They’re Repeating The Word ‘Unprovoked’ Again, This Time In Defense Of Israel
We’re seeing the western political/media class
bleating the word “unprovoked” in unison again, this time in reference to the massive
multi-pronged operation launched
by Hamas against Israel on Saturday morning which reportedly killed
hundreds of Israelis.
“The United States unequivocally condemns the unprovoked attacks
by Hamas terrorists against Israeli civilians,” reads a statement from the White House.
“The loss of life in Israel as a result of the violent,
calculated and unprovoked attack by Hamas is heartbreaking,”
reads a statement by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.
“The unprovoked terror attack today
and the murders of innocent Israeli citizens are a stark reminder of the
brutality of Hamas and Iran-backed extremists,” reads a statement by congressman and house speaker
contender Jim Jordan.
“This ignominious, unprovoked, and
barbaric attack on Israel must be met with world condemnation and unequivocal
support for the Jewish state’s right to self-defense,” tweeted presidential candidate Robert F Kennedy Jr.
“This is an ‘unprovoked attack on
civilians’: Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg,” reads a recent Fox News report.
“Unprovoked aggression by Hamas
terrorists,” reads a tweet by former secretary of state Mike Pompeo.
“I forcefully condemn these cowardly,
horrifying, unprovoked attacks on Israel by Hamas,” tweeted congressman John Fetterman.
“These attacks by Hamas against Israel were heinous
and unprovoked,” tweeted Senator Mark Kelly.
“As a steadfast supporter and ally of Israel, I
unequivocally condemn the unprovoked and unprecedented
terrorist attack launched by Hamas and stand with the people of Israel as it
rightly defends itself,” tweeted congressman Richie Torres.
“The unprovoked attacks on Israel by
Hamas through Gaza and via air and sea, are absolutely a terrorist
attack,” tweeted Democratic Party pundit Ed Krassenstein.
“I unequivocally condemn Hamas’ horrific, unprovoked attacks
and call on all parties to take steps to prevent civilian harm,” tweeted congresswoman Sara Jacobs.
I could cite many, many more examples, but I think
that’s enough to make the point I’m trying to make. Isn’t it strange seeing the
same oddly specific word choice inserted over and over and over again about the
same event in statements by politicians and pundits, regardless of their
political affiliation? When you lay them all out together it starts to sound
highly suspicious, like someone always referring to his car as “my car, which I
did not steal,” or always introducing his spouse as “my wife, whom I do not
beat.”
It’s clear by now that whenever you see the word
“unprovoked” being forcefully repeated in a uniform way across the entire
political/media class, whatever they’re talking about was definitely massively
provoked.
We saw this exact same thing when Russia invaded
Ukraine; from the very beginning western politics and media were saturated with
the word “unprovoked”,
bashing the western public in the face with that message over and over and over
again despite the obvious and
undeniable fact that
the war in Ukraine was most
definitely provoked.
As Noam Chomsky quipped last
year, “Of course, it
was provoked. Otherwise, they wouldn’t refer to it all the time as an
unprovoked invasion.”
And the same is of course true of the latest Hamas
offensive. There are all kinds of arguments you could legitimately make about
it, but one argument you definitely cannot defend is that it was unprovoked. As
Palestinian-American writer and comedian Amer Zahr put it on Twitter, “75 years
of ethnic cleansing. 15 years of blockade. Confiscation of Palestinian lands.
Pogroms on Palestinian towns. Desecration of Palestinian sacred sites. Daily
raids into Palestinian homes. Constant humiliation of a entire people. Nothing about
today is ‘unprovoked.’”
Calling Palestinian violence against Israel
“unprovoked” is easily even more ridiculous than calling the Russian invasion
unprovoked, because the abuses of Israeli apartheid are so well-known by the
general public at this point. Multiple
mainstream human rights organizations have accused Israel of administering an abusive
apartheid regime which treats Palestinians as lesser people. Palestinians who
live in the open-air prison known as Gaza are deliberately subjected
to undrinkable
water, food shortages, energy
shortages and bombing
campaigns. Those outside
Gaza are subjected to racist,
violent policing and land seizure and live under a different set of laws than Jewish Israelis. The entire people were
forced out of their homes to make way for a new state for reasons that had
nothing to do with them, and any attempt to resist this has seen them killed as
“terrorists”.
Of course the attack was provoked.
Isn’t it odd that the western political/media class
would begin uniformly asserting something so easily disprovable? So
transparently false? Why would they keep choosing over and over and over again
in each instance to make use of that specific word “unprovoked” in their
condemnations of the attacks by Hamas?
The answer is that this choice is not so much
something they are saying as something they are doing.
They’re not attempting to communicate with their audiences, they’re attempting
to circumvent the critical thinking of their audience and trick them into
accepting a blatant falsehood as true.
Skillful manipulators make frequent use of a cognitive
bias known as the illusory truth effect, a glitch in the way human minds tend to operate
which makes it hard for us to differentiate between the experience of hearing a
well-evidenced fact and the experience of hearing something that they’ve heard
repeated multiple times. If you want the public to believe something false you
won’t be able to use facts and evidence to make your case to them, so what you
can do is just repeat something over and over again until it starts sounding
like the truth. Repeat the lie enough times and boom, you’ve perception-managed
westerners into viewing the world from an understanding that Israel did nothing
to provoke Palestinians into their actions.
After the news broke about the Hamas offensive I
tweeted, “Here come days and days of western news media slyly reversing the
aggressor-defender relationship and reporting as though the violence began with
the Hamas offensive, spontaneously out of nowhere.”
But even I wasn’t expecting the perception management
to be this brazen.
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