We originally passed on debunking the Economist’s Jan 11 exercise in wishful thinking, “Second thoughts about the Promised Land” aka “Jews Starting To Reject Those Evil Zionists”. But on second thought, it’s just so factually and demonstrably incorrect – and so obviously an attempt to comfort Israel haters with the thought that Zionism is beyond the pale – that we’re going to take a whack at it a week late.
First, the central claim from the Economist article:
Then the article goes into a litany of excuses that its readers can use for not supporting Israel – ultra-orthodox control of Israeli society, the military presence in the West Bank, the fact that Arabs want to kill Jews (no seriously – that’s a reason they give!). But here’s the trick: the Economist couldn’t just publish their “Zionism is evil” list without seeming like they were pushing an agenda. So they made up this frame of how worldwide Jews are rejecting Israel.
And by made up, we mean they are not saying things that are justified either by evidence or logic:
That last passage was from last week’s Ha’aretz. It’s about how the central Jewish issue of our time – as recognized by the leading Jewish organizations on the planet – is the health and survival of the Jewish State. This is a claim justified with actual evidence (rather than a litany of internationalist reasons why Jews should obviously be rejecting Zionism, because it’s obviously bad) – evidence that speaks both to trends and decisions being made on the ground by actual community leaders speaking for actual communities.
Then again, when you need a pretext for publishing over 2,500 words on why Israel is bad… well, if you’re a journalist for a major outlet of political and economic sophistication, it seems like any pretext will suffice.
Previously: At This Point, Journalists Are Literally Just Going Through The Motions Of Covering Up Their Bias, LA Times Can Give You Anti-Israel Cycle-Of-Violence Framing. Full And Accurate Reporting, However, Is Not Their Forte., Reuters Pretends That History Is What Reuters Would Like History To Be
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