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The Defamation League: The Liberal Media

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  • The Defamation League: The Liberal Media

    THE DEFAMATION LEAGUE: THE LIBERAL MEDIA
    By Eric Alterman

    The Nation
    http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090216/alter man?rel=hp_currently
    Jan 30 2009
    NY

    To delve deeply almost anywhere into the arguments over the Israeli/
    Palestinian conflict is to invite an overload of irony, but let
    us focus for one moment on a fracas caused by Abe Foxman, national
    director of the B'nai B'rith Anti-Defamation League. Irony No. 1 is
    that a "league," as such, does not exist. Foxman is it. (When asked,
    for a New York Times profile, whom in the organization besides himself
    a reporter might interview, Foxman "couldn't think of anyone.") Irony
    No. 2? Under Foxman, "antidefamation" is not really the ADL's line;
    defamation is.

    Take, for example, Foxman's recent attack on Bill Moyers (a
    longstanding friend and occasional supporter of my work). When
    Moyers broadcast a less than laudatory commentary about Israel's
    Gaza invasion, Foxman accused the veteran journalist and liberal
    icon of--I kid you not--"moral equivalency, racism, historical
    revisionism, and indifference to terrorism." (You can read it online at
    pbs.org/moyers/â~@¨journal/blog/2009/ 01/exchange_between_billmoyers&#
    8232;_a.html, together with Moyers's response.)

    The incident says far more about Foxman than Moyers. As M.J. Rosenberg
    of the Israel Policy Forum observed, Moyers "is one of the most admired
    figures in America. This attack will harm not at all. It will, in fact,
    enhance his reputation just as Ed Murrow's was enhanced by the attacks
    on him during the McCarthy era." Still, it is demonstrative of the
    maximalist Manichaean mindset that characterizes so much of American
    Jewish officialdom. Among Moyers's myriad sins, says Foxman, was
    his "ignorance of the terrorist threat against Israel, claiming that
    checkpoints, the security fence, and the Gaza operation are tactics of
    humiliation rather than counter-terrorism." Now really: is it so hard
    to imagine that the checkpoints, security fence and Gaza operations
    are tactics of both humiliation and counter-terrorism? Where, exactly,
    would be the contradiction?

    But for the likes of Foxman, any action Israel takes is de
    facto defensive and solely in the interests of peace, no matter
    how warlike. He goes so far as to attack Barack Obama's choice
    of former Senator George Mitchell as the US envoy to the region
    because--get this--Mitchell is "fair" and "meticulously even-handed,"
    and Foxman says he is "not sure the situation requires that kind
    of approach." Foxman's moral compass has gotten so twisted, he has
    the ADL working to undermine Congressional resolutions condemning
    genocide--specifically, that committed by Turks against the
    Armenians. Foxman does not dispute that genocide took place; rather,
    he argues that it would be inconvenient for Turkish (and Israeli) Jews
    were Congress to take note of it. So we have reached a point where
    an organization founded by Jews in 1913 to "secure justice and fair
    treatment to all citizens alike" is now in the business of defaming
    those with whom its director disagrees and purposely turning a blind
    eye to genocide. In light of the desire of so many anti-Semites to
    treat the Holocaust in a similar fashion, Foxman's position strikes
    this Jew at least as one too many ironies to be tolerated.

    What's more, the defamation of Moyers escalated further. Following
    Foxman's fusillade, New York Times neocon William Kristol inserted
    in a regular column--yet another devoted as usual to the majesty
    of George W. Bush's leadership--an attack on Moyers for allegedly
    "lambast[ing] Israel for what he called its 'state terrorism,' its
    'waging war on an entire population' in Gaza." Like Foxman, Kristol
    also implied that Moyers was guilty of racism.

    Again, read the text of Moyers's remarks. Neither Kristol nor Foxman
    notes his stated belief that "every nation has the right to defend its
    people. Israel is no exception, all the more so because Hamas would
    like to see every Jew in Israel dead," or his deep concern about the
    growth of "a radical stream of Islam [that] now seeks to eliminate
    Israel from the face of the earth." Yet despite the fact that Bill
    Moyers is, well, Bill Moyers, the Times editors not only allowed
    Kristol to deliberately distort and decontextualize his remarks;
    they would not allow Moyers to defend himself in his own words in
    response. After the PBS journalist submitted a letter to the editor,
    he was told, "We will not print that 'William Kristol distorts or
    misrepresents,' and the editors will not budge." They insisted that
    the letter be changed for publication to read, "I take strong exception
    to William Kristol's characterization," and they truncated much else.

    This is pathetic and ridiculous. If one were to survey, say, 1,000
    journalists or even 1,000 New York Times readers and ask them whether
    they were more likely to trust the judgment, honesty or bravery of
    Bill Moyers or of William Kristol, my guess is that the result would
    be a landslide victory in Moyers's favor that would dwarf that of
    Barack Obama's over John McCain. I'd even bet the same would be true
    in a private survey of Times editors. Yet publisher Arthur Sulzberger
    Jr. and editorial page editor Andrew Rosenthal--rather than admit
    their colossal mistake in giving so prestigious and influential a
    perch to Kristol, who was at long last ushered off the page with
    his next column just one week later--instead chose to empower his
    McCarthyite slanders against one of America's most distinguished
    patriots and practitioners of their profession.

    Writing in the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz, the celebrated author
    and patriot David Grossman termed the Gaza operation "just one more
    way-station on a road paved with fire, violence and hatred," and added,
    "our conduct here in this region has, for a long time, been flawed,
    immoral and unwise."

    When Foxman and Kristol have the guts to go after Grossman--who,
    after all, lost his son two years ago in a war both men supported from
    the comfort of their armchairs--then perhaps we might take seriously
    their complaints about the relatively moderate sentiments expressed
    by Moyers. Until then, I fear, we must chalk up their ideological
    fanaticism and their moral and intellectual confusion as yet another
    casualty of this endlessly destructive conflict.

    About Eric Alterman Eric Alterman is a Distinguished Professor of
    English, Brooklyn College, City University of New York, and Professor
    of Journalism at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism. He is also
    "The Liberal Media" columnist for The Nation, a senior fellow and
    "Altercation" weblogger for Media Matters for America, (formerly
    at MSNBC.com) in Washington, DC, a senior fellow at the Center for
    American Progress in Washington, DC, where he writes and edits the
    "Think Again" column, a senior fellow (since 1985) at the World Policy
    Institute at The New School in New York, and a history consultant to
    HBO Films.

    --Boundary_(ID_EEyDNd6FxqXKK911mIkIwQ)--
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