My mother
who is 88 years old likes to send and or forward emails that she finds
interesting, relevant, or funny. Many of them are animal and nature photos or
jokes that someone sent her. She also sends a lot of links to MoveOn.org
petitions because she is very liberal and politically involved with the Democratic
Party. I also want to mention (because of where I am going with this story)
that she is Jewish but not religious, and has visited Israel a couple of times.
All that being said, let’s get on
with the content of the email she sent me (and 42 other people) with the
subject line of Fwd: Brilliant and in which she just wrote FYI.
During the recent cease-fire, the leader of the Palestinian
terrorist organization Hamas, Khaled Mashal, sent a gift to the Prime Minister
of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, in an elaborate box with a note. After having
the box checked for safety reasons, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu opened
the box and saw that the content was human feces. He opened the note,
handwritten in Arabic by Mr. Mashal, which said, "For you and the proud
people of the Zionist Entity."Mr. Netanyahu, literate in Arabic, pondered
the note and decided how best to reciprocate. He quickly did so by sending the
Hamas leader a very pretty package with a personal note. Mr. Mashal and the
other leaders of Hamas were very surprised to receive the parcel and opened it
very carefully suspecting that it might contain a bomb. But to their surprise
they saw that it contained a tiny computer chip. The chip was rechargeable with
solar energy, had a 1.8 terabyte memory and could output a 3D hologram display
capable of functioning in any type of cellular phone, tablet or laptop. It was
one of the world's most advanced technologies, with a tiny label,
"Invented and produced in Israel." Mr. Netanyahu's note, personally
handwritten in Arabic, Hebrew, French, and English, stated very courteously... "Every leader
gives the best his people can produce."
My initial reaction was a slight
chuckle, then I got upset because it’s very Racist (and that’s not like my
mother) and finally I started wondering if my mother actually thought this was
a true story considering she put FYI at the beginning of the forward. My
feeling was that this was a joke story but I thought I should do a little fact
checking before I blasted my mother for sending it to her email group.
After about a 5 minute Google search
I found that the story had originally been published in 2014 by a website
called To The Point News, who tout themselves as “The Oasis for Rational
Conservatives”. The only other references I could find were posts on Facebook
and chat rooms so my conclusion was that this is “Fake News”.
So now the question is, why did my
mother, who’s intelligent, well read, and keeps up with the news think this was
something worth sharing? First, the original email came from a guy in her
Sierra Club group (in hindsight she did say she should have paid more attention
since he is a Republican). Second, the story makes Israel look good. And last
but not least, it sounds plausible, like it could be true.
This email my mother forwarded is a
better example of an insensitive joke than fake news but it still gives us the
opportunity to discuss the fake news hype.
Fake news is nothing new, I’m sure it’s been around since early man
started telling stories around the fire and was probably used to try and make
his adversaries look bad. It’s basically gossip with the intent to manipulate
social or political thought. Back before the internet we called it “spin” and
there were people known as Spin Doctors, now they are “Communications
Specialists” who give us “alternative facts”.
At its core, a lot of fake news is
propaganda. That’s kind of what my mother’s email was in that it tried to elevate
Israelis while denigrating Palestinians. The fake news/propaganda tries to
elicit an emotional rather than a rational response from the recipient because
they are much easier to manipulate that way. And Psychological Manipulation is
what all this current fake news crap is all about.
The powers that be, whether
politicians, big business, religious leaders, or the super rich are all trying
to influence us into their way of thinking. Social media has made it so much
faster and easier to get the message and or disinformation out to the masses
that most of us can’t even keep up with the sheer volume let alone figure out
what’s fact or fiction.
To view the column in it's original form go to page 5 of the following link. Winters Express 4/19/18