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Zionist circles linked to Islam-bashing DVDs targeting
voters in key US states
(IPS: is Inter Press Service: U.S. based world wide news service) September
22, 2008
Millions of voters in US states crucial to this fall's presidential election
received DVD copies of a controversial documentary film as advertising
inserts in their morning newspapers last week, with more sent out over the
weekend.
The 2006 film, "Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West," which has
been accused by critics of encouraging Islamophobia, was reportedly
delivered, or slated for delivery this weekend, into tens of millions of
households in states such as Ohio, Michigan, Florida, Colorado, North
Carolina, Pennsylvania, Missouri and other "swing states" that don't vote
consistently for either party and usually decide elections.
Republicans and their candidate, Senator John McCain, have made battling the
threat posed by radical Islamists a central platform of their campaign,
while presenting their Democratic rival, Senator Barack Obama, as being weak
on the issue. Obama has also fought off persistent smear campaigns,
particularly aimed at Jewish voters, that he is a "closet Muslim."
Gregory Ross, the spokesman for the Clarion group, which produced and is
distributing the DVD, told the Harrisburg Patriot-News that the movie was
being delivered to 28 million homes throughout the month of September and
that the intention was not to sway voters to either candidate.
The Clarion Fund is a shadowy nonprofit group created to "educate Americans
about issues of national security," according to its Web site. The staff and
organizational information of the group is not listed on the Web site.
Clarion Fund was founded by the writer and executive produce of "Obsession,"
Israeli-Canadian Raphael Shore. The group also runs the Web site
Radicalislam.org - an educational site which implores its readers to "take
action against radical Islam" by exploring its resources under four
headings: "fueling terror," "Sharia law," "vote 2008," and "radical Islam
overview." Because of Clarion Fund's nonprofit, tax-exempt status, it is not
permitted to sway voters in a partisan manner. But Radicalislam.org
reportedly was, until it was recently pointed out in the media, carrying an
article that explicitly endorsed McCain.
IPS telephoned the Clarion Fund and its reported contact and counsel, Eli D.
Greenberg of the New York law firm Wolf Haldenstein Adler Freeman and
Herz.The telephone calls were not returned.
The documentary, despite an initial disclaimer that the material covered
applies only to radical Islamists and not all Muslims, has drawn fire from
critics for conflating mainstream Islam with violent and militant tendencies
of a smaller subset of the religion. Critics argue that it makes little
distinction between the religion of Islam and the political realities that
inform terrorism.
Among the film's stable of experts are "reformed" Palestine Liberation
Organization resistance fighter and convert to evangelical Christianity
Walid Shoebat, Muslim-baiter and self-described "terrorism expert" Stephen
Emerson, and another evangelical convert from Islam named Noni Darwish who
runs a Web site called Arabs for Israel.
An investigation by IPS last year revealed that the production and promotion
of "Obsession" was tied to several right-wing Zionist groups in the US and
Israel. Raphael Shore's brother, Rabbi Ephraim Shore, heads up the Israeli
group Aish Hatorah, which helped form HonestReporting, an organization
which, the IPS investigation revealed, had ties to the film despite the
apparent denials of the relationship.
Several of the newspapers that ran the advertising insert were contacted for
interviews by IPS, and those which responded all gave similar responses
that, though the material may or may not agree with the editorial positions
of the papers, the DVDs met the standards for advertising. The newspapers
said they did not want to participate in censorship.
Asked how advertisements are screened for inclusion with the paper, the
publisher of North Carolina's News and Observer, Orage Quarels III, told
IPS, "Is it slanderous? Is it biased? We look at each one individually."
"We take all advertising on good faith," Jim McClure, the vice president of
advertising for the News and Observer, which sent out about 250,00 copies,
told IPS when asked if the paper considered the intent of advertisers when
considering their submissions. "This product came from the Clarion Fund, it
was clearly identified, there was a Web site, an address and a phone number
on the package, and it came to us through an advertising agency."
"We're getting many concerned calls and emails from Muslims around the
country who see this as an attempt to not only marginalize and demonize the
American Muslim community, but also to sway the election by targeting swing
states," Ibrahim Hooper, a spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic
Relations, told IPS. "People are outraged. I haven't seen this kind of
outrage in a long time. It's coming to their homes, it's coming to their
neighbors and they believe its going to impact their lives and their
children's lives negatively."
Hooper also said there had apparently already been an incident of bias
against a bus driver for children attending an Islamic school in Ohio. The
biased comments were likely inspired by the film.
The New York Times distributed about 145,000 copies of the DVD in national
editions of the paper in 11 markets, including Denver, Colorado; Miami,
Tampa, and Orlando in Florida; Detroit, Michigan; Kansas City and St. Louis
in Missouri; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and Milwaukee, Wisconsin, according
to Times spokesperson Diane McNulty.
McNulty classified the ad as opinion advertising.
"It went through our advertising acceptability office, and they looked at
it," she told IPS.
McNulty was unsure, however, if that office had viewed the DVD before
accepting it. A message left for Steph Jesperson of the Times' advertising
acceptability office went unanswered.
McClure told IPS that they have gotten overwhelmingly negative responses for
readers and will be running objections as letters to the editor in upcoming
editions of the paper.
But at least one newspaper, North Carolina's News and Record, declined to
carry the DVD.
"We did not distribute it. I was not involved in the decision; it was an
advertising call, in keeping with advertising policies," wrote John
Robinson, the editor of the News and Record on his blog. "I asked our
publisher about it. He said it was divisive and plays on people's fears and
served no educational purpose. The revenue it would have brought in was not
a motivator."
Indeed, the print newspaper industry has seen a precipitous decline in
revenue, and many critics contend that it's a tough decision for newspapers
in economic straits to turn down advertising dollars. In press reports, many
newspapers declined to give the advertising rate for their distribution of
the DVD, and a few commented that the Clarion group paid the standard
advertising rates.
But exactly who paid those standard rates is still in question.
The $500,000 needed to produce the movie was reportedly borrowed by Shore
and Clarion, so it is unclear that they had the money to make the recent
mass distribution effort, which likely was a multi-million-dollar
enterprise.
"I can't imagine that you can produce, package, distribute and advertise
this product for less than $50 million," Hooper said.
He also insisted that the substantial financial push may have been intended
to sway the election. "Why," he asked, "did they choose to distribute this
hate propaganda to millions of homes in swing states in this election?" -
IPS
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