It’s very difficult to characterize this as an isolated incident of anti-semitism by the BBC considering it’s far from their first incident, and considering further that the BBC has spend 20 years and well over £300,000 keeping the 20,000 word Balen Report into their perceived anti-Israel bias buried.

How can we be expected to believe that there is no anti-semitism at play when the BBC claim that they refuse to call Hamas a terrorist organization because ‘Terrorism is a loaded word, which people use about an outfit they disapprove of morally. It’s simply not the BBC’s job to tell people who to support and who to condemn […] We don’t take sides. We don’t use loaded words like “evil” or “cowardly”. We don’t talk about “terrorists”.’ despite the fact they actually do that constantly, and have for decades?

Rajib Karim: The terrorist inside British Airways

Brussels: Epicentre of the terrorist threat in Europe?

Built at a time when IRA terrorist attacks were a constant threat, High Point was built to be bomb-proof

Securing and maintaining reliable funding is the key to moving from fringe radical group to recognised terrorist organisation

Eighteen years after the Brighton bombing, former IRA terrorist, Patrick Magee, has continued to defend his role in the blast

[Lisa] Smith was, however, found not guilty of financing terrorism by sending money to a man for the benefit the terrorist group.

Sudesh Amman: From troubled schoolboy to terrorist

Between 1969 and 2001 over 3,526 people were killed in terrorist violence in the UK. ↑ this one is from BBC Bitesize, educational material the BBC writes for children. I guess editorializing to children doesn’t count as taking sides.

The BBC clearly has no problem naming and shaming terrorism when Jews aren’t the target. This assertion of “Jewish wealth” isn’t only an obvious Elders of Zion appeal, it’s the latest in a long, long line of Isolated Incidents of the BBC suddenly altering its established reporting standards for only the situations where they address the one country in the world full of Jewish people.

  • Veraticus@lib.lgbt
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    9 months ago

    I was reading about new antisemitism the other day and I thought it was interesting.

    Most canny antisemites have turned to the old (and formerly totally fine) canard “criticizing Israel is not antisemitic” to shield their actual antisemitic criticism. Not wanting to call Hamas a terrorist organization is a perfect example. They’re only terrorizing Israel, which isn’t inherently antisemitic! /s

    But yeah it’s really everywhere now. Sometimes it’s mask off as in this incident. But frequently it’s mask on.

    • JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      Are you claiming anyone criticising Israel is antisemitic? Despite the fact that many people doing that are jews?

      • homoludens@feddit.de
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        9 months ago

        No, they’re not. Antisemites hiding behind “we’re just criticizing Israel” does not mean everyone criticizing Israel is an antisemite.

        I also doubt that a statement made by a jew can’t be antisemitic just because it was made by a jew. That’s like saying a statement can’t be misogynistic because it was made by a woman.

        • AggressivelyPassive@feddit.de
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          9 months ago

          And this bullshit argument is exactly why this debate is so absurd.

          Every critic of Israel’s policies will be called antisemitic. And you know why? Because it’s an awesome shield, if you don’t want to engage with an argument. And people like you believe it immediately and call everyone an antisemite. That’s not helpful at all.

          Israel is measured by double standards. Nothing they do will ever cause the international outrage any other country’s actions would cause.

          If we (that is, the West) are truly Israel’s friends, we have to call them out on their errors. That’s what friends are for.