Tuesday, October 29, 2013

A Closed Circle of Commentators



by Dror Eydar


1. The choice between freezing settlement construction and agreeing to 1967 borders or freeing terrorists is like King David choosing between famine, defeat and pestilence ("'Shall seven years of famine come unto thee in thy land? Or wilt thou flee three months before thy foes while they pursue thee? Or shall there be three days' pestilence in thy land?" 2 Samuel 24:13). 

The choice then, and the choice today of releasing prisoners, was aimed at minimizing the damage, but nevertheless, the government needs the vehement public opposition to the use of prisoners as a political bargaining chip to be heard loud and clear. The public outcry against this move guarantees that the Americans and the Palestinians are well aware that we consider this an extremely high price to pay. 

And another point that has gone nearly unsaid: Israel is asking the U.S. not to ease the sanctions on Iran, despite Tehran's willingness to negotiate. That is legitimate demand. Why, therefore, do we need to relax our security belt and undermine the principles of justice and law just so the other side will be willing to negotiate? Doesn't that weaken our position on Iran? 

2. On Monday, Army Radio personality Razi Barkai invited two wildly diverse commentators to be guests on his popular talk show: Channel 2 commentator Amnon Abramovich and Channel 10 commentator Raviv Drucker. Together they created a triangle with amazing geometrical properties: a total of 0 degree angles. All three men view reality from exactly the same political and ideological perspective. All three despise Habayit Hayehudi and think that the party's alliance with Yesh Atid Chairman Yair Lapid is a disaster and must be undone. Not, heaven forbid, because they want to help Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu get the ultra-Orthodox parties into the coalition, but rather to ensure the removal of the so-called "extreme Right" and "nationalists" from said coalition. 

Incidentally, it is safe to assume that if Netanyahu had declined to release prisoners, the same three commentators (along with the entire Israeli Left) would have attacked him for missing the opportunity. 

Abramovich boasted his extensive knowledge in "political science": The members of the coalition bear the responsibility for the decision to release prisoners and therefore they are forbidden from protesting against the release of prisoners. Indeed, that is why the bill proposed by coalition party Habayit Hayehudi (aiming to legally limit the government's freedom to release prisoners) was unnecessary. But as for the vocal protest of the release? Jewish tradition teaches us that sometimes, if a decision is made because there was no other choice, there is an obligation to protest against it. This can be an educational and moral thing to do.

Abramovich continued showing off when he said that Housing Minister Uri Ariel (Habayit Hayehudi) and Habayit Hayehudi Chairman Naftali Bennett, do not do anything in their respective ministries except for helping the settlers.

And what has Abarmovich himself done? He serves as the unofficial representative of Peace Now on Channel 2. His enemies are not Hamas or Fatah but the pioneers of Israel, the "settlers." He has never missed an opportunity to slander the Jewish pioneers who, alas, did not ask for his stamp of approval to make this good land bloom. In fact, the man is still stuck in the 1980s. His obsolete and tiresome language cannot disguise his loathing for anything and anyone to his right (which includes the majority of the public). 

The second commentator on the show was Drucker, who, as we all know, often features Barkai on his own television show, "The Source." As far as he is concerned (based solely on wishful thinking), the alliance between Bennett and Lapid is long over, and once it is severed for good, Lapid will (finally) be free to pressure Netanyahu on diplomatic issues (code for destroying Jewish communities). 

This scenario has repeated itself too many times. We all still remember the notorious forum of "our commentators" featured on Rafi Reshef's daily program on the same radio station several years ago. They were referred to as nothing other than "our commentators." Two days ago, on the Knesset channel, I watched Shalom Kital interview Razi Barkai. He invited Aviv Boshinsky, once Netanyahu's spokesman, to the studio, as though he represented the "other side" of the spectrum. But I have never heard Boshinsky voice any conservative views. Together with MK Hilik Bar (Labor) it was a case of four against one, Likud MK Danny Danon. Routine...

So did Abramovich or Drucker contribute anything to our knowledge of the situation? Did they illuminate any dark mysteries? Perhaps they illuminated Peace Now Secretary-General Yariv Oppenheimer's point of view. But what about other perspectives? Don't Barkai and his colleagues have a responsibility to provide additional points of view to their audiences?

3. What is stopping them from inviting commentators with different worldviews, who perhaps see the settlement enterprise in a positive light and view it as a cornerstone of our continued existence in this good land? Why not invite commentators who hold different positions on the legal status of Judea and Samaria? Who do not view Israel as an occupier?

Barkai, much like the rest of his colleagues, would dismiss these claims. To him, he and his colleagues can present all the perspectives on our reality just fine, even if all these perspectives are very similar to one another. Thus, the airwaves provide a stage for a very small caste, which, much to our disgrace, has a chokehold on our country's information channels. They were not chosen by God. This is merely a conceptual paradigm that has us brainwashed: There are journalists on one side and right-wingers on the other. 

The way to liberate public consciousness begins with marking this group, pointing out their clear leftist position, and then questioning their exclusive right to relay reality to the public. A strong enough public protest could make this Berlin Wall fall too. It is not a dream.


Dror Eydar

Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=6131

Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.

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