Jazeerileaks

I think it is time to stop pretending that all of the documents purported to be leaked Palestinian Authority documents are what they claim to be, namely PA diplomatic memos. Some are, but many are not. Barry Rubin goes into great detail in his blog posting in describing this fabrication. The Palestinian Authority itself has forcefully rejected that the papers released which describe Palestinian concessions in the peace process are in fact real documents. In fact, they are arguing that the positions attributed to the PA are actually the Israeli positions, something which Barry Rubin demonstrated to be the case in his blog post!

It has been argued that the release of the documents present Israel in a bad light, namely as rejecting reasonable Palestinian offers. Therefore, some have suggested that the documents may have been released in order to bring condemnation upon Israel. J Street’s Ben Ami, in a rush to condemn Israel, seized on them to proclaim that the Palestinians are a peace partner and that Israel has refused to negotiate. Yet, this scenario for the release of the documents does not make sense because the PA has already stated flatly that they did not make the offers in question. One could make the case that any organization utilizing these documents to blame Israel is one that would condemn Israel anyway. J Street is clearly among them. My colleagues who continually try to explain why they are supportive of J Street, clinging to the conception that J Street is supportive and not overly critical of Israel, are finding themselves tiring of presenting a weakening, if not failing, argument.

The release of the documents has definitely done harm to the Palestinian Authority. As the PA faces both internal criticism (Hamas as well as no small part of Fatah) and external criticism (from most, if not all, of the Arab world) for its theoretical willingness to compromise on key issues, to suggest that it made such compromises in negotiations can only do it harm. So what is the origin of these papers?

Well, certainly there are those who will argue that they were created in an Israeli attempt to do harm to the PA by weakening it. This is absurd. Al Jazeera would certainly be much more willing to promote Israeli attempts to harm the PA than it would be to criticize the PA. Additionally, Israel has nothing to gain by weakening the PA and strengthening Hamas.

No, the most likely scenario is one in which Hamas, a supporter of Hamas such as Iran or Hizballah, or an opponent of Abbas among Fatah supporters (Dahlan) created the concession documents and placed them among some legitimate documents in order to make the fabricated ones look real and to weaken the PA and to undermine its ability to represent the Palestinian people in negotiations. Now we can talk about whether or not the PA has a reasonable claim to that status in the first place, having lost the only election held in recent years, but this at least is a reasonable option. I think that an attempt to undermine or even oust Abbas is a reasonable guess as to why these documents were released to the press by whomever chose to do so.

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Post-SOTU briefs

I didn’t bother watching the speech, ’cause it was over 9k words long: Plus, I can’t stand watching Obama. He’s so arrogant. (I listened to a bit of it on the radio. He’s much better heard than seen.) Anyone who watched the whole thing, kudos. I watched Paul Ryan afterwards. (He’s soooo cute.) He went on too long, too. Ten minutes should have been enough. And he missed a chance to slam the Dems by pointing out THEY were in charge of last year’s Congress, that did not pass a budget. By the way, when the AP fact-checks your ass and declares your financial claims in the SOTU wrong, you know the honeymoon is over. Hell, even the CSM is taking him to task for ignoring the need for budget cuts. Of course, the editorial staff at the Times is just thrilled that Obama wants to stay the course that’s screwed up the economy for two years now. But we expected that.

Mr. Obama’s speech offered a welcome contrast to all of the posturing that passes for business in the new Republican-controlled House. On Tuesday, House Republicans pushed through a resolution calling for reducing spending on domestic programs to 2008 levels. In a fragile economy, cutting spending on transportation, education, scientific research, food safety and childhood nutrition will do huge damage.

Yes, but the Times thinks we should totally waste money on Obama’s green schemes and then raise taxes. Woot! My money is their money!

Oh, that’ll show those terrorists! The Russian president is on the case. He’s going to prevent another terrorist bombing in an airport by firing the regional chief of transport. Awesome job. He’s about as smart at American security for deciding to take away our toothpaste. If you’d been reading Jeffrey Goldberg for a while, you’ve been expecting an attack like this. Of course, in the current climate about rhetoric, the fact that Goldberg predicted an attack like this makes him responsible for it. Damn you, Jeff! All those people, and it’s on your head!

Egypt cracks down, brutally: I await the thousands of headlines from world media condemning the brutality of the Egyptian government against the protesters, many of whom may die today. And the tear gas that did not kill a Palestinian protestor? It was fired at Egyptian protestors without incident.

Google and the Holocaust: Google has partnered with Yad Vashem to make its Holocaust archives searchable via Google. This is a wonderful thing. However, count on people using more Holocaust imagery in their attacks on Israel as a result of this. (Normally, I’m an optimist. When it comes to all things Jewish, I’m a realist.)

Posted in Holocaust, Israeli Double Standard Time, Terrorism, The One, World | Tagged , , , | 5 Comments

Tuesday news roundup

Israeli Double Standard Time: Say, you know who’s banning books because they conflict with their view of their religion? Hamas. You know who’s not calling Hamas a fascist state? Time magazine. What time is it? That’s right.

But it’s not Israel-bashing, so who cares? The State Dept. has called the Turkel Commission’s report, which says the IDF used justifiable force in the Mavi Marmara incident, “credible, impartial, and transparent.” Funny, I can’t seem to find the thousands of AP wire stories racing around the world to declare this news. Of course, this being the State Dept., they push the UN panel as the “primary forum” to determine whether or not the IDF’s response to being attacked, beaten, stabbed, and thrown over the deck was justified. Because, of course, we need to know if force was justified after this:

“They dragged me down a ladder, two men, one above and one below – while they were dragging me by my pants they started coming off and my shirt hiked up,” he said. “I saw that there was massive bleeding and I could see my intestines spilling out of my stomach.”

Oh, sure. It was all the IDF’s fault.

Hezbollah wins, peace loses: If Congress doesn’t stop all funds to Lebanon, the U.S. will be complicit in arming a terrorist army. Hezbollah has won the fight to form the government of Lebanon. The next war is going to be brutal, bloody, and all-encompassing, not just hitting the Shi’ite areas of Beirut. Because Hezbollah, the Iranian proxy, will be running Lebanon completely. I wonder if Time magazine will run a cover story titled “Do Lebanese Really Care About Peace?” (No, of course I don’t really wonder that. It doesn’t fit the narrative.)

Palileaks, the True Paliwood Story: Barry Rubin has a primer on how the lies can be used to show the truth of the peace talks. He knows this stuff waaaaay more than I do, so go read his analysis.

Posted in Israel, Lebanon, Media Bias, Turkey | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

The Guardian, Jonathan Freedland and Karma Nabulsi: now we know…

It certainly pays off to sit for a while on the fence (I wonder why that activity is called this way in English – after all, normally fence is the last place you would choose to plop your backside upon). The media is raging for the last three days with a new PaperGate, this time with a scandal called “Palestinian papers”, carefully brewed by Al Jazeera and The Guardian.

Both Al Jazeera and The Guardian are under full steam, feeding the histrionics caused by the initial publication, publishing more new “material” daily. It is not for nothing that I put that word between quotation marks. The eggs are already in the air and no matter whether PaperGate is a deliberate hoax or just a self-delusion, the eggs are going to cover quite a few faces. Read the article SCOOP: Explaining How The “Palestine Papers” Story Is A Fabrication That Teaches Us The Truth. So far it’s the best guide for the perplexed. Only one quote:

Abbas suggests that the documents or the translation reverses the Israeli and Palestinian positions. In other words, it is Israel offering compromise and the Palestinians rejecting it. In general, it is Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, not the PA that is proposing to divide east Jerusalem and so on.

This single possible explanation of the whole affair will be hardly accepted by the main publishers, at least not immediately. It will mean too much egg too soon. Better to let the story fizzle slowly and then, in some distant future, fess up using a corner of the mouth only…

But this is not why this post. Folks like prof. Barry Rubin will get eventually to the roots of this sham. What was of a special interest to me is rather on the sidelines of the whole story.

To start with, two (purportedly) different authors submit two articles. One is Jonathan Freedland, a Jewish lefty, with his Palestine papers: Now we know. Israel had a peace partner and the other Karma Nabulsi, an Oxford academic (I already had a dubious honor to reflect on her peculiar academic achievements) and a former PLO representative (in fact, today she is more of a Hamas mouthpiece than anything else). Karma Nabulsi calls her opus This seemingly endless and ugly game of the peace process is now finally over. Read both, there hardly is a need to quote anything. Of course, Ms Nabulsi is more incendiary of the two. Of course, her call for cessation of any negotiations and return to killing is not restrained much. But if you try to filter out the chaff, the gist is striking: both anti-Israeli extreme and “pro-Israeli” lefty are fully ready to accept the version fed to them by the Al Jazeera / The Guardian pair. Both don’t question for a moment the truth of the matter (well, Freedland left himself just a bit of wiggling out room, but far from being enough) – obviously the story told fits their point of view too well.

Now the more important issue: the role of The Guardian in this PaperGate. While general anti-Israeli trend of Al Jazeera is open for all to see, The Guardian is, on the face of it (OK, I know), interested in peace and tranquility in the Middle East. May the lions lie down with the lambs and all that jazz…

So, wouldn’t it be kind of natural to ask a simple question: even assuming that the story touted by Al Jazeera and The Guardian is correct in all its details (which assumption is bullshit), why would The Guardian participate in an act that blows away the current PA leadership, only to install a new regime that will be much less inclined to talk and much more inclined to shoot? Why would The Guardian give a willing hand, in fact, to a new intifada? Why is The Guardian so bloodthirsty?

You tell me…

Cross-posted on SimplyJews

Posted in Media Bias, Politics | 6 Comments

Palileaks: They’re not passing the smell test

A quick look at the initial reports about al Jazeera’s so-called leaks raises my b.s. meter to its very top. Listen to this quote and tell me you don’t think there’s an effort out to utterly discredit the Palestinian leadership (such as it is):

One document quoted Erekat as telling an Israeli official: “It is no secret that …we are offering you the biggest Yerushalayim in history.” He used the Hebrew word for Jerusalem.

Ahmed Qurie, the lead Palestinian negotiator in 2008, was quoted as proposing that Israel annex all Jewish settlements in Jerusalem except Har Homa. He also said Israel could keep control of a part of the Old City of Jerusalem.

“This is the first time in history that we make such a proposition,” the document quoted Ahmed Qurie as saying.

Really? Saab Erekat called Jerusalem “Yerushalayim”? That’s awfully convenient, if you’re looking to discredit Erekat utterly in Arab eyes.

I’m not buying either quote. And I’m especially not buying the so-called intransigence of the Israeli side. The fact that the Guardian says it has verified the documents is meaningless. The Guardian has had an anti-Israel agenda for decades. Let someone else (preferably several someones) verify the documents before I believe them.

Posted in Israel, palestinian politics | 3 Comments

Getting it wrong on Lebanon

I tend not to pay attention to the AP analysis on the Middle East, because it is so often wrong. Watching the AP spin the “negotiations” for the new Lebanese prime minister is a great example of how they get it wrong.

Hezbollah is taking a leaf from its Iranian masters and insisting that “cooperation” means “Do what we say or we won’t cooperate.” Here’s my favorite bit:

“In case the person we support is chosen to form the Cabinet we will work for this Cabinet to be a government of national unity,” Nasrallah said in a televised speech. “We do not seek to cancel anyone.”

That is significant because Hezbollah and its allies had appeared to be closing in on enough support in parliament to form a government on their own, if they had chosen to try to do so.

That’s the exact opposite of what they’re doing. Consider the opposition to Hebollah’s “suggestion” for PM:

A senior March 14 source said Mikati was the candidate of Hezbollah, adding that there was no Saudi cover for his nomination. “Mikati is not a consensual candidate. He is a candidate of Hezbollah. The problem is that Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah is appointing the Sunni prime minister,” the source told The Daily Star.

“We will not participate [in any Mikati government] because we consider that Saad Hariri is the only one who can form a national unity Cabinet in which all parties participate,” MP Ahmad Fatfat of Hariri’s parliamentary Future bloc told al-Jadid TV.

Strong-arm tactics are not cooperation. And that is how Hezbollah works. It’s sheer bullshit to imply otherwise, and the AP does more than imply that Hezbollah is willing to “cooperate.” Really? Like this?

“The Lebanese Druse leader Walid Jumblatt received threats from Hizbullah; if he didn’t support them – Hizbullah would conquer their stronghold in Chouf mountains [south-east of Beirut],” MK Majallie Whbee told Army Radio Saturday.

Whbee, a member of the Druse community, estimated that such threats emanating from Hizbullah camp were the basis for Jumblatt’s recent support of the Hizbullah-Syria alliance in the present Lebanese political crisis. He also suspected that Jumblatt would not, in the end, join a government coalition headed by Hizbullah.

Instead of reading Hezbollah apologists, try reading Tony Badran and Michael Young. They write true analysis, not Hezbollah spin. So does Barry Rubin. The AP? Feh.

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Guns and frozes

Where in the world was Meryl this morning? Up in the Poconos, taking her nephew shooting in 6 degree weather (-2 when factoring in the wind chill).

He had a great time.

My nephew shooting

 

 

 

 

 

 

So did I. We’ll have an even better time if he gets a chance to visit me in Richmond, where we can shoot indoors. Or at least, if we go outside, in much warmer weather.

22 out of 25 in trap shooting the first time you’ve ever shot a real shotgun is pretty damned good. My nephew is, as my father would say, a chip off the old block. Dad was a marksman in the army in WWII.

Nephew is joining the Marines. He’ll be in boot camp in a couple of months, unless a slot opens up sooner. Things are going to get very different this year.

Posted in Guns | 14 Comments

Left behind

(All the lefties are going to freak about the title of this post. ZOMG! She’s one of those rapture freaks!)

I left my good microphone in Virginia, and I am in NJ. With a kick-ass script and a crappy mic. Dammit. No contribution to the podcast for me this time, unless Doug feels like postponing until Monday (which I doubt).

Well, I can put it in for the next one. It’s not time-sensitive.

It’s 13 degrees out. Fahrenheit, to my foreign readers. I’ve decided that I really don’t need to go anywhere for another couple of hours at the least, and maybe not for the rest of the day. I hate the cold. I can’t wait for spring.

Posted in Life, Podcasts | 2 Comments

Friday briefs

The usual Palestinian form of “dissent”: A stone-throwing mob. The French foreign minister was quoted as saying that holding Gilad Shalit was a war crime, so of course, the Palestinians showed their appreciation by terrorizing her and her staff during their trip to Gaza. (And gee, spontaneous demonstrations happen all the time in the Hamas-controlled territory. Oh. Wait. Hamas-controlled.) Interesting how neither the AFP nor the AP says the mob “said they were relatives of prisoners.” The statement is made as if it’s known by all. I wonder how many members of Hamas were in the “spontaneous” mob.

Protesters were waiting for Alliot-Marie as she crossed from Israel into Gaza through the Erez Crossing, lying on the road and jumping on her vehicle. Hamas police eventually dispersed those protesters, but more gathered outside a United Nations office in Gaza City that was her first stop in the Palestinian territory, and later followed her to a nearby hospital, pelting her motorcade with eggs. AP Television footage showed Alliot-Marie narrowly dodging a shoe thrown by a protester as she climbed into a jeep under heavy guard.

But it’s not Goldstone, so it can’t be true: Watch for the world to belittle or ignore the completion of the Israeli investigation into the Gaza Flotilla. The report will be published on Sunday.

South Korea shows the world how to handle pirates: The South Korean navy stormed a hijacked ship, killed eight, wounded a few more and recaptured the ship. The words “Ay, Maties!” were not heard, but perhaps the pirates heard the message sent by South Korea:

President Lee Myung-bak went live on national television to announce the successful conclusion of the five-hour operation, 1,300 kilometers northeast of Somalia.

Mr. Lee told the country South Korea will not tolerate future attacks on any of its nationals.

By the way, if you think that perhaps American soldiers helped, you may be right. There was a vague reference to help from “other nations” in the article.

Posted in Gaza, Hamas, Israel | 2 Comments

In response to Tiger mothers

You can’t read this first bullet point without laughing out loud. Leave it to a Jewish mother to show a Tiger mother how it’s done:

Here are some of the things that my four children of a Jewish mother were always allowed to do:

  • Quit the piano and the violin, especially if their defeatist attitude coincided with a recital, thus saving me from the torture of listening to other people’s precious children soldier through hackneyed pieces of the juvenile repertoire, plink after ever more unbearable plonk.

Read it all. It’s wonderful.

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Palin, Beck, and Limbaugh Connected with Anti-Judaism

A couple of weeks ago, a wacko named Jared Loughner, who has absolutely nothing to do with Sarah Palin, Glenn Beck, or Rush Limbaugh committed an unspeakable crime in Tucson. Never mind that he killed four other people and shot a Rep. Giffords in the head, he killed a nine year old girl and that is good enough for me to hate him with an indescribable passion. We all search to find meaning in this craziness, this horrifying irrationality. “He must have been induced to this extreme behavior!”

The left blames the right. The right blames the left. The sane blame insanity. What Loughner put on Youtube and what he said to friends about his conspiratorial beliefs is simple insanity. Many of us try to explain terrible events by trying to attribute order to them, giving them a cause and therefore and effect that we can comprehend. Some went after leaders on the political right including Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh, but most strongly Governor Palin. They argued that her words and actions incited this man to this deed. Palin had evidently placed crosshairs on a map of congressional seats to target as especially important to win for those politically aligned with her. Rep. Giffords district was one of them. “Palin put crosshairs on Giffords! She must be responsible!”

Well friends, Loughner published a lot online and with incredible and ludicrous details. No where does he mention anything about Sarah Palin, Glenn Beck, or Rush Limbaugh. Here is where anti-Judaism creeps in to the picture.

No few people accused Palin of inciting Loughner to this action and Palin responded by accusing them of a “blood libel“. “Blood Libel!” Some Jewish leaders screamed:

Blood libel is a term that belongs to us! It can only refer to accusations that Jews use the blood of others for baking matzah, for sacrifices, for gefilte fish, for powering Dimona, as a secret ingredient in Coca Cola, for making Barbies and other actions of pure evil.

Well, I embellish a bit. The reality is that “blood libel” does indeed have painful connotations for Jews. Libels have resulted in pogroms against the Jews time and again with some entire communities being massacred. Yet the concept is a simple one, and here Governor Palin was correct. The concept is that one community, or even a person, is accused of a murder in which they were totally uninvolved because the accuser wishes to do that community, or the specific people accused, harm regardless of their culpability. Jews were accused of crimes because people hated the Jews, not because they were involved in the crimes. Meanwhile, the Jewish community officially objects to Gov. Palin’s use of the term. Okay. I think it was appropriate to an extent, but using another term would have been better, one option which I will share with you in a moment.

Where does the anti-Judaism come in? It comes into the picture with the selective outcry about incitement. All one need do is to look at the difference between the coverage of the Fort Hood shooting and the Tucson shooting. In the Fort Hood shooting, the perpetrator was a devout Muslim who had at one point attended the mosque in America led by Anwar Al-Awlaki, near the top of the Al-Qaeda chart. Al-Awlaki is the head of Al-Qaeda in Yemen. No one in the mainstream media, N-O O-N-E, would ever accuse Maj. Hasan of being incited by an Imam in an American Mosque, would they??? Hasan had direct contact and was in communication with Al-Awlaki in America!!! But the media blamed the army, the right wing in fact, for persecuting him, even though the military welcomed him and went out of its way to help him through his schooling and residency.

Let us compare that to the Tucson incident. In that, the media immediately looked for incitement by right wing leaders, going so far as to ignore the facts published by Loughner himself that negated their arguments. Who needs facts when you have a narrative that you like to use! Some of you have just noted that this is where Governor Palin is connected with anti-Judaism.

Jews and Israel specifically are often accused of crimes that they not only did not commit, but can provide evidence that they had nothing to do with. Yet there are those out there who accuse none-the-less. Is the argument that Israel trained sharks to attack tourists in Egypt not libelous? What about the argument that the Mossad is responsible for the attacks against Christians in Iraq rather than the Muslims who claimed responsibility? How about those who argue that Israel perpetrated 9/11? I could go on and on, but you get the point. The assertion that Governor Palin’s words somehow impelled this wacko (wacko is far nicer a term than is deserving) to bloodlust is not only totally unfounded, but is in fact controverted by the evidence offered by Loughner himself. Should Governor Palin and others similarly accused have called the media’s accusation a “blood libel” as opposed to a Media Libel, which is the term I would rather apply, or some other similar term? Perhaps she should have used another term. But fussing at her about her use of “Blood Libel” misses the real point. The real point is that the same narrative hugging, fact denying, that is going on against Israel and has been going on against the Jews for time immemorial is being applied in the mainstream American press to their perceived opponents on the political right.

Far from being guilty of anti-Judaism, Governor Palin and others on the political right including Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh, who were also similarly accused of incitement, were in many ways the victims of anti-Judaism simply applied beyond the boundaries of the Jewish community and unto friends of Israel. Meanwhile, as I write this, Rep. Giffords, a strong supporter of Israel and a member of the all too persecuted tribe, is making a remarkable recovery in a Houston hospital. My thoughts are with her, with her family, with others making recoveries and with the families of those who lost loved ones to Sinat Hinam, blind hatred.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, AP Media Bias, Israel, Media Bias | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Thursday briefs

So he wasn’t a braggart after all: The line from the U.S. back when Khalid Sheik Mohammed was captured was that he didn’t kill Daniel Pearl, he was just a braggart who wanted credit for the murder. Turns out that line was bull. He did it. What a p.o.s. And hey, great work, guys, in figuring out when a terrorist is lying and when he’s telling the truth. I’m so confident in my country’s ability to protect me from them.

Challah Hu Akbar: New guy in the neighborhood, with a very witty blog title. Yes, indeed, challah is great. (And one of the tastiest breads in the world!) He’s on the blogroll.

We’ll whitewash Palestinian terrorism even if it kills you: The AP reports that a Palestinian man—that’s the phrase they use—rode up to a checkpoint, fired at soldiers while chanting “Allahu akbar,” and likely did it to revenge a relative who was killed while attacking soldiers with a pipe bomb two week ago—yet he doesn’t even get the “militant” designate. Why? Because the AP can’t find a “militant” group to tie him to.

That famous Muslim religious tolerance: While I am stunned that this is an AP story about Muslim religious intolerance, this is worse than anything they report on the Haredim. Muslim courts divorced a couple that did not request a divorce, leaving their marriage in limbo. This is apparently common practice against unapproved Islamic sects. Where did this happen? Gaza? Nope. Tulkarem, West Bank. Think we’ll see a cover story in Time about the Palestinians upcoming fascist state? (Of course, I kid. We’ll never see a negative story in Time about the Palestinians.)

How corrupt is the UN? This corrupt: The UN investigator is under investigation—for retaliating against two whistleblowers who reported corruption at the UN. Awesome. And oh yeah—this is the guy who closed down investigations before they were finished, with no charges filed. There are no hens, only foxes, in the UN henhouse.

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Because we can all use some good news

NY cop rescues 11-year-old girl who fell through the ice.

“I could see just her head sticking out of the water,” DeMatteo said, according to the New York Post. “I was nervous that we’d both go in, but I couldn’t just sit there and do nothing. When you see her in the water, you’re going to do whatever you can to help her.”

But after he got her out of the water and they headed for land, the ice gave way again, sending them both briefly into the frigid water.

Chris Gonzales, first assistant chief of Sayville Community Ambulance, threw them a rope and pulled them ashore. They were taken to a hospital for observation, though neither was seriously injured.

At a news conference at Stony Brook University Medical Center, Sarah and DeMatteo sat side by side in wheelchairs, both wrapped in gray blankets.

“I’m better, just my hands feel all tingly,” Sarah said, according to the New York Daily News.

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She pulled one hand out of her blanket to shake her rescuer’s hand. “Thank you,” she said, receiving a big smile back from DeMatteo.

Posted in Miscellaneous | Comments Off on Because we can all use some good news

Wednesday news roundups

You know, I’m almost with Iran on this one: I hate Valentine’s Day. I hate all Hallmark holidays. But I’m not willing to make it illegal, and the Iranians are. It’s that famous Muslim tolerance of other religions! Woot! (Although, when I go through the supermarket and see that glaring pink aisle, I do have second thoughts about making it illegal.)

Oh, then the party’s saved! Amir Peretz is going to stick with the Labor Party and give it another chance. To elect him, I suppose. (Pssst… Dude…. get rid of the porn ‘stache.) You know, when even Labor Party stalwarts balk at staying in the Labor Party, it’s time to retire the socialists.

Toldja so: The LA Times runs an article about the Serbian accused of genocide who is now an Israeli citizen because he married a Jew, and they don’t get around to mentioning that until paragraph 11 of a 14-paragraph story. The first ten paragraphs are all about the genocide committed by an Israeli citizen, and the headline is “Israeli citizen suspected of involvement in Bosnia war crimes arrested.” But of course. It’s far more important to call him an Israeli than to point out he’s an immigrant trying to run away from his past.

This is what Meryl will be doing for the next few days: Little Big Planet 2 is out. (And I has a Sackboy doll!) Sarah’s coming over to play while I work, at least until I can take lunch. Then we’ll hit a couple of levels together. Then I will sadly turn off the PS3 and go back to work. Ah, well. I anticipate our regular weekly gaming lunch forming again. Hell, it even got me to synch up my internet connection with the PS3. Can Netflix be far behind?

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Your Tuesday briefs

“Spontaneous” pro-Hizbollah demos popping up in Lebanon: Love the report of “hand-held radios” being spotted. Read: Walkie-talkies with which to receive their instructions.

Associated Press reporters saw at least four gatherings of up to 30 people each, dressed in black and carrying hand-held radios. One gathering was about 400 meters (1,300 feet) from the Grand Serail, the seat of government in downtown Beirut, and security officials closed the roads leading to the building.

That’s just a shot across the bow. Lebanon is on the edge of a precipice.

Perversion of Aliyah: A Bosnian man married to a Jewish woman emigrated to Israel five years ago. Turns out he’s wanted for genocide in a massacre of Bosnian Muslims. Israel, of course, is cooperating. But mark my words, the anti-Israel left will use this as an example of Israeli genocide, even though the man is neither Jewish nor Israeli-born.

Remember, it’s anti-Zionism, not anti-Semitism: Someone painted a swastika on cargo from a British Airways flight to Israel. Gee. I guess they didn’t get the message that hate crimes are wrong in the U.K. Oh, wait. I forgot. The Exception Rule was in play. That’s where you add “Except for Jews” to every rule. So hate crimes are wrong, except for the ones against Jews. Like Israeli Double Standard Time, however, not to worry: It’s only in effect on days that end with a Y.

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