nettime's_un-american_committee on Fri, 19 Apr 2002 20:22:15 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> palestine viewed through apple pie digest [guderian, abramson] |
Carl Guderian <carlg@vermilion-sands.com> Or even speaking from Amsterdam (long) Bram Dov Abramson <bda@bazu.org> Re: Speaking from New York - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Fri, 19 Apr 2002 14:00:42 +0200 From: Carl Guderian <carlg@vermilion-sands.com> Subject: Or even speaking from Amsterdam (long) I briefly attended a pro-Palestinian protest last Saturday, but left before it became unruly. According to the papers, some demonstrators, apparently kids of Moroccan extraction, threw rocks at the Hotel Krasnapolsky on the Dam and even attacked a gay nightclub called iT, far from the parade route. What was *that* all about? There were a few banners equating the Israelis with Nazis, but most just expressed outrage at the Israeli invasions in particular and policy in general. I can understand Ms. Fallaci's worry about anti-Israeli sentiment degenerating into anti-semitism. It's an old habit, and not just of the Left, of being to easy on one's allies. But does my disgust at Sharon's murderous opportunism translate into admiration for Arafat or the suicide bombers? Of course not. That's a strawman argument, like equating the global protest movement with the Black Bloc. And Berlusconi's always been soft on fascism and his media propeties reflected that long before this crisis. She does have a point in that the protest movement should have something to say about the swastikas, cemeteries and attacks. And we could certainly spare a few harsh words for Arafat and the people encouraging the suicide bombers (but we're kidding ourselves if we think the bombings will stop if the leaders are captured). So here are few: Even before the routine suicide bombings, Arafat and his Palestinian Authority reminded me of former Washington D.C. Mayor (early to late 1990s) Marion Barry and his crony-ridden administration. Both leaders had glorious pasts--Arafat as PLO terrorist, Barry as civil rights activist--but later became puppet emperors of their neither-fish-nor-fowl domains. The Palestinian territories are bantustans without control over basic infrastructure like electricity and water, and always under the Israeli guns. DC is a city with the many of the obligations of a state but none of the powers associated with one and no votes in the House or the Senate. It's subject to a Senate committee that's been dominated by Republicans at least since 1992 and DC is policed not only by DC cops, but also the FBI, Secret Service, US Park Police, US Marshals and others. It even had a referendum (medical marijuana) annulled, by a Senate budgetary trick. The PA provided some law and order and the space necessary for life to carry on, but was also used to process bribes, settle grudges and carry out reprisals against "collaborators" who sold their businesses and land allotments to Israelis. I suspect Arafat only pretended to have control over Hamas and the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade, to give him face and bargaining leverage in exchange for political cover and lack of close scrutiny. Then they realized they didn't need him anymore. But how can *anyone* control a loose organization of angry people in a land where guns and bombs are as common as cobblestones? In the less deadly Barry regime, cops were shaking down gays for money while a city limousine carried Barry around on his whoring rounds, and his wife Cora Masters carried on like Lady MacBeth. Parking meters were beheaded, the schools declined and property values plummeted. Barry dispensed jobs to his cronies, but had little actual power, thanks to Senate Republicans. I liked living there (1996-1998) though, but wondered if we'd ever be rid of him. The dynamic in both cases was unequal opponents playing political chicken, with the citizens staked out on the highway between them. In DC the deadlock was finally broken when Barry was bought off with a professorship and North Carolina Sen. Lauch Faircloth lost his election (actually Faircloth was good for DC but he really hated Barry). Former City Controller Anthony Williams won the election and DC began to recover immediately. Until then, Barry won majority votes on the strength of popular hatred for the Senate committe. Likewise with Arafat. He's a local hero for standing up to the Israelis. Absent the crisis, he'd have been deservedly pushed out long ago. And I know there are a lot of Israelis who'd like to kick Sharon's ass from Haifa to Hebron for feeding, if not actually precipitating, the crisis. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict of course won't be solved so easily, but before anything else, pack Arafat off to Paris to his sweet young wife and enough stolen money to finish his life in idle luxury (it's the cheapest option, trust me) and force Sharon to resign. Now. The Arafat-Sharon dynamic is a familiar one and it's a downward spiral. No more bulldozing. Shut down settlements, starting with the most recent ones. Maybe leave some really old ones, but make them pay rent to the Palestinians. Consolidate the Palestinian territories into a contiguous region. Give up some of the Gaza strip but keep the Golan Heights because it's militarily stupid to give away the high ground. Since Israel needs the security, keep the checkpoints but bring in UN observers, to stop the petty humiliations. Have Israel ship their prisoners to the Hague to be tried there. The US has the $2.7 billion, but if they won't use that leverage, the EU can boycott Israeli software and lettuce and whatever else and throw Israeli spies in jail when we catch them. (Recently the Dutch learned that an Israeli company that sold it spying equipment was spying on the Dutch government.) Go around the US. If Chavez can beat the CIA, Europe and the Middle East can do so in Israel. Bush and Powell can either get serous or piss off. No anti-semitism in the foregoing, I hope. Not really anti-Israeli sentiment either. If I were Fallacci, I'd steer clear of any Israel hotel named after King David. Menachem Begin may be dead, but maybe some old Irgun Zvi Leumi member might have a flashback and think the place is full of Brits and it's 1946 again. Last time they warned the hotel first, but next time, who knows? Just a tip. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Fri, 19 Apr 2002 06:38:05 -0400 From: Bram Dov Abramson <bda@bazu.org> Subject: Re: Speaking from New York mrzero@panix.com: >Here arabs are seen as >madmen who go to their deaths with a twisted ecstatic smile on their >faces. We hear little of the Israeli soldiers who, instructed to >perpetrate systematic abuses of human rights in the Occupied >Territories, refuse to serve there. We have no consciousness in our >media of the connection between the murderers of Rabin and the >current Israeli policies of State Terrorism. In our media the >Israelis are seen to hold an absurd monopoly on the term >"anti-semitism." > >I am saddened by the behavior of both parties in this conflict. But >it was clearly the Israelis who walked away from the Oslo accords. Well, I don't live in the United States -- only in one corner of its mediascape (Canada) -- but I have heard tons about Israeli soldiers who refused to serve as soldiers; I suspect that the meaning assigned to the word "anti-semitism" is the product of its Aryan-movement 19th c history rather than the conspiracy implied (such is the life of languages, http://www.oup-usa.org/isbn/0195040058.html); and "clearly" is, to understate colossally, hardly clear to everyone. Speaking of straw men: >I believe she is mistaken to think that the support of >the Palestinians by rightwing elements in Europe absolves the Iraeli >government from its crimes of Terror, of destroying the >infrastructure of Palestinian lands in the name of self-defense. I mean, leaving aside the "rightwing" non sequitur, who would possibly make such a stupid argument? She certainly didn't. And: >The "settlers" in the occupied territories are seen as pioneers >reclaiming their homeland instead of invaders grabbing land. Your analysis of Israeli public opinion and of Israeli media coverage may be a bit off here. Certainly there are a handful of folks who see things the way your argument needs them to, but to extrapolate from them to the citizenry at large is kind of weird. Bottom line, I guess, is that any assertion of "the way things really are" is likely to be conjectural unless you've actually measured something and folks agree on the premises of measurement. Corollary being that generalities are probably not useful terms in which to talk, unless one is interested in epic struggles between Good and Evil or, more prosaically, one is interested in viewing the situation as a fight between two opposing sports clubs, in which case it's relatively easy to don the right coloured sweater, wave the right flag, sing the right songs, line up on the right side of things, etc. For what purpose, I'm not sure. >In this battle, the Israelis are not the underdogs; they are the >overlords. And though we drown in a sea of moral contradictions, that >situation should not be lost sight of. From where I write, it is far >easier to lose sight of the crimes of State Terror than the retail >crimes of terror. Uh, yeah. Go team. (But, "retail"?) cheers Bram -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net