Stephen FryWhether intentional or not, it is a sick joke to suggest, as Fry does, that the words of Hamas are somehow more problematic than the actions of the racist war criminals of the State of Israel but given the stance of most of the mainstream media on Israel and the Palestinians there is always more space for denouncing Hamas and using their ridiculous charter as an excuse for Israel's war criminality than there is to denounce Israel.
Between the intense sanctimonious sensibilities of the left, on the one hand, and the brute moral certainties of the right, on the other, we squeezed liberals find ourselves (as ever) wringing our milk-white hands and wishing it were all otherwise. We don’t want to offend, but we cannot spend our lives walking on eggshells.
An example from each side. The truth has to be told about the genocidal madness of Hamas (read their “covenant” online if you don’t believe me. It’s not just every Jew across the world they want to kill, it’s also – I’m serious – Rotarians).The truth also has to be told about the failure of the west’s “war on drugs”. Not just a tactical failure, but a strategic and moral one.
So, from those two, more or less randomly chosen, subjects, here are two things that can’t be said. Israel has every right to resist coming to an accommodation with Palestine while it is led by Hamas. To save lives all over the planet, drugs must be legalised.I knew I shouldn’t have spoken.
*tiptoes away*
Stephen Fry is an English comedian, actor, writer and activist.
June 03, 2015
Can Stephen Fry be serious?
The trouble with asking comedians their view on a certain thing is that you don't know if their answer is a joke or not. That is certainly the case with Jews for Justice for Palestinians signatory, Stephen Fry. See this in the most recent New Statesman. It's headed "What you can't say. Stephen Fry, Slavoj Žižek, Elif Shafak and more say the unsayable". Now cop this:
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