reSee.it - Tweets Saved By @Hal9000_T1

Saved - October 18, 2025 at 10:24 PM

@Hal9000_T1 - KHAL

🚨 Breaking: IDF whistleblower says aid from 1,000 trucks was buried in pits or burned. This is internationally funded aid - IDF dug pits, everything from cooking oils to water and buried or burned it. This is how @cogatonline was lying about trucks going into Gaza. https://t.co/bzyNKuZD5B

Saved - September 28, 2025 at 7:42 AM

@Hal9000_T1 - KHAL

🚨 Breaking: After 7 years in Israeli prison, the identity of the person calling in hundreds of bomb threats to planes and Jewish centers worldwide is revealed as Michael Kedar from Ashkelon, Israel. This story was and is buried by MSM (and of course the ADL).

Video Transcript AI Summary
There is a bomb on a plane. Lufthansa flight four four one. "I provided the bomb, and my team smuggled the bomb." "C four bomb." "We are told that this is called a, quote, viable threat, and canine units will sweep the plane, and all luggage and cargo will be checked." The pilot diverted the plane to JFK. "Two bomb threats called into two Jewish centers." "There was a bomb in the JCC that's going to go up to me in less than an hour." "Inside the JCC Building." "Tell them to hit the blue button because this is not okay." Katie with the FBI. "You've been in The United States. Do you speak English?" "You speak English very well." "We know what happened, we know how it happened, we know who did it, but we don't know why." "I didn't do it." "We have everything that we need in this case." "The anti Semitic threats targeting our Jewish community are horrible." "We are representatives of the United States government or the FBI."
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Thank you so much for calling the Standard Reservation. You're speaking with Rose. How can I help you? Speaker 1: Hi. There is a bomb on a plane. Hello? Hi. There is a bomb on a plane. There's a bomb on a plane? Yes. Where? Lufthansa flight four four one. Speaker 0: And how do you know this is us? Speaker 1: I provided the bomb, and my team smuggled the bomb. Speaker 0: You provided the bomb? Bomb? Yes. Yes. Telling me what is your name? Speaker 1: No. Oh, Speaker 0: so you're not gonna give me your name at least? Speaker 1: No. Why not, sir? Security reasons. Speaker 2: Breaking news tonight. A swarm of police and passengers evacuating a bomb threat. Speaker 3: This threat came in the form of a phone call to the Lufthansa corporate offices. The pilot onboard flight four forty one was notified of the threat, and the pilot is the one who made the decision to divert the plane here to JFK instead of continuing on to the destination in Frankfurt, Germany. Speaker 0: I think if you can just give me your name, I will call you back so we can talk about this, you and I. Speaker 1: I don't think you can handle this. You're not even asking what the bomb is. What type of bomb is this? C four bomb. Speaker 0: It's a what? Speaker 1: C four bomb. Speaker 3: We are told that this is called a, quote, viable threat, and canine units will sweep the plane, and all luggage and cargo will be checked. Speaker 1: Two bomb threats called into two different Jewish centers. Good morning, JCC. How can I help you? Hello. Speaker 4: Was a while ago, Speaker 1: a c four bomb. I'm sorry? Speaker 4: There was a bomb. There was a bomb in the JCC that's going to go up to me in less than an hour. I'm sorry. Who's this? I can't tell you who this is. So listen to me. There is an explosive device in the JCC. Lindsay, there's a bomb here. Guys, it's security. Speaker 1: I'm sorry? Are you here? Is it? Speaker 4: Inside the JCC Building. Speaker 1: Where are you calling from? Speaker 4: I can't tell you where I'm calling from. In the short time, there is going to be a bloodbath in the JCC. Many people are going to die. People's heads are going to be blown off to him. But it happened in the short time. Tell them to hit the blue button because this is not okay. Hello? I have to be gone now. I told you enough. Speaker 3: What a scary morning from Speaker 2: teachers and students have brought bombs for everyone. Speaker 1: You can't go in. Speaker 2: I'm Katie with the FBI. This is Lopes, okay? We travel over here Speaker 1: because we wanna talk to Speaker 2: you about what's going on, okay? Yeah. Okay. You've been in The United States. Do you speak English? Yeah. Right? Been working this investigation for a while with the Israeli National Police jointly. Okay? That means together. You speak English very well. Right? Yeah. The reason why we travel this way, you know, because, like I said, we've been working this case for a while and we wanted to give you the opportunity to explain to us why this happened. Okay? Speaker 1: I didn't do it. Okay? Speaker 2: We know what happened, we know how it happened, we know who did it, but we don't know why. Speaker 1: I I didn't do it. Okay. Speaker 2: Well, I'll tell you this, Michael. We we've been impressed by your skills. You've been doing this for quite some time and we haven't been able to catch you. You did a very good job. We didn't have to come here and talk to you. Okay? We have everything that we need in this case. We don't need any statement from you. You understand that? I understand. We've already made the case. Okay? But we don't think that's fair for us to not come over here, not sit down with you, and to not give you the opportunity to tell us why this happened. Okay? Because that's all anybody cares about. I didn't do it. Didn't do it. Okay. You did do it. We are representatives of the United States government or the FBI. The case Speaker 1: The anti Semitic threats targeting our Jewish community are horrible.
Saved - March 10, 2025 at 9:48 PM

@Hal9000_T1 - Dr. KHAL

"Occupation of the American Mind" Documentary every American should watch. Pass it around. https://t.co/cpFIFHns9l

Video Transcript AI Summary
In 2014, Israel launched a devastating attack on Gaza, resulting in thousands of Palestinian casualties. Despite global outrage, American public opinion remained largely supportive of Israel, influenced by media coverage that often frames the conflict from an Israeli perspective, emphasizing Israel's right to self-defense against Palestinian terrorism. This narrative overlooks the historical context of Palestinian dispossession and the ongoing occupation of Palestinian territories since 1967. Israel's PR efforts, which began after the Lebanon invasion in 1982, aim to shape American perceptions by portraying Israel as a victim and downplaying the impact of the occupation. While international consensus supports a two-state solution based on pre-1967 borders, Israel continues to expand settlements. The US government's backing of Israel further complicates efforts to achieve a just resolution.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: On 07/08/2014, Israel launched a devastating military attack on the Gaza Strip. Over the course of fifty one days, the Israeli military dropped nearly 20,000 tons of explosive on Gaza, a densely populated area the size of Philadelphia, killing over 2,000 Palestinians and wounding tens of thousands more. The overwhelming majority of these casualties were civilians. Speaker 1: This strip of land is being bombarded from the air, sea, and land. Speaker 2: Israel launched at least a 60 strikes on the Gaza Strip. Speaker 3: And there's one less hospital in Gaza now. Israel today flattened Waffah Hospital. Speaker 0: The sheer scale of the attack sparked outrage and condemnation around the world. Speaker 1: Israel's Month long pounding of Gaza shocked many people around the world. Mass demonstrations have been held in many of the world's major cities. Bring good. Speaker 4: Bring good. But Speaker 0: in The United States, the story was different. Polls showed the American people holding firm in their support for Israel. Speaker 5: This is the latest CNN ORC poll of Americans shows 57% of those polls say Israel's action in Gaza is justified, 34% say unjustified. Speaker 0: These numbers were striking, but they weren't new. Over the course of a conflict in which Palestinian casualties have far outnumbered Israeli casualties, the American people have consistently shown far more sympathy for Israelis than for Palestinians. Speaker 6: It's very difficult to divorce public opinion on any question from the media coverage that people rely on to form opinions. And I think the most prevalent lesson from looking at the coverage is that the coverage tends to see this conflict from the Israeli side. Speaker 7: Study after study has demonstrated that Israeli perspectives dominate American media coverage. So by far, the most common thing we've heard is that everything comes down to Israel's right to defend itself. Speaker 8: Israel is a state that implements its right to defend itself and its citizens. Speaker 3: It is a talking point that is set from the top. And by the top, I mean from the highest officials, government officials who are commenting on this issue, which the media obsessively covers and repeats. Speaker 9: A man's gotta do what a man's gotta do, and you'd say a country's gotta do what a country's gotta do. We have to defend ourselves. Speaker 3: In the most recent war in 2014, when we looked at mainstream media outlets, almost by a margin of of three to one, Israeli spokespeople overrepresented compared to Palestinian spokespeople. So almost every time you turned on the screen, there was a Israeli representative on the screen telling you Israel is the one that's in a position of defense. It is being attacked. Speaker 10: And basically, Israel is saying, hey. You don't have to be a rocket scientist to understand that if rockets fly in your head, you're allowed to defend yourself. Speaker 3: Add to this the fact that you have American elected officials also reinforcing Israel's right to defend itself. Speaker 11: As I've said many times, Israel has a right to defend itself against rocket and tunnel attacks from Hamas. Speaker 3: And you hear some of the same framing by anchors who reiterate and reinforce many of the same talking points that the Israeli official spokespeople are making. Speaker 12: Israel has the right to defend itself against Hamas, of course, a group that is firing rockets on Israel coming out of tunnels to attack Israelis. Speaker 3: That imbalance there was very significant in shaping the way the the public understood this conflict. Speaker 13: I worked in European media for a long time. The coverage is the opposite. There's Palestinian legislators, Palestinian thinkers, Palestinian intellectuals, pro Palestinian thinkers, many voices. Speaker 8: So let me say very very frankly, it's very easy to blame the victim. It's very easy to pull out a terrorist label. Speaker 13: You come to America and you think that you're an alien. You're looking at a different world or a different planet, And I'm thinking, what's going on here? Speaker 14: When a narrative is so dominant Thousands of rockets without any visible descent or complication, it's it's extremely difficult to make clear to people that it is it is basically a propaganda story. Speaker 15: Israel is under siege by a terrorist organization that is Speaker 14: How do you make that clear when the mainstream spectacle is so unrelenting and total? Speaker 7: We hear over and over again that the conflict comes down to Palestinian terrorism and Israeli security. And what gets pushed out of the frame entirely is the fact that that for almost fifty years, Palestinians have been systematically dispossessed from their land and denied their most basic human rights. Speaker 16: Pioneers and refugees from countries of the oppression, young and old, they are going now to a land which accepts them. They will march to their work in the Jewish settlements to build roads, to quarry stones. They will drill wells to restore to Palestine soil its long neglected fruitfulness. Speaker 0: Zionism, the nationalist movement that emerged in Europe in the late eighteen hundreds, was dedicated to the idea that the Jewish people, after centuries of living as persecuted minorities within other countries, were entitled to a state in historic Palestine, the biblical homeland of the Jews more than three thousand years before. But there was a basic problem with the choice from the start. Palestine was already home to hundreds of thousands of Palestinian Arabs who had been living in Palestine for centuries, first under the rule of the Ottoman Empire and since World War one under the control of the British Empire, and for decades had aspirations of their own for an independent state in Palestine. Tensions steadily escalated during the nineteen thirties, placing more and more pressure on the British colonial government to reconcile the competing interests of both sides. After World War two and the Holocaust, the situation reached a break point. Ultimately, the British colonial government made the decision to withdraw and to pass the problem on to the newly created United Nations. In 1947, UN resolution one eight one recommended that Palestine be split into two parts. Jews, who were a third of the population, would receive 56% of the land. Palestinians, who were two thirds of the population and possessed more than 90% of historic Palestine, would receive 44%. These terms were immediately rejected by Arab leaders as unfair, but in the spring of nineteen forty eight, Zionist leaders declared Israel a state along the proposed borders anyway, triggering the first Arab Israeli war. Speaker 17: Arab armies set out to destroy the newly born nation that suffered repeated defeat. Speaker 0: After winning a crushing victory, Israel took possession of even more land. By the time armistice was declared in 1949, Israel controlled 78% of historic Palestine. The creation of the new state would be celebrated by Israelis as a triumph. But to this day, it is commemorated by Palestinians as the Nakba, the Arabic term for the catastrophe, in memory of the hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who were driven from their homes to make way for the new Jewish state. All told, approximately 700,000 people, more than half of Palestine's native population were uprooted. Speaker 3: There's a lot of sympathy that can be generated, and I think rightly so, for what Jewish people as a whole have dealt with in Western societies and globally because of antisemitism. The question then becomes, what is the proper response to that? The Zionist answer is, of course, statehood. And there's many people who would sympathize with that if it was in fact done in a vacuum and if it was in fact done for a people without a land in a land without people. The reality is that's just not the way that it happened. There were people here. They lost their homes, their Speaker 18: livelihood, their nation, their everything. This was a land in 1910 that was 93% Palestinian Arab and 7% Jewish. How did it suddenly become 80% Jewish and 20% Palestinian? This was not a normal demographic transition. This was a consequence of Israel's desire to create a Jewish state, and to do that, it had to get rid of as many Palestinians as possible. There's other more complex factors, but that's cutting it to its bare bones as we see it. Speaker 19: That is, I think, in a certain sense, the core of the conflict. The Palestinians have suffered inordinately as a result of the creation of Israel. The creation of a Jewish state in a country that had an Arab majority necessarily and inevitably caused them irreparable harm. Speaker 20: The Palestinians used the term catastrophe to speak of the 1948 consequences when they lost their land the first time around. In '67, it was another Nakba, another catastrophe. Speaker 0: In June of nineteen sixty seven, Israel won what was perceived as a stunning underdog victory over much larger Arab armies during the Six Day War. With victory, in addition to taking land from Egypt and Syria, Israel began to militarily occupy all remaining Palestinian territory in the West Bank, the Gaza Strip, and East Jerusalem. Speaker 20: Suddenly, all of Palestine is now lost. We now had no Palestinian land left under Palestinian control. You had a huge Palestinian population living as refugees or living under occupation. Palestinians are governed under military law. They are essentially prisoners. They are treated as if they were all prisoners of war. They have no rights. Speaker 0: In the immediate aftermath of the sixty seven war, the United Nations Security Council passed resolution two four two. Citing international law forbidding the takeover of territory by war, two four two explicitly called for Israel to withdraw its armed forces. But to this day, Israel has largely failed to comply, not only holding Palestinian territory, but confiscating additional land and building massive Jewish settlement blocks in the West Bank and East Jerusalem in direct violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which expressly forbids states from transferring civilian populations into territory it occupies. In addition, Israel has established an entire matrix of security control on Palestinian land to secure these settlements, including checkpoints that prevent Palestinians from traveling freely within their own land and a 440 mile security wall along the Israeli border that cuts into Palestinian territory. Speaker 3: We're talking about massive denial of human rights for millions of people. At the most basic level, the government that is ruling over these people is is not a government in which these people, the Palestinians, have a voice. Speaker 7: There's really no way to fully understand why the Palestinian people have resisted Israel for so long without understanding this basic history of dispossession and occupation. But for the most part, this isn't the story we get in American media coverage. Instead, the legitimate grievances of Palestinians, including their right to resist an illegal military occupation, get pushed out of the frame by this constant discussion about extremism and terrorism and antisemitism. Speaker 21: You know, rational, clear minded people understand that Hamas is a terror group, and it is, committed to killing Jews and wiping Israel off the face of the earth. That's not debatable. That's a fact. Speaker 20: It's never about land somehow. That gets dropped out. It's never about settlements. It's always about they hate us because we're Jewish. Speaker 19: Whatever the Palestinians have done is portrayed in terms of mindless violence against Jews out of some kind of primeval anti Semitism. No sense of how this started, where the animus comes from. It's completely inexplicable in the the the way in which it's generally presented, and these people basically kill because they hate, and they hate because they're irrational Muslim fanatics or whatever. Speaker 9: I think Americans largely get it. They know who the good guys are and who the bad guys are. Speaker 19: This is not an illusion. American public opinion is generally supportive of Israel because it's been led to believe that Israel is in the right and the Arabs are bad guys. Speaker 7: None of this is by accident. It's the result of a deliberate effort to shape American perceptions of the conflict, a propaganda effort that really begins to take shape with Israel's Invasion Of Lebanon in 1982. Speaker 5: Israel unleashed another massive air attack on Palestinian guerrilla targets in Lebanon today. Speaker 19: From the sky, the howl of Israeli jets bombing and bombing. Speaker 22: Tonight, Israel has never been closer to nor more in control of an Arab capital. Speaker 0: In the summer of nineteen eighty two, Israel invaded neighboring Lebanon in an attempt to drive the Palestinian Liberation Organization out of its encampments on the southern border with Israel. Israeli Officials justified the attack as a defensive action required to take out terrorists. But as the story played out on American television, a different narrative began to emerge, one that presented Israel as the aggressor. Speaker 23: What in the world is going on? Israel's security problem on its border is 50 miles to the south. What's an Israeli army doing here in Beirut? The answer is that we are now dealing with an imperial Israel which is solving its problems in someone else's country. World opinion be damned. Speaker 24: The Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982 was a watershed. It was Israel breaking out beyond its immediate region to aggressively attack another country, and it was a bit of a shock to many people. Speaker 22: Israel was always that gallant little underdog democracy fighting for survival against all the odds. Now the Israelis have annexed East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights settled down more or less permanently on the West Bank and occupied close to half of Lebanon. In the interests of self defense, that gallant little underdog Israel has suddenly started behaving like the neighborhood bully. Speaker 0: By the time the war was over, the Israeli military would kill seventeen thousand Lebanese and Palestinians and wound another thirty thousand, almost all of them civilians. Speaker 17: In West Beirut, hospitals are so taxed with the injured that they have become specialized. This center takes only burn victims of phosphorus shells. Trapnel cases, concussions, and fractures are directed to other facilities. Speaker 0: And just a few months later, American media coverage would take an even darker turn. Speaker 5: There's been another horrendous turn of events in The Middle East. Hundreds of men, women, and children, perhaps as many as a thousand people in all, have been massacred in two Palestinian refugee camps in West Beirut. Speaker 0: Israel's Lebanese allies, operating with the consent of the Israeli government, had massacred several thousand Palestinian civilians in the refugee camps of Sabra and Shatila, and American news media had the pictures to prove it. Speaker 25: The Israelis permitted an armored column of right wing Christian gunmen to enter West Beirut late Friday. They took up positions surrounding Shatila refugee camp last night, and this morning, they were gone. Speaker 22: A bloody massacre which has heightened tensions between The US and Israel. Speaker 20: Sabra Shatila was hardly the first massacre committed by Israel against Palestinians and against Arabs. There's a dirty legacy of Israeli massacres from the pre state through the creation of the state and beyond. The big difference was this one was televised. Speaker 25: By all appearances, groups of men had been ordered to stand against the wall and then gunned down in cold blood. Speaker 22: Today, Palestinians search frantically for relatives. They took our children, one said. They're killing our families. Speaker 20: This was a game changer in terms of how Israel was going to deal with the question of publicity. They went on the offensive for the first time. Speaker 26: All the direct or implicit accusations that the IDF bear any blame whatsoever for this human tragedy in the Shatila camp are entirely baseless and without any foundation. The government of Israel rejects them with a contempt which they deserve. Speaker 20: It was perhaps the first time they recognized at the highest levels inside Israel how much they needed to do that if they expected to maintain the kind of understood support in The United States. Israel can do no wrong. Israel is always the the victim. Israel is the little David against the big bad Goliath. Speaker 0: Two years after the Lebanon invasion, the American Jewish Congress sponsored a conference in Jerusalem to devise a formal public relations strategy known in Hebrew as Hasbah. Participants included PR and advertising executives, media specialists, journalists, and leaders of major Jewish groups. According to a brochure from the congress, no single event brought home the need for a more effective or information program more persuasively than the nineteen eighty two war in Lebanon and the events that followed. As one conference participant put it, Israel is no longer perceived to be little David, but Goliath steamrolling across the map. The primary aim of the conference was to develop strategies to spin unpopular Israeli policies and to counter negative press coverage by shaping the media frame in advance. News doesn't just jump into a camera, a conference delegate said. It's directed. It's managed. It's made accessible. Israel based advertising executive Martin Fenton would put it in even more blunt terms. Propaganda is not a dirty word, he said. Face it. We are in the game of changing people's minds and making them think differently. To accomplish that, we need propaganda. The conference was chaired by US Advertising Executive Carl Spielvogel, the legendary ad man who created the highly acclaimed Miller Lite beer ads in the nineteen seventies. Speaker 7: The choice of Spielvogel makes perfect sense. He's known as a master of image inversion and rebranding. The ad man responsible for transforming Miller Lite, which had been viewed before as a woman's beer, into a manly beer that tough guys would drink. Speaker 16: But the best part is that it Speaker 22: tastes so great. The best part is it's less philly. No. It tastes great. Less philly. Speaker 7: His job with Israel would require the same kind of rebranding only in the opposite direction to help soften the image of a country that's coming to be seen as a bully. So he recommends creating a cabinet post dedicated exclusively to explaining policy, whose job would not be setting policy but presenting it in the most attractive way to the rest of the world. Speaker 24: Classic PR is to say the problem is not the policy, it's the presentation. When the policies are so reprehensible that many people become critical, Rather than acknowledge there's anything wrong with the policy, there's a doubling down on the PR effort. Speaker 7: After Lebanon, you start to see the basic Hezbollah strategy in action. Images of Palestinians fighting back against Israel's occupation make their way onto American television screens. And the Israeli military crushes this resistance in brutal ways that undercut Israel's image as underdog and victim. Speaker 27: Israeli helicopter gunships deliberately fired a missile into a crowd of civilians last night, killing seven Palestinians and wounding seventy more. Speaker 7: Then Israeli officials go into full Hasbro mode, an act of the occupation doesn't even exist, framing all Palestinian resistance as terrorism and Israeli aggression as self defense. Speaker 9: We will do whatever it takes to defend ourself and defend ourselves, we will. Speaker 7: That's the basic Hasbro strategy in a nutshell. Even when you're violently crushing resistance to your own brutal occupation, portray Israel as an innocent victim by demonizing Palestinians as nothing but terrorists. Speaker 13: The Palestinian terror campaign continues. It only justifies again and again that we Israel have to continue and defend ourselves. Speaker 20: There have been horrific Palestinian terrorist attacks, and I use that word very specifically to mean what terrorism means, which is attacks on civilians for a political purpose. Speaker 27: Anger in Israel today at last night's suicide bomb in Tel Aviv, killed four and wounded around 50. Speaker 20: Those are horrific attacks, which should be condemned. They are violations of international law, period. But the problem is Israeli violence is assumed to be legitimate because it's always self defense. Speaker 28: Some of the people who have been killed are said to be civilians. In fact, two of them are said to be, little girls. But the Israeli military says they try to the best of their knowledge to make sure whoever they are striking was a known militant. Speaker 8: All the cases when Palestinian people were killed by the Israeli military, and this is not called acts of terror, and one should ask why if it is civilians who are being killed but from a plane and not by a suicide bomber, why this is not terror and only terrorist when somebody is killed by a suicide bomber? Speaker 24: If the terrorist label can only be affixed to one set of people but not another set of people, then you're in an Orwellian zone. You're down a rabbit hole of linguistic manipulation. Speaker 9: The last thing they want is a political settlement. What they want is more demonstrations, more riots, more bodies. That's what they want. Speaker 3: And so this becomes the framing of the situation. Israel is defending itself, which means Israel is not the aggressor here. That doesn't square with the reality on the ground, and we know that. You have a right to defend yourself. You don't have a right to occupy people, deny them their human rights, and then cry foul when they resist. That's not the right to self defense. That's the right to repression. That's what Israel is asking for here. Let us do away with these dissenters, these Palestinian dissenters, and call it defense. Speaker 0: As news media have proliferated over the years, Israel's public relations efforts have only become more and more explicit and intense. Speaker 29: In The United States, we have a show called The Apprentice where Donald Trump auditions people to work in his corporate boardroom. In Israel, the version of the apprentice is called, the ambassador. Speaker 30: The ambassador. In a world where the real battles take place in newsrooms and TV studios, the ability to create a positive image for your country is a crucial task for every ambassador. Speaker 29: It's a show where Israelis compete for who can offer the best Hosbura. That means explain in Hebrew. Explain our situation. Speaker 31: While The Apprentice tests contestants' ability to sell lemonade on the street Lemonade. Or handle office politics, the ambassador finalists have learned that selling real politics is a lot harder. Speaker 2: The problem is that when you sell lemonade, nobody hates lemonade. Nobody's gonna say that your lemonade occupies territories or that your lemonade kills babies. Speaker 29: Israel's mechanism of projecting its propaganda or what they call Hasbara is one of the most sophisticated arms of its government. It's a weapon of Israeli warfare. Speaker 7: And when you look today at how the media cover the conflict, you see just how successful Israel's propaganda has been in reversing the legacy of Lebanon. Speaker 9: If there's any complaints, and there should be, about civilian deaths that they they belong, the responsibility and the blame belongs in one place, Hamas. I don't think anyone should get that wrong. Speaker 6: The Israeli position is the first position they are allowed to to determine the narrative, determine the facts on the ground. Speaker 2: Hamas is a terror organization committed to our destruction. They fire thousands of rockets at our cities. Speaker 6: It becomes a story of Israelis responding to Palestinian attacks. Speaker 2: Israel says this is a response to the almost 800 rockets that had landed in Israel from Gaza this year alone. Speaker 7: Again and again, the wider context of Israel's occupation simply drops out of the coverage. So it comes across as this confusing and endless cycle of violence that begins when Palestinians attack and Israelis retaliate in self defense. Speaker 32: Three Palestinians were shot and killed while allegedly trying to attack Israelis with kitchen knives. Speaker 5: This cycle of violence continues. When Hamas launches rockets from Gaza, Israel hits back. Speaker 3: Cycle of violence presupposes this back and forth retaliation. It's the same sort of thing with a lull in the violence or a relative calm. Speaker 12: After three days of relative calm, the violence is once again picking up here in The Middle East. Speaker 3: Well, relative to who and to what. Right, what's actually going on on the ground is not ever a lull in the violence for Palestinians. In fact, occupation is a system of violence that goes on every single day. Just because there's no violence that Israelis are witnessing for a particular period of time before it resumes again does not mean that there's no violence facing Palestinians from the occupation. So this lull in the violence is only seen through the prism of Israeli victimhood, not Palestinian victimhood. Speaker 6: It's no wonder that Americans would identify with the Israeli side or or support it. It would be shocking if they didn't. And I think this is the the lesson to be drawn from thirty years of media coverage that I think has been slanted heavily in favor of Israeli interests. Speaker 7: What we've seen is really another kind of occupation, an occupation of American media and what we could call the American mind by a pro Israel narrative that's deflected attention away from what virtually everyone recognizes as the best way to resolve this conflict, end the occupation and the settlements so that Palestinians can finally have a state of their own. Speaker 33: Ladies and gentlemen, mister Arafat, chairman of the executive council of the Palestine Liberation Organization, his excellency, Yitzhak Rabin, prime minister of Israel, the president of The United States. Speaker 0: The ongoing peace process that began with the Oslo peace accords in 1993 was designed to negotiate the terms of Israel's withdrawal from Palestinian territory in accordance with the UN resolution two four two, which made an explicit connection between Israeli withdrawal and a just and lasting peace. Speaker 34: For decades, there has been an overwhelming international consensus on a political settlement of the conflict, namely a settlement on the internationally recognized border. Speaker 7: The international consensus for a two state solution is based on the borders in place before the sixty seven war. This means that Israel gets 78% and the Palestinians get the rest, 22 of historic Palestine. Twenty Two Percent. That's it. Speaker 0: But since Oslo, Israel has actually taken more Palestinian land for its Jewish only settlements. In 1993, there were approximately 200,000 illegal Jewish settlers living in the occupied Palestinian territories. Since then, that number has more than tripled with approximately 650,000 settlers now living in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. In addition, since 1967, Israel has also demolished approximately 28,000 Palestinian homes. Speaker 2: The United Nations says there's been a big increase in the number of Palestinian homes demolished by Israeli forces. This Speaker 0: is what Palestinians have called ethnic cleansing, demolitions and evictions carried out by Israel in the occupied West Bank. So Speaker 15: if you look Speaker 35: at the result, not the words and the pretty phrases, what's happened over the past twenty years and was inaugurated at Oslo was not a peace process. It was an annexation process. Speaker 19: What has happened is that now one in 11 Israeli Jews live in these illegal settlements. So the failure to confront the settlement enterprise from the very beginning, I think has created a almost insuperable obstacle to the creation of a Palestinian state. There's no place to put it. Speaker 20: And that's what the settlements are all about. It's to claim the land, facts on the ground that become nothing we can do about it now, it's too late. Israel wants as much of the land as they can get away with, with as few Palestinians on it as possible. Speaker 36: Israeli governments from the very beginning after the sixty seven war never considered giving up Israeli control of the territories. Moshe Dayan, who served as defense minister and foreign minister, people asked him what will be the future. Now we're controlling the territories. And he said, the future will be exactly what it is today. We must continue to retain the control of these territories. Speaker 7: Just listen to Netanyahu talking in private to his right wing settler base in 02/2001 about how he has no intention despite what Israel agreed to at Oslo of giving up land and ending its illegal settlement expansion in the West Bank and the rest of the Jordan Valley. Netanyahu is clear that Israel's not giving anything up. But he's also very clear that the way to make that argument is to invoke security threats, and he's especially confident that he can manipulate the American people to buy into this argument. Speaker 9: And Speaker 7: this, of course, is exactly the case is made to the American people time and time again whenever Israel's been called out for refusing to end the occupation and its settlement project. Speaker 9: We're willing to make great concessions for peace, but there is something that I will never compromise on, and that's Israel's security. Speaker 24: The conventional wisdom is that continuing the occupation makes Israel more secure. And if you buy that argument, then it's a license to occupy indefinitely. Speaker 3: What we're we're talking about here is something that is completely indefensible. Israel knows this. Israel knows this very well, and for that reason, wants to talk about anything and everything else. They'd rather talk about terrorism. They'd rather talk about security. They'd rather talk about Iran. Anything but the occupation. Speaker 7: The reason they've been able to so effectively change the subject isn't because they're practicing some kind of mass mind control. The main reason is that the US government itself has had a vested interest in promoting the same narrative for almost fifty years now. This goes back to the start of the so called special relationship with Israel in the late nineteen sixties when The US decides to deputize Israel and make it what the Nixon administration called a cop on the beat to protect American interest in the Middle East, especially US energy supplies. Ever since, the American government has continued to give Israel roughly $3,000,000,000 a year in military aid while also vetoing one UN resolution after another, condemning the occupation and settlements. The challenge is to make sure that the American people stay on board with despite what Israel is doing. Speaker 0: A number of well funded public relations organizations have emerged within The United States to help Israel justify its policies, especially the occupation and settlements, on security grounds. One of these groups is the Israel project. In 02/2009, the Israel project turned to conservative pollster and rebranding expert Frank Luntz. Speaker 2: Frank Luntz. This is the man that reframed the estate tax as the death tax, Health care reform as government takeover of health care. Now some critics have called Luntz a spin doctor who manipulates public emotion, but Luntz would reframe that as Fox News analyst. Speaker 0: The Israel project hired him to determine which talking points used by Israeli and US Officials over time have been most effective in maintaining American sympathy for Israel. Luntz wrote up his recommendations in a 02/2009 report called the Global Language Dictionary. Speaker 7: If you wanna understand how the propaganda works, especially in The US, you need to read the Luntz document. He's really clear that the occupation and especially the settlements are a problem. And he points the polls that show a large majority of Americans actually think that Israel should retreat to the 67 borders. In fact, he says, when you talk about land in terms of 67, you completely flip American sentiment against you. But, and this is his solution, if you bring up the danger of terrorism, you win back to support. The key, Lunt says, is to claim that the fight is over ideology, not land, about terror, not territory. In fact, these three words, terror, not territory, summarize the basis of the propaganda campaign in The US. And Lance goes on to say that one of the most effective ways to make the conflict about terrorism is to refer to an obscure political document written in 1988 by a small group of idolugs, the Hamas Charter, that calls for the destruction of Israel. Even though the Hamas leadership effectively disowned the charter a long time ago, it's been PR gold for Israel. Lunt's research has discovered that when Americans hear the words of the charter, Israel goes from bully to victim, and sympathy for the plight of the Palestinians dissipates. So he says, don't just quote it. Read it out loud again and again. And his advice has been taken up often hysterically by Israel's advocates. Speaker 37: The Hamash charter not only calls for Israel's destructions, ladies and gentlemen. Article seven calls for the murder of every Jew. It calls for the murder of every Jew. It's a Nazi document. Speaker 3: We have the Israeli prime minister saying movements like Hamas that are national movements are the same thing as ISIS. Speaker 9: Hamas is like ISIS. Hamas is like Al Qaeda. Hamas is like Hezbollah. Hamas is like Boko Haram. Speaker 3: And they are completely not the same thing. And anyone who understands anything about The Middle East and political dynamics there will will explain to you exactly why that is the case and and immediately spot that for the propaganda that it is. Speaker 36: Hamas is as much a nationalist movement as it is in a religious movement. And in fact, it it often assigns priority to its nationalist goals over its religious goals. This false notion that Hamas is part of this Al Qaeda network is not bought even by important elements of the American military. Speaker 0: In 02/2010, the United States Central Command or CENTCOM, the highest military command in The US, issued a classified report that questioned The current US policy of isolating and marginalizing Hamas as well as Hezbollah in Lebanon. The report described the two groups as pragmatic and argued that putting them and Al Qaeda in the same sentence as if they're all the same is just stupid, and it directly repudiated Israel's publicly stated view that Hamas and Hezbollah are incapable of change and must be confronted with force, warning that failing to recognize their grievances and objectives would result in continued failure in moderating their behavior. Speaker 7: And the US military isn't alone in this assessment. ISIS itself has attacked Hamas again and again because they're not radical enough. They're too pragmatic and too compromising. But none of these facts stop people from going on and on about Hamas' charter anyway in order to paint Hamas with the same brush as ISIS. Speaker 37: I spent a lot of time on my radio program going over Hamas' charter. What it says, it wants to obliterate Israel. It wants to destroy the Jews. It is a sick, twisted, you know, perverted ideology, a religion that has been hijacked by radicals, and it it manifests itself in different forms, Muslim brotherhood, Islamic Jihad, Hamas Hezbollah, ISIS Al Qaeda, you know, it's all the same thing. Speaker 7: Meanwhile, you hear next to nothing about another extreme political charter that has much more relevance to the conflict, the platform of the ruling Likud party in Israel. Speaker 3: Well, if you look at the language that's in that charter, the Likud charter, it flatly rejects, quote, flatly rejects the existence of a Palestinian state anywhere anywhere on that side of the Jordan River. In other words, completely denying the right of a state of Palestine to exist. That's far more relevant to have language like the language in the Likud charter be in the charter of a party that is the largest in an Israeli government, driving an Israeli state, and has the capacity to act upon the words in their charter in a way that no other party does. Speaker 0: To strengthen the case that the conflict is about terrorism and not territory, Luntz points to the effectiveness of another well established Israeli talking point, the claim that Israel gave up control of Gaza in 02/2005 in hopes of achieving peace and a two state solution and got only rockets in return. Speaker 10: We left Gaza completely. We had Gaza. They could have turned it into a flourishing, wonderful place to live in. Look at what they did. They turned it into a haven of terrorists coming from all over the world. Speaker 3: It's completely untrue that Israel left the the Gaza Strip. They did withdraw their colonists, but at the same time, they tightened their control over the Gaza Strip. Speaker 2: This is Gaza's main freight route into Israel, and normally this road would be bumper to bumper with heavily laden trucks, but it's completely closed as is every other border crossing in the country. Nothing's coming into Gaza and nothing is getting out. Speaker 3: So the idea that Israel left is 100% bogus. Speaker 20: Gaza remains occupied. Gaza has no control over its coast, over its waters, over its harbor, over its airspace, over the land or its borders, over its people. Who can come and go is totally at the Israeli discretion. In Gaza, there are constant military attacks by the Israeli Air Force by drones. Targeted assassinations go on all the time. It wasn't really a withdrawal, Speaker 6: but the conventional shorthand in the media is that Israel was willing to give up an enormous amount to the Palestinian side, and the Palestinians responded with violence. Israel, Speaker 38: for since 1967, controlled Gaza. They gave it to the Palestinians in a gesture of peace, and all they got are a bunch of rockets and retriever. Speaker 7: This is the basic frame of Israel's PR campaign. Make sure the media stays focused on terrorism and amass extremism as a source of the conflict, not the occupation and the settlements. If you wanna see this in operation, just look at the coverage of any of Israel's many attacks on Gaza over the past few Speaker 2: evening. In the sixty years of conflict between Israel and the Palestinians, there have been few, if any, days like this one. The scale and intensity of this attack was surprising. The deadliest operation against Palestinians in decades. Speaker 3: After an intense three week assault, thirteen hundred dead, five thousand wounded. Speaker 0: In February, Israel launched Operation Karzleid, a massive ground and air assault on the Gaza Strip. Speaker 27: The air force released this cockpit video. Speaker 0: Over a period of three weeks, the Israeli military dropped over 600 tons of bombs on Gaza. Speaker 27: It isn't clear yet how many civilians are among Speaker 0: Nearly fourteen hundred Palestinians were killed and thousands more injured. Speaker 27: The wounded were carried on corrugated iron, in private cars, on bats, and in arms. The worst one day casualty toll in Gaza anybody can remember. Speaker 18: Normally in a conflict, civilians can run for their lives. Gaza was one of the few, if not the only modern conflict where the helpless civilians who were subjected to massive technologically advanced firepower by the Israelis had no escape route. Speaker 39: With Gaza City bombed and burning, Palestinians heeded Israel's warning to get out of the way, but found they had nowhere to go. What's a safe place for us to go, the woman cried? Not the UN compound where 700 people took shelter. Israeli artillery hit it then hit it again. Speaker 34: It was a brutal murderous attack, devastating. This attack was murderous. Speaker 0: As with the Lebanon invasion three decades before, horrific images of destruction spilled onto television screens around the world. But this time, the Israeli government was prepared. Six months earlier, it had set up a new unit within the Israeli prime minister's office to help coordinate the government's messaging once the invasion started. Speaker 32: Israel is defending its actions, saying this assault is in direct response to almost daily rocket and mortar attacks. Speaker 40: If you ask any American why that war started, they would say because the Palestinians started, you know, firing rockets at Israel. Speaker 2: Hamas keeping up the rocket fire that triggered the Israeli attacks in the first place. Speaker 41: Hamas once again firing several dozen rockets into Israel today. Speaker 40: They're always preparing Americans for an attack against these people who are incorrigible terrorists, who are constantly shooting rockets, and never ever giving the other side of the story. Speaker 6: We were told endlessly in any media outlet you wanna look at that Israel had to invade and attack the Gaza Strip because of an unending assault from Hamas and various militant groups in Gaza. Speaker 2: What are the goals of that operation right now? Speaker 36: To change totally the behavior of the Hamas. It's a terrorist regime that keeps shelling Israel with thousands of rockets and motor shells. Speaker 6: What this forgets is that for the latter half of 2,008, there was a very successful ceasefire that curtailed rocket fire into Israel dramatically, almost to the point at which there was none. This was shattered in February when Israel attacked what they said was a tunnel building project, killed six Hamas militants. At that point, the ceasefire was off. Now the New York Times, the so called paper of record, reported this very clearly one time. Speaker 7: The story gets buried on page eight of the New York Times and hardly registers anywhere else. Why? Well, look at the day that Israel chose to break the ceasefire, 11/04/2008, which just coincidentally happened to be the day of the historic election of Barack Obama. It virtually guaranteed that no one in America would notice, and that's exactly how it played out. When Hamas resumed rocket attacks after Israel broke the ceasefire, Israeli officials went on American television and got away with blaming Hamas for breaking the ceasefire. Speaker 42: You know, it was Hamas that unilaterally tore up the ceasefire understandings. It was Hamas that escalated the vines that reached a crescendo on Christmas day when we had in one twenty four hour period some 80 rockets, mortar shells, and missiles coming into Israel attacking our civilians. Now we want to work with the Palestinian government. Speaker 7: And the lie was then repeated uncritically by US news media. Speaker 40: James, there's no question here, is there, that Hamas started this? Speaker 43: Well, look, I don't think Israel had any choice. It was a ceasefire that was broken by Hamas. They fired something like 300 rockets into Israel. I mean, this is an act of war. What are they supposed to do? Speaker 7: Just compare this to how media outside The US dealt with this. Speaker 4: Isn't it the fact that during the ceasefire, not a single Israeli was killed? And the reason for that was because Hamas fired not a single rocket. Speaker 44: No. I think you're wrong, unfortunately, because during that ceasefire of six months, they were firing rockets on a daily basis. Speaker 7: On channel four in Britain, you saw an anchor presenting evidence that the Israeli government itself acknowledged that Hamas observed the ceasefire. Speaker 4: This is actually a document that's given to journalists by the Israeli government. And in this document, it says, and I'm quoting, Hamas was careful to maintain the ceasefire. Speaker 7: The Israeli official clearly caught in a lie, attempts to change the subject to how evil Hamas is. But the interviewer doesn't let him get away with it. Speaker 44: They were firing rockets, and they're always trying to target civilians. Their main goal is to try to kill children and women. Speaker 4: And not that Shasham, I'm I'm I'm I'm gonna have to stop you because this document is published by the Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at the Israel Intelligence Heritage and Commemoration Center, and they say Speaker 27: It is not a Speaker 4: that Hamas maintained the ceasefire. Speaker 44: It's not a government. It is private institution. Speaker 4: To foreign journalists by the government as a statement Speaker 44: of fact. Listen. Speaker 4: Now Speaker 44: the facts to hear the facts or you'd like to invent some facts? Speaker 32: I would Speaker 4: like you to tell me Speaker 3: the facts because these are actually Speaker 7: Exchanges like these are unthinkable in The US, even though Israel itself behind the scenes acknowledged Hamas had observed the ceasefire, something another British reporter forced Israeli spokesperson Mark Regev to admit on camera. Speaker 19: There were no Hamas rockets during the ceasefire. Before November, there were no Hamas rockets for four months. Speaker 42: And that's correct. Speaker 34: Israel officially recognizes that until it broke the ceasefire, Hamas didn't fire a single rocket. I mean, the propaganda is so powerful that these truisms, literally truisms, are almost inexpressible. Speaker 6: The lesson is that this conflict started when we say it started, and we say it started when Israel was attacked. Speaker 0: In 02/2012 and again in 02/2014, Israel launched two more devastating attacks on Gaza. Speaker 7: Israel can saturate the media with its spokespeople, but there's still the problem of massive Palestinian casualties showing up on television screens. You can't make those images go away. An Israeli official actually said, in the war of pictures, we lose. So you need to correct, explain, or balance it in other ways. Here again, the Luntz document spells out which talking points have been most effective in spinning the brutal reality of Palestinian casualties. He says the first thing the pro Israeli spokespeople should do is to express empathy for the innocent victims. Speaker 36: Unfortunately, innocents do get hurt, and we we really grieve that. We're sad for every civilian casualty. Speaker 14: The entire situation is tragic. Speaker 7: Once you've done that, Lance says, you also have to get people to empathize with Israelis by describing what life is like for them, living in constant fear of Hamas rocket attacks. So again and again, we hear the focused tested phrase that the rockets are raining down on Israel. Speaker 14: We have thousands of rockets raining down on our civilians. Rockets were raining down on Israel. Speaker 24: Any advertising executive will tell you the essence of propaganda is repetition. Speaker 32: Rockets raining down on Southern Israel. Rockets raining down on Israel. The Hamas rockets rained down on Israeli border towns. Speaker 7: Then, Lance tells PR spokespeople to turn the tables and ask the American people, what would you do? Speaker 9: So what would you do in The United States? Speaker 2: You imagine what America would do if it were facing a similar threat? Speaker 36: We always try to ask you the question we ask ourselves. What will you do? What would you do? What would you do Speaker 42: if more than 3,000 rockets had been fired on your cities? Speaker 37: What would you do, 3,000 rockets? Speaker 42: What would you do if terrorists were tunneling under your frontier? Speaker 37: What would you do if three kids are kidnapped because of a tunnel network? Speaker 3: What sort of question is this? Of course, anybody would act to defend themselves against unprovoked aggression, but it is a question that is completely devoid of any context. What drives society to a point where after multiple devastating wars, they continue to resist with these most feeble methods? They don't want you to ask that question. They don't want you to ask what is behind this? What's the history here? Who are these people? Where did they come from? Why are they so desperate? No. They want you to understand Israeli behavior. Israeli behavior is always characterized as a reaction to unprovoked violence. Speaker 7: Then on top of that, when massive numbers of Palestinian civilians predictably die from Israeli attacks, Israel claims it's part of a deliberate Hamas strategy to drum up sympathy. They use Speaker 9: telegenically dead Palestinians for their cause. They want the more dead, the better. Speaker 7: So they end up in this upside down Orwellian world where Israelis killing civilians becomes an unforgivable transgression against Israelis. Speaker 5: It is hard to come away with any feeling but that we are in the midst of a world gone mad. Last week, I found a quote of many years ago by Golda Meir, one of Israel's early leaders, which might have been said yesterday. We can forgive the Arabs for killing our children, she said, but we can never forgive them for forcing us to kill their children. Speaker 6: It's not difficult to imagine Americans identifying with Palestinians who are suffering, but they need to be able to see that suffering on their television screens and in their newspapers. Speaker 4: Israel said today its new offensive is targeting terrorists. Speaker 6: And when your sense of the coverage is that there's something that these people did to deserve this or that they are affiliated with terrorists and terrorist minded governments, The fallout of that is an inability to identify with people who are suffering in far greater numbers and in far greater proportion than their Israeli counterparts. Speaker 0: The effort to shape American perceptions of the Israeli Palestinian conflict has been taken up by a number of pro Israel groups based in The US. Together, these groups are commonly referred to as the Israel lobby. Nowhere has the lobby's power to shape a pro Israel narrative been more visible than in the US Congress due largely to the efforts of one of the most influential lobbying groups working on Capitol Hill today, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, better known as APEC. Speaker 45: It Speaker 11: is great to see so many good friends from all across the country. Speaker 46: I see more than 10,000 people, young and old. Speaker 0: APAC's annual conference draws nearly 10,000 attendees from around the country, including the most influential members of both houses of congress from both parties. Speaker 2: Remember there are seven congressional office buildings? Speaker 47: As you leave here today to meet with your senators and representatives, I want you to go there knowing with certainty that you'll make a difference with every member that you meet. Speaker 2: You're gonna feel so good when six months from now, you see the three major talking points evolve to three points of legislation for the US government. Speaker 48: Is passed. Speaker 19: It would be very hard for ordinary Americans to know that they're being deceived, that that some very competent experts at spin management are in fact deluding them. There are many reasons for this. One of them is that the American political class has basically swallowed the line hook line and sinker. Speaker 49: They keep getting rocket attack after rocket attack, and then they're criticized for human rights problems because they defend themselves. Speaker 19: This is particularly true for Republicans. Speaker 50: They're responding, mister speaker, to attacks on their civilian population. I mean, what is it that they want? Well, we know what they want. They want Israel obliterated from the map, mister speaker. Speaker 19: But it's also true for many Democrats. Speaker 11: We stand with our ally. We stand with the democratic state of Israel. We stand against terrorism. Speaker 2: This administration will always stand up for Israel's right to defend itself. Speaker 19: They made the mistake of actually leaving APEC's fax address on one bill that was actually laid before congress. And, of course, nobody was apparently embarrassed. The fact that APEC writes the legislation for them or writes their speeches for them doesn't seem to, in the least, bother people. Speaker 41: There's nothing happening here that's secret or under the table. It's not a cabal. It's not a conspiracy. It is, in fact, domestic politics the way it's practiced here in The United States. There are roughly three dozen or so pro Israel pacts that give money. Over the last fifteen or twenty years, they've given $5,560,000,000 dollars in American elections. There are one or two Arab American PACs, and I believe last time I looked, they'd given, you know, 800,000 to a million. So you've got $55,000,000 of PAC contributions on one side, and you've got maybe a million at most on the other side. That gives you a pretty good sense of what the balance of power is if you're planning on running for congress. Speaker 40: It's all about the money. Speaker 9: And I do see a lot of old friends here, and I see a lot of new friends of Israel here as well. Democrats and Republicans alike. Speaker 40: He being Netanyahu got a joint session so that Democrats and Republicans would have the opportunity to stand up and cheer for him, and it would be good for their campaigns to raise money. He put out the most hard line propaganda that went entirely against US policy. Speaker 9: The border will be different than the one that existed on 06/04/1967. Israel will not return to the indefensible boundaries of 1967. Speaker 40: And he gets 29 or 39 standing ovations. What are they applauding? The continuation of the conflict? Are they applauding that more Israelis and Palestinians are gonna keep dying? Is that what they're applauding? No. They're applauding we want more money in the next campaign. That's what it's entirely about. There is no other issue like this. Speaker 7: For the most part, the lobby pushes policies that are consistent with US interests anyway. And when these interests don't align, we see the limits of the lobby's power as we saw with Obama's Iran policy, which passed despite an intense campaign by the lobby to defeat it. So we shouldn't overstate the influence of the lobby on American foreign policy. But at the same time, we shouldn't underestimate the lobby's power to limit debate about Israeli policies in the occupied territories, especially far right Israeli policies that are often way out of step with the political views of most American Jews. In fact, it's not accurate to call it a Jewish lobby at all. It's the Israel lobby. Speaker 19: The actual views of most people in the American Jewish community according to every poll diverge greatly from the extreme right wing, neoconservative views of the entire establishment leadership of that community. Most people in the Jewish community are much more liberal. They're against settlement. They're against occupation. They want a two state solution. The lobby and its the various other institutions are the main supports and props of settlement and occupation and of protection of the status quo. Speaker 41: And there are some key elements of what we call the Israel lobby that aren't Jewish, so called Christian Zionists. Speaker 32: Evangelical Christians in America have become Israel's staunchest ally in an increasingly hostile world. Speaker 7: Powerful groups like CUFI, Christians United for Israel, lobby Congress for an expansion of Israeli territory because they believe that's what the Bible calls for. Speaker 22: CUFI representatives from all 50 states went to Capitol Hill. Their purpose was to personally speak with their elected officials and express concerns for Israel's security and their support of Israel's right to the land by biblical mandate. Speaker 34: In The United States, roughly a third of the population believes that every word of the Bible is literally true. If the Bible is literally true, then the land of Israel was promised to the Jews by God, and they have every right to take it over from the usurpers. Speaker 15: Listen closely, those of you who are listening in the liberal media. The Jewish people are not occupying the land of Israel. They own the land of Israel. The truth about Israel is God gave the land of Israel to Abraham in an eternal blood covenant four thousand years ago. The land of Israel belonged to the Jewish people then. It belongs to the Jewish people today, and it will belong to the Jewish people forever. The land is their land. Speaker 41: One of the problems with the influence the Israel lobby has in The United States now is it has been hard for government officials to have an honest discussion. Speaker 7: Just look what happened to president Obama when he made the mistake of simply saying out loud what the international consensus is. Speaker 11: We believe the borders of Israel and Palestine should be based on the 1967 lines with mutually agreed swaps so that secure and recognized borders are established for both states. Speaker 7: It didn't matter that Obama was just repeating what had been official US policy for decades Or the right wing president Ronald Reagan had said essentially the same thing in the nineteen eighties in even stronger language. Speaker 5: UN resolution two four two remains wholly valid as the foundation stone of America's Middle East peace effort. It is The United States position that in return for peace, the withdrawal provision of resolution two four two applies to all fronts, including the West Bank and Gaza. Further settlement activity is in no way necessary for the security of Israel and only diminishes the confidence of the Arabs that a final outcome can be freely and fairly negotiated. Speaker 7: When Obama said it, he was immediately accused by right wing groups of setting up Israel for another holocaust. Speaker 51: Has president Obama abandoned Israel? After strong support by 11 consecutive American presidents, it appears Obama has moved sharply toward Israel's enemies, and the results could be disastrous. The leader of Hezbollah has vowed to finish the job Hitler started. Up till now, America's strong backing of Israel made that impossible. But with Obama's waffling, could a second holocaust be on the way? Speaker 15: No. Auschwitz. Speaker 7: It's a pretty ingenious tactic. How are supposed to have a rational discussion about the occupation when pro Israel Extremists call the 67 borders the Auschwitz borders? No. Auschwitz border. Speaker 40: These are the two alternatives. You're either gonna be in Auschwitz or you support Israel. Because Israel was in fact created in the wake of the Holocaust, it isn't that extraordinary that the two would be linked that way. I have a problem with the idea of exploiting the link and using those 6,000,000 Jews in almost in my mind, it's like saying Anne Frank would would want the occupation to continue. Speaker 14: You know, the Jews have gone through, an unspeakable historical trauma. Right? But the fact is that if you look at other sort of reactionary or right wing propagandas, various kinds, you know, nationalistic and so on, you see that what they all kinda have in common is this view that we are in danger. We are victims. They're trying to destroy us. Speaker 9: If history has taught the Jewish people anything, it is that we must take calls for our destruction seriously. We are a nation that rose from the ashes of the holocaust. When we say never again, we mean never again. Speaker 14: You're the victim, so anything you do in self defense is okay, even though it has you acting like a monster. Right? Speaker 19: A suggestion that Israel has committed war crimes is particularly offensive given that the Jewish people suffered under the most horrific war crimes in the Holocaust. Speaker 35: It's the argument they always use. Remember the Holocaust. It's always invoking the Holocaust in order to justify Israel being held to a different standard than everyone else is being held to. Speaker 8: I see a lot of manipulation here about the victimhood of Israeli Jews, the sense of victimhood. And I'm a child of survivors, Holocaust survivors, so I'll be the last one to underestimate the importance of history and the history of persecution of Jews in the Israeli Palestinian context. But does it mean that Jews now in Israel go every day and think about Auschwitz? I doubt it. Speaker 41: Anyone who is critical of the special relationship, criticizes the activities of the lobby, or disagrees with the policies that they recommend, or is critical of Israel's conduct, is virtually certain to be attacked, usually in very harsh ways, by Israel's defenders. There are watchdog groups that keep track of what different media organizations publish or broadcast, and if they're not happy about it, they either publish their own attacks, they organize consumer boycotts. Speaker 40: Israelis and the lobby do not think there's ever any problem with policy. The problem is only the way it's covered, which is why they have organizations like CAMR, which is, you know, the Committee on Middle East Accuracy. Accuracy means that you present the side that makes Israel look good. The lobby and the Israelis believe that the mainstream media in America is pro Palestinian. I mean, it's laughable. Speaker 2: Consistently, the Times has suppressed any story that would portray Israel sympathetically, and on the other hand, has written dozens of stories portraying the Palestinians sympathetically. Speaker 38: Israel is now portrayed in much of the major media, especially CNN, the BBC, as the aggressor, as the predator nation, and the poor Palestinians and Arabs as the victims. Speaker 6: It's one of the most profoundly successful tactics of right wing media pressure and media criticism groups, and they were going to argue that it's true in violation of all the facts. Speaker 32: You're saying that because CNN has interviewed Palestinian families and shown Palestinian children who have been wounded or killed, that somehow CNN is saying that Hamas is okay? I don't think that those two are equivalent. We're not allowed to show the civilians caught in the crossfire? Speaker 52: Of course, you're allowed to show civilians caught in the crossfire. You should also mention all the restrictions that Hamas puts on your reporting inside the Gaza Strip. You should also mention all the context with regard Hamas putting children in harm's way. You should also routinely mention the fact that Hamas' charter calls for destruction not only to the state of Israel, but for the murder of Jews across the world, which, of course, CNN does not. Speaker 32: That that's silly, Ben. We talk about that all the time. We talk about the charter the Hamas charter that says that they want to obliterate Israel and wipe Israel off the face of the map. That's you're just not being fair. That's not true. Speaker 15: Our Speaker 52: reporters on ground occasionally. In the you mentioned it occasionally in the midst of vast swaths of imagery about Israel using what you would term excessive force. Speaker 6: The media outlets don't see the pushback from the other side. They don't see the upside to standing up for for their own reporting. So I think in most cases, they cave. Speaker 7: Look at the pressure that came down on veteran NBC reporter Ayman Moyaldin when he was covering the two thousand and fourteen Gaza invasion for NBC. Moyaldin was playing soccer on a beach with four Palestinian kids just moments before they were killed by an Israeli rocket. And he talked about this on social media and shared video of the heartbroken reactions of the kid's parents. And what did NBC do? It responded by pulling Mayold in from Gaza. And, of course, there's no greater weapon in the attack arsenal than equating critical coverage of Israel's policies with antisemitism. Speaker 21: Any fair minded person who follows Al Jazeera knows it's anti American and antisemitic. You're a Jew Exploding. Jewish man. Correct? Speaker 27: Yes. Speaker 21: I am. It doesn't it doesn't come more antisemitic now, Al Jazeera. I am They would they would they would do violence to you. Speaker 18: Who and who? Speaker 21: A journalist at Al Jazeera? People that run that network. They would do violence you. I hardly think so. Speaker 34: Abba Eban wrote an article in which he explained to American Jews what their task was. Their task is to show that anyone who's a critic of Zionism, by which he means a critic of the policies of the state of Israel, must be either an anti Semite or a neurotic self hating Jew that covers a % of possible criticism. Speaker 37: We'll start tonight in in The Middle East where Israel What? Israel isn't supposed to defend itself? Speaker 48: Mexico bomb taxes will be exercised What are Speaker 15: the countries Speaker 2: around the same standard Speaker 3: as it is? Speaker 15: What are destroy her terrorism? 4,000 men away. Who's the only democracy in The Middle East? You're lying. Self hating Jew? Speaker 40: So used to be I was always called a self hating Jew, and and everybody like me was called a self hating Jew. I am now not only a self hating Jew, but they also call me an anti Semite. How I, with my four Jewish grandparents, I'm still an anti Semite. My wife was born in a displaced persons camp in Germany, and I'm an anti Semite. Speaker 3: They have for a very long time been able to effectively defend the indefensible, to the American public through miseducation and misinformation campaigns, through effective talking points, through, smearing individuals on the opposite, side of things, labeling them all kinds of things, sympathizers with terrorism. I've done dozens of interviews which begin from the terrorism departure point. But when given an opportunity to actually speak and present a different perspective, that can dissolve rather quickly. Speaker 37: Is Hamas a terrorist organization? Speaker 3: Do I get to actually speak now? Speaker 37: You get to answer the question. It's a simple yes or no question. Is Hamas Did you invite me on here? Is Hamas, whose charter calls for the destruction of Israel, is that a terrorist organization? That's a yes or no question. Thank Speaker 3: you for your question. It's very telling to me that and it should be telling to your viewers as well, by the way, that the moment you have a Palestinian voice on your program who begins to explain the legitimate grievances of Palestinians around Speaker 37: terrorist attacks. Answer. Let me Answer that question. What part of this can you get through your thick head? I think Is Hamas a terrorist organization? Me? Excuse me? Or no? The only thing Speaker 3: that you're gonna say is what we want you to say. And if you don't say it, we're not gonna let you speak. Speaker 7: So you end up with reporting that gives way more priority and weight to the official Israeli perspective than to the Palestinian one. Look at how American media covered Israel's Two Thousand And Fourteen Attack On Gaza. A keyword search of all the major networks showed that over the course of the 51 assault, Israel's ongoing military siege and blockade of Gaza were barely mentioned compared to the thousands of times Hamas rocket attacks on Israel were mentioned. Speaker 12: Why is Hamas launching missiles into population centers of Israel? Speaker 7: The basic propaganda frame is built into the very assumptions journalists bring to the table. Speaker 12: Since Israel pulled out of Gaza in 02/2005, '8 thousand rockets have been fired from Gaza into Israel. Speaker 7: This is how propaganda works. It works by getting your words in the mouths of other people, especially the mouths of supposedly objective media commentators. Speaker 46: I'm wondering though whether you're outraged by the conduct of Hamas, starting the conflict by firing rockers, building tunnels to kill and kidnap Israelis, being more than willing to sacrifice Palestinian lives by embedding them into into their own kind of arsenal and using them as Israel contends as human shields. Do you have a level of outrage at Hamas itself? Speaker 7: It doesn't seem like propaganda at all. It just seems like news. And this goes across all the major media, including the supposedly most liberal. Look at Rachel Maddow on MSNBC, who's known as the leading progressive voice on mainstream television. She did only four segments on the war. And during these few segments, she never once mentioned Israel's ongoing occupation of the West Bank or its siege and blockade of Gaza, and never once mentioned the fact that The US has armed Israel with the very weapons that were being used against the defenseless civilian population, Instead, choosing to frame the invasion as part of a senseless cycle of violence perpetrated by both sides. Speaker 48: It's been a constant cycle of fighting between Israel and Hamas for the past several years in Gaza. And the fighting and the cause of the fighting feel terribly familiar because this is basically a recurring war. And if it feels like deja vu, feels like, ugh, I've heard all of this before, you are right because this really does keep happening over and over and over again. Speaker 13: Rachel Manor, most important woman on MSNBC, the leader when it comes to politics, in six weeks of war, never mentioned the word blockade, occupation, illegal settlements, Never mentioned the support that Congress have for Israel, unconditional amount of money, billions of dollars. What is that? What a disappointment. Our media operations, national media is a scandal when it comes to Israel. I look at The UK with all its deficit, and there's real debate. For example, there's this anchor called Joan Snow, channel four in The UK, he interviewed Mark Regev, and he grilled him with questions, Grilled him. Speaker 53: Mark Regev, how does killing children on a beach contribute to that purpose? What was the point of bombing the El Wafa hospital, for goodness' sake? There are grave uncertainties No. No. About whether you are acting within Speaker 19: the law. Speaker 53: Oh, Oh, yes. You are deliberately targeting neighborhoods in which you know there are women and children. You've tried everything with Gaza. You've besieged it for seven years. The people live an intolerable and ghastly life, and you know that better than anybody. Why don't you try one other thing, talking? Why not talk? Why not be brave and talk directly with them? Why not? Speaker 13: I can never see this in America. I never seen anything like this in The United States. Speaker 7: There have been occasional examples of American journalists who've had the courage to challenge the official Israeli line. Back in the fifties, CBS's Mike Wallace didn't back down from grilling Israeli ambassador Abba Ibn about Israel's illegal takeover of Arab land. Speaker 22: The fact remains that Israel benefited territorially from a war, from armed violence. Well, as a member of the Judaic faith, which cherishes social justice and morality, do you believe that any country should profit territorially from violence? Speaker 7: And years later, Wallace didn't shy away from comparing the terrorist tactics of Palestinian militants with the terrorist tactics of Jewish militants in the nineteen forties. Speaker 22: The fact is that innocent people die from terror whoever the terrorist. The Jewish independence fighters, trying to hasten the exit of the British from Palestine and to intimidate the Arab population there, bombed bus stops and office buildings, railroad trains, and shopping crowds. The fighters of Stern and Irgun took a toll of innocent victims that ran into the hundreds. Speaker 7: More recently in 02/2012, during a sixty minutes piece, the late Bob Simon dared to report on what day to day life is like for Palestinian Christians who live under Israeli occupation. Speaker 54: Israel has occupied the West Bank for forty five years, turning the little town where Christ was born into what its residents call an open air prison. Christian Nastas lives with her mother Claire, her father, brother, and sister in this house which is surrounded on three sides by the wall. How do you live with this? Speaker 7: Simon's report was seen as so unusual and so incendiary that Israeli ambassador Michael Oren actually tried to spike it, censor it, leading Simon to directly confront him on camera. Speaker 55: When I heard that you were going to do a story about Christians in the holy Land and my and Speaker 14: had, I believe, information about the nature of it Speaker 55: and it's been confirmed by this interview today. Speaker 54: Nothing has been confirmed by the interview, mister ambassador, because you don't know what's going to be put on air. Speaker 55: Okay. I don't. True. Speaker 54: Mister ambassador, I've been doing this a long time, and I've received lots of reactions from just about everyone I've done stories about, but I've never gotten a reaction before from a story that hasn't been broadcast yet. Speaker 55: Well, it's a first time for everything, Bob. Speaker 7: These are examples of exceptional reporting, but they are the exception. And there's a reason for that. In each of these cases, these journalists were mercilessly attacked and labeled antisemitic. It didn't matter that they were both Jewish. That's how the climate of intimidation works. Speaker 19: It's almost impossible to get any view that isn't one way or another shaped by an Israeli perspective. Almost impossible. It cannot get in without facing a firestorm of pit bull attacks to make sure that the line is followed. Speaker 29: Everyone who's trying to tell the American public a different side of the story, an alternative view of the conflict that's reality based has already crossed a barrier of fear, and I think they've already told themselves, well, I'm gonna pay for this, but I'm ready to pay the price. Speaker 0: Over just the past few years, the proliferation of social media and Internet news sources has made it increasingly difficult for the Israeli government and pro Israel groups in The US to manage American perceptions of the conflict. Video footage and reporting from the ground bearing witness to the reality of the occupation are now more accessible than ever on the Internet. In addition, over the past few years, a number of high profile documentaries made by Israeli and Palestinian filmmakers alike have trained a harsh light on current Israeli policy and the repression of Palestinian At the same time, a powerful new boycott divestment and sanctions movement has been gaining momentum and raising awareness of the occupation. While activists from the Black Lives Matter movement have been making explicit connections between police violence against African Americans and the Israeli military's repression of Palestinians Speaker 56: We stand next to people who continue to courageously struggle and resist the occupation. People continue to dream and fight for freedom. From Ferguson to Palestine, the struggle for freedom continues. Speaker 0: And all of these developments seem to be having an effect. Polls now show that while sympathy for Israel remains at all time highs among older Americans, it has been hemorrhaging among young people. Speaker 7: Despite the efforts of the lobby, something really striking is taking place. Lots of young people are abandoning the mainstream media and turning instead other independent sources. So they have a totally different way of making sense of what's happening, an unfiltered view of Israel's repression. And pro Israel Operatives like Frank Lantz are in a panic. In his latest report, he calls what's happening with young people a disaster and demands that Israel supporters respond. And people have answered the call. You have powerful right wing billionaires like Sheldon Adelson, a major donor to Republican candidates, bankrolling a campaign to silence and intimidate student activists on college campuses. But it's not working. Groups like Students for Justice in Palestine, who see what's happening to Palestinians as a civil rights issue, have refused to be intimidated. They're refusing to back down even though they're being labeled as anti Semitic and terrorist sympathizers, and their numbers are growing. Hey. Hey. Ho ho. This seat of justice got to go. Speaker 3: As the discourse begins to open, more people are starting to understand this as a rights based issue, not an issue of radicalism. This is a movement for the rights of people whose rights are being denied, who are living under occupation, who want to live in their country freely just like anybody else. Speaker 19: You can see just so many video clips of kids having their hands smashed by soldiers with batons. You can see just so many pictures of thousands of people being killed as happened in Gaza. And at a certain point, you there's a cognitive dissonance. You realize that what you're being told Speaker 14: is a pack of lies. Let's just get away from the mythologies and talk about the realities, and then maybe be able to persuade people that they should not any longer give their unwavering support to a nation engaged in a policy that's not just inhumane and and brutal, but ultimately suicidal. Speaker 41: Given the central role that The United States plays in backing Israel, seems to me Americans, all Americans have a right to question particular Israeli policies and in particular the prolonged occupation. The fact that the Palestinian people have been kept without a state and without any political rights for decades now. Speaker 20: For us in The United States, I think, the issue has to be what is our government doing? How is our government allowing, enabling, supporting, arming, defending Israeli violations. Speaker 7: In the end, this comes down to a battle for the minds of the American people. A battle over the stories they're told to make sense of this conflict. A battle over perception. The more Americans are able to see the reality of occupation with their own eyes, to see images of routine daily violence, of the repression and humiliation that never make their way into mainstream news, the more they'll question the image of Israel as this tiny little David up against the bullying Arab Goliath and start to wonder if it's actually the outgun Palestinians who might be the real Davids here. When that starts becoming the dominant perception here in The US, all bets are off. It all comes down to American public perception. Speaker 34: That's the one way to change anything, changing perception and understanding here leading to a change of policy here. As long as The United States supports Israel, nothing's gonna happen. US government will support it as long as The US population tolerates. Speaker 45: In checkpoint. Better have your premise if you found at the checkpoint. Gumming on the tower aiming down at the checkpoint. I did it to keep you in fear at the checkpoint. Interfuse a cage in the rear of the checkpoint. Feels like prison on a tear at the checkpoint. I'd rather be anywhere but here at this checkpoint. Nelson Mandela wasn't blind to the checkpoint. He stood for free Palestine, not at checkpoint support. BDS don't give a dime to the checkpoint. This is international crime at the checkpoint. Arabs get treated like dogs at the checkpoint. Because discrimination is the law at the checkpoint. Criminalize without a cause at the checkpoint. I'm just telling you what I saw at the checkpoint. So I just got bad attitudes at the checkpoint. Condescending and real rules at the checkpoint. Don't let them in their ass when they move at the checkpoint. They might strip a man or woman nude at the checkpoint. Soldiers might blow you out the shoes at the checkpoint. Gas you up and in like the fuse at the checkpoint. Every day you stand to be accused at the checkpoint. Each time your life, you can lose at the checkpoint.
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