Showing posts with label antisemitism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label antisemitism. Show all posts

Monday, July 4, 2016

newspapers and Jeremy Corbyn: "I think I got away with it"newspapers

I watched this rather nasty hearing on the subject of antisemitism by the Home Affairs Committee, chaired as usual by Keith Vaz, who opened proceedings with a few warm remarks about his long-standing friendship with the chief witness.

Towards the end of the hearing Jeremy Corbyn was asked if Shami Chakrabarti�s report clarified what antisemitism is. He duly obliged with the following definition:
�Antisemitism is where you use epithets to criticise people for being Jewish, you attack Jewish people for what they are, it is completely unacceptable, and I would have thought it�s very obvious what antisemitism is, just as much as would be very obvious what Islamophobia is -  if you criticise Moslem people for what they are, what they are alleged to believe, even if they believe in it or not, and I think in the report Ms Chakrabarti makes it very clear that we have to condemn both of those with great vigour equally.�

Shami Chakrabarti was sitting behind Jeremy Corbyn, and she appeared to be acting as his �minder�. She nodded and shook her head, scribbled away on a pad and occasionally slipped a post-it note onto the table in front of her client. 

Next to Ms Chakrabarti in the front row, directly behind Jeremy Corbyn, sat a stern-faced man in a dark suit who Keith Vaz referred to as �Mr. Rotherham.�  He and Ms. Chakkrabarti gave each other meaningful looks, and he too passed a post-it note to Mr. Corbyn. Keith Vaz spotted this and scolded them. 

t�te-�-t�te

Keith Vaz queried Ms Chakrabarti�s independence in the light of her last-minute decision to join the Labour Party. He suggested that people might regard her report as a whitewash.

�No no�, protested Mr. Corbyn. �Shami is completely independent�. 

There was a great deal of waffling about what Mr. Corbyn meant in his accidental comparison between Israel and �Islamic states�. He insisted that he meant it �lower case�  i.e., Islamic states in general, not �the� Islamic State.

�Ms Chakrabarti, there is no need to nod at the back� said Mr. Vaz. 
This did not go down very well with Ms Chakrabarti and the stern-faced man. Both glared thunderously thenceforth.

Victoria Atkins, James Berry, David Burrowes, Nusrat Ghani, Tim Loughton, Stuart C McDonald, Chuka Umunna, and David Winnick were the MPs who questioned Jeremy Corbyn.


He said he �totally and profoundly disagreed� with the views of Holocaust denier Paul Eisen. 
Mr Corbyn reflected on his meeting with Board of Deputies president Jonathan Arkush earlier this year, which, he said had �lasted quite a long time. We got on quite well. Look if we want a strong cohesive society, we oppose antisemitism because it divides us�. 
The Labour leader said he had attended events about the Israel-Palestinian conflict where Holocaust deniers had been removed for making antisemitic comments regarding the Shoah. 
He had travelled to Ealing in west London for tea with Raed Salah because the sheikh was under house arrest, he added. 
Questioned on why he had accused Guardian journalist and JC columnist Jonathan Freedland of "subliminal nastiness", Mr Corbyn said Mr Freedland had "made comments detrimental to my character".

Mr. Corbyn spoke of his agreeable conversations with �Mr. Akrush�, mispronouncing his name repeatedly.   Nusrat Ghani�s approach was rigorous and rather fierce. When Mr. Corbyn kept including �all forms of racism� in his replies she insisted on talking specifically about antisemitism. 
Mr. Corbyn responded to her adversarial tone by becoming increasingly insouciant. 
She asked if he intended to accept the invitation to visit the leader of the Israeli Labour Party.  His evasive answer implied that he would not be accepting it, and it�s widely believed that he hasn�t actually replied at all.

Victoria Atkins was also fittingly adversarial. She raised the subjects of Stephen Sizer and that �cup of tea with Raed Salah�

�I had a discussion with him�, said Corbyn. 

�Paul Eisen founded a group called Deir Yassin Rembered. Deir Yassin was a village that was destroyed during the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948.�

An anti-Israel version of an event, plucked from its proper historical context, unchallenged by the committee. When controversial matters appertaining to Israeli/Arab history are being distorted I do not believe members of the Home Affairs committee are capable of identifying propaganda. 
As I�ve said so many times before, Jeremy Corbyn and his ilk have always embraced the Palestinian version of events as if they were definitive, absolute and conclusive. 

Corbyn�s total lack of interest in historic events from the pro-Israeli perspective belies all his disingenuous claims about bringing people together, engaging with both sides or talking with �people you disagree with� to secure �peace�. He claimed to have visited Israel many times, and to have spoken to Israelis, but he did not go into detail. 

David Winnick is too doddery for his shirt I�m afraid, and his supposed support for Israel is half-hearted bordering on full-scale elusive. He appeared to be saying that Israel is guilty as charged, but blaming Jews for it is racist. 

 �Bombardment of Gaza� intoned Corbyn.

David Burrowes livened things up a bit by mentioning the Hamas Charter, and Keith Vaz obligingly read out the well-known passage, as follows:
 �The prophet, peace and prayer be upon him said: the time will not come until Muslims will fight Jews and kill them until the Jews hide behind rocks and trees which will cry �O Muslim, there is a Jew hiding behind me, come on and kill him� �

�It�s unacceptable but you have to talk to extremes on both sides.� said the witness.

Chuka Umunna wondered why Corbyn didn�t �call out� Mark Wadsworth, the individual from Momentum who had offended the Jewish MP Ruth Smeeth at the infamous launch of the Chakrabarti report. He said he�d seen the video. In fact we�ve all seen the videos of what happened. From every conceivable angle.  He also brought up Jackie Walker�s offensive comment about Jews financing the slave trade.

Tim Laughton enquired about the role of Seumas Milne, Corbyn�s right-hand man and director of communications. 
�Is he a friend of Hamas and Hezbollah?�  
�You�d better ask him. He�s a man of immense intellect and a scholar. He�s written many books (so has Ernie Wise) and he works extremely hard...�

There is a video, said Mr Laughton, showing Milne praising Hamas for their spirit of resistance and declaring that they would not �be broken� 
He was not allowed to show the video to the committee, but Mr. Vaz promised to write to Mr. Corbyn about it at a later date. 

Stuart C McDonald wasn�t sure if the report defined what antisemitism is. Corbyn duly obliged:(forgive the repetition.)
�Antisemitism is where you use epithets to criticise people for being Jewish, you attack Jewish people for what they are. It is completely unacceptable and I would have thought it�s very obvious what antisemitism is, just as much as would be very obvious what Islamophobia is. If you cri�icise Moslem people for what they are - what they are alleged to believe - even if they believe in it or not, and I think in the report Ms Chakrabarti makes it very clear that we have to condemn both of those with great vigour equally.�
Is everyone expected to swallow that?  Yes, he really did use a glottal stop, and yes, I think he really does believe the above. It seems he doesn�t actually think Muslims believe what they profess to believe, namely Islam. He evidently doesn�t believe that the more devout they are the more antisemitic and homophobic they�re likely to be. He equates antisemitism (hatred of Jews) with Islamophobia, (criticism of Islam) both of which he regards as racist. 

James Berry: 
�Mr Corbyn, do you agree that Israel has the right to exist? " 
�Sorry?� 
�Do you agree that Israel has the right to exist?� 
�The State of Israel exists of course� 
�Then you agree that it has the right to exist?� 
�Yes, and all proposals that are put forward are actually -- that our party�s policy is for a two state solution.� 
�Do you understand why Jewish people find it at best offensive and at worst downright antisemitic to have to continually justify Israel�s right to exist?� 

�I�m sure they do. There are issues about Israel and its treatment of Palestinian people and occupation of the West Bank and the siege of Gaza, and all proposals for a peace process are based around the removal of the settlements and of course an end of the siege of Gaza. Listen! I�be been there many times, and what�s happening is wrong. The killing is wrong..� 
�On both sides, presumably� 
�Absolutely, but there isn�t a way forward that doesn�t involve dialogue, that doesn�t involve acceptance of the rights of Palestinian people  and recognition of a Palestinian state, that surely has to be the right way forward.�

The siege of Gaza!
The settlements!!
The �treatment� of the Palestinian people!!!
The occupation!!!! 

No-one challenged him on any of that, so I think Jeremy Corbyn could safely say �I was antisemitic a couple of times, but I think I got away with it.�


Saturday, July 2, 2016

newspapers and The Chakrabarti report and other disastersnewspapers



Believe it or not, I often refresh my brane by looking (through my impartial spectacles) at arguments diametrically opposed to my own. We all know how easy it is to slip into the habit of confining yourself to your own circle, if only to snaffle new currency to revitalise your tired old arguments. 

So many articles have appeared about the Chakrabarti fiasco that I wasn�t even going to add to the verbiage, but on the other hand, I didn�t think hiding in a cupboard would look much better. I�ll leave the disastrous launch to everyone else, incriminating videos and all, and stick to the other disaster - the allegedly inadvertent insult within Corbyn�s speech. 

I followed a link (via Guido) to Labour List, a website I wouldn�t ordinarily read. 

I admit I only skimmed Shami�s report, but from a quick perusal I got the impression that it was largely autobiographical. Also, it seemed to me that she was trying to create a new, cast-iron definition of antisemitism of her own, a task that has defeated many better qualified minds than hers.  Was it necessary to reinvent the wheel instead of looking at the recent antisemitic outbursts and analyzing the underlying zeitgeist in the Labour Party? I thought the inquiry into antisemitism in the Labour Party was originally set up to investigate antisemitism in the Labour party.  It seems to have migrated, transmogrified into something rather different.

However, John Mann MP, a supporter of Israel, praises Shami�s work, which surprised me.
I wonder if he was flattered that she followed several of his recommendations. Maybe it got better as it went along?
In my view, banning the word "Zio� will only generate a substitute euphemism. 

Shami recommends that: �Labour members resist the use of Hitler, Nazi and Holocaust metaphors ..� which looks almost as though she believes that the temptation to use such terms is practically irresistible - you know, naughty but nice! And they say Jeremy was never a great wordsmith.

Shami has taken full responsibility for Jeremy Corbyn�s infamous comparison between Israel and Islamic State. She thinks it�s merely a re-worded version of a paragraph in her report. By way of an explanation a commenter called Peter contributed this:

And just in case anyone is in any doubt, below is the substantive point that the author of the report made, and which the Labour leader was referring to (the below text is taken directly from the report): 
�To suggest, for example, that all or most Jewish people are wealthy or interested in wealth or finance or political or media influence or less likely to be of the left or likely to hold particular or any views on the subject of the Middle East is a classic stereotype. Equally, to doubt the political or national loyalty of a Jewish person on account of their actual or perceived connection to fellow Jews elsewhere around the world including in Israel is (unwittingly or otherwise) to tap into an age-old antisemitic conspiracy trope that will inevitably and understandably leave your Jewish friends, neighbours or fellow activists feeling vulnerable, excluded and even threatened.....
Similarly, I have heard Muslims (en masse) being derided as inherently sexist and/or antisemitic and potentially of split or dubious loyalty in the context of Party membership and political participation. Once more, they are sometimes expected to explain and condemn the actions of Isis or particular terrorist acts before, or more vehemently, than anyone else. This is simply not fair.�
Let�s look at that statement.The first paragraph is all well and good. Peter may be right. Shami was doing what Shami does, bringing an imaginary Muslim equivalence into all matters related to Jews and Judaism.  It�s her way of �testing� an argument, and it throws us back onto the insoluble, catch 22, circularity of the status quo. (Antisemitism is racism.  Islam promotes antisemitism. Accusing Muslims of antisemitism is racist.) 

People like Shami believe every example of antisemitism must be compared with a similar example of �Islamophobia� in order to test its validity. 
To Shami this is fair, but supporters of Israel and critics of Islam see it as constructing an unnecessary and inappropriate moral equivalence. That is one reason why Shami was the wrong person to conduct this inquiry. 

As for Jeremy Corbyn�s reworded version of Shami�s essay, well, what can I say. 
�Our Jewish friends are no more responsible for the actions of Israel or the Netanyahu government than our Muslim friends are for those of various self-styled Islamic states or organisations.�
If you�re going to create an analogy to explain the unfairness of mindlessly associating one thing with another, you could take (as in this case) �Jews� and �Israel�, and compare them to two other benign things that are often unfairly linked. For example:   
 �Our Jewish friends are no more responsible for the actions of Israel or the Netanyahu government than our feathered friends are for....the fashion for fascinators� 

Well, I couldn�t think of a good example, but you see what I mean. Why was it necessary to bring Muslims into it at all? And after all, the analogy he presented pitted "Jews" and �something bad� against "Muslims" and �something bad�.  Not all of us agree that Israel is something bad, or, for that matter, that the Israeli government is doing anything more than protecting its citizens from something that is extremely bad.  

And it all leads back to the BBC and the way it has successfully demonised the Jewish State till it automatically becomes �something bad� in the minds of the gormless and the uninformed, and when Jeremy Corbyn speaks as if that is a given  no-one bats an eyelid.


Somewhere online, in a comment or in an article, it was pointed out that only Corbyn and his strategists could have turned the launch of a serious report about antisemitism in the Labour Party into another bog standard promotional event for the politics of Jeremy Corbyn. Good point. They�re unstoppable.

Saturday, June 25, 2016

newspapers and Opting out of the hard shitnewspapers


We�ve had a couple of days to think. This piece by Fraser Nelson interested me, both for the article itself and also for some of the below-the-line responses. 
Apparently, before resigning, David Cameron had asked his aides: �Why should I have to do the hard shit for someone else, just to hand it to them on a plate?�
Fraser�s answer, and I suspect he speaks for many people, went something like: �you are the prime minister, and many people are counting on you to do so.� 

Looking back over events, it seems that Cameron handled the whole affair quite badly, showing little evidence of foresight. He could have done with one of those flow-charts that help people make decisions. You know, diagrams that offer yes/no routes to an eventual crock of gold. 
It now looks as if he hadn�t even properly considered the possible outcomes of the referendum - quite simple; yes or no. Not just yes.
Theory of change

It looks also as though he hadn�t properly considered the outcome of his promise to support Brexit if he failed to secure significant reforms for the UK, and then refusing to admit the inadequacy of the crumbs he was fobbed off with, then pretending that the referendum was about leaving or remaining in a �reformed EU�.  
Not forgetting a few other things he hadn�t properly thought through, such as prematurely announcing that he didn�t intend to stand as PM next time round. 
Then, there�s Turkey.
Oh yes, and announcing that as well as not �seeing why he should do the hard shit�, he announced that he wouldn�t do anything at all till October, thus provoking threats from various shunned EU officials about the bad shit in store if we didn�t bloody well get a move on with article 50.

The one thing that underpins this dire situation is this business about immigration. It seems to me that the BBC has played a huge part in toxifying this topic. There are two parts to the public�s worries about immigration, one mentionable, the other unmentionable. 

Mentionable - barely - is the numbers argument. We�re a small island with limits. We can�t fit everyone in. We can�t accommodate them all. We�re bursting at the seams. 
Also in this category is the question of economic inequality, a conundrum that works two ways. The expats whose pensions stretch further in, say, Spain, and the Brits who abandon all principles and amass fortunes working in Arab states. 

But the very real effect on the UK by migrant workers whose willingness to work harder for less, causing job losses for locals and driving down wages, has at last made this particular aspect of immigration, and the attendant fears thereof, mentionable.

Then there is the unmentionable. Something that only people like Paul Weston or Tommy Robinson dare to articulate. Outwardly it�s called �cultural�. It�s the way that some neighbourhoods have become alienating and frightening to the original residents and to outsiders. 

Most of all the fear is of Islam and the Islamification that�s spreading through Europe. It is already causing deep division here. But we cannot mention it without being ostracized by the fools and the blind, who think tolerance, as well as wealth, should be redistributed - to the deserving and the undeserving, indiscriminately. 

I have to generalise about the BBC. I know there are some exceptions, but broadly speaking the BBC has always taken Palestinian propaganda at face value and swallowed it whole. Lock, stock and barrel. People running the BBC have little or no knowledge of history, and no doubt most of them still believe, along with Ken Livingstone, the fictitious propaganda that more than 700,000 innocent Palestinians were driven out of their homes at gunpoint by Jewish terrorists in 1948 to create Israel.  Let�s face it, if you believed that, you might see things the way they do, coupled with the inexplicably romanticised version of Islam that the BBC continually portrays.

That is the only explanation for, e.g.,  the BBC Trust�s inability to understand why Tim Willcox�s �clumsy� / �badly worded� remark to an Israeli-born witness after the Paris terrorist attack was inappropriate and offensive. They seemed to think he had made a valid point, and, after all, had apologised for unwisely blurting out �Jews� when he meant �Israelis�. 
Their faith in the righteousness of the Palestinian cause prevented them from understanding that the Paris attacks were part of something much more fundamental than �revenge� for what they erroneously believe to be a �Jewish-only� Israel, a country illegally and unjustifiably obtruded on stolen �Muslim land�. The fundamental reality that believers of such ahistorical fiction could never grasp is of course that the Paris attacks were fuelled by the same old same old. Antisemitism. 

The BBC could easily show the public just a fraction of the hatred that is openly promulgated throughout the Arab world. Not difficult. It�s on the internet, on Arabic TV, in Arabic education. But they never, ever do. 
That is why there�s still a taboo over criticising Islam. It�s branded racist. It makes you a bad person, a hater. The world turned upside down.

I don�t know if this is wishful thinking, but I�m beginning to think that underlying those fears about immigration is a deeper fear of creeping Islamisation. There is reason to worry. Evidence is gradually seeping through. But as of now, we have to euphemise it or be branded bigots. 

Earlier today Jeremy Corbyn eventually came out to make a speech, but it was so boring that both the BBC and Sky cut to Nicola Sturgeon and then to some EU bigwigs pronouncing on how they were going to punish us for rejecting them.


Corbyn has announced an enquiry into immigration, and why so many Labour voters opted to Leave. That�s in addition to the enquiry about antisemitism, which has expanded to embrace Islamophobia, racism and bigotry. He ignored the more interesting topic, that of those dastardly mutinous plans to depose him.

It�s like, break open the popcorn, and be entertained by everyone opting out of the hard shit.

Monday, May 30, 2016

newspapers and John Humphrys, recruiting sergeantnewspapers


No blogging time for me for a few days, but I recommend Sarah AB�s article on Harry�s Place  about John Humphrys�s bungled interview with Jackie Walker.  I wholeheartedly agree with Sarah AB:
He did not do a very good job.  She was introduced as having been suspended for comments she made about Israel.  Although a discussion of Israel prompted her remarks, this isn�t an accurate summary of the reasons for her suspension. He also failed to pick up on the significance of the term �chief financiers� or take issue with the dubious nature of some �historical� accounts of the relationship between Jews and the transatlantic slave trade. 

Frustratingly, Humphrys� line of questioning, even though it failed to probe the real problems with what she said, was open to a charge of unfairness.   He claimed she�d said in effect,  �let�s get over the Holocaust� (not really) and then said that there was no need for her to �invoke the Holocaust� (when she wasn�t the first to mention it in the original Facebook conversation), and then claimed she implied �the Jews had it coming, almost�.�
The Slugger O�T piece is very good, too. 

The BBC is very slow to pick up on this kind of thing. By the time they�ve decided it�s �newsworthy� people like Walker have had plenty of time to conjure up a defence and even convince themselves of its righteousness.  
The problem is that John Humphrys and co. are jacks of all trades and masters of none. He obviously hadn�t been properly briefed. Most of your all-purpose anchors and presenters are out of their depth when dealing with any serious subtlety and complexity. Time constraints as well.

Listeners who hadn�t already read about this incident must have wondered what all the fuss was about. �Reinstate the poor woman,� they�d be shouting at the radio ... �leave her alone�.

Humph has probably done Corby�s Antisemite Party a great service; hope they�re grateful. Probably recruited a few extra BDSers as well.