Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Deluge of Jew-Hatred in Response to Broadcast About Online Antisemitism

https://www.algemeiner.com/2016/06/15/npr-producer-deluge-of-jew-hatred-in-response-to-broadcast-about-online-antisemitism-forced-program-to-shut-down-comments-section-interview/

NPR Producer: Deluge of Jew-Hatred in Response to Broadcast About Online Antisemitism Forced Program to Shut Down Comments Section (INTERVIEW)

JUNE 15, 2016 1:28 PM 0 COMMENTS
NPR's "Here and Now" program. Photo: Screenshot.
NPR’s “Here and Now” program. Photo: Screenshot.
A producer for a Boston-areaNational Public Radio (NPR) station expressed her shock on Wednesday at the barrage of antisemitic and racist remarks posted in response to a broadcast about online antisemitism — which resulted in the shutting down of the comments section. 
Karyn Miller-Medzon, a senior associate producer for90.9 WBUR-FM NPR’s “Here and Now” nationally syndicated program, told The Algemeiner she was “caught by surprise” at the hatred spewed in response to a post of a previously broadcast, eight-minute segment highlighting the controversial “(((echo)))” symbol used by white supremacist groups and antisemites to track Jews online. The segment featured an interview with Anti-Defamation League (ADL) CEO (((Jonathan Greenblatt))), who spoke about the organization’s decision to place (((echo))) on its list of hate symbols. Within hours, she said, the site was flooded with vicious epithets.
“There was a deluge — over 100 comments — of offensive, racist and antisemitic remarks — the kind that you know people somewhere think but don’t expect to see,” she said. “Every time an offensive comment appeared, five or six more people would add their own comment to that one. So each comment would spawn new ones.”
According to Miller-Medzon, these included “stereotypical depictions of Jews, about their physiology and long noses, things like, ‘Well, of course, we want to show who the Jews are online so they don’t interbreed with the common population,’ and, ‘We wouldn’t have to use the (((echo))) symbol if Jews wore yellow stars.’”
As soon as she became aware of what was happening, Miller-Medzon said, she alerted the show’s host. She then contacted the managing editor, who informed the web department. An immediate decision was taken to remove the antisemitic and racist remarks and shut down the comments section. A WBUR web moderator announced the closure and linked to the station’s community guidelines:
npr boston 1
“This kind of occurrence is rare,” Miller-Medzon told The Algemeiner. “We are a news and current-affairs show, and report on everything you can imagine. We do sometimes cover controversial topics that spawn offensive comments, and we take steps to remove the comments and ban the user. So it’s not uncommon for us to remove a post or warn posters that if they continue with their offensiveness, we will ban them. However, I can’t remember ever having to shut down all comments on a particular segment, and I’ve been here a long time.” 
While there were a handful of people speaking out against the antisemitic comments, she said, any defense against them proved futile. “The comments were coming so quickly and from people with such clear hatred that I don’t think it was realistic for someone who felt otherwise to engage them,” she said. “Engaging would have led to more of the same, and I think the wisest thing to do was not to engage.”
Miller-Medzon said she believes the alt-right community — who is responsible for creating the (((echo))) symbol — got wind of the “Here and Now” segment and decided to launch an online trolling attack. “We have wonderful listeners and readers who regularly, in our online forums, really defend the oppressed and speak out against racism,” she said. “This is not our regular community of listeners, because we don’t usually get this kind of venom.”
Miller-Medzon concluded by bemoaning the timing of the incident — which “couldn’t have been more depressing” — in the wake of the Orlando massacre and the show’s subsequent reporting on hate crimes. “On the day when one of the few segments we ran wasn’t about Orlando, this segment spawned even more hatred,” she said. “This was all a surprising turn of events.”
She first brought the issue to light in a Twitter post on Tuesday:

Ironic (sad) that comment section of @hereandnow webpage about online  had 2 be shut down b/c of antisemitic slurs 

Friday, June 10, 2016

Defending History - Past Imperfect

History can be a fragile thing, very much like an old book. The pages are brittle and become more easily lost, damaged or  removed. The older the history, the more at risk it is.






Sometimes history is lost or broken by accident.  Records are destroyed - like the loss of the ancient library of Alexandria. Sometimes history is destroyed on purpose. Historical revisionists abound. These are not people who present thoughtful, encompassing, documented examinations of events. These are individuals and groups who present arguments which omit or offhandedly dismiss large chunks of the historic record. Usually this is in pursuit of a political or social agenda. Sometimes it's about mitigating responsibility or guilt. Rarely is it about respecting history. Many oppressive governments have proved that.

Defending history is not just about perpetuating stories and retaining facts. History is about people. When we negate any aspect of the historic record, good or bad, we dishonor the memories of the people who lived it and sometimes died in it. Teaching history, repeating history, going to the places where it happened is not just about keeping things known, its about speaking for the for the dead - the heroes, the villains, the good people, the bad people and the foolish.

We cannot ignore that history is recorded by people. People are fallible. The historic record is imperfect. Imperfect is not the same as untrue or wrong.

History is like food. What we had yesterday makes us what we are today and what we have of it today will make us what we will be tomorrow. To be historically anemic is ugly, unhealthy, unnecessary and dangerous.