August 8, 2009
Paul J. Balles shows how the US media�s application of Joseph
Goebbels�s dictum � that a lie, if audacious enough and repeated enough
times, will be believed by the masses � has produced a plethora of anti-Arab
bigots, from the likes of Steve Emerson, Alan Dershowitz, Caroline Glick and
Ruth Conniff to the racist ranting of brainless lumpen on the internet.
More insidious than the wars with tanks and guns, aircraft and bombs,
missiles and guidance systems, shock and awe campaigns. The wickedest wars
are the wars for people's minds � the propaganda campaigns that exercise
thought control.
"Get control over radio, press, cinema and theatre," said Joseph Goebbels,
Adolf Hitler's propaganda minister. He perfected an understanding of the
"Big Lie" technique of propaganda based on the principle that a lie, if
audacious enough and repeated enough times, will be believed by the masses.
Western brainwashing comes from the media. Readers, listeners and viewers
need to be aware of these propaganda sources. About the media in general,
Steven Salaita correctly observed:
The flippancy with which US media apply the word "terrorism" to Arab
populations reinforces the notion that violence in the Arab world is
ahistorical and therefore senseless. Arabs in turn become a people without
narratives who belong to a culture incapable of rationality.
Steve Emerson has a website and blog with as much anti-Arab ranting on it
as any bigot might produce. Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz has
implied that all Arabs are potential terrorists and therefore worthy of
slaughter. American Israeli Caroline Glick, Deputy Managing Editor of The
Jerusalem Post, writes two weekly syndicated columns preaching
hard-line Israeli propaganda.
In The
Progressive, Ruth Conniff validated the false but widespread notion
that while violence exists among both Arabs and Israelis, terrorism is
exclusive to the Arabs. When Arabs fight against Israelis, the Arabs are
guilty of "terrorist violence" but the Israelis are engaging in "military
reprisals".
On anti-Arab radio you hear things like "Arabs love dictators" and "Obama is
an Arab," as if being an Arab disqualifies one from humanity. If they aren�t
referring to Arabs as "camel jockeys" or "rag heads", they�re calling them
as Islamo-fascists. Along with O'Reilly, Sean Hannity, Lou Dobbs and Glenn
Beck give Fox news stable of anti-Arab propagandists.
Hollywood films have been vilifying Arabs for decades. Jack Shaheen
revealed, in The TV Arab,
how television stereotypes Arabs as "billionaires, bombers and belly
dancers".
Even as a youngster, Shaheen was disturbed by the Arab stereotypes in
children�s cartoon characters.
In Shaheen's Reel Bad Arabs,
a long line of degrading images � from Bedouin bandits and submissive
maidens to sinister sheikhs and gun-wielding "terrorists" � have vilified
Arabs since the days of silent films.
In his research, Shaheen identified more than 1150 films that defile Arabs.
His newest book, Guilty:
Hollywood�s Verdict on Arabs after 9/11, reveals how the film industry
continues to shape American understanding of Arabs and Arab culture.
Muslim scholar Ziauddin Sardar made it clear that anti-Islamic brainwashing
is not new: "From the days of Voltaire right up to 1980, thanks largely to
the efforts of Enlightenment scholars, it was a general Western axiom that
Islam had produced nothing of worth in philosophy, science and learning."
That the propaganda has reached the masses should be clear from some of the
slurs on the internet, examples of which are displayed here:
F**K ALL YOU SAND NIGGERS! I HOPE WE BLOW YOU ALL UP AND TAKE THE ONLY
THING YOU ARE GOOD FOR OIL!
It wasn't enough to curse Arabs. He had to shout it, writing his message
in uppercase letters, revealing how effective anti-Arab propaganda has been
in America.
Those who control the media control the mental attitudes of the population;
Americans have been programmed to hate Arabs and Muslims and to love
Israelis. How could compassionate Americans be nonchalant about their
slaughter of a million Arabs in Iraq, even though they know that it was all
based on lies? Decades of propaganda and brainwashing.
Paul J. Balles is a retired American university professor and freelance
writer who has lived in the Middle East for many years.