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Related: About this forumPalestinian posts make Facebook a 'monster,' Israeli minister says
CBC story hereFrom the article:
Israel's public security minister has taken aim at Mark Zuckerberg over Facebook posts that he says incite violence against Israelis. "Some victim's blood" is on the hands of the Facebook founder, Gilad Erdan told Israeli television.
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Palestinian posts make Facebook a 'monster,' Israeli minister says (Original Post)
shenmue
Jul 2016
OP
ericson00
(2,707 posts)1. its absolutely true; there's a lot of vile anti-Israel and anti-Semitic crap on that site
like this https://www.facebook.com/truthaboutjews/?fref=ts
that I've reported, some friends have, and it stays on there.
Israeli
(4,286 posts)2. Israel’s anti-Facebook Spin Is Latest Excuse to Ignore the Occupation
Accusing social media of inciting Palestinian terrorism is the Israeli rights latest tactic for ignoring the true motivations for the violence and masking its failure to stop the attacks.
Asher Schechter Jul 07, 2016
read more: http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.729564
Asher Schechter Jul 07, 2016
But Facebook was not really the point for Erdan, or for Shaked. It was just the last in a long line of bogeymen and red herrings used by the Israeli right to cover a glaring, painful truth: They have no idea what to do. If anything, the Facebook spin proves that they dont have much to offer but talk.
Also, that theyll pretty much say anything if it means they can avoid talking about the ultimate reason that makes Palestinian teenagers grab a knife, a screwdriver or a gun and go out to kill: the everyday reality of military occupation in the West Bank.
Also, that theyll pretty much say anything if it means they can avoid talking about the ultimate reason that makes Palestinian teenagers grab a knife, a screwdriver or a gun and go out to kill: the everyday reality of military occupation in the West Bank.
So why is it that, while free at last to pursue their ideology, right-wing Israeli cabinetministers choose not to advocate for extreme measures, but prefer to go after a Zuckerberg and his terror incubator in Palo Alto? Well, for one, attacking Zuckerberg is far easier than really delving into the complexities of why teenagers are now butchering each other, and also translates far better electorally. Also, its much easier to look elsewhere for enemies than to admit that its impossible to beat terror without acknowledging the worsening reality of the occupation and its effects.
With the Facebook spin, the Israeli rights denial has reached comic levels of ridiculousness. The right wing is officially out of excuses and parties to blame for its failure to provide Israelis with security. It cannot blame the left anymore, since the left is pretty much eviscerated, so it has moved to social media.
read more: http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.729564
Little Tich
(6,171 posts)3. When all else fails, blame Facebook
Source: Times of Israel (Avi Issacharoff Blog)
For nearly two years before the outbreak of the lone-wolf intifada, Israeli defense officials warned repeatedly that absent a political horizon for the Palestinians and a significant change in policy toward Palestinians and the Palestinian Authority, we were headed for an explosion.
No one could offer specifics about the nature of the upcoming conflict or how violent it would be. But between 2013 and 2015, there was a consensus among the Shin Bet, the military Intelligence brass, the Central Command, the coordinator of government activities in the territories and anyone with anything to do with the Palestinian arena that this was where things were headed. These warnings were issued time and time again and time and time again the decision-makers ignored them. We Arab affairs reporters who were in the territories and encountered the Palestinians daily saw the black cloud looming over the West Bank. The writing was on the wall, whether the wall was inside a refugee camp, a village, city, or on Facebook.
And then it began: the outbreak (or hiba in Arabic), the Al-Quds Intifada, the wave of terrorism, the lone-wolf intifada all these terms that attempted to describe the unfathomable phenomenon of hundreds of young men and women trying to kill Jews with knives, cars, and, of course, improvised rifles even if it meant dying themselves.
The response of Israeli decision-makers was not very surprising, since they had disregarded all the warnings theyd gotten of the approaching explosion. Ignoring the warnings not to play with fire on the Temple Mount, they had outdone themselves by seeing fit to allow a prominent government minister to go up to the Temple Mount on the eve of Rosh Hashanah and allow a deputy minister to marry in the complex.
No one could offer specifics about the nature of the upcoming conflict or how violent it would be. But between 2013 and 2015, there was a consensus among the Shin Bet, the military Intelligence brass, the Central Command, the coordinator of government activities in the territories and anyone with anything to do with the Palestinian arena that this was where things were headed. These warnings were issued time and time again and time and time again the decision-makers ignored them. We Arab affairs reporters who were in the territories and encountered the Palestinians daily saw the black cloud looming over the West Bank. The writing was on the wall, whether the wall was inside a refugee camp, a village, city, or on Facebook.
And then it began: the outbreak (or hiba in Arabic), the Al-Quds Intifada, the wave of terrorism, the lone-wolf intifada all these terms that attempted to describe the unfathomable phenomenon of hundreds of young men and women trying to kill Jews with knives, cars, and, of course, improvised rifles even if it meant dying themselves.
The response of Israeli decision-makers was not very surprising, since they had disregarded all the warnings theyd gotten of the approaching explosion. Ignoring the warnings not to play with fire on the Temple Mount, they had outdone themselves by seeing fit to allow a prominent government minister to go up to the Temple Mount on the eve of Rosh Hashanah and allow a deputy minister to marry in the complex.
Read more: http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/when-all-else-fails-blame-facebook/