> Mr. Easterbrook said he planned to apologize in his Web site column 
> on Friday for "stumbling into a use of words that in the past people have taken as 
> code for anti-Semitic feelings.""
> 
Personally, having read his response, I am ready to give him a bit of a 
break. I think he was stupid, that's all, not anti-Semitic (and as everyone knows 
I'm pretty attuned to even mere hints of anti-Semitism). I think his problem is 
assuming there is and should be a connection between people's professed 
religion and their secular actions. I think there should be and I do try to live my 
faith, but I doubt most people see the connections (but that might be 
invidious thinking on my part).

Anyway, here's what Easterbrook posted as his apology 
(http://tnr.com/easterbrook.mhtml):

"AN APOLOGY: Nothing's worse, as a writer, than so mangling your own use of 
words that you are heard to have said something radically different than what 
you wished to express. Of mangling words, I am guilty. 

"Monday I wrote an item about the disgusting movie Kill Bill, which so 
glorifies violence as to border on filth. I was indignant that a major company whose 
work is mainly good, Disney, would distribute such awfulness, in this case 
through its Miramax subsidiary. I wondered how any top executive could live with 
his or her conscience by seeking profits from Kill Bill, oblivious to the 
psychological studies showing that positive depiction of violence in 
entertainment causes actual violence in children. I wondered about the consciences of 
those running Disney and Miramax. Were they Christian? How could a Christian 
rationalize seeking profits from a movie that glorifies killing as a sport, even as 
a form of pleasure? I think it's fair to raise faith in this context: In fact 
I did exactly that one week earlier, when I wrote a column about the movie 
The Passion asking how we could take Mel Gibson seriously as a professed 
Christian, when he has participated in numerous movies that glorify violence. 

"But those running Disney and Miramax are not Christian, they're Jewish. 
Learning this did in no way still my sense of outrage regarding Kill Bill. How, I 
wondered, could anyone Jewish--members of a group who suffered the worst act 
of violence in all history, and who suffer today, in Israel, intolerable 
violence--seek profit from a movie that glamorizes violence as cool fun? Below is 
the paragraph I wrote that's causing the stir (to read the item in its entirety 
from the beginning click here ). I quote it verbatim so that you can see how 
easy it is, on subjects like these, for good righteous anger to turn offensive 
by a careless choice of words: 
Set aside what it says about Hollywood that today even Disney thinks what the 
public needs is ever-more-graphic depictions of killing the innocent as cool 
amusement. Disney's CEO, Michael Eisner, is Jewish; the chief of Miramax, 
Harvey Weinstein, is Jewish. Yes, there are plenty of Christian and other 
Hollywood executives who worship money above all else, promoting for profit the 
adulation of violence. Does that make it right for Jewish executives to worship 
money above all else, by promoting for profit the adulation of violence? Recent 
European history alone ought to cause Jewish executives to experience second 
thoughts about glorifying the killing of the helpless as a fun lifestyle choice. 
But history is hardly the only concern. Films made in Hollywood are now shown 
all over the world, to audiences that may not understand the dialogue or even 
look at the subtitles, but can't possibly miss the message--now Disney's 
message--that hearing the screams of the innocent is a really fun way to express 
yourself. 

"I'm ready to defend all the thoughts in that paragraph. But how could I have 
done such a poor job of expressing them? Maybe this is an object lesson in 
the new blog reality. I worked on this alone and posted the piece--what you see 
above comes at the end of a 1,017-word column that's otherwise about why 
movies should not glorify violence. Twenty minutes after I pressed "send," the 
entire world had read it. When I reread my own words and beheld how I'd written 
things that could be misunderstood, I felt awful. To anyone who was offended I 
offer my apology, because offense was not my intent. But it was 20 minutes 
later, and already the whole world had seen it. 

"Looking back I did a terrible job through poor wording. It was terrible that 
I implied that the Jewishness of studio executives has anything whatsoever to 
do with awful movies like Kill Bill. Nothing about Eisner or Weinstein causes 
any movie to be bad or awful; they're just supervisors. For all I know 
neither of them even focused on the adoration-of-violence aspect until the reviews 
came out. My attempt to connect my perfectly justified horror at an ugly and 
corrupting movie to the religious faith and ethnic identity of certain 
executives was hopelessly clumsy. 

"Where I failed most is in the two sentences about adoration of money. I 
noted that many Christian executives adore money above all else, and in the 
20-minute reality of   blog composition, that seemed to me, writing it, fairness and 
fair spreading of blame. But accusing a Christian of adoring money above all 
else does not engage any history of ugly stereotypes. Accuse a Jewish person 
of this and you invoke a thousand years of stereotypes about that which Jews 
have specific historical reasons to fear. What I wrote here was simply wrong, 
and for being wrong, I apologize. 

"Every reporter who has called me today has asked me my faith. Since I say 
this is relevant for others, it's relevant for me. I'm a Christian. I worship in 
one of the handful of joint Christian-Jewish congregations in the United 
States. This website describes the Bradley Hills Presbyterian (USA) side of the 
church. This website describes Bethesda Jewish, a Klal Yisrael ("All Israel") 
congregation that shares the same worship spaces and finances. Two years ago I 
wrote in The New Republic of the Bradley Hills-Bethesda Jewish joint 
congregation, "One of the shortcomings of Christianity is that most adherents downplay 
the faith's interweaving with Judaism." I and my family sought out a place 
where Christians and Jews express their faith cooperatively, which seems to me a 
good idea. Bad idea: writing poorly about this, and being misunderstood. Again, 
I'm sorry."





Tom Beck

www.prydonians.org
www.mercerjewishsingles.org

"I always knew I'd see the first man on the Moon. I never dreamed I'd see the 
last." - Dr Jerry Pournelle
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