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Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University – David
Newman (Dept of Political Science) “reduced to name-calling”
In his classical defense of free speech, John
Stuart Mill imagined a free marketplace of ideas, in which truth
will usually prevail. But Newman could not be bothered to respond to
a single item in Im Tirzu’s meticulously documented report on NIF
funding. Instead of refutation, he offered only name-calling.
... Many on the Left employ a double
standard concerning free speech. They want their own advocates or
professors immunized from criticism – thus Prof. Newman’s outrage at
groups, such as Campus Watch, which publicize what professors say in
and outside the classroom. On the other hand, they develop an
elaborate set of rules to disallow the speech of others as
incitement, Islamophobia, homophobia, sexism, racism, or
McCarthyism. Neve Gordon is an egregious
example. He published a widely disseminated op-ed in The Los Angeles
Times calling for a boycott of Israel, but whines when others point
out what kind of people head Ben-Gurion University’s Political
Science Department and files libel suits to silence critics.
http://new.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=169052
Think Again: More free speech
follies
BY JONATHAN ROSENBLUM
19/02/2010
Many on the Left employ a double standard concerning free speech.
They want their own advocates immunized from criticism yet have an
elaborate set of rules to disallow the speech of others as
incitement, Islamophobia, homophobia, sexism, racism, or
McCarthyism.
Fast and furious was the reaction to the recent
accusation by Im Tirtzu, a Zionist student group, that 92 percent of
the Goldstone Report’s citations came from 16 NGOs funded by the New
Israel Fund. David Newman described Im Tirzu’s efforts, in these
pages, as “the latest campaign to trample freedom of speech and
political activity within our dying democracy,” pure McCarthyism
(“The politics of delegitimization,” February 10).
That statement was typical Left-academic fare,
both in its casual dismissal of Israel’s “dying” democracy and in
its misunderstanding of free speech.
In his classical defense of free speech, John
Stuart Mill imagined a free marketplace of ideas, in which truth
will usually prevail. But Newman could not be bothered to respond to
a single item in Im Tirzu’s meticulously documented report on NIF
funding. Instead of refutation, he offered only name-calling.
Free speech presupposes criticism, without
which there can be no marketplace of competing ideas. It does not
mean that no one who has won in the battle of the marketplace of
ideas will ever act upon their perception. Free speech is precious
precisely because ideas have consequences. The NIF would prefer its
donors to think that it is involved in social welfare projects or
pushing religious pluralism. It tells donors that it does not fund
groups that call for disinvestment or boycotts of Israel, or who
negate the existence of Israel as a Jewish state, or which advocate
the Palestinian right of return, or which engage in propaganda. Each
of these claims is false. Im Tirzu shone a light on the activities
of the NIF that the organization would rather hide. But increasing
public knowledge is precisely what the marketplace of ideas is
supposed to do.
Many on the Left employ a double standard
concerning free speech. They want their own advocates or professors
immunized from criticism – thus Prof. Newman’s outrage at groups,
such as Campus Watch, which publicize what professors say in and
outside the classroom. On the other hand, they develop an elaborate
set of rules to disallow the speech of others as incitement,
Islamophobia, homophobia, sexism, racism, or McCarthyism.
Neve Gordon is an egregious example. He
published a widely disseminated op-ed in The Los Angeles Times
calling for a boycott of Israel, but whines when others point out
what kind of people head Ben-Gurion University’s Political Science
Department and files libel suits to silence critics. Similarly,
NIF’s CEO Larry Garber characterized those who take note of NIF’s
funding of organizations that call for an end to Israel as a Jewish
state as “contemplat[ing] ethnic cleansing.”
FINALLY, THE Goldstone Report is a crucial
public issue demanding the most robust public debate. The Goldstone
findings place Israel in an intolerable bind, unable to defend
itself. Goldstone could provide no answer in the Brandeis debate to
Ambassador Dore Gold’s question: What should Israel do in response
to rocket attacks? If every Israeli response to terrorists using
civilian populations as a shield is automatically labeled a “war
crime” or “disproportionate,” Israel is left with the unpalatable
choice between swallowing terror attacks or risking international
condemnation and possible sanctions. All those concerned with
Israel’s security have a right to know who laid the groundwork for
Goldstone.
Shmuel Rosner, also writing in these pages, did
not accuse Im Tirzu of stifling free speech. He did, however,
describe Im Tirzu’s campaign as “ugly, brutal and quite disgusting”
(“I would have done the same,” February 9). Presumably, he was
referring to the billboards and newspaper ads depicting Chazan with
a horn affixed to her head (a visual pun on the identity of the
Hebrew word for fund and for horn). Those ads undoubtedly succeeded
in drawing much more media attention to Im Tirtzu’s thoroughly
researched 135-page report.
I’m not an aesthetician, but it strikes me that
the horned Chazan is not nearly as ugly as an internationally
circulated letter signed by Chazan on the second day of Operation
Cast Lead accusing Israel of a “massacre” of Palestinian civilians,
while not even mentioning Hamas rocket attacks on Israel. Nor as
ugly as the statement by seven NIF-funded NGOs to the Goldstone
Commission claiming that Israel had no military purpose in Operation
Cast Lead, and sought only to wreak havoc and destruction on Gaza.
Nor as ugly as the letter written by another NIF-sponsored NGO to
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown demanding the issuance of arrest
warrants against Ehud Olmert, Ehud Barak and Tzipi Livni for their
oversight of Operation Cast Lead.
Rosner also made the truly startling claim:
“The NIF has nothing to do with the Goldstone Report.” Hey, if you
have a lot of friends some will turn out to be bad apples.
But the 16 NGOs discussed in Im Tirzu’s report
were not small fry. Collectively, they received millions of dollars
in annual funding from NIF. Nor were their efforts at delegitimizing
Israel incidental to their main task. B’Tselem describes its primary
task as “changing Israeli policy in the Occupied Territories.” Nor
is it just a coincidence that the same groups funded by NIF also
received many millions more from those with an established animus to
Israel – the Ford Foundation (an NIF partner), the EU and European
governments, George Soros’s Open Society Initiative, and mainline
Protestant church groups. Far from being unknown to the NIF, the
activities of these NGOs were frequently highlighted in “updates” on
NIF’s Web site.
FINALLY, THE delegitimization of Israel by the
16 NGOs was long-standing. Adalah, which poses as a defender of
civil rights of Israeli Arabs, was actively involved in the
preparation of the 2001 Durban Conference, which turned into an
anti-Israel hate-fest. Adalah helped draft the final resolutions,
including one recognizing the right of Palestinian resistance (i.e.,
terrorism) against Israeli apartheid and another calling for the
right of return.
The State Department’s 2003 Report on Human
Rights Practices, which relied heavily on B’Tselem and Physicians
for Human Rights-Israel, both funded by NIF, made no individual
mention of any of the 213 Israelis killed and 900 injured in
terrorist attacks that year, but detailed Palestinian grievances
done to three beds destroyed in a Nablus hospital.
Perhaps nothing better captures NIF’s
long-standing agenda than a March 23, 2001, letter to The
Jerusalem Post by one Evalyn Segal, who describes how she was a
“devout Zionist,” until she came to Israel for the first time on a
1989 NIF study tour and had her eyes opened to the “racist contempt
of the Israel government ... toward Palestinians [and] how the
founders of Zionism schemed from the start to take over, by any
means necessary, the whole of Palestine and to cleanse it of
Palestinians.”
Do I think that Naomi Chazan wants to see
Israel destroyed? No. I think she believes that only a quick
withdrawal to the 1949 armistice lines can save Israel. And she
knows that after the failure of Oslo and the disaster of the Gaza
withdrawal, there is no chance that the majority of Israelis will
agree with her proscriptions. Therefore she and NIF seek to maximize
international pressure on Israel, even at the cost of delegitimizing
Israel.
That is not something to which those of us in
the majority should remain oblivious.
The writer is the director of Jewish Media
Resources. He has written a regular column in The Jerusalem Post
Magazine since 1997, and is the author of eight biographies of
modern Jewish leaders.
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