On Tuesday, April 15, a Palestinian Arab terrorist armed
with an AK-47 assault rifle took position near Road 35 and opened fire on
Israeli civilian traffic. Before fleeing
the crime scene, he managed to fire dozens of rounds at cars passing mere
meters away. Barukh Mizrahi (47 years
old, father of five) was killed by one of those bullets. His pregnant wife Hadas survived, but with multiple
bone fractures and in a state of shock.
One of the couple’s children (Almog
Mizrahi, 9 years old, who was travelling in a second car) underwent surgery
aimed at extracting the shrapnel embedded in his body.
So far, nothing really uncommon – just another episode of ‘non-violent
resistance to occupation’. So not
uncommon, in fact, that the British Broadcasting Corporation – that paragon of impartiality
and accuracy – only reported it as an aside, in an article dealing with the
failure of Israeli-Palestinian negotiations.
So did the British weekly ‘The Economist’. But the latter’s journalist must have felt
that reporting about Israeli victims of Palestinian terrorism – even in a ‘by
the by’ manner – was simply too accurate, or perhaps too impartial. Hence, the said journalist – who, incidentally, is so proud
of his scribblings that he signs them only with the initials N.P. – decided to add
a bit of venomous ‘context’. So, he wrote that
“a Palestinian gunman fired on cars on a nearby road restricted to settlers, killing one of them.”
Again, on the face of it there’s
nothing extraordinary here. Political
activists masquerading as journalists often engage in this type of disgraceful ‘story
manipulation’. Under their glib pens,
the characters involved undergo strange metamorphoses: terrorists who deliberately
and indiscriminately murder civilians turn into ‘gunmen’ or ‘militants’; and
once apprehended – into ‘prisoners’ whose release is mandated in the name of ‘peace’
and ‘human rights’; as for the innocent victims of those ‘militants’ – they (and
their women and children) become nameless ‘settlers’ guilty of driving on
segregated roads. Nothing new in all this.
The only problem is – in this
case N.P. was caught violating not just such trifles as journalistic honesty, common
decency and good ol’ human compassion, but also that absolute entity that some
might call ‘God’s Undeniable Truth’. Because Barukh
Mizrahi was no settler – he lived well within those armistice lines that people
like N.P. deceitfully call ‘the 1967 borders’.
As for Road 35, it’s actually not ‘restricted’ to settlers or to anyone
else – but rather open to all, Jews and Arabs.
(At least – for the time being; it will take a few more attacks by
Palestinian ‘militants’, before Israelis finally decide that the safety of
their own children is worth more than somebody else’s convenience. And since they are accused of ‘apartheid’
anyway…)
Needless to say, both facts – the one about the man and the one about the road – were very easy to check. All that was needed was for N.P. to actually move his lazy behind from the environs of Orient House – where such 'journalists' tend to spend so much of their sorry lives, waiting to be fed 'news' by their Palestinian contacts – and actually do some research.
But research is about uncovering facts; and this brand of 'journalism' is not about facts, but about activism. So, in his keen desire to find fault with the Israeli victim and somehow justify the Palestinian ‘gunman’, N.P. got it completely, undeniably, horribly wrong. And the fact has been pointed out to ‘The Economist’. Which, after pondering for a whole week (!), deigned to delete the blatant untruths from the web article (which, by that time, nobody was reading anyway...) The editors even added a remark at the bottom of the article, stating that
But research is about uncovering facts; and this brand of 'journalism' is not about facts, but about activism. So, in his keen desire to find fault with the Israeli victim and somehow justify the Palestinian ‘gunman’, N.P. got it completely, undeniably, horribly wrong. And the fact has been pointed out to ‘The Economist’. Which, after pondering for a whole week (!), deigned to delete the blatant untruths from the web article (which, by that time, nobody was reading anyway...) The editors even added a remark at the bottom of the article, stating that
“An earlier version of this article mistakingly said that the road in Hebron was restricted to settlers and that the victim of the attack was a settler.”
That’s it; no apology; no
embarrassed admission of sloppiness, let alone bias and ill-will. Well, let me point out to The Economist’s
learned editors (LOL!) that an article does not ‘say’ anything on its own – either ‘mistakingly’
or indeed mistakenly; that it was their ‘journalist’ that said (or, rather, wrote) the
calumny. And that it’s rather obvious
that he did so neither ‘mistakingly’ nor mistakenly, but as a result of
knee-jerk assumptions fed by a combination of anti-Israel bias and plain ol’
laziness.
This is no honest
mistake; but even if it were, The Economist’s reaction is remarkable in its lack of professionalism. We all make mistakes,
granted; but if you are – say – an engineer, a teacher, a doctor or an
economist (as opposed to a 'journalist' at ‘The Economist’), you’ll analyse the
cause of the mistake; you’ll learn from it and you’ll make damn sure it won’t
happen again. In any ‘normal’ business,
such processes are mandated by run-of-the-mill professional and management
systems.
Well, not at The
Economist, apparently. But why?? Isn’t journalism a ‘normal’ business? Don’t journalists expect customers to pay –
directly or indirectly – for their services? So why does The Economist dare deliver those
services – repeatedly
– with such blatant lack of professionalism?
British consumers were
outraged when they found that food products sold as ‘beef’ actually contained
small amounts of horse meat. They
demanded an inquiry; they asked the entire supply chain to analyse their
processes afresh and required them to report how they’ll avoid a repetition of
the mishap. Horse meat may not be
harmful; but it’s not beef.
We raise hell when we are
fed – through suppliers’ negligence – the wrong kind of meat, even when it does
not harm our bodies; so should we let our minds be poisoned by drivel delivered
as ‘news’ by dishonest and lazy ‘journalists’?
Of course we shouldn’t, and
in fact… we don’t. Most people are
equipped with common sense; and faced with N.P.’s type of ‘journalism’, they simply
vote with their feet. Circulation and
audience numbers are dwindling; so is advertising. Numerous media outlets – from newspapers to
television stations – struggle to survive.
In 2013, the US newspaper industry lost
more than $1 billion of its 2012 revenue.
Worse, thanks to ‘journalists’ like N.P., the entire profession is
falling into disrepute: three out of four Americans believe
that journalists ‘try to cover up their mistakes, rather than admit them’; only
one in five Britons trusts
journalists to tell the truth.
Based on an opinion poll by Pew Research, 2011 |
The myth is that all this
should be attributed to the internet, which allows people to quickly access
free information. Well, sure, it is hard
– nay, it’s impossible – to compete with information that is available
free-of-charge online. But that’s not
where true journalists should compete.
There will always be people willing to pay for honest, reliable, trustworthy
information; but there won’t be a market for the type of sloppy and tainted hokum
peddled by the N.P.’s of this world. As
for the old-fashioned outfits that employ them, they’ll soon disappear –
however few peanuts they pay their pseudo-journalists.
Because we, John Public, will
be fed no horse meat by Tesco; and no bull shit by The Economist.
This is powerful stuff.
ReplyDeleteGood job.
Makes me feel powerless. And afraid for jewish future
ReplyDelete