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Jim Clancy Fired by CNN for Mentioning the Word Hasbara (Israeli-Zionist Propaganda), Following Rick Sanchez and Octavia Nasr January 26, 2015 Editor's Note: It's important to note that Jim Clancy was not a hero. Like Rick Sanchez and Octavia Nasr before him, he worked for the CNN Israeli-Zionist propaganda (hasbara) machine for 34 years. He forgot for a second to respect his Zionist maters by referring to them as hasbara agents (Zionist propaganda agents). They don't like to be called so, that's why they fired him. He was part of the Zionist hasbara himself all his career, including this incident, as he did not criticize the cartoons. Actually, he defended them. It's just his Zionist masters don't like any of their employees to call their hasbara machine "hasbara." This is dangerous to them as it may contribute to awakening the totally hasbara-controlled Americans and Europeans. You can't be free to practice freedom of expression if you work in an Israeli-Zionist propaganda (hasbara) machine, like CNN, Fox, Sky News, Washington Post, New York Times, etc.
CNN anchor resigns after criticising Israeli propaganda MEM, Sunday, 18 January 2015 15:04 Longtime CNN International anchor Jim Clancy left the network after being involved in a Twitter feud with what he called the "Hasbara team," referring to public relations efforts by Israel supporters on social media. "After nearly 34 years with Cable News Network, the time has come to say Farewell!" Clancy wrote in a memo to staff obtained by media industry news blog TVNewser. "It has been my honor to work alongside all of you for all of these years." CNN confirmed on Saturday that the veteran correspondent had left the network. His resignation came more than a week after he was involved in an argument on Twitter which started when he posted a message about the derogatory cartoons the Charlie Hebdo magazine published before the attacks on its Paris offices, in which 12 people were killed. Clancy's Twitter account has since been deleted, but the tweets he posted in the argument were published on several websites, including Gawker, Twitchy and Mediaite. "The cartoons NEVER mocked the Prophet," he tweeted on Jan. 7. "They mocked how the COWARDS tried to distort his word." Oren Kessler, a research director at the Washington-based Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, opposed Clancy's statement, calling it "absolutely untrue" because Charlie Hebdo had been targeted in the past for publishing an issue in which Prophet Muhammad was listed as a "guest editor." In response, Clancy tweeted: "Hasbara?" The dictionary meaning of the Hebrew word hasbara is "explanation," but, in discussions about Israel and Palestine, it is used as a term referring to the promotion of positive information about Israel and Zionism (Israeli-Zionist propaganda). Other social media users, including some openly pro-Israel bloggers, condemned Clancy's tweets, to which he replied: "These accounts are part of a campaign to do PR for #Israel @JewsMakingNews @elderofziyon Nothing illegal - but PR not HR : Human Rights [sic]." Clancy, who anchored the global news show "The Brief," did not specify the reason of his resignation. His biography at the "Anchors and Reporters" section of the CNN website has been removed. Clancy's resignation was immediately celebrated by his opponents, with pro-Israel blogger Elder of Ziyon tweeting: "Elder gets results! Jim Clancy fired from CNN."
CNN fires Jim Clancy after 34 years over tweeting row with Jewish activists. Welcome to Press Freedom in Zio-America! January 17, 2015 at 1:52 pm By. Dr. Patrick Slattery – Yesterday CNN fired one of its star reporters after he got into a tweeting argument with Jewish activists, including Oren Kessler of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. The FDD is a neocon propaganda organization lavishly funded by billionaire Jewish Zionists like Roland Arnall, Charles Bronfman, and Michael Steinhardt. Jim Clancy’s CNN biography page was promptly deleted, but to see how little loyalty from CNN 34 years of hard work will get you, please refer to this archived snapshot of his page. For those of you interested in the tweets involved, the website israellycool.com (which I guess means “Israel is really cool”) has preserved the comments, with some annotation and perhaps selective editing. It is hard to see what the big deal is. It starts with Clancy making the questionable claim that Charlie Hebdo’s cartoons weren’t actually mocking Mohammed but rather those who distort his words. A rather mild bruhaha ensues, which includes Clancy correctly pointing out that his opponents were hasbara (Israeli public relations) agents. I don’t really know what passes for etiquette on Twitter, but Clancy never said anything really that insulting. He did suggest that “You and the Hasbara team need to pick on some cripple on the edge of the herd.” That predictably prompted a Jewish organization that promotes inclusion of people with disabilities throughout the Jewish community to protest the use of the word “cripple” to CNN President Jeff Zucker (a fellow Zionist), who promptly fired Clancy. One might ask whether Clancy was on one of his trips to North Korea when CNN fired Rick Sanchez simply for saying that there were a lot of people at CNN a lot like Jon Stewart (i.e. Jewish). Or perhaps he thought that his 34 years of service to CNN was enough to give him some modicum of job security. At any rate, it seems pretty obvious that this whole Twitter spat was intended to give CNN a pretext for firing Clancy, who came into the Zionist’s cross hairs due to his deviation from the Israeli propaganda line, as you can see in the reaction that this Zionist website gave to an interview that Clancy conducted with a former Israeli ambassador. The ‘hasbara’ tweeps who brought down Jim Clancy, and their ties to Israel and the Israel lobby US Politics Allison Degeron January 20, 2015 http://mondoweiss.net/2015/01/hasbara-brought-israel Veteran CNN journalist Jim Clancy’s resignation this week is one of the odder media fallouts from the Charlie Hebdo Paris attack. On January 7, Clancy got into a late night Twitter spat regarding the French satirical magazine with online adversaries. When he told them they were ganging up on him and practicing “hasbara,” the Hebrew word for “explaining” that describes pro-Israel advocacy often at the behest of the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, they lashed back as if the term were libelous. As it turns out, Clancy was not off base. Some who sparred with him have worked for the Israeli government and the pro-Israel lobby group AIPAC, and one online activist in particular boasts of a track record of getting journalists fired for their comments on social media about Israel and its conflicts in the Middle East. Because neither Clancy nor his employer offered an explanation as to why he quit, much speculation has circulated. The reigning theory is that he was forced to leave because calling out online commentators for having a pro-Israel slant is seen as a redline for mainstream journalists. Clancy also made an ableist comment; he said his Twitter foes’ time was better spent by picking off a “cripple.” Within days Clancy’s Twitter account was suspended and he confirmed to TVNewer that he had left CNN after nearly 34 years. The big question remain. Was Clancy correct when he said that a handful of those he was arguing with online were engaging in hasbara? And did they coerce a pink slip? The answer to both questions is likely yes. First, let’s review the actual tweets. Everything started when Clancy tweeted to say that the cartoons published by Charlie Hebdo depicting the image of Islam’s prophet were not offensive. “The cartoons NEVER mocked the Prophet. They mocked how the COWARDS tried to distort his word. Pay attention.” In response, @Elderofzyion wrote, “You might want to actually look at the cartoons before tweeting about them. I have a collection: http://elderofziyon.blogspot.com/2015/01/the-collection-of-charlie-hedbo.html …” @Elderofziyon, an anonymous Israel supporter who does not live in the country, has a track record of getting journalists canned. He mans a blog of the same name that purports to be a right-wing fact check machine. For instance, Elder has blogged repeatedly and aggressively about Mondoweiss. In the past he has worked on an advocacy project with the pro-Israel group Stand With Us, which just announced a partnership with the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, or as Clancy would call it, he volunteers in hasbara. On his blog Elder has also advertised a job opening with the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs. On Friday Elder of Ziyon wrote in a post entitled, “Elder gets results! Jim Clancy fired from CNN” that “The respected CNN anchor who insulted me on Twitter during an epic and bizarre meltdown is now gone. Buh-bye!” He also bragged, “This is the second CNN personality that I’ve been involved in getting fired.” In 2010 he campaigned for CNN to let go of Senior Editor of Mideast Affairs Octavia Nasr after she tweeted praise of a lately-deceased Hezbollah leader. At that time, Elder boasted “That’s two high-profile people I helped to get fired this year for their impolitic comments and activities.” This was an apparent reference to Human Rights Watch’s Marc Garlasco. Another challenge to Clancy over his comment about Charlie Hebdo cartoons came from pro-Israel advocate Oren Kessler: “Absolutely untrue. The magazine was targeted in the past over an issue in which Muhammad was listed as guest editor.” To this, Clancy tweeted back to Kessler one fateful word, “hasbara?” Kessler retorted, “you could admit that your tweet was mistaken, and your response to me was inappropriate.” Clancy then doubled down on the hasbara accusations, and made his offensive “cripple” comment. He tweeted, “You and the Hasbara team need to pick on some cripple on the edge of the herd” and “The Hasbara (Israeli explaining the inconsistencies of Human Rights) team has declared victory over @ClancyCNN – next up, #ICC” and “Here’s the rub: @JewsMakingNews @elderofziyon are accounts with about 50 followers…who are also part of a PR campaign that is anti-Muslim,” and “These accounts are part of a campaign to do PR for #Israel @JewsMakingNews @elderofziyon Nothing illegal – but PR not HR : Human Rights.” Hasbara team? Oren Kessler is a former journalist for the Jerusalem Post and Haaretz and now a think-tank man, working for the hawkish Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), which supports tougher U.S. sanctions on Iran and a strong pro-Israel line. Chief positions in the group were held by Clifford May from the Republican National Committee, former (W.) Bush security advisor James Woolsey, former aide to Dick Cheney John Hannah, and AIPAC staffer Toby Dershowitz, according to research from My Right Web, a project of the Institute for Policy Studies. The 2007 book The Israel Lobby calls the Foundation a part of the Israel lobby and notes that it urged “regime change” in Iran in the wake of the Iraq invasion in 2003. FDD’s other campaigns have included “30-second television spots conflating Yasser Arafat with Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein. The video’s producer was Nir Boms, FDD’s first vice president and a former officer for the Israeli Embassy in Washington,” per My Right Web. After Kessler chimed into the conversation, journalist Yair Rosenberg, who writes for Tablet and works as an editor for the Israeli National Archives, took notice. Rosenberg has over 10,000 followers, and he propelled the story to an international attention by tweeting, “Wow, so this is an extraordinarily unprofessional response by a CNN anchor when faced with a factual correction,” and “Uh, after these incredibly biased and inappropriate tweets, I hope CNN won’t be sending this guy to cover Israel.” Rosenberg later said online that he was surprised Clancy had to leave his job over this row. Meantime, the cripple remark caught ire from Jay Ruderman, the head of a family foundation that supports organizations that work with disabled persons, particularly youth. Ruderman tweeted at Clancy, “Cripple is derogatory term,” then repeatedly called for CNN to apologize for the offensive remark over Twitter, on Israeli television and in the pages of the Washington Examiner. Unquestionably, Clancy’s cripple remark did warrant an apology. But as for the word, “hasbara,” which set everything in motion, Clancy was not off base with respect to Ruderman. For nearly six years Ruderman was employed by AIPAC, and he also was an IDF liaison with the Jewish Diaspora. In 2010 he was the vice-chair of international affairs for the pro-Israel, anti-Semitism watchdog the Anti-Defamation League [PDF]. Ruderman heads a charitable trust that embraces Jewish values, and he has spoken out in defense of Israelis with disabilities. Last October he said that the anonymous use of the word “Aspergery” by an Obama administration official to describe Benjamin Netanyahu was offensive to millions who have Asperger syndrome. What’s more, Ruderman’s organization maintains strong ties with the Israeli government. The Ruderman Family Foundation offers members of Knesset fellowships to speak at Brandeis University in Massachusetts. From the foundation’s website: “Ruderman Knesset Fellows” seeks to provide “a unique opportunity for Members of Knesset to acquire first-hand knowledge of the American Jewish community, its priorities, challenges and sensibilities.” Participants run the gamut in Israeli politics, from sponsoring members of the far-left group Mertez, to the far-right Jewish Home party. After the now notorious Twitter debacle, Clancy’s only public comment was a confirmation to TVNewer that he was indeed leaving CNN. Here’s the goodbye note: After nearly 34 years with Cable News Network, the time has come to say Farewell! It has been my honor to work alongside all of you for all of these years. This is one of the greatest news organizations in the world. It has truly revolutionized information delivery while driving technological advances in how we gather the news. Through it all, CNN has been a family to my own family. That means something. As I reflect on all of the great adventures and achievements of the past, I wish you great success in the future. The only comment from the news anchor’s former employer was a quick, “Jim Clancy is no longer with CNN. We thank him for more than three decades of distinguished service, and wish him nothing but the best,” given to TVNews. What the future holds for Clancy remains a media mystery. He is, however, one of the most high profile journalists to resign after going head to head with advocates for Israel online. The right-leaning Honest Reporting, a self-proclaimed defender of “Israel from media bias,” which covered the story from the beginning, questioned if there was a “teachable moment” from the fiasco, as no one from CNN offered up a reason for Clancy’s departure, or an apology. Honest Reporting also admitted to drumming up a bombardment of complaints to CNN. Therefore it concluded that the real lesson-learned was “how force of numbers can have a tremendous impact. Between HonestReporting and a number of other concerned organizations, Clancy’s misdemeanor was exposed for all to see and led to a huge number of complaints to CNN.” What remains is the question of whether it was the ableist comment, or the hasbara comment that forced Clancy to leave his job. If Clancy left over the “cripple” comment, that seems extreme. It is indefensible to use that term, but an apology should have been enough– and people say a lot of wild things on twitter. If he lost his job for calling out pro-Israel online advocacy in the midst of his own run-in with those advocates, that reflects a worrisome tightening of speech. They were Israel advocates. This element of his quitting or firing should not be forgotten as it does present a warning to journalists. As the hardly left-leaning Thomas Friedman has explained, even espousing the U.S. State Department’s official policy that settlements are illegal and East Jerusalem is an occupied city can stop a career before it starts. The logical after-effect of this Twitter war is that senior journalists within major news networks will surely think twice before uttering the word “hasbara” from here on. Correction: An earlier version of this post incorrectly identified Yair Rosenberg as Israeli. - See more at: http://mondoweiss.net/2015/01/hasbara-brought-israel#sthash.OuK1ZoKF.dpuf
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