Boycotting Israel Is the Right Thing to Do
Israel's war on free speech continues
Philip Giraldi • February 13, 2018 •
Tracking
the consequences of Israel’s apparent conviction that it should never
be bound by the rules and conventions that constrain the behavior of
other countries sometimes leads one into dark places.
The daily torments
inflicted on the Palestinians is increasingly a horrific tale that has
no apparent end, while Benjamin Netanyahu struts and boasts of his power
to do more and even worse, openly calling for war with Lebanon, Syria
and Iran on a world stage where no one seems willing to confront him.
I
have chronicled how Israel does terrible damage to the United States,
through inciting war, its financial demands, and its unparalleled
ability to make Washington complicit in its war crimes and general
inhumanity. But, as bad as it is, in some areas the worst is yet to
come, as Israel and its hubristic leaders know no limits and fear no
consequences, thanks to the uncritical support from the American
Establishment, a large percentage of which is Jewish, that is unwilling
to take a strong stand against Netanyahu and all his works.
Israel
has been particularly successful at promoting its preferred narrative,
together with sanctions for those who do not concur, in the English
language speaking world and also in France, which has the largest Jewish
population in Europe. The sanctions generally consist of legal
penalties for those criticizing Israel or questioning the accuracy of
the accepted holocaust narrative, i.e. disputing that “6 million died.”
Those attacking Israeli government policies can be found guilty of antisemitism, which is now considered a hate crime
in Britain. Under the new law, passed in December 2016, Britain became
one of the first countries to use the definition of antisemitism agreed
upon earlier in the year at a conference of the Berlin-based International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA).
A
statement from British Prime Minister Teresa May’s office explained
that the intention of the new definition was to “insure that culprits
will not be able to get away with being antisemitic because the term is
ill-defined, or because different organizations or bodies have different
interpretations of it”.
May
went on to elaborate how the law“…means there will be one definition of
antisemitism – in essence, language or behavior that displays hatred
towards Jews because they are Jews – and anyone guilty of that will be
called out on it.” The Guardian, in covering the story, added that “Police forces already use a version of the IHRA definition to help officers decide what could be considered antisemitism.”
The British government’s own definition relies on guidance
provided by the IHRA, which asserts that “Antisemitism is a certain
perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews” and
elaborated that it could be considered antisemitic to accuse Jews of
being “more loyal to Israel or their religion than to their own nations,
or to say the existence of Israel is intrinsically racist.” In other
words, even if many Jews are more loyal to Israel than to the countries
they live in and even though Israel is intrinsically racist, it is now
illegal to say so in Great Britain.
The
British government’s subservience to Jewish and Israeli interests is
nearly as enthusiastic as in the United States, though it is driven by
the same sorts of things – Jewish money and Jewish power, particularly
in the media. A majority of Conservative Party members of parliament have joined Conservative Friends of Israel and the Labour counterpart is also a force to be reckoned with on the political left.
Last November there was a major scandal when Britain’s Overseas Development Minister Priti Patel was forced to resign
after she held 14 “unofficial” meetings with Israeli government
officials, including Netanyahu. The meetings were during a “vacation
trip” in Israel arranged by a British Jew with the improbable name Lord
Polak who functions as a lobbyist for the Jewish state. During her
visit, Patel visited an Israeli military hospital in the occupied Golan
Heights. When she returned to Britain, she began to work on the
feasibility of sending U.K. aid money to the Israeli Army for its
alleged humanitarian work. None of the meetings were reported to the
British Foreign Ministry.
Here
in the United States, the friends of Israel appear to believe that
anyone who is unwilling to do business with Israel or even with the
territories that it has illegally occupied should not be allowed to do
business in any capacity with federal, state or even local governments.
Constitutional guarantees of freedom of association for every American
are apparently not valid if one particular highly favored foreign
country is involved.
Twenty-four states now have legislation sanctioning those who criticize or boycott Israel. And one particular pending piece of federal legislation
that is also continuing to make its way through the Senate would far
exceed what is happening at the state level and would set a new standard
for deference to Israeli interests on the part of the national
government. It would criminalize any U.S. citizen “engaged in interstate
or foreign commerce” who supports a boycott
of Israel or who even goes about “requesting the furnishing of
information” regarding it, with penalties enforced through amendments of
two existing laws, the Export Administration Act of 1979 and the
Export-Import Act of 1945, that include potential fines of between
$250,000 and $1 million and up to 20 years in prison
According to the Jewish Telegraph Agency,
the Senate bill was drafted with the assistance of AIPAC. The
legislation, which would almost certainly be overturned as
unconstitutional if it ever does in fact become law, is particularly
dangerous and goes well beyond any previous pro-Israeli legislation as
it essentially denies free of expression when the subject is Israel.
Israel
is particularly fearful of the Boycott, Divest and Sanctions movement
because its non-violence is attractive to college students, including
many young Jews, who would not otherwise get involved on the issue.
Benjamin Netanyahu and his government clearly understand, correctly,
that BDS can do more damage than any number of terrorist attacks, as it
challenges the actual legitimacy of the Israeli government and its
colonizing activity in Palestine.
Israel has recently passed legislation criminalizing anyone who supports BDS and has set up a semi-clandestine group called Kella Shlomo
to counteract its message. The country’s education minister has called
BDS supporters “enemy soldiers” and has compared them to Nazis.
Netanyahu has also backed up the new law with a restriction
on foreigners who support the BDS entering the country. This has
included a number of American Jews who have been critical of Netanyahu,
bringing home to them for the first time just how totalitarian “the
Middle East’s only democracy” has actually become.
The
British experience as well as a recent case involving New Zealand
illustrate just how insensitive Israel is to the interests of other
nations and should serve as a warning to Americans of how Netanyahu and
company are heedless of fundamental rights like freedom of speech and
association. A prominent New Zealand singer who goes by the name Lorde
canceled a planned tour to Israel based on her concerns about the
mistreatment of the Palestinians. End of story? No. She was promptly
lambasted by the usual suspects including Howard Stern and “America’s
Rabbi” Shmuley Boteach and was then punished by the Grammys ceremony in New York City on February 8th,
where she was told that she would not be allowed to sing one of her own
songs even though she was up for album of the year. She was the only
finalist who was blocked in that fashion and no one in the media,
predictably, linked the two events and recognized that she was almost
certainly being punished for not performing in Israel.
Now Lorde is in the middle of a lawsuit
initiated by the Israeli government supported lawfare organization
called Shurat HaDin. In line with its own anti-boycott legislation,
Israel now believes it has the right to sue anyone who supports BDS no
matter what country they live in or where they indicated their support.
In this case, Israel is intent on silencing New Zealanders who exercised
their freedom of speech in New Zealand.
Shurat HaDin is no stranger to foreign courts, though it has lost more cases than it has won. In February 2015, a lawsuit
initiated by it led to the conviction of the Palestinian Authority and
the Palestine Liberation Organization of liability for terrorist attacks
in Israel between 2000 and 2004 even though there was no evidence
demonstrating that there had been any direct involvement by either body.
A New York Federal jury and judge, always friendly to Israeli or Jewish
litigants, awarded damages of $218.5 million, but under a special
feature of the Anti-Terrorism Act the award was automatically tripled to
$655.5 million. Shurat HaDin states that it is “bankrupting terror.”
In the New Zealand case two New Zealand women who used publicly accessible social media to convince Lorde to cancel her concert are being blamed
by Shurat HaDin for the mental anguish of several Jewish concertgoers
who apparently have been in a state of shock since the Lorde
cancellation was confirmed. They are suing for “moral and emotional
injury and the indignity” and also for the New Zealanders having
violated the anti-BDS legislation “to give real consequences to those
who selectively target Israel and seek to impose an unjust and illegal
boycott against the Jewish state.”
Based
on past experience, Shurat HaDin might even win the case inside Israel
while finding that the ruling will not be accepted or enforceable in New
Zealand as it is in violation of that country’s constitution. But the
real intent is to intimidate critics and, as in some cases brought in
the U.S., to force opponents to spend money on defense lawyers, making
critics of Israel reluctant to go public or even willing to settle out
of court. Friends of Israel make sure that any criticism of the country
they love above all others becomes toxic. Florida State Senator Randy
Fine is, for example, currently demanding that Tampa and Miami cancel upcoming April concerts by Lorde to punish her for her “anti-Semitic boycott” of Israel. He is abusing
his position as an elected public official to silence someone he
doesn’t agree without of deference to a racist foreign country that has
nothing to do with the United States.
It
is important for Americans to realize that Israel not only spies on the
U.S., digs its paws deep into our Treasury, and perverts Washington’s
Middle East policy, it is also attempting to dictate what we the people
can and cannot say. And Congress and much of the media are fully on
board. This is absolutely insufferable and must be stopped. Groups like
Shurat HaDin flying into New York to exploit friendly Manhattan judges
and juries to advance Israel’s toxic agendas should be told to go home
upon arrival.
Israel’s complete hypocrisy was highly visible in yet another news story last week. The Polish government has passed controversial legislation,
subject to judicial review, to criminalize any claims that Poles were
responsible for the Second World War prison camps that the Germans set
up in their country. This has been strongly and vociferously opposed by
Netanyahu speaking for the Israeli government, which is apparently
concerned that its claim on perpetual and universal victimhood is being
challenged. Washington is also, to no one’s surprise, lining up with
Israel, threatening that the new law might damage bilateral relations
with Warsaw.
Characteristically,
no one in the U.S. mainstream media, which is generally supportive of
Bibi’s complaints, is noting that the proposed Polish legislation is not
too dissimilar to any number of existing anti-free speech laws
criminalizing holocaust denial in Europe or criticism of Israel in the
United States. Nor is it different than some laws in Israel, including
the criminalization of anyone who speaks or writes in support of BDS. As
usual, there is one standard for Jewish issues and Israelis and a quite
different standard for everyone else.
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