al-Hurra: reality check

I just got my satellite dish repaired and was surfing the channels. I came across Rob Satloff interviewing Dennis Ross about the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. So basically Satloff, head of the pro-Israel think tank WINEP, interviews Ross, former pro-Israel American diplomat who is spending his exile at… wait for it… WINEP. What channel was this? Al Hurra, where Satloff apparently has this show called “Dakhl Washington” (Inside Washington). Actually Satloff’s Arabic surprised me, although the accent is grating. But who am I to talk?

Anyway, apparently this is what I’ve been missing from not watching al-Hurra: Israeli tools. Satloff is basically a professional lobbyist, which actually makes him more bearable than Ross, who has been spreading his extremely skewed vision of Oslo / Camp David II for years, sabotaging reasonable US policy along the way, while pretending to some kind of statesman status (he is also advising both Obama and Clinton – another reason to vote Edwards if you’re a Democrat. Update: apparently Ross also advises Edwards. Oh well.) Apparently, the other regular feature on al-Hurra is Iraqi Shia propaganda, or so they say.

But really, everything that needs to be said about al-Hurra has already been said by Abu Aardvark.

0 thoughts on “al-Hurra: reality check”

  1. Given the massive amount of almost universal and not very nuanced anti-Israel propoganda in the Arab World, letting Arabs hear Dennis Ross’ opinion for 30 minutes might not be the most horrible thing in the world.

  2. Jose, never heard of finding someone’s accent annoying being racism. That’s ridiculous. And what’s an ELL?

    Ethan, I’d happily hear the voices of Israelis speaking for themselves, but please keep Dennis Ross and others who pretend to neutrality away from my TV set.

  3. “Jose, never heard of finding someone’s accent annoying being racism. That’s ridiculous. And what’s an ELL?”

    Wow. Ok an ELL is an English language learner. Here is the wikipedia page for Linguicism: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguicism. Essentially, the main idea is that criticizing someone’s accent, or some other culturally-linked aspect of language, is a thinly veiled form of racism.

  4. Having spent much time in Britain I must have picked that up. I know it’s not generally written like that in journalism. Anyway, Satloff’s elocution can be grating. I guess I don’t know about his accent — from now on, just as Stephen Colbert is color-blind, I am accent-deaf.

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