Are Right-Wing Blogs More Dangerous Than The Left?

In a word, in our current world: yes. Henry Farrell uses WaPo Ombudsman Patrick Pexton's weak defense of Jennifer Rubin's blaming al-Qaeda for the Norway attacks to make a larger point about the role of blogs in fomenting violence:

There is no effective contact between e.g. MoveOn or the Daily Kos on the one hand, and the various subgroups and splinters who are more enthusiastic about violence on the other. When the latter try to influence the former, they get mobbed and repelled. The right is a quite different matter – there are dense social ties between online partisans and anti-Muslim bigots and crazies claiming that universal dhimmidom is right around the corner.

Pexton’s suggestion that leftwing bloggers need to think carefully about whether they too will inspire the mass-murder of scores of teenagers doesn’t deserve a serious response in itself. But it is worth looking at as a specific manifestation of a more pervasive intellectual confusion between two different forms of ‘extremism,’ one of which is not in fact a form of extremism at all.

Eric Alterman piles on Pexton. When was the last time there was a left-wing secular mass murder or assassination in America? Or Europe? There was a time when left and right violence could be equated or compared. I just don't see the evidence for it today. Especially if you consider Islamist terror, as I do, also a form of radical right fundamentalism. Bin Laden's agenda was far closer to Pat Robertson's than Michael Moore's, as that fatuous Christianist reminded us just after 9/11.

Dish App: Coming Soon

A reader writes:

Great news that the Twitter feed is back. Now, can you guys also make a Dish-only iPhone app happen? Please, pretty please? I tried the Daily Beast app but couldn't find how to read the Dish on it.

In fact, we just completed a final round of testing on a Dish tab that will appear on the Beast app and function just like its own app. It should be available to the public within the next week or so. Stay tuned.

The Struggle Within Israel

Altalena_off_Tel-Aviv_beach

Shlomo Avinieri sees a revival of classical socialist-humanistic Zionism in the latest tent protests:

It seems the neo-capitalist model, which clearly caused the economic crises the West is currently experiencing, is contrary to the requirements and values of the Zionist enterprise. It is therefore wonderful to see the Israeli flag flying at these demonstrations after it seemed to have become the property of the right-wing settlement movement. The current demonstrations are not only a reflection of social protest. They are Zionist in the deeper sense of a just and humanistic Zionism.

(David Bernstein, by contrast, blames Israeli feelings of entitlement and poor knowledge of the supply/demand curve.)

Meanwhile, Netanyahu celebrates a rather darker story of internecine Israeli conflict. Just as the US far right occasionally lapses into nostalgia for the confederacy, so Netanyahu's far right government wants to diminish David Ben Gurion and resurrect the terrorism of Menachem Begin as the lodestar for Israel's future. Hence the planned raising of the Altalena warship from the bottom of the sea. Money quote from Gershom Gorenberg:

“The idea that Begin is the hero of this story is a total rewrite,” he said. Gorenberg likened the Israeli government adopting this narrative to the American government “endorsing Confederate History Month as a celebration of the South’s role in preserving the Union.”

And the Likudnik beat goes on.