I hope everyone saw it. Yesterday AIPAC did what it hates doing: exerting raw power in public.For those who missed it, here is the basic story. Note that Rachel Maddow of MSNBC was too scared to touch it while Chris Hayes dove right in (his days are numbered).
The bottom line is that it is all good because we have AIPAC’s strong-arming on this priceless video. Democratic delegates refused to give a 2/3rds vote in favor of the AIPAC language but the chair, with AIPAC looking over his shoulder, ignored the vote and announced it passed anyway.
A beautiful moment because there it is — what I’m always talking about: AIPAC money has bought US foreign policy. Ignore the cover story that Obama requested the AIPAC language. That is a lie and spin. Even if he did “request” it, it is because returned money man Rahm Emanuel told him he had too.
It’s all about the money. Bravo to the Democratic delegates who said “no.” However that was like saying no to the czar or Stalin. AIPAC wasn’t having it. See this video where AIPAC admits how it operates. And this pirated transcript where it describes how it buys Congress.
Keeping all that in mind: here is the piece I wrote yesterday for Huffington Post before this all happened.
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I received an email last month that I want to respond to publicly. It reads as follows:
I agree with you 100% about the Israel lobby’s baneful effects on our democracy. Like you (and Tom Friedman), I was appalled when those Congressmen and Senators gave Netanyahu a standing ovation and when they support his policies not because they agree with him but out of fear. I also agree that the lobby is damaging to the interests of the United States and Israel as well.
However, I seriously question if it is wise for you to point these things out. Don’t you fear that the things you write are grist for the people who don’t like Jews? No doubt people hostile to Jews in general, not mere critics of Israel, quote the things you write and say, “you see, even a Jewish guy who formerly worked at AIPAC says that it controls U.S. policy toward the Middle East.” Doesn’t that worry you?” I think it should.
That is just an excerpt. But I only want to address his main point: is it “wise” for me to continually write about the lobby when my work can be used by people in ways that I certainly would not approve.
The answer is that this question does concern me. I know how easily it is to take the phrase “the lobby” or “Israel Firsters” and apply them to all Jews.
However, I don’t see that happening. The people who hold racial or religious animus against Jews do not need the lobby issue (or even Israel itself) as grist for their bigotry mill. A certain segment of the population does not like Jews, just like others (or the same) segments of the population do not like African-Americans, or Muslims, or gay people, or whatever. These people have always been out there but, fortunately, at least in the case of Jews, they have always been a tiny and politically insignificant part of the population. They are unlikely to go away and they are unlikely to ever do much damage. They never have.
On the other hand, I do worry that the lobby issue could damage Jews if the perception that Jews are more concerned, or even equally concerned, with a foreign country as with the United States takes hold.
However, it certainly doesn’t take me to reveal that politicians in this country pander to the pro-Israel lobby more than to any other lobby dedicated to securing the interests of a foreign country (in fact, the Israel lobby has no close competition in that regard).
When Prime Minister Netanyahu gets a more powerful ovation in Congress than any president of either party, when Governor Romney flies off to Israel to hold a fundraising event there, when speaker after speaker at both conventions effusively salute Israel from the podium (but no other foreign country) it hardly takes my commentary to make people notice the unique place the lobby and Israel itself hold in American politics.
Nor am I responsible for putting the AIPAC convention on C-Span each year so Americans can see their highest leaders (often including the president and always the congressional leadership) stand in front of U.S. and Israeli flags to proclaim devotion to the Jewish state and to whatever policy (lately it has been sanctions on Iran) that AIPAC is pushing.
Nor am I responsible for the likes of Sheldon Adelson on the Republican side and Haim Saban on the Democratic who combine their massive campaign contributions with assurances that their particular choice will be the most pro-Israel president ever.
I didn’t create the parties cutout organization (the Republican Jewish Coalition and the National Jewish Democratic Council) which are dedicated to rounding up support for its respective candidate on the basis of Israel and its supposed needs.
As for Congress, everyone knows about the power of the lobby and that Members of the House and Senate do not deviate from the AIPAC line out of fear of offending an organization with close ties to key donors.
This isn’t news.
It may be news, however, that the lobby does not speak for most Jews who, while most are pro-Israel, are not particularly Israel-centered.
The last fairly definitive poll we have on that score came in 2008 during the presidential campaign when the American Jewish Committee found that just 3 percent of Jews vote with an eye on Israel issues.
The rest cast their ballots based on American domestic issues and, on those issues, Jews are overwhelmingly liberal and Democratic (Barack Obama received 78 percent of the Jewish vote in 2008). Their commitment to domestic liberalism is why Jews have voted Democratic in every presidential election since 1928 and why it is unlikely that will change any time soon.
We are Americans and vote based on American interests. AIPAC represents its 100,000 members and, more significantly, the donors associated with it. It does not speak for the community as a whole, not by a long shot. The same applies to the other Jewish organizations in AIPAC’s orbit.
It is critical that Americans understand that, because the perception that American Jews are so attached to Israel that they put its interests above their own country’s could negatively influence Americans who have never been biased against Jews.
And that is why I think it is “wise” for me and others like me to speak out and say: I’m a Jew and the lobby does not speak for me. I care about Israel but the interests of my own country will always come first. I understand that the interests of the United States and Israel are not identical and, when they conflict, my default position is to stand with my president not Israel’s prime minister. (Lobby activists never criticize Israeli prime minister, but only the U.S. president, whether Democratic or Republican, when the two countries diverge).
I also think it is “good for the Jews” for Muslims and Arabs to know that the lobby speaks only for the lobby and not for all Jews or even for all pro-Israel Jews. How can it be beneficial for a tiny minority to be viewed as hostile to the infinitely larger Arab and Muslim world? It isn’t, and we’re not.
The bottom line is that it is not writing about the lobby that could potentially harm Jews. It is rather the perception that the lobby speaks for all of us. My mission is to say “oh no, it doesn’t” and to do everything I can to make sure my fellow Americans understand it. For Americans to think otherwise is, as the phrase goes, “bad for the Jews.” And for America, the safest haven Jews have ever had.

I watched the video and didn’t see AIPAC over the guy’s shoulder. What else does MJ Rosenberg see that no one else does? Is he medicated?
I have called my Senators and representative today, as well as the Israeli consulate in Boston, to express my outrage at Prime MInister Netanyahu’s tone-deaf attacks on Obama administration’s Iran policy and doing it on 9/11 no less.
“And, ribono shel olam, isn’t it time to give the “the possible fueling of antisemitism” canard a rest? How many times has that one been used to stop us orthodox Jews from reporting to the police wife-beaters and rabbinical child-molesters?”
The Magnus Zionist
http://www.jeremiahhaber.com/2007/09/singling-out-israel-for-moral.html
MJ Rosenberg was only wrong when it came to judging Obama, as so many were. He has proved to be just as much a captive of AIPAC as is Congress and his predecessors. He got the word early after taking office when AIPAC drafted letters (the House one even carried AIPAC’s name) signed by three quarters of both the Senate and the House arrived on Obama’s desk warning him not to put any pressure on Netanyahu about anything. So there you have it. Our new president, just after taking office, finds that Congress is watching Netanyahu’s back and not his. Since the existence of these letters, which appeared on the AIPAC site, was not seen as news by the US media, with the exception of a WashPost blog which revealed the AIPAC connection, most Americans never learned about it. Did it maybe have something to do with who dominates the media?
A “hostile takeover” of USA by AIPAC is not — repeat “NOT” — a hostile takeover by “Jews” (generally) or by “the Jews” or anything like that. No. No again. AIPAC is a very, very few very, very rich people who support right-wing Zionsim. They may be Jewish, but their manipulation is not Jewish in character (and some of them, may be very, very rich southern Baptists) but (merely?) American lobbying manipulation, just like the big banks, big oil, big armaments, big pharmaceuticals, , and all the other “bigs”. Out system is broken and they are manipulating it masterfully — masterfully, but not “Jewishly”.
And their purpose in all this is not Jewish but Zionist. Just to be clear. so praise praiseworthy Jews (most of us, I hope) and tell it like it is about AIPAC.
My immediate concern would be what should be done to alleviate the backlash. I can’t help it.
Why should there be a backlash?. Obama’s judgment was the removing the reference to united Jerusalem and indicating that the US was neutral regarding the Palestinian demand for unlimited right or return of the refugees to Israel (which has been the deal-breaker between the two sides in the past) would cost him votes. This has nothing to do with AIPAC and its supposed malevolent influence. This is a direct appeal to the voters on Obama’s part. His political instincts, which won him the Presidency four years ago told him that more voters wanted the united Jerusalem clause than oppose it
I ask again….what does all of this have to do with AIPAC?
MJ-Four years ago, after the election, you assured me at the TPM Cafe site, that AIPAC and the settlers were “Finished” once and for all. American policy towards Israel was now entering a new era, much more to your liking Obama was not a prisoner of AIPAC and would put an end to their influence which you claimed was against the will of the American people, , the Democrats, who all supposedly agree with you on the Arab/Israeli conflict were in control of both houses of Congress and now things were going to change in the direction that you wanted. I told you then that all Presidents end up following the same policies, i.e. whining about the settlements, nagging both sides to reach an agreement but then realizing that a peace agreement is not attainable so they end simply trying to manage the conflict.
Why were you so wrong and I was right, if I am a stupid “right-winger” and you are a wise “progressive”?