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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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August 7, 2019
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Blind
Hate Drives Campaign to Fire Jake Tapper
by Steven Emerson
IPT News
August 7, 2019
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If Saturday's horrifying terrorist attack in an El Paso Walmart had
taken place in Jerusalem, leaving 22 Israelis dead, the killer would rot in
jail knowing his family would be taken care of, paid every month by his government.
He might one day have a park, or a school, or a street named in his honor. He would be held up as a
hero and used to inspire more killing. Children would be encouraged to follow his lead.
This is by no means an exhaustive list of how the Palestinian Authority
and others incite violence against Israeli civilians. But it's why, in the
wake of discussions about the role political rhetoric plays in attacks like
the El Paso massacre, CNN anchor Jake Tapper made a passing reference to
Palestinian incitement.
For the sin of invoking a real thing, Israel-haters are demanding Tapper
be fired.
It seems to have started with Sana Saeed, a host and producer with Al-Jazeera's
online arm, AJ+.
"Collect your man, CNN," she wrote Sunday after calling Tapper's remarks "the height of unethical
journalism." That's a charge on a scale with plagiarizing, lying or
stealing information. What, exactly, did Tapper
say to generate such an accusation?
"You hear conservatives talk all the time—rightly, in my view—about
the tone set by, well, the Arab world," Tapper said. "The
Palestinians and the way they talk about Israelis, justifying ... no direct
link between what the leader says and the violence to some poor Israeli
girl in a pizzeria—but the idea you're validating this hatred."
"You can't compare the ideology of Hamas with anything else,"
Tapper said, "but at the same time, either tone matters or it
doesn't."
Sober viewers might note that Tapper is using the example of Palestinian
incitement to ask whether people are being inconsistent in minimizing
political rhetoric in the El Paso shooting. But Palestinian advocates
blinded by a hatred for Israel are not sober viewers.
U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., accused Tapper of "[c]omparing
Palestinian human rights activists to terrorist white nationalists,"
and dismissing it as a lie. It is a lie, Tapper replied, because that's not at all what he said.
He invoked a dead Israeli girl in a pizzeria – if Tlaib wants to argue
the suicide bomber was a "human rights advocate,"
let her do it on the House floor.
MPower Change,
run by Tlaib ally and Israel-basher Linda Sarsour, then launched a campaign
demanding
Tapper's firing. In addition to rejecting the very idea of a Jewish
state as "creepy," Sarsour spreads a blood libel that holds American Jews liable
for police shootings of unarmed black people.
"Tapper distorted the violence in El Paso by invoking occupied
Palestinians and Arabs out of nowhere and comparing them to the white
nationalist shooter," an MPower Change statement
said. "... By inserting Palestinians and Arabs in a conversation about
white supremacist violence, Tapper pushed the Islamophobic 'terrorist'
narrative about Muslims and Arabs that's been mainstreamed over the past
few decades."
People can debate whether Tapper had a point about rhetoric inciting
Saturday's bloodshed. But MPower Change's description misrepresents the
entire exchange. That didn't stop the anti-Israel group Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) from joining MPower
Change's campaign.
It's not the first misguided run Sarsour has made at Tapper. When he criticized her and others in the national Women's March
for praising fugitive cop-killer Assata Shakur in 2017, Sarsour accused Tapper of being part of the
"alt-right."
Again, Tapper's question after El Paso challenged the Trump
administration and its supporters – those Sarsour, Tlaib, JVP all oppose –
to consider whether their rhetoric might have been a factor in a
self-professed white nationalist's terrorist attack. But they couldn't
see that because he dared mention Palestinian incitement.
We have taken note of the blind hate Islamists and their allies have for Israel,
showing how it drives them to make insane comparisons between Israel's army and ISIS and blacklisting Muslims who support Palestinian
nationalism but aren't sufficiently rabid in their criticism of Israel.
This campaign isn't going anywhere. But it's another clear example of
how those who claim to combat hate have plenty of their own demons to
wrestle.
Research Analyst Teri Blumenfeld contributed to this report.
Related Topics: Islamist
Censorship, Media
| Steven
Emerson, Palestinian
incitement, political
rhetoric, blind
hate, El
Paso terrorist attack, Jake
Tapper, Rashida
Tlaib, Sana
Saeed, Linda
Sarsour, MPower
Change, Jewish
Voice for Peace
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