1. “Ed Lasky, Jimmy Carter, and al Qaeda” -- which summarizes the religious background to Jimmy Carter’s criticisms of
2. Jimmy Carter sent a handwritten note on January 26 to Rabbi Marvin Hier at the
Dear President Carter:
We respect your historic achievement in forging peace between
Egypt andIsrael in 1979 which only deepens our disappointment and concern over your one-sided book, ": Peace Not Apartheid." Palestine
President Carter there is no Israeli Apartheid policy and you know it. I join with the
Simon Wiesenthal Center in respectfully reminding you that the only reason there is no peace in theHoly Land is because of Palestinian terrorism and fanaticism.
In 2000, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak went to Camp David and offered Yasser Arafat 95% of the West Bank, 100% of
Gaza and part of theOld City of, along with $30 billion in compensation for Palestinian refugees. Arafat’s response was the launching of the bloody Intifada which targeted innocent civilians in restaurants, malls, schools, and religious services with suicide terror attacks. Had Arafat accepted Jerusalem Israel ’s offer at Camp David there would have long been aalongside Israel. Palestinian State
Mr. President, when the Palestinian people repudiate their fanatics in favor of a course of moderation, then there will be peace in the
Middle East .
Here is President Carter’s response:
(Hat tip: Boker tov, Boulder!)
3. Professor Ruth Wisse, writing at the COMMENTARY blog, on the question of accusations of anti-Semitism against Jimmy Carter:
It was not Jimmy Carter who formed the Arab League to prevent the emergence of
Israel and who then dedicated the work of the League to’s destruction. It was not Jimmy Carter who refused partition and insisted on maintaining generations of Palestinians as refugees. Neither was it Carter who instituted the economic boycott of Israel Israel , introduced the UN resolution equating Zionism with racism, or sponsored terrorism as an “unsponsored” weapon against. Carter did not translate, disseminate, and dramatize the Protocols of the Elders of Israel for audiences in the multi-millions. He did not generate the anti-Semitism that sweeps and informs the Arab world. He is not an active anti-Semite. But he became its apologist, he echoes its accusations, using its terminology and advancing its cause. Zion
Carter’s letter to Rabbi Hier -- non-responsive, gratuitously insulting, small and ungracious in tone -- is not necessarily evidence of anti-Semitism. It may simply be another exhibit in support of Joshua Muravchik’s thesis.
Check out the Chicago Tribune today for a jew-hatey defense of Carter by none-other than Paul Findley (and don't miss the Trib's cover page hatchet job on Rudy Guiliani (it's starting already).
Posted by: J. Lichty | February 07, 2007 at 09:06 AM
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Posted by: poopy head | February 20, 2007 at 06:35 AM
i am a nazi
Posted by: poopy head | February 20, 2007 at 06:35 AM