Sy Borg wrote: ↑March 8th, 2024, 9:03 am
It's the inordinate focus.
Not for US citizens. Our government gives Israel economic, military and military intelligence support. A US citizen can consider themselves complicit in Israel's behavior in ways he or she would not in your other examples.'
Further the expectation that everyone must scan either the category of problem they are reacting to or all problems, then choose to distribute their criticism evenly or from worst problem to least, or they are antisemitic is a confused claim. It is a conclusion about individual attitudes based potential correlation, not cause. Or at least it is merely presumed cause. 1) the issue I mention above about the US Israel relationship 2) what issues the person is exposed to. 3) what other reasons, other than the special relationship or media focus, lead that person to focus on the situation in Israel.
Is one sexist and/or child-hating if one does not focus on human trafficking but focuses instead on children's mental health?
Is one anti-Uyghur if one focuses on China's laxity/complicity in intellectual theft?
If one is an activist for animal right is one anti-child or anti-human?
If one fights against sexism, does this mean one is primarily racist (or the reverse) if someone can demonstrate which is the worse problem?
It matters if the criticism is valid. If it is not valid, then that's a problem with the criticism.
If it is valid then that needs to be answered.
People get involved in specific issues for all sorts of reasons. To assume that they must catalog the world's problems and then either start from the worst and only having complained about that problem to some degree may they move down the list OR they hate the people causing problems of lesser importance as a race or social group or sex or whatever is confused. And after having created the list, they must then consider the possibility that the media is focusing too much on this issue - and also why they might.
They may have nothing against the group but still have ended up for whatever reasons focused on that issue.
I think it is certainly possible that some individuals and some media outlets have an anti-Israel POV. But the moment it is assumed that we know what is going on in the individuals, I think it's confused.
Here you present a kind of meta-criticism, concluding that complaints about Israel are antisemitic, unless the person in question has criticized other governments equally.
Do you yourself pass this kind of criticism and does it make sense to apply it? Have you complained about other kinds of unfair prioritization in the media and considered those who went along with this to be anti-woman, or anti-Syrian, for example - when the neo cons and other hawks and their allies really wanted to get troops on the ground in Syria and Syria was at the top of the media list, did you assume the media were anti-syrian and those who became concerned about this were also Anti-Syrian, unless they also focused on other situations? Do you take into account in your assigning racist beliefs how the citizenship and the behavior of individuals' (or even media outlets) governmental policies might be affecting your focus? What conclusions can we draw about your prejudices if you haven't done that?
If Israel is doing something wrong, then I can certainly imagine saying that there are also other places where groups need our advocacy - which labeling the attitudes of people being critical.
If Israel is not doing something wrong, the substance based defenses of their actions are on point and the other criticism is distraction.