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January 07, 2009
By
Neve Gordon
Source: The Nation
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Watching Israeli public television (Channel 1) these days can be an unsettling experience, and lately I've abstained from the practice. But after being stuck for seventy-two hours with our two young children inside a Beer-Sheva apartment, the spouse and I decided to visit my mother, who lives up north, so that our children could play outside far away from the rockets. My mother, like most Israelis, is a devout news consumer, and last night I decided to keep her company in front of the TV.
For the most part, the broadcast was more of the same. There were the usual images and voices of suffering Israeli Jews along with the promulgation of a hyper-nationalist ethos. One story, for example, followed a Jewish mother who had lost her son in
"Because members of his company did not want to hurt civilians, they refrained from opening fire in every direction, which allowed Palestinian militiamen to shoot my boy," the mother stated. When the interviewer asked her about the current assault on
Thus, despite the ever-increasing loss of life in the Gaza Strip,
What did manage to unnerve me in the broadcast was one short sentence made by a reporter who covered the entry of a humanitarian aid convoy into the Gaza Strip on Friday.
My mother and I--like other Israeli viewers--learned that 170 trucks supplied with basic foodstuff donated by the Turkish government entered
While the fact that this information was missing from the report did not surprise me, I found myself completely taken aback by the way in which the reporter justified the convoy's entrance into
There is something extremely cynical about how
One notices, then, that in addition to its remote-control, computer game-like qualities, postmodern warfare is also characterized by a bizarre new moral element. It is as if the masters of wars realized that since current wars rarely take place between two armies and are often carried out in the midst of civilian populations, a new just war theory is needed. So these masters of war gathered together philosophers and intellectuals to develop a moral theory for postmodern wars, and today, as
Neve Gordon teaches politics at
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Hi Neve,
I had the questionable pleasure of watching the Channel 10 news with my parents for the duration of the attacks and then some. It's a twilight zone experience of Orwellian proportion. Not only is my mind being raped by complete lies and half truths, I get to observe my parents' textbook reactions.
Mom's scared and indifferent. Dad is racist and militant. These are good, kind, giving people! A doctor and a nurse. When dad sits with Russians, Arabs, or any other nationality, he likes them for their oddities (that may not make him less racist, but at least it takes on a positive form).
Through them I could almost perfectly lay out the country's political map. There's no debate, no room for facts. Just fear and hatred. How ironic that when I say I want to immigrate, they tell me no other country wants me, only here is safe. I'm an Atheist, pacifist, left winger with an anarchist/socialist viewpoint- I don't feel safe. Not when I go to the peace rallies, not when I write these lines and not when I look at my parents.