MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Place: Lebanon, the Palestinian refugee camps of Sabra and Shatilla.
Time: 1982.
Dramatis Personae: A gunman from the Israeli ally militia, a just-orphaned 10 year old boy, a cameraman.
Action: Immediately after killing the boy's father, the Israeli surrogate takes careful aim and kills the child. Horrified, the cameraman asks "Why did you kill that boy?" Gunman replies, "He just watched me kill his father. When he grows up, he will have but one goal in life-killing me, or someone just like me. I'm not going to let him grow up."
From the Annals of the Affirmation of Life in the midst of despair:
"Security prisoners" held under Israel's "administrative ( read due process free) detention", denied the conjugal visits enjoyed by common thieves and murderers, are smuggling sperm to their wives, several of whom are now pregnant.
This story is brought to you by The United Semitic Peoples' Kemalist Front.
"One Semite, One Vote. One State, No Yahwists."
Comments
by jollyroger on Fri, 03/15/2013 - 4:17pm
Detention without trial isn't genocide. Even Sabra and Shatila wasn't an attempt to exterminate an ethnic or national group. But if anyone wants examples of massacres carried out by Israelis, rather than by their allies, google Dawayima, Safsaf, Qibya, Khan Yunis, Rafah, and Kafr Kassem.
by Aaron Carine (not verified) on Fri, 03/15/2013 - 6:31pm
by jollyroger on Fri, 03/15/2013 - 8:52pm
If what the Israelis are doing amounts to genocide, then so does Arab terrorism.There hasn't been an attempt to exterminate the Palestinians. The Arabs aren't being expelled as they were in 1948(and on several occasions after that).
by Aaron Carine (not verified) on Fri, 03/15/2013 - 9:16pm
by jollyroger on Fri, 03/15/2013 - 9:06pm
So you don't think "genocide" is a politically & historically charged dog-whistle word, and takes away from the fair & balanced framing?
I'm hardly a big fan of Israel's actions with its neighbors, but no, I don't think "genocide" or "apartheid" appropriate for describing this prisoner treatment.
How did we describe these things before Afrikaaners & Nazi Germany?
by PeraclesPlease on Fri, 03/15/2013 - 9:16pm
by jollyroger on Fri, 03/15/2013 - 11:14pm
by jollyroger on Fri, 03/15/2013 - 11:25pm
That's a toughie; if Coleridge needed to be an opium addict to write, should we have tried to wean him off it, or kept him on it for the sake of literature? But we don't have that problem here; the abuse of the word "genocide" doesn't make for either good poetry or good punditry. If we consider what Israelis are doing to be genocide, we should use the same word to describe Arab terrorism.
by Aaron Carine (not verified) on Fri, 03/15/2013 - 9:27pm
I know I repeated myself; that was for emphasis, although some might call it obsessing.
by Aaron Carine (not verified) on Fri, 03/15/2013 - 9:38pm
by jollyroger on Fri, 03/15/2013 - 11:21pm