This is why the AP sucks

The AP is so unbelievably biased against Israel, it can’t report the news without adding their own whitewash. We’ve seen that in many articles about Palestinian wrongdoing. Now they’re doing it in defense of anti-Semitism.

Here’s the headline:

German newspaper expresses regret over cartoon depicting Israel as ravenous monster

And here’s the lead:

A German newspaper has expressed regret after publishing a cartoon that appeared to depict the state of Israel as a ravenous monster.

Munich-based Sueddeutsche Zeitung says the picture appeared Tuesday alongside two reviews of books about Israel.

The caption suggested that the Jewish state was seen by its enemies as akin to Moloch — a monstrous deity from the Old Testament to whom followers sacrificed their children.

Let’s take a look at the Ynet article that included the translated words, shall we?

“Germany presents” the drawing’s subheading reads and then elaborates: “For decades Israel receives arms, sometimes for free. Israel’s detractors believe Israel to be a voracious Moloch. Peter Beinart condemns this situation.”

Note that the AP headline was clear: The article depicted Israel as a ravenous monster. An editor changed the text inside the story to make it seem that perhaps it didn’t really depict Israel that way, even though, well, it did. And the AP doubles down by explaining in the final paragraph:

The picture had been taken from a stock library and originally wasn’t intended as a depiction of Israel.

Note that nobody is quoted. the words “The paper said” or “an editor said” were not inserted in front of “orginally wasn’t intended as a depiction of Israel”. The AP makes it seem as though these are facts, not a statement made by someone working for the German paper after an outcry was raised.

The Jerusalem Post managed to contact both the artist who drew the picture (and was horrified at its use) and Peter Beinart.

The illustrator of the cartoon Ernst Kahl strongly objected to the use of his drawing by the Süddeutsche. The cartoon was originally designed for a gourmet cook magazine called “Der Feinschmecker.” He said if he were told in advance of the use of his illustration, he would not have green-lighted the publication of his cartoon for the Süddeutsche’s book page. The paper reviewed two books slamming Israel, including a book by the American Jewish author Peter Beinart.

Beinart objected to the cartoon on his twitter feed, writing “Dumbest part of nasty cartoon accompanying review of my book is that I strongly support military aid to Israel.”

But the AP? Well, they’re too busy covering for anyone who gets caught slamming Israel. Because in the AP narrative, Israel can never be right. Not ever. Covering for anti-Semitism? Well, that’s just part and parcel of the AP’s biased coverage of Israel.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, AP Media Bias, Israel, Media Bias | Comments Off on This is why the AP sucks

Friday briefs

Yeah, she didn’t seem to care about the Christians, though: Navi Pillay, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, is bent out of shape that the Egyptian military overthrew the Muslim Brotherhood government. Because the military is detaining the leadership. Where, we wonder, was her concern while the Islamists have been murdering Christians these past few years? It’s amazing what they find to complain about, isn’t it?

Red on red: For once, we agree with–yes, really–Fatah. they’re calling on Gazans to overthrow the Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated Hamas government. Not that we think it will happen, or that we think the PA is much better than Hamas, but we did get a giggle out of the news.

Hamas: The biggest losers. Yeah, we knew already they were losers, but Elior Levy goes into details about how big the loss of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood government is to Hamas. Don’t forget, they’re already reeling from the loss of Syria and Iran by siding with the Syrian rebels. Now, if only Qatar will stop giving them money, maybe there would be a popular uprising against Hamas. For which every death would be blamed on Israel.

And of course, it’s the Jews’ fault: The Muslim Brotherhood is already using their worst possible insult about Egypt’s new leader: He’s a Jew. If he is, it’s to Egypt’s benefit. Assholes.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, Gaza, Hamas, Middle East, palestinian politics, United Nations | Comments Off on Friday briefs

The NSA national anthem

We need to update the Star-Spangled Banner. So I did.

O say can you see all my data today
It’s not private anymore and our pols say it’s all good
We don’t care about you, says the NSA
We only spy to keep bad guys from your neighborhood
Oh but wait we also trap the internet you read
Do not worry citizens, it’s from fear you are freed
Oh say does your government know what is best
So pretend that you are free, we’ll take care of the rest

If you liked this, how about trying my novel, Darkness Rising: Book One of The Catmage Chronicles? It’s a YA fantasy adventure.

Thirteen-year-old Andy Cohen gets the surprise of his life when a talking cat shows up in his front yard. Goldeneyes, a powerful Catmage, needs Andy’s help. Her grandmother—the wisest, most powerful Catmage alive—is missing, and her trail leads straight to Andy’s town. But there’s a problem: Goldeneyes doesn’t like humans very much, and Andy is impulsive and reckless. They have to learn how to work together, and they need to do it before the Wild Ones kill Nafshi and steal her powerful Magelight.

Posted in American Scene, The One | Comments Off on The NSA national anthem

Happy Fourth of July

This seems more important than ever, seeing as how the last two administrations don’t believe that our forefathers were right to keep government out of our business. As Benjamin Franklin said:

They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.

Happy Fourth of July to my fellow Americans, and to my fellow Americans in spirit.

Old Glory waving in the breeze

Two hundred and thirty seven years ago, our forefathers gave us this:

The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America,

When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

Read the whole thing, in its original document. And then weep because of our current political class.

God bless America, and vote the bastards out.

Posted in American Scene, Holidays | 1 Comment

Mideast Media Sampler – 07/03/2013

1) When all else fails focus on Israel

I’m not sure that the editors of the New York Times realized how absurd the title of this recent article on the Middle East sounded, Chaos in Middle East Grows as the U.S. Focuses on Israel.

However, the content of the reporting – co-written by Jerusalem Bureau Chief Jodi Rudoren and White House correspondent Mark Landler – is earnest. The beginning of the article emphasizes the apparent contradiction.

In Damascus, the Syrian government’s forces are digging in against rebels in a bloody civil war that is swiftly approaching the grim milestone of 100,000 dead. In Cairo, an angry tide of protesters again threatens an Egyptian president.

At the same time, in tranquil Tel Aviv, Secretary of State John Kerry wrapped up a busy round of shuttle diplomacy, laboring to revive a three-decade-old attempt at peace negotiations between the Israelis and Palestinians. He insisted on Sunday that he had made “real progress.”

Much of the rest of the articles seeks to justify Kerry’s poorly timed obsession.

Former administration officials defend that conviction. Mr. Kerry’s focus, they say, makes sense precisely because of the chaos elsewhere. With little leverage over Egypt and deep reluctance about intervening in Syria, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is one place that the United States can still exert influence, and perhaps even produce a breakthrough.

“You don’t have instability between the Israelis and Palestinians right now,” said Dennis B. Ross, a former senior adviser to Mr. Obama on the Middle East. “But if you don’t act, there’s a risk that the Palestinian Authority will collapse, leaving a vacuum. And if we know one thing about vacuums in the Middle East, they are never filled with good things.”

Resuscitating the peace process, he said, is also vital to Jordan, which is reeling from the wave of refugees from Syria and can ill afford a new wave of Palestinian unrest in the neighboring West Bank.

We could put that another way. Since the administration botched its handling of Egypt (supporting the Muslim Brotherhood) and Syria (allowing Islamist militias to take over the Syrian opposition), it’s hoping to pressure Israel so it can claim a (minor) political victory amid the increasing havoc throughout the Middle East.

Israel’s existence as an island of stability in a chaotic region is something that Thomas Friedman mocked in February, 2011:

Rather than even listening to what the democracy youth in Tahrir Square were saying and then trying to digest what it meant, this Israeli government took two approaches during the last three weeks: Frantically calling the White House and telling the president he must not abandon Pharaoh – to the point where the White House was thoroughly disgusted with its Israeli interlocutors – and using the opportunity to score propaganda points: “Look at us! Look at us! We told you so! We are the only stable country in the region, because we are the only democracy.’’

We don’t know what really went on. We don’t know what Israeli officials told the White House. If Israel was calling for caution from the White House, two and a half years later that advice looks pretty apt. Friedman looks foolish for his contempt.

That Israel is the focus of American diplomacy shows that the administration still hasn’t gotten the message.

As Barry Rubin observed recently:

There is an alternative: the United States will understand that Israel is just about the only reliable ally in the Middle East. It might take another president to do that.

2) Where diversity is ordinary

The usual perception of Israel perpetuated by the media is that it is a country without much regard for “the other.” The truth about Israel is much different. Diana Bletter described this reality in Diversity Makes Life Rich: An Ordinary Day in Israel at the Huffington Post.

The other day — an ordinary day — I got up and brought my car over to the auto repair shop in our village, owned and operated by a Muslim man, Nasser. Nasser employs about 15 people in his shop, including my friend, Jasmine (more on her in a minute), several mechanics (Muslims and Jews) and a Rumanian Christian woman who, after meeting a Muslim man studying medicine in Bucharest, married him and moved to Israel.

From there, I went to Akko — home to about 50,000 people, of whom 30 percent are Arab — to visit my friend, Janan. She was the first Druze woman in Israel (if not in the entire Middle East) to receive her Ph.D. Janan is founder of Akko Vision, a dialogue group consisting of Jewish, Muslim, Christian and Druze women. (I’m a member of the group.) There is also a Baha’i woman. (Unlike in Iran, where the Baha’i are persecuted.) The group’s lasts initiative was a visit of women from Bethlehem.

After meeting with Janan, I went to the market in the Old City of Akko where I walked through winding, ancient alleyways, Arabic music playing, incense burning, guys smoking water pipes, the smell of coriander and fresh pita bread. I stopped to buy blue ceramic dishes made by Armenian craftsmen from a Christian couple who own one of the largest tourist shops in the Old City. I learned that there’s only one country in the Middle East with an increasing Christian population and that’s Israel. (In Iraq, Lebanon and Libya, Christians have become victims of religious persecution. There has been a spike of attacks against Christians since the Muslim Brotherhood gained power in Egypt. In Gaza, Christians face attacks daily.)

What’s remarkable about this sketch of Bletter’s life in Israel is how free it is from politics. She is making no point other than: this is what’s normal.

3) Where terror is extraordinary

Next door, Israel’s “peace partner,” once again, hails a terrorist.

Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas has awarded the “highest order of the Star of Honor” to arch-terrorist Nayef Hawatmeh. This is a continuation of the policy followed by Abbas and the PA to glorify terrorists responsible for murdering Israelis, as documented by Palestinian Media Watch.

Nayef Hawatmeh is the leader of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP). The DFLP carried out many deadly terror attacks, including the killing of 22 schoolchildren and 4 adults after taking them hostage in Ma’alot, the killing of 9 children and 3 adults in an attack on a school bus, the killing of 7 in a Jerusalem bombing, the killing of 4 hostages in an apartment building in Beit Shean, all of which took place in the 1970’s. In addition, the DFLP has participated in and claimed responsibility for dozens of other terror attacks, including a suicide bombing near Tel Aviv that killed 4 in 2003.

Abbas himself signed the PA declaration decorating Hawatmeh with the Star of Honor, which praises Hawatmeh’s “efforts to raise the flag of Palestine since the launch of the Palestinian revolution.”

Those who continue to prioritize the peace process fail to account for the starkly different values of Israeli and Palestinian society. Not once do they ask themselves if a society that so frequently honors cold blooded killers is ready to commit to peace.

Posted in Israel | 1 Comment

Your objective media in action

Check out the lead on this article on the Zimmerman trial:

(CBS/AP) –A Florida judge has ruled that prosecutors may introduce evidence about suspected murderer George Zimmerman’s coursework in criminal justice that they say gave him knowledge of Florida’s self-defense law.

I think this one’s all CBS editing. I can’t find it in the AP solo version, but there are a lot of versions credited to CBS/AP.

Way to be objective, CBS.

Posted in American Scene, Media Bias | Comments Off on Your objective media in action

Wednesday briefs

I think the fat lady is starting to sing: The Egyptian army is meeting with leaders of the opposition to the Muslim Brotherhood. I do believe there’s going to be more blood in Egypt’s streets soon. The big question is: If they overthrow Morsi, will they get it right next time? One can only hope. Egypt is the most populous nation in the Middle East, and was once a great civilization. Maybe if they get happier at home they’ll realize Israel isn’t their enemy. But don’t count on Obama to do anything smart. He hasn’t so far.

But it’s anti-Zionism, not anti-Semitism: Anti-Semitism in German newspapers? Yeah, this is a surprise. A German paper portrays Israel as a ravenous Moloch (an idol to which ancient people sacrificed children). Should we be surprised? No more than seeing a crossword puzzle author use “Shylock” as a definition for Jew.

Lies times three: I caught a headline in my Google News feed that the majority of Israelis believe the apology to Turkey is a mistake. It’s in the Hurriyet News and cited by the CBN, based on a poll that was supposedly commissioned by the Begin-Sada Center. The thing is, I can’t find the poll results on that site. In fact, all I can find is a link to the Hurriyet article quoting one Professor Efraim Inbar, which is about as self-referential as they come. So I’m calling bullshit on this poll, especially since I found an actual poll taken in 2012 in which a majority of Israelis said that they supported the apology to Turkey.

A majority of Israelis believe that Israel should take action in order to improve relations with Turkey, including the issuing of an apology on operational mistakes that took place during the flotilla takeover, as part of an agreement between the two countries. Most Israelis think that the Israeli government is not doing enough to improve relations with Turkey, and believe that doing such will assist Israel’s international campaign against Iran.

This, dear readers, is how lies are spread. Hurriyet is a major Turkish newspaper, and it has been spreading anti-Israel lies for years. You’d think that a pro-Israel group wouldn’t want to help them along. Because now Turkish politicians are blaming the Jews for the protests in Turkey.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, Israel, Middle East, Turkey | Comments Off on Wednesday briefs

Mideast Media Sampler – 07/02/2013

Inspired, not

Inspired by the massive outpouring of popular opposition, the Tamarod, to the regime of President Mohammed Morsi of Egypt, the editors of the New York Times issued a call for the President hailing from the Muslim Brotherhood to take heed:

Mr. Morsi is put on notice

We sympathize with the frustration and anger that is drawing tens of thousands of Egyptians into the streets of Cairo and other cities this week, the country’s largest demonstrations since those that helped force the previous president, Hosni Mubarak from power, nearly two and a half years ago. Citizens of one of the Arab world’s great nations, they struggle with poverty — hunger and poverty rates have risen over the past three years — rising food prices, unemployment and political repression.

Inspired by so-called Arab Spring, they are demanding a government that respects its citizens’ voices and is truly committed to improving their lives. A lesson of the Arab Spring should be a warning to all rulers who cling to power for too long and ignore their people’s demands. President Mohammed Morsi of Egypt clearly hasn’t figured that out.

As the impetus for a major demonstration on Sunday grew, Mr. Morsi gave an unconvincing speech in a lame attempt to ward off dissatisfaction. The June 30 demonstrations are still on demanding Mr. Morsi’s resignation. According to news reports, the protestors came from all social classes and ideologies.

As authoritarian governments often do, the one in Cairo is deluding itself about the causes for the unrest, which had left two protestors and one policeman dead. Officials blamed the previous regime. Even if remnants of the Mubarak regime are playing a role; the truth seems more complex — it is easy to understand why Egyptians are fed up.

Mr. Morsi, 61, who has been in power for only a year and hailed by Time Magazine as the Most Important Man in the Middle East, has sought to use his office to extend his powers and those of the Muslim Brotherhood at the expense of true democracy. Government projects that were supposed to benefit the poor only end up enriching the elite. He has intimidated numerous independent journalists and critics, fomented sectarian violence, appointed a former terrorist as a regional governor and imposed the values of the Muslim Brotherhood on Egypt’s artistic community.

This is a delicate moment for the United States and Egypt, an increasingly unreliable ally and partner in Arab-Israeli peace efforts.

Mr. Morsi may still have a chance to steer his country on a stable path without sacrificing it to extremist elements. That will require ordering security forces to exercise restraint against the protestors and — even more importantly — quickly offering Egyptians a credible, more democratic path forward.

Unfortunately, President Obama was wrong to cut funding to pro-democracy groups upon coming into office, sharply affecting their ability to compete politically with the better organized Islamists. However, on Tuesday, Secretary of State John Kerry called publicly on the Egyptian government to “respect” the “spontaneous” peaceful protests. The administration needs to persuade President Morsi to accept the legitimacy and urgency behind the protests and begin talking to opposition groups. Egypt needs change. A peaceful transition would be best for everyone.

Actually that’s not what the editors of the New York Times wrote. I changed several of the particulars from their January 26, 2011 editorial, Mr. Mubarak is put on notice. This time, the editors noticeably less enthusiastic about the opposition.

Today in Military Ultimatum in Egypt, the editors write:

On Monday, the military responded to a wave of increasingly violent anti-government protests by threatening to impose its own unspecified “road map” if the government and opposition forces did not resolve the political crisis in 48 hours.

The military played a role in Egyptian politics for decades but withdrew 10 months ago under pressure from Mr. Morsi. Although many opposition groups applauded the military’s willingness to again intervene in politics now, that would be a major setback for Egyptian democracy. It would effectively give the military an opening to reinsert itself whenever there is a political crisis — and it is certain there will be more if Egypt wants to be on the road to real democracy. An adviser to Mr. Morsi said, “We understand it as a military coup.”

There are two underlying premises to the editorial that are faulty.

One is that Morsi has greater legitimacy than Mubarak did simply because he was elected. The other is that the military is a major obstacle to democracy. True, Morsi asserted some civilian control over the military but it shouldn’t be understood as a democratic reform, but a way of removing an obstacle to his intended power grabs.

In the first case, even if Morsi was elected democratically, he did not govern that way. Despite occasional criticisms the New York Times didn’t make a sustained effort to highlight the way he usurped power.

The second point is that while no one should attribute democratic ideals or altruistic motives the Egypt’s military, it has enough self-interest to preserve its privileged status in Egypt to serve as a bulwark against the Muslim Brotherhood’s increasing authoritarianism.

The Muslim Brotherhood isn’t simply a political party, like Democrats or Republicans in the United States. It is a highly disciplined organization that demands fealty to ideas and practices by its members. There are no casual members of the Muslim Brotherhood. Moreover its ideology is anti-American and antisemitic and has its roots in Nazism. Last year Barry Rubin described its goals:

What is most important to understand about the Brotherhood is that, despite its religion-based ideology, it should be viewed in political, not theological terms. It is and has always been a revolutionary organization seeking to seize state power and then to transform thoroughly the societies where it operates.

But how does the New York Times view the Muslim Brotherhood? In today’s editorial it criticizes the organization:

The primary blame falls on Mr. Morsi and his backers in the Muslim Brotherhood. Persecuted and excluded from political life for decades, they refused to grasp what was required to lead the world’s largest Arab country. They used elections to monopolize power, denigrate adversaries and solidify ties with Islamist hard-liners.

The premise to this rebuke is that if only the Brotherhood understood what was best for Egypt it wouldn’t have subverted the revolution to its own ends. (It also assumes that the Brotherhood doesn’t consist of “Islamist hard-liners.”) But the Muslim Brotherhood doesn’t care about such matters. It wishes to transform society, not govern in the way a liberal American newspaper would expect or want it to.

Morsi is no more legitimate than Mubarak because he ruled for less time or because he was once elected. He never accepted that there were limits on his power and sought to exploit as much authority as he could. This might have worked if eighty or ninety percent of Egypt supported the Brotherhood. But Morsi won only a little more than half the votes. That is why the dissatisfaction with him is so strong.

The current opposition is no less legitimate or worthy than the Tahrir Square protesters of 2011, simply because they don’t have a recognizable face like Wael Ghonim. Then those spearheading the drive to oust Mubarak had no more of a defined agenda than the current protesters. Those who did have a coherent plan was the Muslim Brotherhood, which was content to stay in the background and ride the wave of discontent to power.

The bottom line is that Egypt’s military isn’t the obstacle to Egyptian self-government, the Muslim Brotherhood government is. It is a point that the editors of the New York Times refuse to grasp.

Posted in Israel | Comments Off on Mideast Media Sampler – 07/02/2013

Tuesday briefs

Words fail: Profiles of the 19 elite firefighters who died in the Arizona wildfire yesterday.

The EU are the enemy: The Dutch have decided that it’s all Israel’s fault. Of course it is.

… the report, entitled “Between Words and Deeds: Prospects for a sustainable peace in the Middle East,” calls for sanctions against Israel because of settlements yet advocates talking to Hamas and omits any reference to Palestinian terrorism.

There’s no reason whatsoever to build the separation fence, or arrest terrorists, or not allow free travel between Hamastan (Gaza) and the West Bank. None. I don’t know what Israelis could be thinking.

Aiding and abetting: I love the way the world accuses Jews of being the money-grubbers, who will sell anything to anyone for profit, and ignores things like France and Germany selling Iran missile-grade ores. Because it’s not like Iran will use them for weapons or anything. I believe I just said this above: The EU are the enemy.

Yeah, the jury’s still out: The Deputy FM thinks that Israel has convinced Putin not to sell S-300 missiles to Syria. We’ll see.

Missing the forest for the trees: John Kerry is concentrating so heavily on the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, he doesn’t seem to have time to notice that millions of Egyptians are calling for their Pesident’s ouster, and the military is threatening a coup. Barry Rubin points out the idiocy in our current Middle East policy.

Posted in American Scene, Israel, Middle East, Syria, World | Comments Off on Tuesday briefs

Mideast Media Sampler – 07/01/2013

Taken by Surprise

Perhaps the biggest protest in the Arab world took place yesterday in Cairo (and elsewhere in Egypt.) The group, Tamarod (“rebel” in Arabic), claimed to have gathered. 22 million signatures, calling for the resignation of President Morsi, on the anniversary of his election. The goal of Tamarod was to obtain more signatures than the 13 million who voted for Morsi last June 30.

David Kirkpatrick and two other reporters for the New York Times reported on yesterday’s events, By the Millions, Egyptians Seek Morsi’s Ouster

So they didn’t downplay the numbers.

However there appear to be some troubling aspects to their coverage.

Clashes between Mr. Morsi’s opponents and supporters broke out in several cities around the country, killing at least seven people — one in the southern town of Beni Suef, four in the southern town of Assiut and two in Cairo — and injuring hundreds. Protesters ransacked Brotherhood offices around the country. In Cairo, a mob of hundreds set fire to the almost-empty Brotherhood headquarters, pelting it with stones, Molotov cocktails and fireworks for hours. A few members hiding inside the darkened building fired bursts of birdshot at the attackers, wounding several, but the police and security forces did nothing to stop the assault or the arson.

Is this sequence correct? Elsewhere it appeared that the protesters on the headquarters were fired (and some number were killed) upon and then they started shooting. Is Kirkpatrick correct? Is the matter unclear?

A reporter on the scene reported:

In other words, according to this eyewitness, the physical attack by the protesters on the Muslim Brotherhood headquarters in Cairo was defensive or retaliatory. It is the opposite of what Kirkpatrick reported.

Who did Kirkpatrick use as his expert?

Shadi Hamid, a researcher at the Brookings Doha Center in Qatar who studies the Muslim Brotherhood closely, said: “The Brotherhood underestimated its opposition.” He added: “This is going to be a real moment of truth for the Brotherhood.”

Mr. Morsi and Brotherhood leaders have often ascribed much of the opposition in the streets to a conspiracy led by Mubarak-era political and financial elites determined to bring them down, and they have resisted concessions in the belief that the opposition’s only real motive is the Brotherhood’s defeat. But no conspiracy can brings millions to the streets, and by Sunday night some analysts said the protests would send a message to other Islamist groups around the region in the aftermath of the Arab Spring.

“It is a cautionary note: don’t be too eager for power, and try to think how you do it,” Mr. Hamid said, faulting the Egyptian Brotherhood for seeking to take most of the power for itself all at once. “I hear concern from Islamists around the region about how the Brotherhood is tainting Islamism.”

While, Kirkpatrick, at least, wrote “… no conspiracy can brings millions to the streets,” Hamid’s use as an expert is problematic. He doesn’t just study the Muslim Brotherhood, but is sympathetic to them. This twitter exchange between Hamid and Eric Trager from last November is instructive.

From his past writing, Kirkpatrick has shown that he, like Hamid, believes that the Muslim Brotherhood is a force for moderation. Perhaps, he didn’t think that there were any competing views.

The next paragraph is curious.

Mr. Morsi’s administration appeared caught by surprise. “There are protests; this is a reality,” Omar Amer, a spokesman for the president, said at a midnight news conference. “We don’t underestimate the scale of the protests, and we don’t underestimate the scale of the demands.” He said the administration was open to discussing any demands consistent with the Constitution, but he also seemed exasperated, sputtering questions back at the journalists. “Do you have a better idea? Do you have an initiative?” he asked. “Suggest a solution and we’re willing to consider it seriously.”

In this article Kirkpatrick and his colleagues acknowledged that yesterday’s protests were larger than those that called for Mubarak’s ouster. Yet, the New York Times didn’t bother to send a handful of columnists into Cairo to cheerlead the protests as they did in 2011. It wasn’t only the Morsi administration that was “caught by surprise.” Furthermore, if you check the last month’s archive of the New York Times, do you know what word you won’t find? “Tamarod.” It’s like writing about American politics during President Obama’s term in office and not using the name “Tea Party.”

Finally here’s how the New York Times portrayed Morsi’s term in office:

The extrication of the military from power was the biggest achievement of Mr. Morsi’s first year in office. Last August, months after his election, the generals finally went back to their barracks and allowed him to take full power as president, although the military retains considerable autonomy under Egypt’s new Constitution.

But Mr. Morsi continued to battle institutions within his own government left over from Mr. Mubarak, most notably the judiciary, and some of those fights contributed to the protests that peaked Sunday. The protests began in November, when he tried to declare himself above the courts until the passage of a new Constitution, a move that reinforced the fears of his opponents and perhaps the general public that he threatened to become a new autocrat.

According to this Morsi was beset by remnants of the old regime. But just because officials were appointed by Mubarak didn’t necessarily mean that they were tainted. And what does it mean “reinforced the fears?” It wasn’t just fears of his opponents, by any objective standard Morsi was an autocrat. He shut down newspapers he disapproved of, he intimidated critics, he attempted to impose his values on Egypt’s artistic community and he appointed a former terrorist as a regional governor.

We get to the end of the article.

The attackers used green pen lasers to search for figures at the windows of the Brotherhood offices, then hurled Molotov cocktails. They vowed to show no mercy on the members inside. “Their leaders have left them like sheeps for the slaughter,” one said. Two people were killed in the violence at the headquarters, medics there said.

Thousands of Mr. Morsi’s supporters in the Muslim Brotherhood had gathered at a rally near the presidential palace to prepare to defend it if the protesters tried to attack. Many brought batons, pipes, bats, hard hats or motorcycle helmets, even woks or scraps of metal to use as shields. They stood at attention with clubs raised and marched together. “We will sacrifice our lives for our religion,” some chanted. “Morsi’s men are everywhere.”

According to the reporter whose tweets were cited above the protesters attacked the headquarters a few hours a few hours after they were attacked, is it possible that Kirkpatrick or one of his colleagues got the scene only after the Muslim Brotherhood members had attacked the protesters? Furthermore, the dead, according to other reports, came from the ranks of the protesters, a point that that the New York Times leaves ambiguous.

But the view of the pro-Moris protesters matches what I’ve read elsewhere. They did not appear to be bent on peaceful demonstrations.

The New York Times had an opportunity to report on history in the making. Unfortunately, aside from the headline, much of the report was distorted favoring the preconceived notions of the paper, its reporters and editors.

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Heroes

Horrible news out of Arizona. 19 elite firefighters were killed.

Nineteen firefighters – all members of an elite response team – were killed Sunday battling a fast-moving wildfire in Arizona, marking the deadliest single incident for firefighters since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, officials said.

In a statement, President Barack Obama said the “thoughts and prayers” of all Americans would be with the loved ones of the firefighters killed near the town of Yarnell, Ariz., about 85 miles northwest of Phoenix. He described the fallen men as “heroes.”

The fire, which investigators believe was sparked by lightning, also destroyed more than 200 buildings in the town, which is home to about 700 people.

Mary Rasmussen, a spokeswoman for the Prescott National Forest, said all 19 killed were members of the 20-strong Granite Mountain Hotshots, a Prescott, Ariz.-based crew who battled blazes in New Mexico and Arizona in recent weeks.

My thoughts and prayers go out to their families.

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Cat food issues

Hey, fellow cat owners. Anyone out there have any experience with your male cat developing crystals in their urine, that precursor to kidney stone?

My vet wants me to put Tig on Hill’s C/D diet, but it has corn gluten in it, and Tig’s been grain-free for years because he’s ALLERGIC TO GRAINS. After a week on Hill’s, his coat is crappy and matting, his ears are filthy, and he has bumps on his ears and face. And the worst of his grain allergy is asthma, which I haven’t seen signs of yet because he doesn’t play like he did when he was a kitten.

My big question for my vet tomorrow: The two brands of cat food, wet and dry, that I feed Tig and Gracie have LESS magnesium content than Hill’s. So WTF am I doing giving them expensive, corn-gluten-added prescription food?

Suggestions from the kitty gallery will be most welcome.

Posted in Cats, Life | 1 Comment

Sunday briefs

Well, then you shouldn’t have said yes to the govt. so many times: The judges who allowed the NSA to spy on Americans are upset that people are calling them collaborators. Someone call a WAHmbulance.

Isn’t that adorable? Kerry thinks he’s making progress in peace talks. Yes, and I have a bridge in Egypt that’s about to go up in flames… oh, wait. Different story. Anyway. Feel free to look at the Jew-hatred in the comments if you’re up for it. Every single article about Israel. Every. Single. One.

Wow, the family wasn’t lying: A Palestinian terrorist was lured out of Egyptand into an Israeli prison via Sinai. The Mossad is that good.

Egypt is burning: Islamists and non-Islamists are battling it out for Egypt’s future. Morsi says there will not be a second revolution. The non-Islamists say, “Oh, yeah?” And may the best Egyptians win.

Posted in American Scene, Anti-Semitism, Israel, Middle East, palestinian politics, The One | Comments Off on Sunday briefs

The AP bias in three paragraphs and a headline

The “objective” news media in a nutshell. The headline:

Israel shows no signs of yielding to Palestinians

The story, such as it is:

Israel’s prime minister is showing no signs of bending as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry presses forward with efforts to restart Mideast peace talks.

Benjamin Netanyahu told his Cabinet on Sunday that he is ready to begin talks with the Palestinians immediately, but he made no mention of yielding to Palestinian demands to halt settlement construction or release Palestinian prisoners.

Netanyahu says he will not compromise on Israel’s security and if a deal is reached, he says he will seek approval in a national referendum. A referendum is not required, and critics have said it would add an additional obstacle to implanting a deal that relinquishes territory to the Palestinians.

Let’s break it down. The prime minister of Israel says he’s ready to sit down and talk with the Palestinians at any time, without preconditions. The headline should be “Israel ready to talk with Palestinians”. Or “Palestinians continue to demand conditions before peace talks with Israel”. And yet, look at the headline, and look at the language in bold. Could this short piece be any more pro-Palestinian?

Not by much.

Your objective media, at work. Way to go, AP!

Posted in AP Media Bias, Israel, Media Bias, palestinian politics | Comments Off on The AP bias in three paragraphs and a headline

For today, pictures

I’m tired of writing.

Here’s a picture from my Sunday trip to Virginia Tech.
The Appalachians in Virginia

And Tig.
Tig

Shabbat shalom.

Posted in Cats, Life | Comments Off on For today, pictures