| Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyhau. |
And she did it again - writing about
a Jewish leader who has become very popular to hate—from either side of the
political aisle, especially as it pertains to how the media views him. There is
no love lost for Israel’s longest-serving and arguably most consequential prime
minister in its nearly 80-year history.
Benjamin Netanyahu has become the fall guy for anything that goes wrong in Israel or affects the Jewish people. The mere mention of his name in almost any context often brings out derision from many well-intentioned Jews. That reaction is frequently based not on the actual facts, but on the way those facts are reported by the mainstream media.
To take one prominent example of this phenomenon, consider
the accusations made against Netanyahu regarding the war in Gaza. The BBC and
The New York Times—two of the world’s most widely respected news
organizations—consistently paint Netanyahu’s Israel in Nazi-like terms. The
rest of the mainstream media often treats that characterization as undisputed
fact. That, of course, has an outsized impact on public opinion.
Netanyahu has been accused of ordering the IDF to disregard
Palestinian casualties in pursuit of Hamas terrorists. Media reliance on Hamas
casualty figures—emphasizing large numbers of women and children without
independent verification—becomes the only “truth” that is reported. It is a
“truth” that does not differentiate between terrorists and innocent civilians.
It is a “truth” that often ignores Hamas’s deliberate strategy of embedding
itself among the most vulnerable civilian populations in order to maximize
civilian casualties.
That “truth,” repeated on the nightly news for months at a
time, makes accusations of genocide against Netanyahu easy to believe. Absent
from much of that reporting is the fact that Netanyahu’s Israel is the only
country in the history of warfare that routinely warned civilians of impending
attacks and gave them time to evacuate. Yet images of destruction, coupled with
a relentlessly negative narrative, made the accusations seem legitimate.
This kind of hostility extends far beyond the prejudiced
narratives promoted by much of the media and influences many well-intentioned
Jews.
Ms. Phillips puts it all into proper perspective, asking in
the subtitle of her Jewish Chronicle article:
“Are the ‘If Only Netanyahu’ crowd really so blinded by
hatred?”
I am sorry to say that I think the answer is yes…
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