling subjects.

Similarly, I distinguish between the Boycott Israel crowd’s anti-Israel intent and the Blame Israel First crowd’s anti-Israel effects. The Boycotters diabolically mask harsh animus against the Jewish people with human rights rhetoric. Most Blame Israel Firsters are simply sloppily following a Western trend that excuses Palestinian sins.

Nevertheless, treating Israel as the problem is convenient albeit false, as PA President Mahmoud Abbas’s actions in sabotaging the peace process this week confirmed. But with his people cast as the innocent Jesus to the dastardly collective Jew, Abbas knows he can appear blameless.

If this peace process fails, expect more articles comparing Abbas and Netanyahu or Abbas and Adelson.

After all, Abbas and Netanyahu each have two “a”s in their last names, while Abbas and Adelson have names starting with an “a.”

But even as blaming Israel becomes banal, it will still have harmful, even evil, consequences, making peace more elusive than ever.

The author is professor of history at McGill University and the author, most recently, of Moynihan’s Moment: America’s Fight Against Zionism as Racism published by Oxford University Press.

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5 Comments on “The evil of banality – when blaming Israel becomes commonplace”

  1. wingate's avatar wingate Says:

    The more I hear about the looming ”Big One ” around Los Angeles or the Yellowstone Super Volcano, the more I get the frightening impression that such could be the imminent answer of the Guardian of Israel to the anti – Israeli politics of the present, evil and illegal US government……..”I will curse those who curse Israel” said the one and only God ! The politics of the present US government are so wicked and evil that we can hardly take it anymore – and I guess that HE who said that ”Israel is the apple of my eye”, HE is fuming at the US government ! Woe, woe to a USA whos government is constantly cursing Israel – desaster could strike you – even destroy you at any moment ! How could such an evil government take over and ruin the once great nation of the USA ………..?

    • Joseph Wouk's avatar josephwouk Says:

      WG…

      Relax. The Holy One, (blessed be he) can find a more just way to help his people than by wiping out North America.

      The American people (not government) are of the righteous ones. Without their support, Israel may never have made it this far.

      Because of them, we know that the US government is constrained from hurting us too badly.

      You would find it hard to believe just how much Israelis LOVE America, but especially Americans.

      So please don’t imagine that the One would hurt his righteous because of a temporary mistake in their choice of leaders.

      I have faith that he’ll guide his own to a MUCH better solution.

      • Louisiana Steve's avatar Louisiana Steve Says:

        Right on! If the Good Lord started striking down those who cursed Israel, he would have his hands full before even considering the USA, who by the way, is the most supportive country in the world for Israel.

        • wingate's avatar wingate Says:

          Dear friends – I do hope that neither the Big One nor any other disaster is going to happen in the USA ! I know what the true americans ( democraically minded, based on judeo-christian ethics ) did for the world in general and especially for Israel and I appreciate that a lot ! ”To those who is given a lot – a lot will be asked ” – I think the USA has been extremly blessed, therefore I think the Guardian of Israel is expecting a lot from the USA, especially a clear and honest position of support for Israel ! These days, I see on one hand that in the USA there is a government at work which clearly, systematically acts not only against Israel, but also against the US – citizens by systamatically destroying every aspect of the USA (society, economy, armed forces ) – is it because he hates everything the USA stands for, because he hates the whites in general, because his sexual interests are questioned ? Now this wicked, evil government ( president ) blames the jews for the failure of the socalled ”peace process” with the terror organisation PLO when actually there should be no talks at all with
          terrorists ! But this US government ( president ), instead of supporting the only democracy in the ME supports the greatest terror state (Iran) to get the nuclear bomb ! ( is it because Mr. BHO is in fact a muslim ? ). By destroying systematically the USA this government is a lethal threat to the West in general – who would fill the gap when the USA would finally be ruined by team BHO – I dont even wanna think about that ! On the other hand I read and hear about increasing potential for desaster in the USA – it is therefore that I think that
          this is a possible thing to happen – maybe in connection with the US governments actions, I dont know. I have that feeling which tells me that ” a lot has been given to the USA ” and they just messed it up to many times ! I hope that the Guardian of Israel has mercy with the USA, with all of us and is helpin us to get along !

  2. Steve Ward's avatar Steve Ward Says:

    Nevertheless, with a maximum of 2¼ centuries to go….

    m.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/108400/jewish/The-End-of-Days.htm


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