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Guest Room

September 26, 2007 - 12:00am
By Munier Salem

I have a beef with the The Sun. I find its editorials slanted. Fortunately for The Sun, this is perfectly fine. Journalism needs to be unbiased. Op-ed doesn’t. Alright, so The Sun’s journalistic credentials are intact (for the moment), but what about its views? Are they perhaps misguided?

I offer you two examples to illustrate my ‘beef.’ The first is an editorial from Nov. 29, 2006. This was shortly after Shimon Peres, former prime minister of Israel came to speak at Cornell. It read like this: “Despite talk of large protests outside the event, it seems that most of the would-be attendees took a more constructive approach: they came inside to seize the unique opportunity to question the ‘objectionable’ Israeli official.”

The second is an editorial from this past Monday concerning (a much better publicized) visit to Columbia University of Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad: “We want Columbia to hear you speak anyway. We want the rest of America, even those who can’t find Iran on a map, to scrutinize your beliefs and pick them apart. We believe in intellectual discourse no matter how much we can’t stand you.”

So let’s partake in a logical analysis of these two quotes. Logically, they say the exact same thing:

1. You are about to (or already did) speak in America

2. There are people who disagree with you

3. You still ought to speak

And of course, in a big sappy conclusion, we reason number three follows from number two thanks to our democratic belief in free speech.

If this were a math course, the discussion ends here. In math, it’s all about the logic. But in editorials it’s all about, well, editorializing (replace z with s for sophisticated British feel).

So the first quote is a bit less loaded. Nonetheless there is this use of quotations around the word “objectionable” (kinda like I just did). What do these quotation marks imply? Is Peres not objectionable? Is he only “‘quote unquote’ objectionable” or equivalently “supposedly objectionable?” As pointed out in The Sun, itself, Peres was a geopolitical and economic supporter of apartheid in South Africa, who was quoted saying, “Israel and South Africa have one thing above all else in common: they are both situated in a predominantly hostile world inhabited by dark peoples.” Is this racism and ethnic hatred not objectionable?

What about policies closer to home? Peres was elected partially on his platform of extending settlements into the West Bank, a United Nations-opposed plan whose eventual execution involved bulldozing Palestinian homes and the inequitable distribution of the West Bank’s already limited water supply. Is this only pseudo objectionable? I suppose this editorial did indeed achieve its goal of editorializing. I’m only left to wonder if it did so justly.

Moving on to our second quotation. It’s not too hard to find the slant, somewhere between “pick [your views] apart” and “we can’t stand you” lies the subtle implication that we differ strongly with the Iranian “president” (supposedly president since he was popularly elected from a not-so-populous pool of candidates, hand selected by the unelected Supreme Islamic Leader). And the difference in opinion is of course unquestionably legitimate. Denying the Holocaust despite its obvious physical evidence and implications, calling for the destruction of a nation (and by extension its innocent civilian occupants), executing dissident academics … the list goes on and on.

But no matter the order of magnitude, and no matter how personally charged we may feel, understand that these two cases are logically identical. Both men have committed human rights violations and both are morally tarnished. Indeed also, both have a base of fervent support — people who see them as heroes. We can see from these editorials that one of these men has vehement support on East Hill. The other man seems to lack similar support.

In my naïve little world of sunshine and rainbows, both men would be sent to The Hague to face the world’s harsh moral critiquing, and ultimately, sentencing. Both men would get equal editorials telling them flatly and plainly, “We do not agree with you, but we shall let you speak your mind, and when you are through prepare for a Helen Thomas-style rip down.”

Sometimes enlightened American college students can be just as dogmatic and partially blinded as the brainwashed residents of an oil-rich radical nation. No matter how strong our beliefs and how heated our emotions, our response should remain consistent: invite these leaders to our universities, let them speak and let them take our questions. When the discussion has ceased, let the world court decide the verdict. When we ignore these leaders, and instead elect to use blind force, we merely end up stuck between Iraq and a hard place (sorry, I couldn’t resist).

In a way, I’m very much jealous of Columbia students, who thanks to their geographic proximity to the United Nations, were given the opportunity to question a ruthless leader’s actions in a forum completely unavailable to even senior level officials within Iran. Perhaps Columbia feels such forums are the perfect way to erode the psychotic reasoning of the world’s worst leaders — the perfect way to force upon them logical analysis. I think our own leader could use a heavy dose of that stuff.

Munier Salem ’10 is a designer at The Sun. He can be contacted at mas335@cornell.edu. Guest Room appears periodically.

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Mr. Salem is clearly using

Mr. Salem is clearly using the Ahmadenijad fiasco as a smokescreen to demonize Shimon Peres and, by extension, Israel itself. If doing business with apartheid South Africa and making one offhand comment that is in poor taste are offenses punishable by the Hague, then Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher should have had hearings long ago. Israel is still a relatively new country with a fledgling economy and Peres felt they needed the economic benefits of business in South Africa, which is almost surely why he sought to gain favor with their leader by appealing to the latter's racial proclivities. I fail to see how these shortcomings of Peres's tenure can be equated with Ahmadenijad's calling for the destruction of a UN member state, denying the holocaust, or failing to acknowledge that homosexuals live in his country.

"No matter how strong our

"No matter how strong our beliefs and how heated our emotions, our response should remain consistent: invite these leaders to our universities, let them speak and let them take our questions. When the discussion has ceased, let the world court decide the verdict."

This is moral relativism at its finest. According to Mr. Salem, no matter what you have done as a national leader, we will invite you to speak at our universities. Do you execute rape victims? No problem, we'll let you speak in Bailey Hall. Funding terrorist groups that kill thousands of civilians and American soldiers? I'll go check if Barton is available next week. Did you help hold our citizens hostage for over a year? Water under the bridge. Or how about sending kids with plastic keys around their necks to clear minefields? Don't worry, we won't judge you. I'm sure Mr. Salem would have been just as quick as Columbia Dean Coatsworth to extend an invitation to Hitler if he were alive.

As evidenced by the actual "debate" and his interview on 60 Minutes, Ahmadinejad had no interest in actually answering questions. The Iranian media has already carefully scrubbed the transcript of his remarks, deleting any mention of his response to Bollinger or his remarks about the lack of gay people in Iran. This is not intellectual discourse; it is propaganda, and we shouldn't let despots take advantage of our halls of learning to press their own despicable agendas.

confirmed

the posts confirm mr. salem's argument. what is moral relativism to you is decades of isreali apartheid policies to others, which, if you are a palestinian, affect you a lot more than what ahmedinejad says.

i would imagine, by salem's argument, that he would include thatcher and reagan in that boat. just ask most of central american's who lived through the 80's how they feel about reagan.

Please see yesterday's

Please see yesterday's excellent Guest Room column as to why your description of Israel's policies is completely off-base: http://cornellsun.com/node/24741

Don't pretend that all Ahmedinejad does is give speeches and that he actually hasn't done anything worth condemning.

"Israel and South Africa

"Israel and South Africa have one thing above all else in common: they are both situated in a predominantly hostile world inhabited by dark peoples.”

As far as I can tell, Shimon Peres never said this. It appears that the words were written in a South African newspaper, but did not from the mouth of Shimon Peres.

You can have any kind of opinion you want, but you can't just make things up.

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