Editorials are posted and archived on thejewishnews.com Dry Bones Blind To Mideast History A recent set of international sur- veys indicated that since the start of Barack Obama's presi- dency the image of America has grown more positive in every country but one. The exception is Israel. It seems unlikely that last month's visit of U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates to Jerusalem will do much to change that. On the issues of freezing West Bank settlements and responding to the nucle- ar threat of Iran it appears, instead, that the gap between the United States and Israel is widening. Gates denied that the Obama adminis- tration is "naïve" about Iran's intentions and the threat it poses to Israel. Yet to many Israelis, and their supporters in America, that is exactly the word that comes to mind. The president seems intent on pursu- ing negotiations to dissuade Iran from developing a nuclear capability. Yet there is little in the history of Iran's theocratic government that would seem to support such hopes. Its intransigence in the face of mas- sive popular opposition to the conduct of the last election and its insistence that to oppose the will of the government is to oppose the will of God, do not leave much room for compromise. The slightest expression of friendship towards Israel by a government offi- cial was enough to get him removed as President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's chief deputy. Iran continues to confront Israel through its proxy terrorist organizations, Hezbollah and Hamas. So it is with some justification that Israelis look askance at America's professed eagerness to negoti- ate. In addition to this is President Obama's conviction that West Bank settlements hold the answer to peace with the Palestinians and through them with the entire Arab world. Gates informed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that only those settlements in which construction actually has begun will be allowed to expand. The Israeli government finds this unacceptable, insisting that the natural population growth of existing settle- ments must determine expansion. Obama's Jewish supporters, and there are many, insist that he is only trying to ISRAEL'S RUSE COMMUNITY IS DEMONSTRATING FOR EQUAL RIGHTS! bring a dose of reality to an Israeli govern- ment that refuses to bend on the issues that would lead to a Palestinian state. But several Jewish groups, most nota- bly the Zionist Organization of America, left a White House meeting with the president dismayed by a lack of sympathy for sweeping accom- modations already made by Israel and a lack of recognition of Palestinian intransi- gence on issues that go to the core of Israel's identity. At the moment these are concerns rather than defeats. The ties remain strong. But several commentators report that Obama's statements have left Israelis shaken and determined to chart their own course when it comes to Iran. An attack on Iran's nuclear facilities ORUSE NEWS THEY'VE ALREADY DEMONSTRATED THEIR EQUALITY www.DryBonesBlog.com unsupported by the U.S. government, either covertly or otherwise, would be a disaster. But other American presidents also took office with hopes for a Mideast peace, only to see them dashed on the rocks of Arab duplicity. President Obama would not be the first to revisit that course. ❑ Reality Check Voodoo News T here are a good many Americans who apparently believe the country's major sports have been infiltrated by witch doctors. I don't know how else to explain this outbreak of "curses" that ostensibly have been cast against certain teams because of wrongs committed in the past. Babe Ruth and the Boston Red Sox. Bobby Bragan and the Cleveland Indians. The owner of the Billy Goat Inn and the Chicago Cubs. Finally, Bobby Layne and the Detroit Lions. I was happy to see the Free Press recently debunk ... yet again ... the entire stupid Layne story. According to this voodoo hooey, when Layne was traded to Pittsburgh three games into the 1958 season, he said the Lions would not win another championship for 50 years. And by golly it all came true. No matter that his former teammates all swear that this would have been totally out of character for the fun-loving, high-living quar- terback. No matter that it has been traced to a blogger who concocted it out of thin air a few years ago. It has been reprinted as fact by people who refuse to accept that decades of mismanage- ment are far more powerful weapons than curses when it comes to losing football games. But there are several darker aspects to this phenomenon. There is strong evidence that Layne was being investigated by the feds back then for associations with unsavory friends. He threw five interceptions in half a game against the College All Stars before the 1958 season and then made two game-deciding mis- cues in a game three tie with Green Bay. In both instances, the Lions were heavy favorites and big money came out of Detroit against them late in the week. The Lions were told to get him out of town in a trade or face the consequences. His teammates are much more reluctant to deny that version of events than the curse story. Beyond that, however, is the power of the Internet to persuade its users to accept the implausible. That is the major tragedy of the decline of newspapers as a primary news source. It is not so much that people are uninformed. It is that they firmly believe things that are sim- ply untrue. As British author G.K. Chesterton put it in another context: "The danger in the decline of religious belief is not that people will believe in nothing. It is that they will believe anything." Or, if you prefer, the Stevie Wonder version: "If you believe in things that you can't understand then you suffer." We chuckle at the gullibility of our forebears who were taken in by hoaxes that seem obvious to our enlightened eyes. Yet on a daily basis, I am sent alarming e-mails about any number of subjects; the slightest fact check on any of them would reveal that they are false. Or attributed to a celebrity who never said any such thing. Of course, I'm probably as guilty as anyone. I held on to my Lions season tickets for years on the misbegotten belief that someday soon they would again emerge as a championship team. If that isn't believing in magic, I don't know what is. ❑ George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor614@aol.com. August 6 2009 35