TPMCafe
« Mitchell Today: Obama Plans To Push For Final Status Negotiations Now | Home | Loyalty and Democracy in Lieberman's Israel: Interviews with Israeli Knesset members Alex Miller and Ahmad Tibi »

Censored by the Huffington Post and Imprisoned By The Past: Why I Made 'Feeling the Hate in Jerusalem'

user-pic

by Max Blumenthal

On Wednesday, I walked around central Jerusalem with my friend, Joseph Dana, an Israel peace activist who has lived in the country for three years. We interviewed young people on camera about the speech President Barack Obama planned to deliver to the Muslim world the following day in Cairo. Though our questions were not provocative at all - we simply asked, "What do you think of Obama's speech" - the responses our interview subjects offered comprised some of the most shocking comments I have ever recorded on camera. They were racist, hateful, and incredibly ignorant, and were mostly couched within a Zionist context - "this is our land, Obama!" The following day, we edited an hour of interviews into a 3:30 minute video package and released it on Mondoweiss and on the Huffington Post.

Within a few hours, I received an email from a Huffington Post administrator informing me he had scrubbed my video from the site. "I don't see that it has any real news value," the administrator told me. "For me it only proves that one can find drunk people willing to say just about anything. Especially drunk, moronic people." For the first time, the premier clearinghouse for online news and opinions had suppressed one of my posts.

Other bloggers and commenters criticized the video on similar grounds. Their complaints generally went like this: In order to advance an agenda, Max Blumenthal exploited the wild remarks of a bunch of drunk Jewish frat-boys innocently showing off in front of their friends. The footage contained in his video in no way reflects what the Israeli public thinks. If Max went to a bar in any college town in the United States he would find the same level of ignorance and racism. Ron Kampeas at the JTA has written that I need "to grow up and put [my talents] to good use." (While Kampeas praised some of my other video reports exposing right-wing Christians, this latest video revealing the extremism of some Israeli and American Jews seemed to hit too close to home.)

The criticism of my video raised an interesting journalistic issue: Is reporting any less credible when interview subjects are drinking alcohol? Of course not. Journalists interview people at bars all the time, especially in broadcast packages. Beer does not, to my knowledge, contain a special drug that immediately infects drinkers with white supremacist sentiments, violent rhetoric, and anti-democratic tendencies. I get drunk as much as any social drinker and I have never called for "white power" or declared, "fuck the niggers!" as one of my interviewees did. No amount of alcohol could make me express opinions that were not authentically mine. If anything, alcohol is a crude form of truth serum that lubricates the release of closely held opinions and encourages confessional talk.

The notion that the racist diatribes in my video emerged spontaneously from a beery void is a delusion, but for some, it is a necessary one. It allows them to erect a psychological barrier against acknowledging the painful consequences of prolonged Zionist indoctrination. And it enables them to dismiss the disturbing spectacle of young Jews behaving like fascist soccer hooligans in the heart of the capitol of Israel and the spiritual home of the Jewish people.

The people in my video were not white trash, nor were they the "extreme right-wing fringe" as some bloggers have called them. They were the college-educated sons and daughters of middle and upper class American Jews from cosmopolitan metropolises and genteel suburbs. Some had come to Israel on vacation, some had made aliyah, and some told me they were planning to move to Israel in the near future. Many were dual citizens of America and Israel. They may have behaved in a moronic way, but they will not grow up to toil in the custodial arts. Many of these kids will move into white-collar jobs and use their influence to advance Israeli initiatives. Programs like Birthright Israel -- a few of those in my video were on Birthright tours -- exist for the exclusive purpose of indoctrinating American Jews into unyielding, unthinking supporters of Israel. Thus the kids in my video represent at least one aspect of the Zionist project's future base of political sustenance.

I do not and have never claimed that the characters that appeared in my video were representative of general public opinion in Israel. They reflect only a slice of reality, which is reality nonetheless. On the other hand, a new Yedioth Aronoth poll finds a vast majority of the Israeli public holds a negative opinion of Obama and believes he is biased toward the Palestinians. A top minister in Israel's government has compared Obama to Pharaoh, claiming his call for a settlement freeze is like casting Jewish children into the river. A group of rightists have launched a campaign against "the anti-Semitic Obama," apparently convinced they can make inroads with the general public.

Behind the Israeli view of Obama lies a climate of extremism that exploded into the open when the country attacked Gaza. Today, extremist sentiment hovers well above the surface. A groundbreaking study of Israeli attitudes published in the wake of the Gaza war by the Tel Aviv University political psychologist Daniel Bar-Tal, who I recently interviewed, found that "Israeli Jews' consciousness is characterized by a sense of victimization, a siege mentality, blind patriotism, belligerence, self-righteousness, dehumanization of the Palestinians and insensitivity to their suffering." Bar-Tal commented to me that the army is the primary vehicle for stoking the nationalism of young Israelis. "Some countries are states without armies," he said. "But Israel today is an army without a state. There is no civilian institution capable of restraining the army's influence."

In an interview with me two days ago, the famed Israeli author David Grossman echoed Bar-Tal's findings, remarking, "The country is trapped in one legitimate narrative: that of the government, which is of paranoia, and every event serves this narrative. Those events that don't are simply overlooked."

I have been in Israel for over a month; almost every day I hear expressions of paranoia about Arabs, historical delusions, and the constant refrain that "the world is against us." I hear this even from some close friends -- young, cosmopolitan Israelis living the good life in the so-called "bubble city" of Tel Aviv. Last week, a friend I play basketball with in a working class suburb of Tel Aviv (he is a high-tech worker from a fifth generation Israeli family) calmly informed me while we sat in the shade by the court: "I'm a Zionist, so of course I prefer the bloodshed on the other side." While sitting at a bar with an elegant and otherwise charming young woman, she described to me while sipping a mixed drink how she arbitrarily shot at Arabs while serving in the army because "they want to come and steal my house." On a leafy Tel Aviv street, a friend of a friend who splits time between spinning at local hip-hop clubs and patrolling the streets of Gaza City told me if Israel has to kill 800 Palestinians to save one Israeli Jew, then so be it. "If we wanted to, we could completely wipe Gaza out," he said. "But we don't because the IDF is pure."

Since Gaza, vocal opponents of the Occupation have found themselves increasingly marginalized and are hounded by the authorities (see the New Profile raid, Ezra Nawi, Sami Jubreir, and on and on). Meanwhile, Avigdor Lieberman and his Yisrael Beiteynu party's unapologetically racist campaign has taken the form of a stream of bills working through the Knesset that would criminalize observance of the Palestinian Nakbah, ban public discussion of a bi-national state, and allow towns to ban people from entering their limits who do not subscribe to Zionist ideals. The bills keep coming like a flood; already, the Nakbah ban has passed a committee vote.

A straight line can be drawn from the rhetoric depicted in my video to the rise of Lieberman, a proto-fascist who draws a startling degree of political strength from Israel's youth by channeling their innermost fears and resentments. In fact, the author of the Nakbah ban is a 28-year-old named Alex Miller - the youngest ever member of the Knesset and the chairman of Beiteynu's youth wing. In an interview, Miller told me he introduced the bill simply because, "the Israeli public believes in loyalty." He added, "Since the founding of our party we have grown in strength. We have never changed our platform and we are seeing increasing support from the public."

Despite the Huffington Post's rejection of my video report, it has exploded across the blogosphere. Even the rapper 50 Cent posted it prominently on his official website. It two days it has garnered 100,000 views. I hope those who have watched it, especially those predisposed to dismiss it as anti-Israel propaganda or shock video with "no news value," will at least ask how vitriolic levels of racism are able to flow through the streets of Jerusalem like sewage, why the grandsons of Holocaust survivors feel compelled to offer the Shoah as justification to behave like fascist street thugs, and how the sons and daughters of successful Jewish American families casually merged Zionist cant with crude white supremacism. The willful avoidance of these painful questions by self-proclaimed supporters of Israel is setting the stage for the complete delegitimization of the country they claim to love. As Obama said, "any world order that elevates one nation or group of people over another will inevitably fail. So whatever we think of the past, we must not be prisoners of it."


**
Read Mondoweiss here.


35 Comments

| Leave a comment
user-pic
If anything, alcohol is a crude form of truth serum that lubricates the release of closely held opinions and encourages confessional talk.

In vino, veritas.

user-pic

In Huffpo, none.

user-pic

Myth,

I would say all those on FOX are on the wagon.

user-pic

Myth,

that was humor :-)

user-pic

First of all, personally, I am not that interested in what these people had to say 'before' Obama gave his speech.

Second, having been raised around many alcoholics and having a young daughter with an alcohol problem, I completely disagree that it is 'truth serum'. My daughter frequently says all kinds of garbage when she is drunk that she doesn't remember and while occassionally may be a release of some emotional issue she's harboring, does not at all express her true overall feelings and views on anything.

In fact she is going to AA because of the damage her drinking does to her friendships and relationships because she says stupid and ridiculous things.

So based on the drinking being a factor of significance along with my lack of interest in what they thought about something that they had not yet witnessed... I think the Huffpost made a wise choice.

user-pic

i venture to guess that the kids portrayed in the video are not alcoholics. with normal drinkers, alcohol does reduce inhibitions. alcoholism is a different animal altogether. alcoholism is a serious disease with a concurrent breakdown of physical and emotional health. there is a physical dependence so much so that if there is abstinence there is great mental anguish and physical symptoms of withdrawal.

speedy recovery to your daughter.

user-pic

I would still disagree with the alchohol as truth serum premise. Heck, if it were true... why resort to torture. Just give them alcohol. I think the premise is false no matter how much someone drinks.

As far as my daughter goes... she is not the drink every day type and it takes only a couple of beers and she saying a bunch of bs.

I probably overused the alchoholic examples but still don't believe the 'truth serum' theory is a good one.

Thanks for the good wishes for my daughter.

user-pic

Actually, I remember a lecture given by someone who worked in a SERE program for the military that the effects of "truth serum" are very much like that of alcohol. I don't have any personal experience with that, but I did find it interesting.

user-pic

I can imagine that one yahoo got another one worked up and they started piling on. So I can, in part, join Synchronicity in pushing back at the In vino veritas line. In part.

But come on: one young lady said Obama was "like a terrorist," hadn't seen his birth certificate, and he definitely wasn't born in USA. She wasn't visibly drunk at all. I think the video had value in showing what we've got ourselves into with all this. Maybe it's fine, maybe it's just healthy youthful exuberance, blowing off steam. That may be a valid opinion. But I think displaying it is not a bad thing. I repeat: lots of people, the neocons but also lots of ordinary churchgoers, suburbanites, people of good faith, perceive that Israel is a quite place of solemn, religious people trying to live their difficult, put-upon lives despite the pressures of bad terrorists all around. People who value their strategic partnership with the United States and their relationship with the Almighty and just want to be left alone to cherish those things and the few material possessions they may have.

It fills out the picture a bit to see them and their American friends hurling abuse, F. Obama for this and F. him for that, the "pussy," the "terrorist." They may have been incited by the camera, but you couldn't get most people to start hurling chauvinist abuse by that alone. Something else is going on and I think it doesn't hurt for it to be seen. Which is why, with apologies, I even reposted it in a broader context. http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/blogs/mare_nostrum/

JMHO.

user-pic

This is what happens when a demographic, small group, or even a single child receive everything they want for two long.

The slightest wiff of "no" leads to a temper tantrum.

That's entitlement for ya.

user-pic

That about nails it, Bill.

user-pic

Thanks for your excellent work Max. Your videos have been proof of the hypocrisy and self-righteousness of so many people and political groups. You have asked questions and shown responses spoken from the mouths of bigots who are rarely shown or confronted by the media.

Does drinking alcohol make people want to kill? At what intoxication level does 'all kinds of garbage' take over?

Would the Huffpost have left the video up if Max had performed blood tests to measure the level of alcohol in the students? If so, what level does the racist domination and violence stuff kick in, .05, .12, .18, .25? Does a breath test suffice or is a serum blood test within 2 hours by a certified lab required?

Yad Vashem teaches us the evils of racism, racist domination and violence. It is beyond sad when those living in a country founded in the ashes of the Holocaust show they have not learned the lessons it wrote in the blood of millions.

user-pic

I believe that it has been scientifically proven that statements made while intoxicated are, actually, spoken by devils and djinni who have possessed the body in its weakened state although despite this hazard, healthy drunkenness is definitely still considered an exceedingly enlightened practice, and naturally cannot lead to any negative consequences because the alcohol vapours -- which are closely related to ether, from which the Internet and space are built -- produces a cushioning field so that, for example, beating up some black guy does not have any real consequences in your life.

These statements, then, cannot be counted to mean a thing and certainly not reflect in any way on a person's actual opinions -- in fact, the more violent, racist, sexist and stupid a person becomes when drunk, the more exemplary a person they certainly are at other times. Anyone who is is not slurring, raping and pillaging while drunk is to be suspected of being a very immoral person.

You should be ashamed of yourself, Mr. Blumenthal.

user-pic

Karl you still make Friedrich Engels laugh.

user-pic

Hm, funny. I think of HuffPost as the epicenter of censorship on the internet. They censor sooooo many comments there, for no reason, and allow soooo many hateful content-free comments to stand, I have always thought there was something very gravely wrong about how the place was being run.

I'm surprised more contributors haven't experienced what you have, given their tendency to suppress so much dialog. Anyways, I consider it a less than useful site, a gossip-hub where you can find idiots like Jenny McCarthy dangerously telling mothers not to get this kids vaccinated and the like.

It's not a place for serious news, its a joke.

user-pic

I am in agreement with you onceler. In fact, I have gotten so sick of their misleading headlines and unfair stifling of comments, I make it a point to refer all Huffposters to talking points memo where everything is so much more informative and civil.

I think the posters here are smarter too

user-pic

When drunk people pee on their shoes, they're still peeing.

user-pic

The Huffington Post reaction explains why I rarely read anything at Huffington and why I'm always here. I have an rss feed on my yahoo home page. Here's what's on it:

The "Full News Feed"

# NORTH KOREA LABOR CAMPS: U.S. Journalists Sentenced To Horrible Labor "- 3 minutes ago"If North Korea carries out its controversial court verdict, two American TV journalists sentenced to 12 years of hard labor Monday face a grim future in a notorious gulag system, said the author of a ...

# Michelle Obama In London With Daughters For Surprise Visit (PHOTOS) "- 3 minutes ago"*Developing: story and pictures being updated* First lady Michelle Obama and her daughters Sasha and Malia continued their girls' trip with a surprise stopover in London after leaving Paris on Mond...

# ROGER FEDERER: After Winning The French, He Turns To Wimbledon "- 3 minutes ago"PARIS — To Roger Federer, what's important is not only that he finally won the French Open. It's how he did it. "I didn't think I played the greatest tennis of my life throughout this tour...

# Chicago Tops 2016 Olympics Race In New Analysis "- 3 minutes ago"Chicago now holds the best chance of winning the 2016 Olympics, a new analysis said Monday. The Around the Rings Olympic Power Bid Index ranked Chicago on top following the International Olympic Commi...

# WWDC 2009 LIVE Coverage: Keep Up With Apple's Announcements "- 3 minutes ago"


and here's the full blog feed:
# Jim Lichtman: Obama and the 'God Gap' "- 17 minutes ago"President Obama appears quite comfortable with religious language but clearly wants to defuse the strong, divisive rhetoric surrounding it. This was apparent in his inaugural address when he referr...

# Starre Vartan: Ownership is SO Last Centruy: From Owners/Consumers to Borrowers/Lenders "- 17 minutes ago"Reed Doyle, the head of global strategic sourcing for Seventh Generation , put it simply: "People don't want to own and maintain cars, they want a way to get from point A to point B." Reed and I we...

# Faisal J. Abbas: Obama Dubbed "The Heir of Antar" As Reactions To His Cairo Speech Continue "- 17 minutes ago"It doesn't seem that the reactions to President Obama's recent speech in Cairo are going to end anytime soon. In his column today, veteran Washington Post writer, Jim Hoagland, described Obama as "...

# Robert Wright: The Bible's Vindication of Obama's Middle East Strategy "- 28 minutes ago"Some West Bank settlers think Barack Obama is defying God's will. Obama wants to stop the growth of the settlements, whereas (according to these settlers) God wants the people of Israel to populate al...

# Earl Ofari Hutchinson: The Terrible Price of Being Tagged a Reverse Racist ""

How many of these are more newsworthy than your video is? Any?

user-pic

Max's video is very newsworthy. Let Americans see the side of Israel that normally only Arabs see.

user-pic

I am not compelled to believe that the behaviors of the kids in the video represent those of Israel. It's like looking at video of skinheads at a KKK rally -- yeah we're both white and living in America, but we don't think the same thing.

But you shouldn't just put it out there without an explanation of what it represents. Unfortunately it represents nothing. Even the video of skinheads at a rally has more journalistic rigor than this edited mashup of random drunks in a bar. There were a couple of racist comments, but I wouldn't say that made all of the kids who said stupid things racist. Yet it's presented in such a way that it's one big borg of racist dumbasses.

user-pic

I keep reading that there is something misleading about this video, as though Blumenthal presented it as representative of all of Israel, of all American Jews, etc. But when Blumenthal posted it on Mondoweiss, the post said no more than that the video showed "rowdy groups of beer sodden twenty-somethings, many from the United States, and all eager to vent their visceral, even violent hatred of Barack Obama and his policies towards Israel."

And that seems to be a fair assessment of what the video shows. It's just one piece of the picture, and Blumenthal presented it as no more than such. So what's the beef?

user-pic

The mask slipped...that's the beef.

user-pic
But you shouldn't just put it out there without an explanation of what it represents. Unfortunately it represents nothing.

Blumenthal wrote this upon posting the video::

On the eve of President Barack Obama’s address to the Muslim world from Cairo, Egypt, I stepped out onto the streets of Jerusalem with my friend Joseph Dana to interview young Israelis and American Jews about their reaction to the speech. We encountered rowdy groups of beer sodden twenty-somethings, many from the United States, and all eager to vent their visceral, even violent hatred of Barack Obama and his policies towards Israel. Usually I offer a brief commentary on my video reports, but this one requires no comment at all. Quite simply, it contains some of the most shocking footage I have ever filmed. Watch it and see if you agree. (Warning: this video contains profanity and material offensive to just about anyone.)

Joseph Dana expanded Blumenthal's account even more shortly after.
The next day, Blumenthal wrote the “explanation of what it represents” which is, incidentally, the content of this post. You're not obliged to read it, but it is there. I believe this does provide a coherent and lucid (and unassailable) explanation of what the video represents. Burning the message is no better than shooting the messenger.

user-pic

I doubt the "hatred" expressed in your video is that viral. After all, these are young men in bars, drinking, preening before females - and shooting off their mouths. We've become so enchanted with excruciatingly examining each other for any sign of "hate", as if we ourselves are free of this all-too-human scourge. It's as absurd a delusion as the old Soviets locking up dissidents in asylums, since anyone questioning Marxism must be crazy.

And who can believe these are "typical" Israelis, since most of them seem to be American Jews beating their chests. Why not? They don't live day-to-day in a climate of fear and bloodshed; to them, it's all so far away. Their video-game worldview has not yet been stunted by loss and grim reality. If these same youngsters were interviewed in a lecture hall, after a debate about constant conflict in the Mideast, I bet thoughts they express would be much different.

What's most amazing, searching this video out in the blogosphere, is how shocked Americans seem to be that Jews express such repellent sentiments, however casually. Maybe we should pump this as our next media-driven "teaching moment" - that we're all human, we all share flaws and shortcomings. We're all capable of hate.

Knowing that, we might be able to approach any issue with a lot more honesty than our dogmas allow us today.

user-pic

I've been in my share of bars and I've never heard anyone say that the President of the United States should get a bullet in his head.

I think the "aw shucks, they're young, drunk, and showing off" argument is a bit oversimplified.

user-pic

Anyone with an even faint knowledge of the last 30-40 years of the Israeli/Palestinian conflict would know that the hatred is beyond 'viral', it is widespread, systemic and frequently lethal.

user-pic

Precisely,

That's why I would be much more interested to hear what they had to say when sober after hearing President Obama's speech.

user-pic

Max Blumenthal:

Programs like Birthright Israel -- a few of those in my video were on Birthright tours -- exist for the exclusive purpose of indoctrinating American Jews into unyielding, unthinking supporters of Israel.

Mr. Blumenthal, my daughter, my nephew and a son of my close friends have all been to Birthright tours over the past three years. Talking to these intelligent young people (who, BTW, support the two-state solution) about their experiences on the tour, and about lessons they've learned, proves to me that your quoted statement is a malicious and self-serving lie.

user-pic

as a former birthright israel participant, a lot of what you wrote rings true. they ply you with alcohol and social events (our trip even included the bizarre spectacle of spending an afternoon hanging out at a pool casually dropped in the middle of the negev desert - remember kids, there's a water shortage in israel!) mixed with a good dose of racial paranoia.

i actually wrote about this recently (in the context of the rebranding of israel as a tourist destination): http://open.salon.com/blog/montcalm/2009/05/21/israel_adventure_tourism_hot_spot

user-pic
user-pic

I for one am not enamored with Israel. They are the reason for our misery and I am personally sick of having to go to war to protect Israel especially since she is capable of defending herself without our "help" since we give them 4 billion a year and all the arms they want. They even have the Nuke so let them defend themselves.

user-pic

Huffpo should have just let it die a natural death, which it probably would have done very soon. It wasn't well reported nor was it very newsworthy. If you want to film something interesting, talk to those kids' parents.

user-pic

"If you want to film something interesting, talk to those kids' parents."

I suspect we got a pretty good indication of what some of those kids' parents think from this video.

When I grew up down south, it was interesting comparing what I read in the letters to the editor on racial issues with what I heard from my schoolmates. In the letters people were on their best behavior. But when you listened to their children it was "nigg@@, nigg@@, nigg@@" all the time. And no, I don't think the kids somehow became bigots all on their own.

user-pic

While I appreciate reporting from the streets, I did not find anything special or shocking about this video. After watching the ignorance that occurred during the 2008 elections and the ignorance that comes out of the mouths of our elected officials - this video is nothing.

user-pic

The video was newsworthy, Mr. Blumenthal, regardless of any temporary lapses in judgment of the part of the normally sage Huffington Post. It is important to include proper disclaimers such as one "hour of interviews" being edited "into a 3:30 minute video package." Focus on making more such timely and informative videos, with appropriate disclaimers included, and waste no more time soothing hurt feelings or trading nitpicks.

Leave a comment

Advertisement
Please disable your adblocker!
Ads are how we pay the bills!

Subscribe

The Coffee House
TPMCafe's regulars

House Brew
From Your Cafe Editor

Special Guests
Big names and big brains

Special Features
Pressing topics and trends

Table for One
An expert's week-long talk.

All Reader Posts
TPM readers discuss.

Book Club Calendar

Coming Soon



January 12-16



« Book Club ArchiveFull calendar »

Recent Reader Posts

All Reader Posts »





Masthead

Editor-in-Chief
Josh Marshall

Site Editor
Lila Shapiro

Intern
Versha Sharma



Subscribe to TPMCafe's feed.
Subscribe to TPMCafe's reader blog feed.

Advertise Liberally
Share
Close Social Web Email

"To" Email Address

Your Name

Your Email Address