The Pro-Israel Lobby And America

Walter Russell Mead has a must-read, via Goldblog:

It can’t be repeated too often:  the American Jewish community is not responsible for the popularity of hard line views among American non-Jews on Middle East issues.  Individual Jews and predominantly Jewish organizations like AIPAC derive their influence over American foreign policy not from their Jewishness, but from the affinity of their policy agenda with the views and priorities of America’s non-Jews.  When American Jews say things about the Middle East that resonate with the views of American non-Jews, they are influential. When, as in the case of the persistent agitation to free convicted spy Jonathan Pollard, Jewish conservative supporters of Israel deviate from the gentile consensus, that influence suddenly disappears.  When, like the many liberal Jewish journalists and pundits who think hard line policies in the Middle East are bad for both Israel and the United States, they say things that American non-Jews don’t like — their views and their insights are largely cast aside.  In none of these cases is the Jewish identity of the writers the key to the reception accorded their ideas.

In general, I think this is right. Mead doesn't mention one important factor in this – the evangelical end-times view of Israel. It's the politics of the Book of Revelation that impels Sarah Palin to take the view of the right-wing Jewish settlers and terrorists in the West Bank (Yes, I take setting fire to mosques, poisoning fig trees, destroying Palestinian agriculture as terrorism). The pro-Israel lobby is successful not just because it pursues legitimate lobbying of Congress to defend almost anything Israel does, but because it also has a sturdy outreach program to non-Jewish Americans who, by and large, identify far more with Western-seeming Israelis than with Arabs and Muslims, an identification understandably intensified after 9/11.

But there comes a point – and this is what many pro-Israel critics of Israeli policy like yours truly have been saying – when this generalized support can blind us to real issues that hurt us and hurt Israel. The Gaza campaign did not command massive American public support – the public was deeply divided but the Congress was unanimously on Israel's side (that's AIPAC's influence in a nutshell).

Supporting the continuing construction of settlements in East Jerusalem and the neo-colonization of the West Bank are also issues that are not synonymous with support of Israel, as Mead and Goldblog have stated.

My snapping point was the Israeli refusal to help Obama reach out to the Muslim world, the horrible human casualties of the Gaza campaign (and Israeli indifference to Arab life they revealed), the fast-growing influence of far right religious parties in Israel (and America), and the dogged refusal to make any meaningful gesture on settlements to get the peace process re-booted with the most promising West Bank leadership ever. And on those issues, AIPAC has been clearly on Netanyahu's side, not Obama's. And that should not stand. J-Street has made a huge error in fibbing, to put it mildly, about Soros' contribution and in being less than transparent. But on this issue they are right, and America and Israel need them.

On 9/11 They Attacked New York City

Mark Oppenheimer gave a speech about the so-called Ground Zero Mosque, and was struck by an exchange afterward with an audience member:

…there was one questioner who made a rather passionate short speech about how I had to understand what it was like in the rest of the country, outside the bubble of New York and Cambridge and New Haven: foreclosures everywhere, dislocation in the economy, uncertainty. And how, he said, in times like this it is understandable that people look for enemies, as they did during the Great Depression and during the Populist moment forty years before that. And I thought he made a lot of good points–but, I said, people should remember that it was New York City that was the victim of the 9/11 attacks, not Texas or Florida or Nevada. So it did not really make sense to say that "it might be all well and good to sympathize with Muslims in New York, but out in the rest of the country times are tough and people were angry."

I pointed out that my brother lived near Ground Zero when it happened, and that my in-laws live in downtown Manhattan, where my wife grew up…. I was not close to the tragedy, but I was far closer than most Americans.

And people listened politely to the exchange, and I had some fruitful and interesting discussions with people afterward, when the speech was over. But it left me wondering: why is there anti-Muslim rage in places with very few Muslims and no history of Muslim terrorism whatsoever? There are good answers to this question, I am sure, but it is late, and for now I will just marvel at how odd it is that somebody thinks it is easy to be a Muslim sympathizer in New York, but not out in the rest of the country

This is reminiscent of what Jason Jones found when he went to Wasilla for The Daily Show.

It Gets Better: Hillary Clinton

An erstwhile Dish punching bag does some good:

Alvin McEwen is upset that the gay community "can't even thank someone without getting into an argument":

Unfortunately some have used this speech to either voice their disagreement with President Obama's movement on DADT and DOMA or criticize Mrs. Clinton for her husband's pushing of DADT when he was president. It's caused some arguments and frankly it's stupid. I don't care what Obama didn't do or what Bill Clinton did do. This is about our children and it says a lot that Mrs. Clinton took time out to show them some support.

I agree but I also can't help wondering if it's part of a campaign to solidify her hold over gay voters in 2016. (Bad Sully. No pot pie!)

Yglesias Award Nominee

“[Grover] Norquist has been an influential figure in the conservative movement for a generation, but his response to Governor Daniels is almost laughably self-important. He acts as if he were speaking ex cathedra. There is an imperiousness and intolerance to Norquist’s words, an effort to shut down debate rather than to engage it. This approach shouldn’t be used in any case — but to employ it against arguably the nation’s most successful governor is very unwise,” – Pete Wehner, Commentary. My very similar take here. Dish reader follow-up here.

The Rise Of Blogazines

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Farhad Manjoo notes an overlap:

The design shifts—with blogs looking more like magazines, and magazines looking more like blogs—aren’t just superficial. These changes in presentation are collapsing all distinctions between “blog posts” and “articles.” Over the last few days I contacted various bloggers and editors at big sites around the Web to ask how they define each term. The answers I got were surprisingly diverse—while each of these organizations has its own rules for what it calls a “blog post” and an “article,” the rules aren’t at all consistent across newsrooms. What’s more, the lines are blurring—blog posts are looking more like articles, and articles are looking more like blog posts.

Further thoughts over at Chloe Veltman’s place.

I’ve thought of the Dish as a blogazine for quite a while now. The model we’ve groped our way toward combines the agility of a pond-skater with the ability to deep dive at any moment. And its reader-generated content makes it a product of a collective mind as well as an individual one, a bull-session as well as an individual’s thinking out loud. Who knew this evolution was possible even a year or two ago?

And I have to say, our new “read on” feature has helped us evolve this more quickly and intuitively than I thought it would.

See?

You get the choice to skim or dive in – at your leisure, and with minimal hassle. Then the links help you explore even more, if your nose takes you there. So the Dish becomes as much a mediator as an individual thinker, as much a collective mind as a single one, as much a biased broadcast as a communal debate. With videos, art, quotes, thoughts, provocations, jokes, and photography thrown in for good measure – some prompted by you, some by me, some by Patrick, Chris, Conor and Zoe. And all, in the end, channeled through what’s left of my fried frontal cortex. That’s much more than this blog was in, say, 2002.

But that’s the joy of this new medium. We still don’t know where it will go next. And we’re all  improvising like mad. What’s not to love?

Malkin Award Nominee

"Bill, I’m not a bigot. You know the kind of books I’ve written about the civil rights movement in this country. But when I get on the plane, I got to tell you, if I see people who are in Muslim garb and I think, you know, they are identifying themselves first and foremost as Muslims, I get worried. I get nervous," – Juan Williams.

No, Juan, what you just described is the working definition of bigotry.

What if someone said that they saw a black man walking down the street in classic thug get-up. Would a white person be a bigot of he assumed he was going to mug him? What percentage of traditionally garbed Muslims – I assume wearing a covered veil or some other indicator and being of darker skin – have committed acts of terror? And, of course, the 9/11 mass-murderers were in everyday attire, to blend in. So was the Christmas Day undie-bomber. The Fort Hood murderer was in US military uniform, for Pete's sake.

The literal defense of anti-Muslim bigotry on Fox is becoming endemic. It's disgusting.