[Did you know]... that one researcher found that nearly a third of the people cancelled over antisemitism allegations in Germany have been Jews?
Controversially, the German government officially classifies the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement, the accusation that Israel is committing the crime of apartheid against Palestinians, and the depiction of Israel as a colonial or settler-colonial entity, as antisemitic. Many of those arrested and cancelled in Germany over allegations of antisemitism have been Jews critical of Israel's policies.
Further down in the article you can see how thoroughly the article has been poisoned by anti-Zionist editors in the "Ideology," "Deplatforming and arrest of Jews" and "Reception" sections, which comprise most of the article.
The "Deplatforming" section portrays the fight against German antisemitism as so broken that it targets innocent Jews who are outraged by that terrible regime over there in Israel.
To the right is a photo and caption that drives home the anti-Zionist point with all the subtlety of a hydrogen bomb. Beneath a photograph of a sign saying "Free Palestine From German Guilt" is the following anti-Zionist caption:
German guilt over the Holocaust motivates unquestioning support for Israel, which has led to Jews voicing criticism of Israel being accused of antisemitism; Israeli filmmaker Yuval Abraham said in response to such accusations, "If this is Germany's way of dealing with its guilt over the Holocaust, they are emptying it of all meaning"
All three illustrations in the article are abused in similar fashion to make anti-Israel propaganda points.
The wording in the "Do You Know" item was taken from an article in the British anti-Israel organ The Guardian, quoting the anti-Zionist activist Emily Dische-Becker.
The Guardian article was authored last February by Kenan Malik, a British Muslim writer, in an article lecturing Jews on what is and isn't antisemitism. That, in turn hyperlinks toward a podcast in something called "The Dig," in which Dische-Becker is interviewed. In other words, this smear of German antisemitism efforts was in effect "laundered" through a supposedly "reliable" source, The Guardian, but originates from an impermissible "self-published" source, a podcast.
By the way:
If you don't like that article don't bother bringing your complaint to the self-styled Wikipedia criticism message board "Wikipediocracy." It was created and largely permeated with anti-Zionist content by the user "Jayen466." He identifies himself as Andreas Kolbe, co-founder of Wikipediocracy. As I've mentioned previously, Wikipediocracy functions as a platform for anti-Israel editors.
2 comments:
Jayen466 is all over the edit history of that article. So yeah he probably won't care to hear it on his forum...
hmm, the permalink regarding the "did you know" discovery screenshot does not fit the screenshot. Maybe it does not work to permalink it?
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