Cornell Insider

a blog by the writers of the Cornell Review

Archive for January 29th, 2009

Bully Pulpit Article on Israel-Palestine

Posted by Cornell Insider Staff on January 29, 2009

Strolling around White Hall today before my government section (incidentally, on Middle Eastern politics), I picked up a copy of the Bully Pulpit and began reading the lead article. Now, I know that the Bully Pulpit is a self proclaimed leaflet for “anarchists and socialists, activists and theorists, and community organizers and academics,” whose goal is to give a “voice to the political left,” but I did not expect to find this in their lead article on the current Israeli-Palestinian conflict: “… Israel’s attacks are deliberately aimed at the civilian population.” The article ended up being a long polemic against the actions of the Israeli government and its terrorization of the innocent Palestinian population.

I will be the first to say that the current conflict—as well as the historical Israeli-Palestinian conflict that has roots in the 1917 British Balfour Declaration — is complicated. It would be easy to oversimplify and support Israel on the grounds that it is the only robust democracy in the Middle East or deride Hamas as supporters of anti-American Islamofascism, but neither of these positions would address the complexity of the issue. That being said, I am consistently baffled by liberals’ (I use this label because the Bully Pulpit uses this term in self-reference) support of Palestine as a small state fighting for independence against the tyrannical behemoth of oppression that is the Israeli state.

Apart from mentioning once that the Qassam rockets fired into Israel by Hamas are “condemnable,” this article assigns absolutely no moral responsibility to Hamas. This is, after all, the organization that the U.S. and E.U. label as a terrorist organization, whose official charter calls for the dismantling of Israel in favor of a Palestinian state. The same organization places its weapons in densely populated civilian areas and airs children’s television shows that encourage martyrdom and Israeli hatred. The Pulpit says that the Qassam rockets are “more symbolic than effective” and have killed fewer than 20 Israelis. There doesn’t seem to be any mention of the thousands of Israeli civilians and soldiers that have been killed in the numerous Palestinian Intifadahs against Israel.

As a prospective student of behavioral economics I don’t have a religious commitment to rationality, but I still can’t conceive of any rational reason why Israel would want to intentionally inflict casualties on Palestinian civilians, as the article suggests. I don’t entirely dismiss that there have been isolated abuses by the Israeli military, (although the article cites information from what is clearly a website for Palestinian propaganda), but I can’t imagine how this could be part of a general Israeli policy. Krauthammer offers a more likely explanation. On one side, the Israelis try to inflict as little collateral damage as possible by sending out text messages to actively inform Palestinians when certain areas will be bombed. Another side, Hamas, intentionally hides it arsenal of weapons in the homes of its own people so that Israel will inflict as much collateral damage as possible and the world will blame Israel. So far, it appears as though Hamas has been successful.

Like I said, this issue has its complexities, but I can’t help but point out that Israel is surrounded by states and independent Islamist organizations that preach the necessity of its outright destruction. Perhaps Golda Meir was right when she said, “There will be peace when the Arabs love their children more than they hate Israel. Until then, there will be no peace.”

Posted in Campus Insiders, National News | 3 Comments »

Socialism = IN!!

Posted by ewherron on January 29, 2009

Earlier this week in my Managing Compensation we were discussing the different types of skills needed to perform different jobs, and how these skills are rewarded.

Among other professions we discussed differences between a CFO of a multi-national company and a road construction worker in Ithaca.

Most people agreed that while the CFO had higher levels of education and responsibility, the construction worker faces harsher work conditions and has to put in more physical effort.

The question is; how are these skills rewarded?

Then the Professor, who has worked as an HR Exec for several large corporations such as Pepsi, Bristol-Meyers, and Saks 5th Avenue called on a mohawk coiffed colleague of mine who bluntly said: “They should be paid the same… I’m a Marxist” a few seconds passed and he let out a little chuckle before the Prof, who by the way is one of only TWO registered Republicans in ALL of ILR (both teach part-time) said “For a second I thought we had a socialist in the class”

This caused mohawk to matter of factly state “Well, you do”. Parenthetically telling the Prof to “f***** deal with it”

This relates to Ollie’s posts about how socialism is generally accepted, and praised in our culture, while neglecting the fact that more people have been killed in these societies than were killed in the holocaust. Whether it’s Stalin sending middle class farmers to the gulag or Che sending dissenters to the firing squad socialism never ends up in the utopian state that so many people wrongly idolize.

Additionally, can you imagine the cold-response I would have gotten if I said something along the lines of “I’m a profit-maximizing capitalist, the construction worker should be paid as little as possible leaving more money for the CFO”. Unfortunately I do not have the testicular fortitude to play such a role in class but I’m sure it wouldn’t have made me the leading candidate for class president.

Posted in Miscellaneous | Leave a Comment »

Che, revisited

Posted by Oliver Renick on January 29, 2009

Yes, the ‘Che as an Insider topic’ saga continues. (See: Che debate and Che movie thoughts)

This time, it comes in the form of a stressful Benicio del Toro interview which he walked out of. Knowing the nature of the newspaper which tried to interview him, the Wahington Times, a typically moderate to right-of-center publication, I’m sure they probably asked del Toro tough questions like: “why did you choose to take part in a movie that glorifies the life of a killer,” or even tougher questions like “why did you choose to openly defend and dedicate your award to a man who, without hesitation, ended families and murdered dissenters?”

Whatever the case may be, it seems that del Toro is a little lacking as far as his knowledge on the subject. One of his quotes from the Times interview: “Not knowing much about the history of Cuba, the history of Che, not being taught anything about it. The image that I have or what has been told to me about this character is that he’s kind of a cowboy – a bloodthirsty cowboy.”

I find it not only curious but quite irresponsible that del Toro did not do significant background research before jumping on to the bandwagon for this one. Del Toro said that he started his research by reading the writings of Che; his diaries, journals, etc. So, what I can conclude from this that 1) Del Toro is an irresponsible actor for not knowing the background of the character he is to glorify, and thus, in his ignorance he agreed to play the part or 2) Benecio did in fact do more research beyond Che’s diaries, but is a sympathizer for communism, and believes the actions carried out by Guevara are a necessary evil. Instead, it may have been more reliable to delay on reading the self-reflections of Che but rather interview a surviving Cuban labor camp captive or the numerous children whose parents vanished at the hand of the Cuban communist regime.

This is not a trivial matter – the influence of Hollywood and big-name actors such as del Toro turns a relatively isolated view of Che as a hero into a major misconception among youth already teetering on the subject. It dulls what should be a strong opposition to the flaws and destruction brought about by communism and extremist values in the hands of political figures.

The only good thing I can see in the film is its length – running about 4 hours, I doubt our increasingly less attentive youth will be able to sit through the propaganda.

Posted in National News | 2 Comments »

 
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