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Monday, October 26, 2009

This is a very well done post by David Bernstein at Volokh: Some Friendly (Really) Advice to JStreet

... During the Cold War, there were anti-Communists, and what one wag deemed "anti-anti-Communists." The anti-anti-Communists were people who purported to be against Communism, but they spent almost all their efforts denouncing the "right-wing" anti-Communists, and precious little effort fighting Communism. Similarly, JStreet risks claiming to be "pro-Israel," but really in practice being primarily a lobby against pro-Israel people who are further to the right, and spending precious little time battling truly anti-Israel folks on the Left. (Would that make JStreet anti-anti-anti-Israel? Or just "anti-pro-Israel"?) Most of its energy so far, from what I can tell, has been spent attacking "right-wing" Jewish groups and individuals, and even Israeli government policies, and precious little battling the extreme hostility to Israel one often finds on the progressive left.

Over the Summer, JStreet honored the so-called "Juicebox Mafia"-young liberal Jewish bloggers Ackerman, Duss, Klein, and Yglesias. Now, these youngsters may be Jewsh, progressive, and pro-peace, and in their hearts they may even be pro-Israel. But I've read many posts from them related to Israel over the years, and I can't remember a single one that actually defended Israel from an unfair charge emanating from the left. They attack Marty Peretz, attack AIPAC, defend Walt and Mearsheimer, and so forth, none of which necessarily means that they can't also be pro-Israel. But how does their pro-Israelness manifest itself? Certainly not in their blogging (Duss and Yglesias have vigorously, defended Human Rights Watch, for example, seemingly on the sole ground that it was under attack from pro-Israel people). And judging by their comments section, it's not like they don't have plenty of readers who are clearly not pro-Israel. So exactly why did JStreet honor them? (Yglesias is appearing on a JStreet panel Tuesday, "What does it Mean to be pro-Israel?" I'd like to see that one...)

Read the rest. I think Bernstein is a bit generous in holding out on judgment for a bit longer, but the gist of the thing is spot-on.

Meanwhile, more news from the conference: J Street branch drops pro-Israel slogan

J Street's university arm has dropped the "pro-Israel" part of the left-wing US lobby's "pro-Israel, pro-peace" slogan to avoid alienating students...

..."We don't want to isolate people because they don't feel quite so comfortable with 'pro-Israel,' so we say 'pro-peace,'" said American University junior Lauren Barr of the "J Street U" slogan, "but behind that is 'pro-Israel.'"

Barr, secretary of the J Street U student board that decided the slogan's terminology, explained that on campus, "people feel alienated when the conversation revolves around a connection to Israel only, because people feel connected to Palestine, people feel connected to social justice, people feel connected to the Middle East."

She noted that the individual student chapters would be free to add "pro-Israel," "pro-Israel, pro-Palestine," or other wording that they felt would be effective on this issue, since "it's up to the individuals on campus to know their audience."

Yonatan Shechter, a junior at Hampshire College, said the ultra-liberal Massachusetts campus is inhospitable to terms like "Zionist" and that when his former organization, the Union of Progressive Zionists (which has been absorbed into J Street U), dropped that last word of its name, "people were so relieved."...

It would be nice to see J Street actually combating this problem alongside some of the brave groups and individuals doing so, rather than going along with it.

4 Comments

With friends like these...

Are they really "going along" with it or are they just recognizing that saying you're pro-Israel doesn't work as an icebreaker in the toxic atmosphere on campuses today. It's a turn-off. Most students dismiss both the pro-Palestinian activists and the pro-Israel activists. Just saying they're pro-peace at least gives them an entree to make their case when approaching students.

(Slogans aside, whether they're actually pro-Israel or pro-peace is another matter. J Street U folks believe what they say about supporting Israel and wanting peace however much we disagree with their analysis and prescriptions.)

Nappy-headed Ho',

J Street U folks believe what they say about supporting Israel and wanting peace however much we disagree with their analysis and prescriptions.

I hope you were observing what part of their face they were massaging and with which finger when they said something about supporting Israel. :-)

Maybe they only support Israel in its historical and not its modern conception?

Ah, yes. The old finger massage trick perfected by the One.

Nappy believes the J Streeters are sincere.* Delusional, hopelessly naïve and dead-wrong on the issues, but sincere and probably well-intentioned.

__________
* At least the leaders are sincere. Many of J Streets nut roots and supporters are pathetic moonbats. Even so, Ben Ami is more dangerous than the JVP crowd who could never get such fawning, doting coverage from the NY Times, NPR, PBS and the rest. The Apologist-in-Chief won't have JVP come to the White House, but it's a safe bet that he listens to Ben Ami's ersatz new Israel lobby. Ben Ami is dangerous because of the air of respectability that gives cover to what are essentially the same policy recomendations.

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