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Obama and Israel


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In response to an Obama smear passed along by email, which contained this write-up by Bill Levinson:

Because of talks that I’ve had with friends, I’ve been grappling with the Obama/Israel issue for a few weeks now. And the more that I, a Gentile, explore the issue, the more I realize that being an outsider is going to prevent me from understanding many of the emotions that are at work here. Ultimately, this is a discussion that needs to happen among members of the Jewish faith. But I still felt like I needed to work some of my thoughts out, for my own sake if not for anyone else’s.

Getting just an initial glimpse of the comments, accusations, and insinuations that have been made against Obama reminded me of one of my favorite, if not my absolute favorite, political quotations: "Faced with the choice between changing one's mind and proving there is no need to do so, almost everyone gets busy on the proof." John Kenneth Galbraith said that, and it holds true a million times more often than it’s proven wrong.

Nothing that I can say is really going to change Bill Levinson’s mind even though he admits that “We do not, to the best of our knowledge, know of any racist or anti-Semitic statements that Obama has made himself.” Similarly, if any opposing voice is going to be attacked as viciously as Levinson attacks Ira Forman, a fellow Jew, I don’t stand a chance here. If my audience is someone who truly thinks that Samantha Power is part of the problem, as people are now saying, and not part of the solution, this is pointless. And if you equate any kind criticism of Israel with “hate speech” and hold American politicians to a higher standard of “support” than you might find among liberal members of Israel’s Knesset, I’m wasting my time.

But don’t listen to me. Levinson wants us to listen to his list of nine writers/pundits/bloggers, so let me counter with my own list of nine: William Daroff, vice president of United Jewish Communities; Nathan J. Diament, director of the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America; Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League; Richard S. Gordon, president of the American Jewish Congress; David Harris, executive director of the American Jewish Committee; Rabbi Marvin Hier, dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center; Rabbi David Saperstein, director of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism; Phyllis Snyder, president of the National Council of Jewish Women; and Hadar Susskind, Washington director of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs.

These nine Jewish leaders signed an open letter in January condemning the type of smear that Levinson is promoting. They wrote:

As leaders of the Jewish community, none of whose organizations will endorse or oppose any candidate for President, we feel compelled to speak out against certain rhetoric and tactics in the current campaign that we find particularly abhorrent. Of particular concern, over the past several weeks, many in our community have received hateful emails that use falsehood and innuendo mischaracterizing Senator Barack Obama's religious beliefs and who he is as a person.

These tactics attempt to drive a wedge between our community and a presidential candidate based on despicable and false attacks based on religion. We reject these efforts to manipulate members of our community into supporting or opposing candidates.

Attempts of this sort to mislead and inflame voters should not be part of our political discourse and should be rebuffed by all who believe in our democracy. Jewish voters, like all voters, should support whichever candidate they believe would make the best president. We urge everyone to make that decision based on the factual records of these candidates, and nothing less.

A tenth Jewish American, Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo, calls this the “Thinking Man’s Madrassa Smear.” Seven more, all of them sitting U.S. Senators and none of whom have endorsed Obama, condemned these smears as well. These guilt-by-association tactics, far from looking to set the record straight about Obama, have their origins in a political agenda that looks to keep Obama from winning the presidency in November – nothing more.

At least four of Levinson’s nine are political hacks: Charles Krauthammer is a neoconservative columnist that has supported the Bush administration through thick and thin; Kenneth Blackwell was the Republican nominee for Governor of Ohio in 2006 and honorary co-chair of the “Committee to Re-Elect George Bush” in 2004; Ed Lasky wrote in 2004 that Jews “must vote for Bush”; and Debbie Schlussel is a bitterly partisan Republican voice reminiscent of Ann Coulter.

All four of these opponents – perhaps more, I didn’t do any in-depth research on them – are trying to get you to vote Republican in 2008. This is a page out of the classic Republican playbook, much like the issue of abortion. These people know that the subject of Israel is one that arouses great passions in many, many people and they want to use these passions to their electoral advantage. Once your vote is cast, their interest in the issue will lay dormant until the next election/fundraiser rolls around. They’re betting that you won’t do any of the legwork required to refute their claims.

And again: they’ve got nothing incriminating, no racist or anti-Semitic statements that have come from Obama himself. It’s all about the church he attends, the politicians he’s photographed with, the other people that attend the political functions that he does. Don’t you think, if Obama did indeed have some sinister motive in mind, that he would have articulated it at some point? Maybe in his first book, written years before he even imagined that he’d hold public office? Yet there is nothing, and Levinson admits it. Perhaps the absence of evidence wasn’t a problem for Donald Rumsfeld, but we should hold ourselves to a higher standard.

The insinuation and guilt-by-association tactics don’t hold up to much scrutiny, either. There are 77 million Catholics in the United States, and, as we know there are no shortage of priests and church officials who denounce abortion and homosexuality. Do you think all 77 million agree with them? Probably not. But do those 77 million keep going to church every week? Probably. Because it’s not really about what the guy at the front of the Church is saying – it’s the man he’s preaching about, Jesus Christ. If everyone sitting in our churches, synagogues, temples and mosques were required to agree with every word that came out of a priest’s, preacher’s, rabbi’s, or imam’s mouth, those pews wouldn’t have many people sitting in them in the first place.

And if we hold these attacks to the same standard, you’ll see just how unfair the tactics are. Debbie Schlussel, for instance, once worked for U.S. Rep. Mark Siljander. Siljander was recently indicted for his work for an Islamic charity accused of funneling money to terrorist groups. Does that mean that Debbie Schlussel, therefore, supports Islamic terrorist groups? I think after looking at her webpage, you’d agree that that’s an absurd argument, to say the least.

In an election as important as this one, you can’t afford to let somebody else do your research for you. You need to educate yourself, and you might be surprised at what you learn.

For instance, Levinson doesn’t tell you that Richard Cohen, one of his nine columnists, actually voted for Obama. He doesn’t tell you that AIPAC is satisfied with Obama’s positions on the Middle East. He doesn’t tell you that Shmuel Rosner of Haaretz has written that “Obama supports Israel. Period.” You have to find that out for yourself, and decide whether or not someone’s just trying to use you and your passions as some sort of political pawn in the most important election of our lifetime.


Comments (15)

I found this linked from The New Republic. I found it interesting and I imagine you will as well:

http://www.nysun.com/article/71813?page_no=1

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Nice. Here is my take on the anti-Semite smear attempt:

http://thepersonalispolitical.tumblr.com/post/27246179

Nice post. It's my sense that Obama's limited track record on Israel scares people who vote solely on a candidate's pro-Israel stance, so they spin all sorts of fantasies about him.

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Pat,

The bottom line (inarguable facts) is as follows.

(1) Obama solicited, although he has not received, the support of Al Sharpton, whose track record of racism and anti-Semitism is well known. Obama praised Sharpton and his National Action Network, the same organization that shouted racial and anti-Semitic epithets at a Jewish-owned store that was later burned to the ground, in the highest terms.

(2) Obama is passively accepting the support of the vicious racist, anti-Semite, and Catholic-hater Louis Farrakhan (he admittedly did not solicit it). So far, requests that he reject Farrakhan's endorsement have gone unanswered.

Under standards set by the National Jewish Democratic Council, this makes Obama just as bad as Ron Paul, who is passively accepting the support of the Stormfront White Nationalist Community. NJDC, which condemned Paul in the strongest terms, lacks the basic integrity to demand that Obama repudiate Farrakhan. This is why I criticise Forman & Co. as harshly as I do.

(3) Obama solicited and received the support of MoveOn.org, which has a proven record of officially promoting hatred of Catholics (derogatory photomanipulation of Pope Benedict waving a gavel in front of the U.S. Supreme Court) and also welcoming hate speech at its now-disgraced Action Forum. MoveOn.org also published a vicious insult to General David Petraues.

(4) Obama is a member of a racist church.

As I said, Obama has not personally spoken against Jews, white people, or Catholics. It is his failure to understand, or perhaps failure to care, that his promotion and endorsement of those who do enables their bigotry is why he is unfit for any position of public trust or responsibility.

Surely you jest, Mr. Levinson. Even Mrs. Clinton doesn't sound this shrill (not to mention paranoid and angry).

My sincere condolences to you and your fellow fundamentalists.

If that's the case - and, for the record, your argument doesn't stand up the slightest scrutiny - what about the 17 members of the Jewish American community who vehemently disagree with you? Any comments on them, Bill? Or are they just "enabling" this stuff as well?

I am Jewish and wish Obama was more critical of Israel along with all other chicken-hearted candidates running for office in this country. Endorsing everything the Israeli government does is not doing Israel any favors as many Israelis understand. It simply postpones the day when Israel has to face facts: they can't have an apartheid-like presence in that region. Even Olmert knows this, but like an addict, he can't keep himself from continuing the bad habits that have created this disaster.

As for American interests, they don't really coincide with everything Israel has been doing and this contributes to the low approval rates we experience around the world.

To say that anti-Semitism is the real cause of anti-Israeli polcies and would exist even if Israel changed its polcies is true but meaningless. Prejudice exists in all parts of the world against one group or another. Genocidal policies are not a natural outgrowth of prejudice, but a very rare one. There is anti-black racism in the US, but does anyone really think that Americans who hold racist views want to kill all blacks? It's time to stop using what happened during WWII as a model for all time. It
grew out of a complex set of circumstances that are no longer present. Palestinians see Jews as their enemies because of ethnic cleansing in the 40s (which all serious historians acknowledge) as well as the illegal settlements and daily oppression under the Occupation. Not because of anti-Semitism. It would be like saying the native Americans hated the British colonists because they were anti-British by nature rather than they didn't appreciate their land stolen.

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Hmm... is there any connection with Ellen Ratner, the news person Thom Hartmann often uses on his radio show... The one who has been fawning over Hillary recently?

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Josh I think 'now' would be a good time to write that piece (as a Jew) you said you've been meaning to post on the covert scheme (within the Jewish community) that smears and lies about Obama specifically to promote the candidancy of Hillary.

If that's the case - and, for the record, your "argument" falls apart with the slightest scrutiny - what about the 17 Jewish Americans who disagree with you (and who you'll admit have much more credibility)? What about them? Are they "enabling" hate speech too?

Apologies for the multiple posts - that last one was retyped when I thought I lost the original.

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It was clear that the entire line of questioning by Tim Russert in the Ohio debate was intended to pit the two candidates in a "who is a stronger supporter of Israel" debate. Hillary was close to winning that tussle when she claimed that she had rejected the support of the anti-semetic (NY Independence party?) and wanted Obama to "reject" rather than simply "denounce" Farrakhans endorsement. He conceded the point.

I still hope that Obama, if elected, will be an even-handed broker in the Middle East and advance policies that are in the US interests and not necessarily driven by Israeli interests. There is nothing anti-semetic about that. Honestly I would like to see Obama break the strangle hold of both the Israeli Lobby and the Cuban Lobby, and the gun lobby for that matter. Our current foreign policies in both Cuba nor Israel are neither one serving US interests effecively, and the NRA punches way above it's weight politically given the views most Americans have towards gun control. Why? Because we, the American public, let them.

But it was very clear where Hillary stood during the debate. Her attempt to one-up Obama on her Jewish support underscores her votes on Iraq, and more recently on Iran; two legislative actions that were in lock step with AIPAC's legislative goals.

As Miersheimer and Walt, the authors of The Israeli Lobby so clearly point out, the problem with even raising the subject is that any clear-eyed, unbiased analysis of the US relationship with Israel that arrives at a criticism of the policy inevitably leaves the messenger branded as an anti-semite. I'm certain that after this post I will be presumed as such. That said, it would be healthy for Americans to stare this perceived anti-semetic monster in the eye, much like we have sexism and racism in this race, and slay the beast.

With that I must add that i believe it is possible to NOT support Israeli agressions in Lebanon, Syria, the West Bank/and Gaza and also not be anti-semetic...just as it is possible to deplore/denounce Palestinian suicide bombers and Hezbollah attacks and NOT be Anti-muslim.

If it were Zulu warriors against pygmies I'd feel the same about their actions, and I'd be pissed off if my government was supplying one side with the poison darts or war paint.

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Oops! I hope it will be proof that I'm not anti-semitic...since I misspelled the word 5-6 times in the post.

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Check out my posts on this subject on my own blog, Orthodox Anarchist, where I take Levinson to task for his shenanigans.

http://orthodoxanarchist.com/2008/02/24/widespread-consensus-right-wing-jerks-promote-falsehoods-racism-hatred-of-blacks-part-1/

http://orthodoxanarchist.com/2008/02/25/widespread-consensus-right-wing-jerks-promote-falsehoods-racism-hatred-of-blacks-part-2/

I urge you to consider the source. Levinson publishes several outrageous anti-Muslim websites. He is a fanatic and he speaks only for the other limited number of crazies like him in the Jewish community. He does not speak for the vast majority of Jews in America.

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Mobius, my Web site is no more "anti-Muslim" than a site condemning the Ku Klux Klan is "anti-white." Islamic supremacists, whom I do condemn, are to Muslims what white supremacists (e.g. the KKK) are to white people. Also, there was supposed to be a part 3 to your series, a defense of MoveOn.org against my accusations. I don't blame you for not following through, as I would not try to defend MoveOn.org against me either.

At this point, Obama's position is hopeless because of almost daily revelations of hate speech from his pastor, and even from his own bloggers. As an example, Jeremiah Wright published a blood libel that accused Israel of working with South Africa to develop an "ethnic bomb" to kill Black people and Arabs. I am the person who found that and posted it, and now the story gets about 10,000 matches on Google.

Obama is obviously damaged goods, and he should drop out of the race to avoid taking the Democratic Party down with him in November.

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