What motivates a journalist to slant an article against Israel? This has never seemed a particularly difficult question. But let’s take a look at some of the possibilities. Consider it exercise for the mind. Like doing stretches. How many scenarios can you come up with?
When one sees the byline of William Booth and Ruth Eglash on a Washington Post article, what follows, one knows, is going to be a very ugly piece about Israel. There will be the pretense of balance, but the slant will always be there and the direction of that slant will never favor Israel. You read their stuff and you have to wonder what's wrong with them, the authors. Their regular and willful distortion of the facts must, by design, be born of deep-seated hatred for the Jewish State.Now if the articles were balanced and at least factually true, we might have given Booth and Eglash a pass. We might have said they are writing what they write for the sake of truth. . . We could have ascribed a certain logic to reporting true but ugly news about Israel, and called the authors "truth seekers." (Even though nitpicking on Israel is kind of a strange thing to do, considering the slaughter going on next door in, for instance, Syria.)With Booth and Eglash, however, what you've got is something far from the truth, something at a distant remove from decency and basic journalistic standards. What you've got instead is two authors pushing a single agenda and passing off selected half-truths as cover for their naked hate of Israel.It's pathological.
Is everything about Israel good?
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu likes to boast to his boisterous cabinet that no one understands the Americans better than he does.
His education minister and coalition partner, Naftali Bennett, leader of the pro-settlement Jewish Home party, has pressed him to abandon his tentative commitment to the two-state solution, which Netanyahu first announced in a speech at Bar Ilan University in 2009.
I told President Obama when I was in Washington that if we could agree on the substance, then the terminology would not pose a problem. And here is the substance that I now state clearly:
If we receive this guarantee regarding demilitarization and Israel's security needs, and if the Palestinians recognize Israel as the State of the Jewish people, then we will be ready in a future peace agreement to reach a solution where a demilitarized Palestinian state exists alongside the Jewish state.
@epavard @BoothWilliam @washingtonpost Absolutely appalling. I can personally vouch 4 @reglash who is anything but an Israel hater.— Simon Plosker (@SimonPlosker) December 15, 2016
@epavard @washingtonpost @reglash & while I don't always agree with @BoothWilliam, he is one of the most professional journos out here.— Simon Plosker (@SimonPlosker) December 15, 2016
@epavard @washingtonpost @reglash @BoothWilliam Is hatred something u attribute 2 everyone whom u disagree with?— Simon Plosker (@SimonPlosker) December 15, 2016
@epavard @washingtonpost @BoothWilliam On the basis that I've known @reglash 4 over 20yrs, ur suggestion that she hates Israel is offensive.— Simon Plosker (@SimonPlosker) December 15, 2016
Plosker tweeted: How can u rationally critique someone's work and then assume it's driven by hate?@epavard @washingtonpost @BoothWilliam @reglash How can u rationally critique someone's work and then assume it's driven by hate?— Simon Plosker (@SimonPlosker) December 15, 2016
There are the descriptors (boisterous, boasting, tentative) where none belong. There is selective omission of facts that are needed for context as referenced in my earlier piece on Booth and Eglash. There’s no getting around it. It is what it is. Media bias.
And I don’t see any good reason for media bias whatsoever, especially for such seasoned reporters as Booth and Eglash, working for a media outlet that does have pro-Israel writers among its staff. I don’t have a way to excuse the bias against Israel when I see it. And neither should you.
Whatsoever.