More Media Fails: Hall of Shame Welcomes Five New Members
November 22, 2012 15:24 by Alex Margolin 8. TechCrunchfor its scathing portrayal of the IDF’s social media campaign.
Many technology websites noted that the IDF used Twitter to declare war on Hamas. TechCrunch, a highly-read technology blog (no. 6 on Technorati’s list of top 100 blogs) took the issue one step further, taking the IDF to task for being, well…biased for Israel.
Describing the IDF’s Twitter feed as “a rolling update of aggressively congratulatory tweets of the on-going strikes,” TechCrunch seemed upset that the IDF was able to present Israel’s perspective unfiltered:
The strategy is a transparent attempt at
controlling the conversation with a one-sided perspective (a.k.a
propaganda). Rather than have media outlets report the story through
embedded journalists and trusted sources, all of the early information
is streaming directly from IDF’s (admittedly biased) information feed.
Nuggets of propaganda are skillfully sandwiched in between key military
strikes.
For years critics have lamented the IDF’s failure to communicate its
message effectively. Now, it’s being criticized for doing it too well.
To some, Israel’s army simply never gets it right.9. Seamus Milne, Guardian columnist
for turning the conflict on its head to defend Palestinian attacks on Israel.
It takes a man of extraordinary bias to look at thousands of rockets flying into Israeli cities, and to conclude, despite all evidence, that it’s the Palestinians and not the Israelis who have the right to defend themselves. Seamus Milne is that kind of man.
“To portray Israel as some kind of victim with every right to “defend itself” from attack from “outside its borders” is a grotesque inversion of reality,” he writes, dismissing the 2005 withdrawal from Gaza as irrelevant.
“So Gazans are an occupied people and have the right to resist, including by armed force (though not to target civilians), while Israel is an occupying power that has an obligation to withdraw – not a right to defend territories it controls or is colonising by dint of military power,” he adds.
It’s unclear which war Milne is watching, but the Palestinian attacks consisted of nothing but attacks on civilians. Talk about a grotesque inversion of reality, Seamus…you lead the way in showing how it’s done.
10. Chris Hughes, The Mirror
for sensationalizing Israel’s threat to launch a ground attack on Gaza
Granted unprecedented access to the front lines of Israel’s troop positions near the Gaza border, Hughes’ seemed to be describing a military build-up on the scale of the raid on Normandy. Take the headline as a dramatic example:
“Ruthless armoured grip?” “Israeli blitz?” Heavy words to describe mundane preparations for an attack that didn’t happen.
Oh well. As they say, truth is the first casualty of war.
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Labels: Anti-Semitism, Communication, Corruption, Israel, News Media
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