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For
the past six weeks the American public has been treated to news
reporting of two totally different kinds: five weeks of calculated,
controlled lies wrapped in sympathy for modern day saintly "Settlers"
being evicted from their homes in their land of Judea, and an open,
honest, gut reactive reporting resulting from the uncontrolled mayhem
wrought by Katrina. What's to be learned from these events?
Simple enough.
When the press reports the reality of events, unhindered by editorial
control, fear of job loss, and predetermined political presentation, the
public can respond in honesty and immediacy to the events visible before
their eyes. The trauma of New Orleans bursts from the screen hour upon
hour: the horror of wind and rain sweeping through the city of tin and
glass casting about the detritus of civilization like leaves whipped by
the fall wind; people scrambling for safety, innocent victims of a power
over which they have no control; the fear of loss, of hunger, of
destitution on every face; panic palpable before the cameras as mothers
weep for lost children, parents cringe, unable to care for their
families, police locked down in their stations watch thugs move about
the streets with impunity; and the overbearing awareness that those in
positions of responsibility have cared for their own and, with a mockery
of awful magnitude, are oblivious to the devastation of the poor.
Even mainstream
media could not hide the consequences of this administration's
incompetence as it belatedly roused itself from its golf game to attend
to the worst natural disaster to hit the
United States
in its history. The full impact of its "war on terror" mentality that
has resulted in a catastrophic depletion of our National Guard and
Reserves became evident as looters and armed gangs took control of the
streets, as the depleted reserves for relief became a national shame
because this administration had cut taxes for the wealthy and services
for the poor. Who could view this chaos through the camera's eye and not
realize that this administration's priorities for human relief mock the
poor and needy in this country while it extols the well to do and
politically savvy in Israel?
Consider the
media's presentation of the pullout from
Gaza,
an event orchestrated by the IDF as reported in the Jerusalem Post
just a week ago. Hundreds upon hundreds of reporters and their
accompanying camera crews were allowed access to Gaza settlements by the
IDF. Consultants were brought in to ensure gingerly treatment of the
Settlers by the soldiers, treatment that recognized the "plight" of
those being evicted from their homes even as their brothers and sisters
in the military shared their grief. Old women and babies streamed before
the cameras as busses hauled away the pioneers who were being taken from
their homes. This parade of human loss repeated itself for weeks on end.
Americans sympathized with these people presented as expendable humans
in the political morass of the Israeli/Palestinian conflict.
Never before in
Sharon's tenure as Prime Minister have we witnessed such free movement
of the press inside Gaza. Strange that Americans have not witnessed the
months of Israeli destruction wrought on the citizens of Rafah or the
devastation inflicted on the residents of Jenin or even the wanton
slaughter of an innocent Evergreen College student who stood tall before
the American bulldozer and watched it crush her beneath its blade, and,
then, in virtual slow motion, pull back without lifting the blade to
sever her body as witnesses stood around in disbelief unable to
comprehend such callousness. Where were the cameras during these
episodes of Sharon brutality? Once again, Americans were used as pawns
to push the Sharon agenda, the besieged Premier attempting to fulfill
the "Road Map" requirements at great political expense.
But who are these
"Settlers"? Why expend such media time on 8000 people being evicted from
their homes? They are in truth "Squatters," people who knowingly and
willingly accept government financial support to move onto land
illegally confiscated by the
Sharon
government under the pretext that it is "annexed" or "appropriated" land
available because Israeli law has legalized its theft contrary to
international law or the conventions of the United Nations. These people
know that they live on Palestinian land the ownership of which can be
traced back through centuries. They accept suburban town home housing
provided by the Sharon government and military protection provided by
the Sharon
government and they, in turn, harass their Palestinian neighbors with
impunity. None of this reality is presented to the American people. They
are presented as citizens of America's only friend in the mid-east,
Israel, having to pullback from their rightful positions in order to
accommodate the political process.
By contrast with
the thousands left behind as Katrina and the broken levees pulled New
Orleans into the mud hole of the lake that once made possible its
existence, thousands left behind because they had no means of
evacuation no cars, no buses, no trains, no military transport, no
helicopters the Israeli squatters were provided free transportation,
new housing within the state of Israel, grants of $30,000.00 each and,
additionally for seniority, NIS 4,800 for each year they lived in Gaza
for each family member, in addition to reimbursement of moving expenses
to the tune of NIS 14,000-21,000.00 to the Negev, Galilee and Nitzanin.
In short, Sharon made sure the settlers he had encouraged to settle on
his illegally obtained land were well compensated for as he demanded
that they leave.
Why mention these
matters in conjunction with the events that have ravaged the Gulf Coast
these past two weeks? Because the American taxpayer paid for the
settlers to be moved and to cover the "disengagement plan" proposed by
Sharon: U.S. aid for the pullout "was slated to offset the cost of
implementing the disengagement plan." (Ha'aretz 4/9/05, Yoar
Stern).
Israel
asked for and received more than 2 billion, including the
U.S.
aid package (Ha'aretz, 24/8/05, Shamuel Rosner; Jerusalem Post
1.27/05, Janine Zacharia). In the CRS Report to Congress, "Israel's
Proposal to Withdraw from Gaza," Clyde Mark notes "Israel will offer
compensation to the settlers, but the amount and the source of the funds
are uncertain. It is estimated that the 1,500 Israeli settler families
in Gaza would receive between $200,000 and $750,000 each to move into
Israel. The compensation would be for their homes and businesses, but
also include additional funds for new housing allowances, business and
household relocation, or other expenses." The total cost of the
disengagement is estimated "at about 8 billion schekels ($1.74
billion)." (Truth seeker," 7/8/05). These pullout costs are
"included in the new U.S. aid package" according to the Jerusalem
Post (_7/05).
Quite a contrast:
U.S. administration support of significant magnitude to citizens of a
foreign country, citizens who illegally occupied another people's land,
while American citizens languished on rooftops or sweltered in makeshift
shelters for days on end with no understanding of where they will go or
how they will replace their lost homes. Can anyone doubt that this
administration's priorities favor those able to offer it political
advantage at the expense of the average citizen stranded at the mercy of
Nature's might? How about a "disengagement plan" for New Orleans'
residents and those made homeless by Katrina? How about diverting the
American/Israeli compensation package to Americans? After all, isn't it
questionable at best that our tax dollars support "Squatters"?
*
William Cook is a professor of English at the
University
of La Verne in southern Californ