company:the new york times

  • Where are the openly gay actors, politicians, artists, academics, scientists, businesspeople?
    http://africasacountry.com/where-are-the-openly-gay-actors-politicians-artists-academics-scien

    Binyavanga Wainaina’s coming out last week was seen as a ‘bombshell’ by a wide range of media, including the New York Times, and Kenya’s Daily Nation. Certainly it was cheered by many, both publicly and privately, as courageous and timely. The big question, as the the BBC asks, is ‘Will #Binyavanga_Wainaina Change Attitudes to […]

    #OPINION #POLITICS #LGBT_rights

  • Report: Israel to call on U.S., EU to support Egypt army in drive against Muslim Brotherhood
    | Haaretz
    By Barak Ravid | Aug. 19, 2013

    http://www.haaretz.com/news/middle-east/.premium-1.542279

    Israel plans to launch a diplomatic campaign this week calling on the U.S. and European Union states to support the Egyptian government and military in their drive against the Muslim Brotherhood, the New York Times reported Monday.

    According to the report, Israeli ambassadors in Washington and in several European capitals have been asked to relay the position that Egypt’s military is the only hope for preventing the country from a decent to anarchy. Foreign diplomats stationed in Israel will be briefed with a similar message, it said.

    However, a senior official in Israel’s Foreign Ministry told Haaretz the diplomatic corps were issued with no such instructions, and denied any such briefings are planned for foreign ambassadors in Israel. He stated that all Israeli diplomats have been instructed to keep a low profile in regards to the Egyptian crisis, and refrain from making statements or discussing the matter unless pressed by other diplomats or foreign ministries in the countries where they are serving.

    The New York Times, quoting anonymous Israeli sources, reported that the message to be relayed to European countries is that at present, stability in Egypt is more urgent than concerns over human rights or democracy. “We’re trying to talk to key actors, key countries, and share our view that you may not like what you see, but what’s the alternative?” one unnamed official was quoted as saying. “If you insist on big principles, then you will miss the essential - the essential being putting Egypt back on track at whatever cost. First, save what you can, and then deal with democracy and freedom and so on. At this point, it’s army or anarchy.”

  • Watchdog Report Says #N.S.A. Program Is #Illegal and Should End - NYTimes.com
    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/23/us/politics/watchdog-report-says-nsa-program-is-illegal-and-should-end.html

    An independent federal privacy watchdog has concluded that the National Security Agency’s program to collect bulk phone call records has provided only “minimal” benefits in counterterrorism efforts, is illegal and should be shut down.

    The findings are laid out in a 238-page report, scheduled for release by Thursday and obtained by The New York Times, that represent the first major public statement by the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, which Congress made an independent agency in 2007 and only recently became fully operational.

    #surveillance

  • #Breaking: #New_York_Times discovers African artists use the Internets
    http://africasacountry.com/breaking-new-york-times-discovers-african-artists-use-the-internets

    The New York Times’ printing press is still radiating from January 8th, 2014 when the newspaper’s East Africa correspondent Nicholas Kulish published a story (with accompanying video) about how the presence of Africans on the Internet represents a cultural revolution.

    #JOURNALISM #OPINION #Just_a_Band #Kenya

  • Urban Poverty in America Made Me Question Everything - Chris Hedges on Reality Asserts Itself (1/7)
    http://www.filmsforaction.org/watch/urban-poverty-in-america-made-me-question-everything-chris-hedges-on

    Chris Hedges talks about journalism on the Real News.

    More at The Real News

    I think the media, the American media at its best, which is, you know, institutions like The New York Times had...

  • The New York Times pronounces on destabilisation of the Middle East - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2014/01/07/pers-j07.html

    With Syria’s Western-backed sectarian war for regime-change spilling over into both Iraq and Lebanon between forces that root themselves in divisions between Sunni and Shia, the New York Times has come forward to attribute this nightmare scenario to Washington’s insufficient engagement in the region.

    “Power Vacuum in Middle East Lifts Militants,” declares the voice of liberal imperialism in a January 4 article.

    The US “newspaper of record” cites fighting in the Iraqi cities of Fallujah and Ramadi involving “masked gunmen” whom “so many American soldiers died fighting.”

    #proche_orient #nyt

  • The NY Times’ #Incorrections
    http://blog.thejerusalemfund.org/2014/01/the-ny-times-incorrections.html

    Recently the #New_York_Times published an article about Mohamad Assaf, the young Palestinian star from Gaza who’s vocal talents were recognized throughout the Arab world after winning Arab Idol. In the original text published on December 19th, the following was included:

    And the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, included in a message to Secretary of State John Kerry a YouTube video of Mr. Assaf singing longingly about cities in Israel that were once Palestinian. Mr. Netanyahu wrote, “Incitement and peace cannot coexist.”
    And....

    Mr. Assaf grew up in the Khan Younis refugee camp in Gaza, an area that often has shortages of water, gas and electricity because of restrictions imposed by Israel.

    Well, on Dec. 31st, the New York Times ran a long correction:

    An article on Dec. 19 about Mohammed Assaf, a Palestinian singer from Gaza who has become a star in the Arab world after winning the “Arab Idol” competition, referred incorrectly to cities in Israel Mr. Assaf sings about. While they had largely Arab populations before Israel became a state in 1948, they were not “Palestinian” in the sense of being part of a Palestinian political entity. The article also referred incorrectly to shortages of water, gas and electricity in Gaza. While Israel places restrictions on some goods coming into Gaza, and many Palestinians blame Israel for shortages, they were worsened by Egypt’s closing of smuggling tunnels and by a tax dispute between the militant Hamas faction, which governs Gaza, and the Palestinian Authority. The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Assaf’s travels to Cairo for “Arab Idol” auditions. The Sinai Desert is part of Egypt; he rode for hours through the Sinai from the border with Egypt, not to the border.

    Corrections are supposed to happen in newspapers when they print factually incorrect information or perhaps because of failures in copy editing like typos, misspellings and so on. What seems to have happened here is that someone complained that the New York Times would refer to cities in Palestine as Palestinian. So by making this correction what the New York Times is saying is that prior to Israel, there was no “Palestinian political entity” that these cities were a part of and thus referring to the cities as Palestinian is wrong.

    Well, that sure seems like news to the New York Times of yesteryear. Calling cities in Palestine “Palestinian cities” wasn’t a problem for the New York Times 1927 or in 1929 for example. Nor was it odd for the paper that today says those cities were not part of a “Palestinian political entity” to refer regularly to a “Palestine Government.”

    It is true that the native population of Palestine during that time did not have self-determination (also, they still don’t today) but does that mean there was no political entity there in Palestine? Yes, Palestine was under a British Mandate then, but does that make Palestine’s cities British? Syria was under French Mandate in the 1920s, does that mean Damascus was a French city? Was it not a Syrian city? Of course these were Syrian cities, and the New York Times reported such at the time.

    So why the correction when it comes to Palestinian cities? Its clear here that the editors chose to appease what was likely a disgruntled pro-Israel reader who was displeased at the very notion that the New York Times might mention a historical reality they reported on at the time today when a Zionist narrative has made significant strides in altering the discourse.

    As far as the correction regarding the siege on Gaza goes, yes, Egypt is playing a role, but to even put it remotely on par with the role Israel is playing in the siege is dishonest. Israel controls all entry and exit ports for commerce in Gaza. They control the ability of Palestinians in Gaza to enter the West Bank. They enforce a naval blockade. Egypt does none of this. It is Israel of course, not Egypt, which confirmed to US officials on “multiple occasions” that “as part of their overall embargo plan against Gaza...they intend to keep the Gazan economy on the brink of collapse without quite pushing it over the edge” and that “they intend to keep the Gazan economy functioning at the lowest level possible consistent with avoiding a humanitarian crisis.”

    In the updated version of the Assaf story, the line about the siege has been edited to the following:

    Mr. Assaf grew up in the Khan Younis refugee camp in Gaza, an area that often has shortages of water, gas and electricity.

    No mention of Israel’s role in creating these shortages exists anymore.

    Corrections are meant to get a story that was factually wrong right. In this case, the New York Times’ correction only managed to succeed at obfuscation, distortion and probably at appeasing pro-Israel readers at the cost of the truth.

  • La Vanguardia: Fort McMoney, entre el documental y el videojuego

    En declaraciones a The New York Times, Dufresne confiesa que el clásico simulador de gestión de una ciudad SimCity ha sido una clara influencia en el proyecto, y aunque las diferencias con la obra maestra de Will Wright son evidentes, sí que se reconocen puntos de conexión.

    Ambicioso y visionario, Fort Mc Money demuestra de forma muy sólida una fusión entre cine y ocio interactivo que, a pesar de no ser ni mucho menos nueva, sí que se muestra cada vez más como una forma muy potente si lo que se quiere es convertir al simple espectador en un actor activo dentro de historias tan reales como las de esta región canadiense.

    http://www.lavanguardia.com/tecnologia/videojuegos/pc/20131203/54395141416/fort-mcmoney-documental-videojuego.html

    #FortMcMoney #jeudoc #webdoc #fmmpresse #sables_bitumineux #pétrole

  • Fun with chronology: misreporting the Israeli assault on Gaza -
    Belen Fernandez
    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2013/12/fun-with-chronology-misreporting-israeli-assault-gaza-201312276433126920.

    The New York Times’ rendering of recent violence on the border between Gaza and Israel is a shining example of the chronological sleights of hand that have come to characterise mainstream reporting on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

  • Revue du 12/09 - Vladimir Poutine prend sa plume — Le Courrier de Russie

    http://www.lecourrierderussie.com/2013/09/12/revue-poutine-plume

    Vladimir Poutine prend sa plume

    http://statics.lecourrierderussie.com/2013/09/Vladimir-Poutine-620x310.jpg

    Vladimir Poutine, président de Russie. C’est ainsi que le chef de l’État russe a signé sa tribune publiée aujourd’hui par le quotidien américain The New York Times. « La Russie plaide pour la prudence », affirme-t-il en titre, pour expliquer, en 7000 signes typographiques, pourquoi son pays est opposé à une intervention militaire en Syrie. Pour le président russe, une telle opération risquerait d’étendre le conflit par-delà les frontières syriennes et de provoquer des attentats terroristes dans le monde entier. Dans les rangs de « l’Armée syrienne libre, signale le président russe, on trouve très peu de champions de la démocratie, mais plus qu’il n’en faut de combattants d’Al Qaïda et autres extrémistes de tout poil.

    #russie #poutine

  • Reddit forum bans climate change ’deniers’ | TheHill
    http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/193545-reddit-science-forum-banks-climate-change-deniers

    The social news site Reddit is banning climate change deniers from its science forum, a moderator for the site said.

    Nathan Allen, the moderator for the forum /r/science — which provides a digital space for people to discuss recent, peer-reviewed science publications — wrote about the move to ban skeptics of climate science (...).

    While the science forum is a small section of Reddit, it has 4 million subscribers, Allen noted, which is nearly twice the circulation of The New York Times.

    “After some time interacting with the regular denier posters, it became clear that they could not or would not improve their demeanor,” Allen said in his post for Grist.

    Allen said that while some commenters did object to the move, given Reddit’s claim to preserve free speech at all costs, most users have welcomed the change.

    He said the news industry should follow suit.

    “As moderators responsible for what millions of people see, we felt that to allow a handful of commenters to so purposefully mislead our audience was simply immoral.” Allen wrote.

    #censure #changement_climatique #négationnisme

  • Manipulation des taux de change : les grandes #banques dans le collimateur de la FCA
    http://e-delit.com/2013/11/15/manipulation-des-taux-de-change-les-grandes-banques-dans-le-collimateur-de-

    Depuis plusieurs mois les autorités de régulation boursière de pays comme les Etats-Unis, l’Allemagne, la Suisse, ou la Grande-Bretagne cherchent à déterminer si des traders employés par les plus grandes banques internationales avaient manipulé les taux de change pour augmenter leur profit.

    La semaine dernière les choses ont commencé à devenir plus claires. Barclays et JP Morgan ont déclaré avoir mis à l’arrêt plusieurs de leurs traders. UBS, Citigroup et Deutsche Bank ont quant à elles reconnu avoir lancé une enquête pour dire de manière sure si certains de leurs traders ont participé à ce montage financier.

    Au cœur de cette affaire, un système de messagerie instantanée et plusieurs milliers de milliards de dollars en jeu. Bloomberg a été la première en juin 2013 à évoquer cette histoire en affirmant que des traders de banques pourtant concurrentes s’échangeaient des informations de manière clandestine sur les ordres de changes des devises de leurs clients.

    Ces acteurs bien informés du marché se mettaient ensuite d’accord, d’après les accusations, pour gonfler ou minimiser les ordres en fonction de leurs propres paris sur telle ou telle devise, afin d’influencer le taux de change et maximiser leur profit.

    Wall Street’s Culture of #Corruption : ForEx Markets Manipulated Too, NYT Reports | Daily Ticker - Yahoo Finance
    http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker/wall-street-culture-corruption-forex-markets-manipulated-too-17502780

    Wall Street (and the Twitter-sphere) were abuzz earlier this week about a Bloomberg report that JPMorgan (JPM) is considering a ban on traders using instant messaging and other chatting technology.
    Other banks may soon follow suit and here’s why: The Justice Department is investigating alleged collusion of currency markets by a group of traders from several banks, including Citigroup (C), Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), UBS (UBS) and Deutsche Bank (DB). The bankers communicated via instant messaging and at least one trader is cooperating with authorities, The New York Times reports.
    The fact the group called themselves “The Cartel” isn’t likely to help them in the court of public opinion, much less with the feds.
    “The manipulation we’ve seen so far may just be the tip of the iceberg,” U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder told The Times. “We’ve recognized that this is potentially an extremely consequential investigation.”

    #banksters #fraude

    • L’assainissement de la finance n’est pas pour demain.
      Même Ugueux s’y met…

      Après le Libor, le marché des changes risque-t-il d’imploser ? | Démystifier la finance
      http://finance.blog.lemonde.fr/2013/12/01/apres-le-libor-le-marche-des-changes-risque-t-il-dimploser

      Diverses informations donnent une idée de la nervosité des banques.

      Certains traders ont été mis « en congé » pendant l’enquête. Les banques ont interdit l’utilisation des « chatrooms » spécialisées qui permettaient aux traders de communiquer librement entre eux. C’est la dénonciation par un « whistleblower » de ces pratiques de « chatrooms » entre concurrents qui a été à l’origine, depuis mai dernier, d’une vague d’investigations. Une question à soulever dans les débats sempiternels sur le bon usage des médias sociaux. Les chatrooms les plus connues ont été baptisées de doux nom de « The Cartel » et « The Bandits’ Club ». Pas besoin de traduction.
      (…)
      Ce marché est largement dominé par une quinzaine de banques dont la Société Générale, BNP Paribas, la Deutsche Bank, Citibank, JP Morgan, HSBC , Barclays et quelques autres. Le problème est en effet mondial et affecte en plus des grands marchés, la Suisse, la Chine, Hong Kong, Bombay et d’autres.

      Le marché est également autorégulé, et le rôle des banques centrales est plus discret qu’autoritaire.
      (…)
      C’est un nouveau pan des activités financières qui fait apparaître des structures qui permettent aux directions d’institutions financières d’améliorer leurs fins de mois en manipulant les actifs dont ils ont la responsabilité. L’assainissement de la finance n’est pas pour demain.

      cf. aussi http://seenthis.net/messages/184484

  • Shameless Self Promotion : T.O. Molefe makes New York Times debut
    http://africasacountry.com/shameless-self-promotion-12

    #The_New_York_Times gave us Kristof, Friedman and Brooks. We gave them the Rt Hon T.O. Molefe. Africa is a Country’s T.O. Molefe, one of two dozen new columnists, made his debut in The International New York Times today.

    #JOURNALISM #MEDIA #African_National_Congress #Cape_Town #David_Brooks #Helen_Zille #Nicholas_Kristof #South_Africa #Thomas_Friedman

  • Suède, Pays-Bas... ils ferment des #prisons par manque de détenus
    http://www.francetvinfo.fr/societe/justice/suede-pays-bas-ils-ferment-des-prisons-par-manque-de-detenus_456120.htm

    Pour la troisième année consécutive, la population carcérale a baissé aux Etats-Unis en 2012, notait The New York Times (en anglais), en juillet. « C’est le début de la fin de l’incarcération de masse », indiquait même une chercheuse de la Northeastern University. En 2011 et 2012, dix-sept Etats ont ainsi fermé ou envisagé la fermeture de prisons - parfois pour des raisons économiques.

  • Quand #Facebook sert à prédire une rupture
    http://www.rslnmag.fr/post/2013/11/05/Quand-Facebook-sert-a-predire-.aspx

    “Un couple ou une relation romantique est un pont entre les différents mondes sociaux d’une personne”.
    C’est ce que nous explique Jon Kleinberg, chercheur à l’Université Cornell, dans un article du The New York Times. Avec Lars Backstrom, un ingénieur chez #Facebook, il a généré un #algorithme qui permet de prédire l’évolution de nos relations amoureuses… Et spécifiquement l’…

    • Gros contre-sens de rsln... La "dispersion" ne correspond pas au navré d’« amis » en commun mais aux interrelations entre les amis des membres d’un couple.
      L’article originel précise bien que le nombre absolu d’amis en commun n’a qu’une très faible corrélation avec la durabilité d’un couple.

  • Why didn’t the #New_York_Times publish the exposé they commissioned of virulent racism against #Africans_in_Israel?
    http://africasacountry.com/why-didnt-the-new-york-times-publish-the-expose-they-commissioned-s

    We’ve written plenty on this blog about the worsening levels of violent racism against Africans in #Israel. This time last year #Olufemi_Terry reflected on a comment by the Israeli immigration minister: “This country belongs to us, to the white man.” Last summer Miri Regev, an MP, told a rally “the Sudanese are like a […]

    #JOURNALISM #POLITICS #VIDEO #David_Sheen #Jason_Springarn-Koff #Max_Blumenthal

    • New York Times Solicits Then Rejects Video of Anti-African Racism in Israel
      http://raniakhalek.com/2013/10/18/new-york-times-solicits-then-rejects-video-of-anti-african-racism-in-is

      You can tell a lot about a media outlet by how it covers #Israel. A recent case in point is the #New_York_Times.

      The Times recently posted a short video entitled, “Free Style In Tel Aviv“, which showcases Israeli hipsters in Jaffa, a Tel Aviv neighborhood with an “eclectic style inspired by the area’s famous flea market.” Of course there’s no mention of Jaffa’s indigenous Palestinian inhabitants who were ethnically cleansed by Zionist militias in 1948 to make room for the Israeli Jews featured in the piece. Nor is there any acknowledgment that ethnic cleansing of Palestinian citizens of Israel continues at a gradual pace to this day, in an atmosphere of violent anti-Arab and anti-African racism that plagues the heart of Israeli culture. But who cares about dispossession when there are funky Israeli hipsters to celebrate, ...

  • The Times Is Working on Ways to Make Numbers-Based Stories Clearer for Readers
    http://publiceditor.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/10/18/the-times-is-working-on-ways-to-make-numbers-based-stori

    Concernant les chiffres, le New York Times décide de ne plus en parler isolément sans les mettre en perspective,

    Toward that end, I just finished speaking with David Leonhardt, someone who is well positioned to do something about this. Not only is he the Washington bureau chief, but he also is a Pulitzer Prize-winning economics writer. (...)

    He agrees that there is a problem, and told me that The Times is already working on a solution. A small group of editors is “thinking through a whole set of issues about how we present numbers,” he told me. The results, he said, will probably be determined within a couple of months. They might take the form of new entries to the stylebook, announcements within newsroom departments or e-mails laying out new guidelines to the whole news staff.

    Ceci après une série de critiques,

    And while he noted that the recent pressure for change is “coming from the left,” specifically the economist-writer Dean Baker and MoveOn.org – which now has more than 18,000 signatures on a petition — this is not a partisan issue.

    Réaction de Dean Baker,

    Numbers in Context : Big Congrats to the New York Times and Margaret Sullivan
    http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/beat-the-press/numbers-in-context-big-congrats-to-the-new-york-times-and-margaret-sullivan

    Anyhow, we will see exactly how the NYT ends up dealing with the issue, but they deserve a great deal of credit for recognizing the problem and trying to address it. Margaret Sullivan, the paper’s public editor, deserves special credit for taking this one on and pressing it with the paper’s edtors. Also Bob Naiman, at Just Foreign Policy, played an important role in initiating a petition at Move-On on this issue, which eventually got almost 19,000 signatures. That’s pretty impressive for the ultimate wonk petition.

  • Watch the video on Israeli racism The New York Times didn’t want you to see | The Electronic Intifada

    http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/watch-video-israeli-racism-new-york-times-didnt-want-you-see

    Ce petit film, terrible, vraiment, sur le racisme en Israël

    Regular readers of The Electronic Intifada are familiar with the shocking and escalating racism in Israel against people from countries in Africa.

    Our extensive coverage of the incitement and attacks on Africans, thanks in large part to the work of David Sheen, demonstrates that this phenomenon is not marginal, but is incited by Israel’s top political leadership.

    When Israeli government ministers incite angry mobs, calling Africans “cancer,” they are simply expressing another face of the racism that Palestinians have always experienced.

  • When the New York Times went to bat for the one-state solution -

    Haaretz, By Sara Hirschhorn | Oct. 15, 2013

    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.552574

    Loath or lust after his ideas, University of Pennsylvania political scientist Ian Lustick created a tempest in a teapot — pardon the idiom, I’m new to Britain — with a recent polemical New York Times op-ed entitled “The Two State Illusion.” In it he heaped opprobrium and a last mound on dirt on the grave of the two-state paradigm and called for consideration of, if not resignation to, the reality of the one-state solution.

    Subsequently, academicians and practitioners across the political spectrum have debated the piece. (The responses include provocative essays by leftist cultural icon Yitzhak Laor in Haaretz, right-leaning Middle East Studies scholar Martin Kramer in Commentary, Arab-American advocate Hussein Ibish and academic Saliba Sarsar of the American Task Force on Palestine in The Daily Beast, left-leaning Jewish intellectual Bernard Avishai in the New Yorker as well as letters to the editor of the Times by Kenneth Jacobson of the Anti-Defamation League and Alan Elsner of JStreet, among others.)

    Seemingly the only “Washington consensus” they can concur with is how wrong Lustick is. Yet while the merits of his argument certainly require further examination, the larger questions about the agenda of the publishers and the audience for this discussion have been largely overlooked — why has Western journalism seemingly been so intent on a campaign to “mainstream” the one-state discourse, and who is really listening?

    Reading Lustick’s editorial myself, I was deeply impressed by his description of the current state of affairs in Israel/Palestine: grim realities, blissful ignorances, misguided optimisms, ingrained inequalities, dangerous fantasies and violent cataclysms. (Full disclosure: I am indebted to his scholarship and assistance in my own research on the Israeli settler movement.) Few have written with such piercing yet empathetic clarity of the dilemmas and delusions of both nations under siege and how (as he wrote in a rebuttal in The Daily Beast) “the illusion” of ultimately achieving two states for two peoples has helped to justify and normalize an interim state of “systematic coercion” and “permanent oppression.”

    Lustick’s is a searing cry to mobilize action that will wrest the “peace process industry” from its collective apathy and acquiescence with the two-state solution. (It should be noted that his vigorous attacks on this “industry” come more from the standpoint of an insider, bearing in mind his role in Middle East policy planning in the State Department and consulting to subsequent administrations, than the putative outsider position he takes.) He seems to be seeking “redemption” for the (retrospective) wisdom ignored by himself and others in the 1980s.

    Yet, while illustrating the vastly different conclusions that political scientists and historians reach, often working with the same raw material of conflict, I consider his conclusions somewhat too “parsimonious” (as the disciplinary lingo would have it); I see the correlation but not the causation in his case study. While undoubtedly the passage of time has failed the two-state solution, this is as much a problem of praxis by politicians as with the theory of nationalist ideology.

    I have yet to see a better solution — complicated by the thin descriptions of workable alternatives in a climate where the only salient scenarios are usually “one nation pushes the other nation into the sea.” Lustick himself is too facile in his willingness to be “untethered” from “Statist Zionism” and “narrow Israeli nationalism,” even if the means to do so will necessarily unleash violence.

    The looming (if not current) expiry for the viability of the “land for peace” rubric and the attractions of power-sharing arrangements notwithstanding, as a Zionist, I’m still not quite ready to be an early adopter in abandoning the state system. Yet, I unabashedly admit that I am what Lustick disparagingly calls the two-state “true believer.” If, as he later suggested, the disciples of the two-state rubric are a group of messianic, faith-based, deus-ex-machina-dependent, self-deluding zealots, in contrast with those converts to the timely, rational, human-agency-enlightened evangelists of the one-state solution, than I suppose I am one of the last doomed members of that fundamentalist cult.

    Yet, the fierce debate over Lustick’s high profile and pull-no-punches argument aside (which are unlikely to be resolved), the larger questions surrounding its agenda and audience remain. Lustick’s piece joins several others in The Times and other major Western media outlets from various perspectives that have sought to mainstream the one-state discourse in journalistic practice. Whether this has backfired or not in reinforcing two-state advocacy remains to be seen, yet there is no doubt that it has achieved a heightened profile and polemic surrounding this paradigm.

    It is not clear, however, whether this agenda is a veritable chicken-and-egg between publishers and politicians to promote one-state alternatives of late, as evidenced by Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon’s own contribution to The Times a few weeks ago. Further, it remains to be seen whether journalists can (and should?) control the message in the months and years to come, in a hyper-competitive media landscape where the op-ed has become the new global public square.

    Yet, the most important aspect of this agenda is the audience it may — or may not — be reaching. If recent items are representative of broader trends, the debate over Lustick’s piece has largely been confined to the English-language media for the politically aware (on both left and right, including the peace industry that he attacks), leaving out the apolitical indifferent and, most significantly, those actually in the region itself.

    From a brief review of the Hebrew press it seems Lustick’s op-ed barely raised an eyebrow, with a rare column in the center-right daily Maariv dismissing the professor as “no lover of Israel,” one “who doesn’t get the way things are here” (a familiar brush-off that many Americans interested in Israel are subject to), and concluding that “practical Zionism, both in its classic and pragmatic [forms] is still what most Israelis are clinging to,” even if the “broad and tired” problem of the two-state solution requires “hard questions.”

    Haaretz also translated Lustick’s piece into Hebrew, although it appears that some of the most inflammatory passages (the frolicking coalition of Orthodox Jews and Jihadis, Tel Aviv entrepreneurs and fellahin, Mizrahi Jews and their Arab brothers) was redacted for its apparently unprepared Israeli audience. There was scant coverage in the Arabic-language press as well, whether or not because the standard editorial line attacking Israel precluded more substantive discussion.

    For all of the fuss from afar on the one-state idea, from the point of view of the relevant parties they aren’t ready for it (yet). As Lisa Goldman wrote so poignantly of the misguided turn of the discussion about the very issues Lustick so acutely illuminated: “While the debate itself was interesting and sometimes provocative, it seemed to circumvent the real elephant in the room – which was the urgency of the situation on the ground.” Perhaps there is more in heaven and earth than dreamt of in Lustick’s philosophy.

    While I remain a true believer in the two-state solution and hope for its fulfillment, the time has come to at least explore other options for an open, constructive and visionary discussion of the one-state solution. An exploration of both policies, especially given current realities, is not and cannot be mutually exclusive. We must heed Lustick’s call, yet I hope for a conversation that more earnestly honors both Zionist and Palestinian national aspirations and is led by parties to the conflict — and its solution — themselves.

    Dr. Sara Yael Hirschhorn is the new University Research Lecturer and Sidney Brichto Fellow in Israel Studies at Oxford University. Her research, teaching and public engagement activities focus on the Israeli settler movement, the Arab-Israeli conflict and the relationship between the U.S./American Jewry and Israel. She is writing a forthcoming book about American Jews and the Israeli settler movement since 1967.

  • Mugged by a Mug Shot Online
    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/06/business/mugged-by-a-mug-shot-online.html?pagewanted=print

    L’ignoble #racket de sites internet contre des accusés, facilité par Google, PayPal et MasterCard (jusqu’à ce qu’il soit dénoncé par le New York Times.)

    AS painful as they are for arrestees, mug shots seem to attract big online crowds. Google’s results are supposed to reflect both relevance and popularity, and mug-shot sites appear to rank exceptionally well without resorting to trickery, according to Doug Pierce, founder of Cogney, a search engine optimization company based in Hong Kong. At the request of The New York Times, Mr. Pierce studied a number of the largest mug-shot sites and found that they were beloved by Google’s algorithm in part because viewers who open them tend to stick around.

    “When others search your name, that link to Mugshots.com is way more attention-grabbing than your LinkedIn profile,” Mr. Pierce said. “Once they click, they stare in disbelief, and look around a bit, which means they stay on the page, rather than returning immediately to the search results. Google takes that as a sign that the site is relevant, and that boosts it even more.”

    What’s curious is that Google doesn’t penalize these sites for obtaining their images and text from other places, a sin in the company’s guidelines. The idea is that Web sites should be rewarded for coming up with original material and receive demerits for copying.

    If it acted, Google could do what no legislator could — demote mug-shot sites and thus reduce, if not eliminate, their power to stigmatize.

    Initially, a #Google spokesman named Jason Freidenfelds fielded questions on this topic with a statement that amounted to an empathetic shrug. He wrote that the company felt for those affected by mug-shot sites but added that “with very narrow exceptions, we take down as little as possible from search.”

    Two days later, he wrote with an update: “Our team has been working for the past few months on an improvement to our algorithms to address this overall issue in a consistent way. We hope to have it out in the coming weeks.”

    Mr. Freidenfelds said that when he sent the first statement, he was unaware of this effort. He added that the sites do, in fact, run afoul of a Google guideline, though he declined to say which one. Nor would he detail the algorithmic changes the company was considering — because doing so, he explained, could spur mug-shot sites to start devising countermeasures.

    As it happens, Google’s team worked faster than Mr. Freidenfelds expected, introducing that algorithm change sometime on Thursday. The effects were immediate: on Friday, two mug shots of Janese Trimaldi, which had appeared prominently in an image search, were no longer on the first page. For owners of these sites, this is very bad news.

    And, it turns out, these owners face another looming problem: getting paid.

    Asked two weeks ago about its policies on mug-shot sites, officials at #MasterCard spent a few days examining the issue, and came back with an answer.

    “We looked at the activity and found it repugnant,” said Noah Hanft, general counsel with the company. MasterCard executives contacted the merchant bank that handles all of its largest mug-shot site accounts and urged it to drop them as customers. “They are in the process of terminating them,” Mr. Hanft said.

    #PayPal came back with a similar response after being contacted for this article.

    “When mug-shot removal services were brought to our attention and we made a careful review,” said John Pluhowski, a spokesman for PayPal, “we decided to discontinue support for mug-shot removal payments.”

    #American_Express and #Discover were contacted on Monday and, two days later, both companies said they were severing relationships with mug-shot sites. A representative of #Visa wrote to say it was asking merchant banks to investigate business practices of the sites “to ensure they are both legal and in compliance with Visa operating regulations.”

  • ’Bethlehem’ is yet another Israeli propaganda film
    Haaretz
    By Gideon Levy | Oct. 6, 2013

    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.550699

    Yuval Adler is a talented director, but he has made an outrageous film. “Bethlehem,” his debut feature, has garnered acclaim and prizes - a critics’ award in Venice, first prize at the Haifa Film Festival, six Ophir Awards (Israel’s national film awards) and high praise from The New York Times.

    Along with his writing partner Ali Wakad, Adler created a very well-made action movie. He also created (another) Israeli propaganda film. Before everyone starts to praise him, they should pay heed to his messages - the overt, but, especially, the covert ones - and not just the direction, acting, editing and impressive attention to detail. But the plethora of details makes it so you can’t see the forest for the trees, and it’s the same poison forest. Or should we say enchanted sea - the Israelis are the good guys, the Arabs the bad guys.

    This film, like many before it about the conflict, is guilty of the sins of distortion and concealment: the context is missing, as if it weren’t there. The film is meant to depict complexity – the misery of the collaborator; the humanity of the agent – but in reality, the film paints a picture without context, and without context there is no truth.

    “Let’s make a movie that won’t deal with the political conflict,” Adler said to Wakad, according to an interview he gave to Mike Dagan in Haaretz’s magazine. But Adler’s refusal to make a “political movie” is deceit and sleight of hand. It is in itself a political statement unlike any other. Adler did not make a film about the Sicilian Mafia, but rather a film about the intifada, which has a political context that he deliberately ignores. This blurring is the movie’s powerful, outrageous statement.