Thursday, May 16, 2013

The Chicken Occupation


Today's International Herald Tribune's front-page carries a story – "The fast-food underground: Gaza finds a way to get its KFC" – colorfully recounting the activities of an entrepreneur who smuggles (though that's hardly the right word) fast-food orders from a border town in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula to the Hamas-governed Gaza Strip.

[QUOTE]  It’s our right to enjoy that taste the other people all over the world enjoy,” said the entrepreneur, Khalil Efrangi, 31, who started Yamama a few years ago with a fleet of motorbikes ferrying food from Gaza restaurants, the first such delivery service here.

Let's deconstruct this story:

[QUOTE] Passage into Egypt through the Rafah crossing is limited to about 800 people a day, with men 16 to 40 years old requiring special clearance. Traveling through the Erez crossing into Israel requires a permit and is generally allowed only for medical patients, businessmen and employees of international organizations.

So, two Arab entities – Egypt and Hamas-Gaza restrict cross-border movement to 800 people a day. We're never told why.

But the IHT (the global edition of The New York Times) piece is written in a passive (aggressive) manner so you wouldn't know just who placed those restrictions.

And just to muddy the waters, we're told that Israel requires a permit for the Erez crossing into Israel.
It's true, but irrelevant.

Hamas is at war with Israel so it really isn't surprising that "permits" are needed – and granted – only for medical emergencies and other humanitarian needs. Not to order chicken.

Still, it is technically true that Hamas-stan citizens can't order fast-food from the Zionist enemy.
It would be weird if they could – if you give the idea a little thought.

But why can't they order fast-food from their Egyptian brothers?

In other words, why can't they order fast-food from a country run by the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood – a fraternal Big Brother -- and spawn --- to Hamas itself?

Strangely, the Times' editors frame the article to place the burden of moral responsibility for the Chicken Occupation on Israel.

[QUOTE] Palestinians generally refer to Gaza as being under siege or blockade by Israel, and isolation from the world is among the most common complaints of people here. That can create an intense longing for what those outside Gaza see as mundane, or ordinary.

But that don't make it true, to paraphrase Leonard Cohen.

[Quote] Breaking the blockade, then and now, is seen as part of resisting the Israeli enemy, giving a sense of empowerment and control to people here, even if it comes in the form of fried chicken.

When countries are at war they tend not to engage in commerce.

Here, if you want a reality check is the truth about what Israel does allow across its border to enemy Gaza. http://www.cogat.idf.il/894-en/Matpash.aspx

So the IHT/NYT gives us a cutesy (in a tendentious way) story. But it is also agitprop – anti-Zionist propaganda.

It is a subtle manipulation of reality in which the oblivious reader (meaning most people who will skim the piece on the Internet as they scroll their way through today) is given to assume Israel controls the Gaza-Egypt border -- when in fact Hamas and Egypt control it.

The Arabs can build a 12-lane highway from Gaza to Egypt to transport all the fried chicken in the world if they want to and no one will stop them.

Yet holding on to the imagery of "the siege" helps keep Gaza's population mobilized and hateful against Israel. So that's the Arabs' motivation.


But what's the motivation of the Times' editors?




Sunday, May 12, 2013

Wars of the Jews


Rabbi Reuven Hammer makes excellent points in his Jerusalem Post opinion piece today reminding us that the Western Wall – site of premeditated ultra-Orthodox rioting Friday against Women of the Wall group – 

is (a) not part of the original second temple structure and 

(b) is the remnant of an edifice built by Herod.

It has symbolic and mythic value, of course, and its antiquity is an expression of the connection between Jewish civilization and the Land of Israel.

My sentiments -- needless to say --  are  with the progressive and liberal forces within Judaism.
 
I myself tend to avoid the Jewish Quarter of the Old City unless we have guests from abroad or out of town. The area strikes me as a Diaspora-oriented Disney-like theme park.

 I'll stick with the Herod exhibit at the Israel Museum.  

Thursday, May 09, 2013

IHT Publishes Israel-friendly Cartoon

Thursday's International Herald Tribune has published a cartoon that shows President Obama in two frames.

"Syria's Assad is out of control!
There's only one thing to do."

"Hope that Israel shows some guts!"

I don't know how such a sentiment escaped the oversight of Serge Schemann, whose idea of balance is to present an Arab or European critic of Israel countered by a Jewish or Israeli critic of Israel.

Nice way to start a Thursday morning.

Tuesday, May 07, 2013

Modest Step Toward Electoral Reform?



The Israeli Cabinet is set to propose a bill that if passed into law would be a modest step toward badly needed electoral reform.

The measure includes raising the electoral threshold to 4% -- I'd like to see it higher but this would be a good beginning.

It would limit the number of cabinet ministers to 19 and it would require that 61 Knesset members support a vote of no confidence.

In sum, it would foster a less parochial, more centrist, more stable, more efficient government and could strengthen the Knesset. Now, so many MKs are also ministers or deputy ministers that legislative oversight of the executive is weak.

I'd still like to see half the Knesset elected on the basis of constituency representation.

Friday, May 03, 2013

File Under "The masses are asses."


Curious, troubling, survey released by Fairleigh Dickinson
University’s Public Mind on Wednesday finds that 29 percent of
Americans think that an armed revolution might be necessary in the next few years -- five percent unsure.

Here is the press release:
http://publicmind.fdu.edu/2013/guncontrol/