How the Media Manipulates Your Israeli-Palestinian Opinions
The media has become less a reporter of this conflict and more of a supporting actor in it.
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Editor’s Note: Joshua Hoffman and Nachum Kaplan are both former journalists.
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The mainstream media and social media are the last place to go if you truly want to understand Israel, the Palestinians, and several other issues.
(Better places include books, documentaries, and interpersonal conversations with Israelis and Palestinians.)
Let’s recall a simple truth about the mainstream media and social media: They are businesses, big businesses, and their product is content designed to maximize the extraction of our time and attention. The more time and attention they can fish out of us, the more advertisements they can sell, and the more their business grows.
Thus, the mainstream media and social media are in the business not of making their readers, viewers, and listeners more knowledgeable, well-rounded citizens, but of crafting narratives that maximize the amount of our time and attention we are willing to give them. Hence why websites like Buzzfeed ask their editors to write 25 headlines per article, so they could land on the most click-worthy title to drive the most traffic and generate the most impressions on their ads.
In our increasingly polarized world, outrage is another especially valuable commodity. It is one of the few things that news media can sell across the political divide. Show a fake picture of a suffering Palestinian child and you spark anger from the so-called “pro-Palestinian” crowd and outrage about the fake or biased news from Israel’s supporters. It is the perfect product.
Note that this model only works when the picture is fake, doctored, deceitful, or out of context. If it is a genuine representation of what is going on, it outrages only one side. That is bad for business. Such are the incentives of the news business and, by extension, social media.
We must also not forget the cachet attached to being a foreign correspondent. It is obscure kind of fame but one that is much prized in journalist circles. Israel is one of the easiest places to pretend to be a war correspondent. Reporters can sit in their plush Tel Aviv and Jerusalem suites, sip martinis, and write as though they are on the frontlines.
There is an enormous level of deceit about this, particularly regarding journalists not reporting from the battlefield. Mind you, there are only two ways for a journalist to be in Gaza: by being imbedded with an IDF unit, or by being a member of Hamas, under the terror group’s Orwellian supervision. Thus, the one place very few Gaza war stories are coming from is Gaza.
And even then, the narrative in modern media is so powerful that “foreign journalists” do not see this lack of access as an impediment. Rather, they know the story that they want to write even before they have landed at Ben Gurion Airport. They see their job as finding “facts” or “news” that will help them tell this story, rather than letting reporting lead what they write, as people imagine journalists do.
This is why the audience knows, with unerring certainty, how the BBC or The New York Times is going to report any development in the Israel-Palestinian conflict before they have even logged on to those sites.
What’s more, some people claim the media lies to us, and that might be true in certain situations — but the media does more than lie to us. They manipulate us not by telling us what to think, but what to think about. The biggest misdirection is what they do not cover. Omission is the hardest lie to detect.
In other words, for every one piece of information they offer us, there are dozens if not hundreds of other pieces that they withhold on a daily basis, sometimes by chance but most of the time by design. In journalism school, we are taught to tell all sides of a story, but the mainstream media and social media largely tell the sides of a story that fits their predetermined agenda — and omit everything else.
When it comes to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the mainstream media and social media have made a habit of ensuring that one of the most important aspects of the media-saturated conflict between Jews and Arabs is the press themselves.
The media has become less a reporter of this conflict and more of a supporting actor in it, “a role with consequences for the millions of people trying to comprehend current events, including policymakers who depend on journalistic accounts to understand a region where they consistently seek, and fail, to productively intervene,” according to Matti Friedman, an Israeli journalist and author.1
They say reporters hurry to keep up with the 24-hour news cycle. These are realities that can explain minor errors and mishaps like poor headline choices. Some say inflations and omissions are the inevitable results of an honest attempt to cover events in a challenging and occasionally dangerous reporting environment.
But such excuses cannot explain why the same inflations and omissions occur repeatedly, why they are common to so many news outlets, and why the international media’s “Israel story” is so off-base to people aware of the historical and geopolitical context of events in this region.
To make sense of most international “journalism” from Israel, it is important to first understand that the news tells us far less about Israel — and far more about the people conveying the news.
“Journalistic decisions are made by people who exist in a particular social milieu, one which, like most social groups, involves a certain uniformity of attitude, behavior, and even dress,” according to Matti Friedman. “These people know each other, meet regularly, exchange information, and closely watch one another’s work. This helps explain why a reader looking at articles written by the half-dozen biggest news providers in the region on a particular day will find that, though the pieces are composed and edited by completely different people and organizations, they tend to tell the same story.”
The media, like many governments, is a corrupt and troubled institution. Corrupt not in that that it accepts bribes; corrupt in a systemic sense. It fails to do what it claims to do, what it should do, and what society expects it to do.
The news media and governments (including terrorist-run governments) are entwined in a vicious circle of mutual manipulation, myth-making, and self-interest. Journalists need crises to dramatize news, and government officials want to “show” that they are responding to crises. Too often, the crises are not really crises, but joint fabrications.
“The two institutions have become so ensnared in a symbiotic web of lies that the news media are unable to tell the public what is true and the government is unable to govern effectively,” according to Peter Vanderwicken, a former journalist at Time, Fortune, and the Wall Street Journal.2
This symbiotic web is very much present in Israel and the Palestinian territories, where foreign activists are a notable feature of the landscape, and where international NGOs and numerous arms of the United Nations are among the most powerful players, wielding billions of dollars and employing many thousands of foreign and local employees.
“Their SUVs dominate sections of East Jerusalem, and their expense accounts keep Ramallah afloat,” according to Friedman. “They provide reporters with social circles, romantic partners, and alternative employment — a fact that is more important to reporters now than it has ever been, given the disintegration of many newspapers and the shoestring nature of their Internet successors.”
“In my time in the press corps,” Friedman added, “I learned that our relationship with these groups was not journalistic. My colleagues and I did not, that is, seek to analyze or criticize them. For many foreign journalists, these were not targets but sources and friends — fellow members, in a sense, of an informal alliance. This alliance consists of activists and international staffers from the UN and the NGOs; the Western diplomatic corps; and foreign reporters.”
In these circles, a distaste for Israel has come to be something between an acceptable prejudice and a prerequisite for entry. I don’t mean a critical approach to Israeli policies or to the government currently in charge of this country, but a belief that to some extent the Jews of Israel are a symbol of the world’s ills.
This idea is quickly becoming one of the central elements of the “progressive” Western zeitgeist, spreading from the European left to U.S. college campuses and intellectuals, including journalists.
In this social group, such a sentiment is translated into editorial decisions made by individual reporters and editors covering Israel. And this, in turn, gives such thinking the means of mass self-replication.
And then there’s the media’s obsession with “Palestinian children.” I think it’s safe to say that no one (well, maybe, except for Hamas and other Palestinian terrorists) wants to see children die, especially in war. But when they are killed, they are killed by Hamas and other Palestinian terrorists, who literally hide among them and use babies and kids as human shields.
Their deaths are nothing short of tragic, and unlike the children deaths caused by Nazis, but produced by Allied forces in World War II, these deaths are disseminated to global television and social media audiences on a daily basis, using sources like “the Gaza Health Ministry.” Which, as we know, is run by none other than the Palestinian terrorist organization, Hamas. If your source is a terrorist organization, what does that say about the “journalism” you proclaim to do?
To add insult to injury, the numbers and images of Palestinian deaths are delivered by virtue-signaling TV anchors, reporters, and talking heads mostly enjoying the confines of far-far-away studios that are cozy and comfortable. They regret the deaths, pretend to care, and think out-loud in empty banalities. You might even hear them say things like: “Why can’t we all get along?” and “I thought there were no more wars.”
“Putting aside the naïveté, it is an astounding feature of this age that adults can be insulated from hardship, suffering, and reality,” said Steve Schmidt, a U.S. political and corporate strategist. “This is real life.”3
What most people don’t realize is that more Palestinian deaths is in great service to Hamas and other Palestinian terrorist organizations, which leverage and inflate these deaths, via the scale of today’s news media and social media, to generate more anger and dismay against Jews (both in Israel and around the world).
This anger and dismay is channeled into “pro-Palestinian” protests and other demonstrations, oversaturated with incendiary and lie-infested propaganda, otherwise known as antisemitism and Jew-hatred. These protests and demonstrations are, in turn, over-covered by the news media, which desperately needs more content to fill their absolutely unnecessary 24/7 “news” products.
What is likely different here compared to other wars is that, in this iteration, Jews are the so-called “perpetrators,” “oppressors,” and “colonizers.” In addition to these terms being so far removed from any sensical view of reality, the uglier characteristics of Palestinian politics and society are mostly untouched by the international press because they would disrupt the “Israel story,” a story of Jewish moral failure.
The news media’s editorial line, predominantly, is that the conflict is Israel’s fault, and the Palestinians and the Arab world are blameless. As one editor of the Associated Press Middle East regional desk put it: He he had gone from seeing himself as a proud member of the international press corps to “the Jew-boy with his finger in the dike.”
Hence why the news media and governments have created a charade that serves their own interests, but misleads the public. Officials oblige the media’s need for drama by fabricating crises and stage-managing their responses, thereby enhancing their own prestige and power.
Journalists dutifully report these fabrications. Both parties know the content is self-aggrandizing manipulations and fail to inform the public about the more complex (and more boring) issues of government policy and activity. Reporters are fully aware of the game they play. The old newsroom joke of, “Never forget who we are writing for: ourselves and each other,” speaks to this truth.
What has emerged, according to Paul Weaver — author of “News and the Culture of Lying: How Journalism Really Works” — is a “culture of lying.”
“The culture of lying,” he writes, “is the discourse and behavior of officials seeking to enlist the powers of journalism in support of their goals, and of journalists seeking to co-opt public and private officials into their efforts to find and cover stories of crisis and emergency response.”4
This is why most consumers of the “Israel story” do not understand how the story is manufactured. But Hamas and other Palestinian terrorist organizations do. Since assuming power in Gaza in 2007, the Islamic Resistance Movement has come to understand that many reporters are committed to a narrative wherein Israelis are oppressors and Palestinians passive victims with reasonable goals, and are uninterested in contradictory information.
“Recognizing this, certain Hamas spokesmen have taken to confiding to Western journalists, including some I know personally, that the group is in fact a secretly pragmatic outfit with bellicose rhetoric,” according to Matti Friedman, “and journalists — eager to believe the confession, and sometimes unwilling to credit locals with the smarts necessary to deceive them — have taken it as a scoop instead of as spin.”
That is, the news media has decided not just to describe and explain, but to “help.” And that is why they sadly do far more harm.
Friedman, Matti. “What the Media Gets Wrong About Israel.” The Atlantic.
Vanderwicken, Peter. “Why the News Is Not the Truth.” Harvard Business Review.
Schmidt, Steve. “Peace is what comes after war.” The Warning With Steve Schmidt.
Weaver, Paul H. “News and the Culture of Lying: How Journalism Really Works.” The Free Press, 1994.
After October 7th, I cancelled our subscriptions in print and on line to LA Times, NY Times, Washington Post, NPR. My husband and I also checked what our universities we attended were doing with the protests. We wrote to them and got non answers. We told them no more contributions. At least, we could find our own news outlets looking for the truth. I started reading Future of Jewish first thing in the mornings, gratefully since Joshua lives in Israel and is a brilliant writer and reporter. We subscribed early to the Free Press which tells the truth. We like the editorials in the WSJ. I am not bragging, just but saying we in California can take a small stand to find out the truth. Thank you for today’s excellent analysis of the bias exhibited by the media.
Sadly this includes the Israeli media which is really having a hard time because they hate Bibi but begrudgingly have to report that the country by a large margin supports finishing Hamas even defying the Americans to do so. Read the editorials to see where the Israeli press stands.....with Biden not with Israel