this post was submitted on 26 Apr 2024
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That is not the implication I am getting from those headlines. Those people are pro-Palestinian, as we all should be.
I agree that we should all support a free and independent Palestine, but that's not the game the American media is playing. All you have to do is look at "conservative" media to see the strategy play out. "Pro-palestine must mean anti-israel."
But that doesn't say 'pro-Palestine?'
And I really don't think that the IDS is part of this media machine you're talking about considering the articles are written by students.
I meant that naming the protests as "pro-palestine" immediately sets up the narrative as an "one versus the other", which leads to " anti-israel" headlines like the one I shared. That narrative distracts people from the main objective, which is to halt the genocide of the Palestinian people.
Okay, but again, I really don't think an IU student newspaper run and written by students is trying to contribute to that narrative. I really doubt they've taken a "simp for Israel" journalism class.
I don't know who downvoted you, but it wasn't me.
The problem with little word games like "pro-palestine" instead of "anti-genocide" is that they are very sneaky and become the default verbiage before we can realize the effect they can have. To this day you still find people arguing against climate change because once upon a time we called it "global warming".
It is easier to argue against Palestine than it is to defend genocide.
I don't disagree with you in general, I just think in this specific case, the students writing the article are more likely to be sympathetic to the protesters fight against the genocide.
As far as downvoting, don't sweat it, it doesn't bother me. People are allowed to not like what I have to say.