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Some of my American friends tell me that young Jewish people are complaining: "Why can't we talk about BDS?" "What's wrong with BDS?" "Please let's talk about BDS." "How come you never want to talk about BDS?"
Indeed, one Emily Schaeffer wrote an article in the anti-Israel blog Mondoweiss entitled, "People are talking about BDS."
So if people are talking about BDS, why not talk about it? By all means, let's talk about BDS.
Any subject referred to by its initials is likely to be something unpleasant, best discussed with caution in public: VD, STD, AIDS. The initials are used to euphemize reality. We can talk about the "C-word" without saying the name of the disease, and that makes us feel much better about it.
BDS is not much different. It stands for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions. These are ugly words, especially when applied to Jews. They were first applied in Nazi Germany and enforced by Sturmabteilung troops - SA Storm Troopers.
BDS is BDS is BDS. BDS by any other name has the same stench
In 1943, the Arab states began their "BDS," when they resolved not to purchase any goods manufactured by Jews in Palestine. The inspiration for this initiative was very likely the Arab Palestinian Grand Mufti, Hajj Amin Al Husseini, who was busy recruiting troops for the SS and hobnobbing with Adolf Hitler.
That boycott evolved into the Arab boycott, a part of the Arab strategy for eliminating the state of Israel, that has been, and remains, in place since 1948. Except for Egypt and Jordan, the boycott is observed throughout the Arab world, in violation of World Trade Organization agreements. The Arab Boycott violates US law. The BDS movement is an extension of the Arab boycott.
So we don't want to use a nasty word like "Boycott," especially not if we want to attract young Jewish people, just as we would want to avoid using nasty words like "venereal" and "disease," with their unpleasant associations. BDS sounds so much more innocuous, doesn't it?
All those things with initials get odd theories attached to them: "You can get it from a toilet seat." "It's not transmitted the way people think it is." "It is not as dangerous as people tell you." Again, BDS is not much different. Emily Schaeffer, who is either ignorant or mendacious, tells her readers:
As more and more people come to realize that BDS is simply a non-violent, creative, temporary tool for highlighting what is really happening within Israel and in the
territories ... Israelis will have to start looking inside ...
The Palestinian call for BDS is not a campaign to bring Israel to its end, but rather a campaign to force Israel to uphold its commitments under international law and the moral and legal standards of a real democracy.
Emily Schaeffer and anyone else can know, if they care to, that BDS is not a "temporary tool," but a campaign to bring Israel to it's end. It is not "Zionist propaganda." It is what the BDS supporters and initiators say.
We must turn the one-state solution into a relevant political agenda...
....
About sanctions/boycott campaigns as a necessary means:
- The legitimacy of Israel’s regime must be challenged for its racism on the one hand, and its colonialist character on the other. The only way this regime can be brought to collapse is from outside. We have to call for boycott and sanctions against Israel.
- There is no chance to change Israeli society from within, we are at a dead end and Israeli society is becoming increasingly fascist.
- We are dealing with the dismantling of power, and the question is how to convince this power to voluntarily dismantle. I totally agree that something more drastic is needed. (Source: Originally at badil.org/Campaign/Expert_Forum/Haifa/Summary.htm),
The Bay Area Campaign to End Israeli Apartheid states "We are opposed to imperialism, sectarianism, and Zionism." (source: baceia.org/about-us/ ).
There is no doubt that BDS is not a "temporary measure." BDS really is aimed at ending Israel as a homeland of the Jewish people. The liberal J Street group has pointed this out in a circular letter:
The BDS movement, whose dogmatic, counterproductive approach underlies “Israel Apartheid Week,” aims to delegitimize Israel’s very existence – making no distinction between West Bank settlements and Israel proper, and refusing to support a two-state solution that results in a viable Palestinian state and a secure, democratic Israel that is a homeland for the Jewish people, living side by side in peace and security.
Moshe Warshawski, a BDS enthusiast stated:
Peace, or, better, justice, cannot be achieved without a total decolonization (one can say de-Zionisation) of the Israeli State...
Zionism is the national liberation movement of the Jewish people. Those who seek to end Zionism seek to end the existence of the Jews as a people. In other words, they advocate cultural genocide. But the one state solution they seek to impose would leave a defenseless Jewish minority prey to a Muslim/Arab majority intent on its destruction. There is every likelihood that the end of Zionism will end the existence of the Jews- the physical genocide of the Jewish people in Israel.
Most of us who are alive today cannot remember when there was no Jewish state. The parents of most university students were not alive when there was no Jewish state. Human beings have limited imaginations. We tend to believe that what exists now, always existed, and will always exist in the future. In reality, nation states have arisen and disappeared many times in the past. Think about a reality in which there is no Jewish state at all, and what it would mean to Jews living in the Diaspora. The time when "Jew" was an epithet for a creature of derision, when there were quotas that screened Jews out of universities, when Jews were objects of contempt in literature, may seem like ancient history, but all this existed in the United States and other "enlightened" parts of the world in the last century. That time can very easily return.
So, by all means talk about BDS. Ask the BDS spokespeople and the organizers of Israel Apartheid Week, "What is your real goal?" What do they mean by "peace?" What is behind their talk about "justice?" What hides behind the rhetoric about "occupation?" And where is the "occupation?" Is it in Nablus, according to them, or in Tel Aviv and Haifa? Ask them, and ask yourself, why Israel and Zionism are being singled out for delegitimation. China has brutally occupied Tibet since 1949. Nobody seriously proposes a boycott of China. Nobody is trying to delegitimize the Chinese state, or deprive Chinese of the right of self determination. Russian brutality in Chechnya was unimaginable, but the BDS people are not calling for an end to Russia, and not asking for a boycott of Russia. Iran has terrorized its own people for the past thirty one years, murdering dissenters, religious minorities, homosexuals and religious transgressors. Iran is threatening regional peace with its nuclear development program, conducted in defiance of the United Nations. But the BDS people are, of course, opposed to sanctions on Iran.
Perhaps you think it is "hysterical alarmism" to point out the possibility of ending the Jewish state. Think again. If the BDS movement did not believe Israel and Zionism could be eliminated, they would not be doing what they do.
Comments
Writing About “BDS”
For days I have been planning a series of posts on the subject of “BDS,” the anti-Israel boycott/divestment/sanctions “movement.” BDS’s aims include a cultural and academic boycott against Israel, which makes it relatively unique in the history of these types of movements. After figuring out what I wanted to say, and sitting down to start writing, I was struck with the fear that by drawing attention to BDS I would increase its notoriety and inadvertently draw additional followers to the cause. So instead of writing a long take-down of BDS, which I may well do another time, I decided to go meta- and write about writing about BDS, although this approach still increases the notoriety of BDS. Nuts.
BDS has been very slowly gaining traction in the media without gaining actual traction on the ground. Jacob Weisberg recently wrote an essay on the topic in Newsweek. The title provides a nice summary of the content, “Don’t Boycott Israel: The Very Idea is Repellent.” Like many articles opposing BDS he focuses on the uniqueness of the cultural and academic boycotts of Israel, and points out that this approach alienates the very people most sympathetic to the Palestinian cause. He does not discuss the impossibility of an effective BDS movement, which is a topic I plan to write about in the future (and touch on below).
Contrary to all forms of logic, the BDS crowd contends that Weisberg’s essay is proof that BDS is working (a step beyond “any press is good press” logic, which does not necessarily imply that a movement is effective yet). If you do a simple Google search of “Weisberg” and “BDS” you will find quite a few links to posts that make this argument. I am sure that some people will say the same about this post. (As a side note, if you Google “BDS” the anti-Israel movement is only one of the top ten hits.)
BDS has had so few triumphs that every extremely minor victory is blown up as “proof” that the movement is gaining steam. I suspect that this phenomenon is the natural psychological coping mechanism of people who have devoted themselves to an ineffective, offensive, and hopeless cause. This movement is planned on computers that run Intel chips (often designed in Israel, and a large employer in Israel) via e-mails that are sent through Cisco Systems routers (also often designed in Israel, and a large employer in Israel) by individuals using Microsoft Office (partially designed in Microsoft Israel’s Research and Development Center).
The cancellation of an Elvis Costello concert, scheduled after the Gaza War, will not cause Israel to withdraw from Gaza (Oh. Wait. Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2006). The Costello household itself was not even unanimous in its boycott of Israel– Diana Krall, Costello’s wife, performed in Israel on 4 August. Naïve musicians and other artists being convinced of the “error of their ways” by naïve college kids, professional activists, ex-hippies, and Pat Buchananites, does not a strong movement make. The fact that an artist canceling a concert in Israel for political reasons is rare enough to make the headlines is not a sign of growing support for BDS.
There are no major organizations or universities in the United States that have agreed to the B, the D, or the S of Israel. Some have debated the issue, but anything is debatable if someone debates it—it does not mean that the matter was taken seriously. The BDSers continue to make a fuss about Hampshire College “divesting” from Israel, long after the school itself issued a statement, in the form of a public letter to Alan Dershowitz, saying, “No other college or university should use Hampshire as a precedent for divesting from Israel, since Hampshire has refused to divest from Israel.” Here we see a non-success trumpeted as a great success. The matter has been debated in the English university system for years, but votes on boycotts have repeatedly failed.
So an article or incident that is in favor of BDS is proof that BDS is gaining steam; and an article or incident against BDS proves that it is gaining steam so quickly that the writer or publication is nervous about it. A victory is a victory and a loss is a victory. If the writer calls it anti-Semitic then that is an even greater victory as the writer is “resorting to ad hominem attacks.”
If I do write a long post or series of posts I will be handing a victory to the BDS movement. If, in that post, I write about the anti-Semitism that creeps into the BDS movement then I have handed out a huge victory. But if I am scared into not writing about BDS for fear I will be helping the BDS crazies, then that is certainly a victory for BDS. If I write about writing about BDS, I still haven’t avoided handing a victory to my opponents on this issue. So I must apologize to supporters of Israel for handing yet another victory to this small, inconsequential, but very loud movement.
Postscript #1: The blog “Divest This!” is an excellent source of information about this topic; and Rob Harris recently posted an interesting three-part article titled “The Music World Goes Anti-Israel” to FrontPage Magazine.
Postscript #2: My great thanks to Professor Walter Russell Mead for giving me the opportunity to post to his blog. I also thank the readers of this great blog for putting up with me in his absence; as you all know by now, I am no WRM!!!
blogs.the-american-interest.com/wrm/2010/08/15/writing-about-bds/
SUPPORT THE BOYCOTTS AND PEOPLE OF PALESTINE
BDS is a valid way to punish Israel for settlers beating and shooting Palestinian farmers while they harvest their fucking Olive trees.
BDS is a valid punishment for the Apartheid Wall.
BDS-it worked on South Africa and it will work on Israel-and on Arizona!
Re: Let's talk about BDS
www.youtube.com/watch
Re: Re: Let's talk about BDS
ZWhy isn't there room for all opinions?
Reality about Israel