The Gold Coast Bulletin

The sobering truth about anti-Jewish hate speech

- Tim Blair

An old journalist colleague was once warned about his drinking, which had become a daily part of his working life. His editors in particular insisted, given that our mate was routinely unproducti­ve during afternoons, that he stop drinking at lunch.

With his job on the line, the colleague agreed. And then, the very next day, he turned up at the office after lunch reeking of booze.

Challenged by his bosses, he presented what he thought was an unbeatable defence. He hadn’t been drinking throughout the entire break, he said. He’d only “had a couple”.

Denial isn’t only a feature of alcoholic rationalis­ing.

Australia’s pro-Palestine movement is so riddled with intellectu­al hallucinat­ions and fantasy that it also tries to convince itself that massive self-inflicted failures are actually triumphs.

That’s why Palestinia­n activists and their supporters were running delirious victory laps all weekend on social media, after NSW police on Friday said anti-Jewish mobs at the Sydney Opera House in October did not, in fact, chant “gas the Jews”.

An “eminent expert” from the National Centre of Biometric Science, no less, had “made an examinatio­n of the audio and visual files taken from outside the Opera House on that occasion”.

His finding? “The expert has concluded with overwhelmi­ng certainty that the phrase chanted during that protest, as recorded on the audio and visual files, was ‘where’s the Jews?’, not another phrase as otherwise widely reported.”

Well, hooray for that. The Jewhating mob clearly chanted “f… the Jews”, as police confirm, but they didn’t say “gas the Jews”.

They merely asked where the Jews were, as they celebrated Hamas’s rape, torture, slaughter, animalisti­c defilement and abduction of more than 1000 Jews just a day or so earlier.

How completely innocent and reassuring. Not.

Remarkably, however, former ABC stand-in host Antoinette Lattouf cited the NSW police findings as a complete personal vindicatio­n.

“It took 100+ days, but NSW police can now confirm there’s no evidence ‘gas the Jews’ was chanted outside the Opera House,” Lattouf posted on X. “(Online reporter) Cameron Wilson and I investigat­ed the authentici­ty of the AJA (Australian Jewish Associatio­n) edited and distribute­d video. Then I was savagely targeted for doing accurate journalism.

“I look forward to receiving apologies from The Australian, Sky News, Australian Jewish Associatio­n, Executive Council for Australian Jewry and at least a couple of WhatsApp groups.”

Lattouf is perhaps a little optimistic on that front. Her “accurate journalism” mostly speculated in a doubt-inducing way about the origin and editing of the videos in question.

But police confirmed the videos “have not been doctored”. All the police investigat­ion did was propose an alternativ­e word to “gas”, resulting in a different phrase still loaded with anti-Jewish hatred and menace.

Everything else – the torching of Israeli flags, the “f… the Jews” chant, the October 7 triumphali­sm, the Hamas cheerleadi­ng and the authentici­ty of the videos distribute­d by the AJA – is either clearly documented or supported by police examinatio­n. Both Lattouf and Wilson acknowledg­ed that other anti-Jewish chants were made.

Still, “don’t hold your breath waiting for retraction­s and apologises (sic) from those in the business of propaganda in service of genocide,” wrote another Australian activist, Randa Abdel-Fattah, who on Friday said she was having “flashbacks to being grilled about the doctored video” by Sky’s Erin Molan.

In that October 13 “grilling”, Molan reasonably enough invited AbdelFatta­h to watch and listen to the Opera House videos. “They say ‘eff the Jews’ and ‘gas the Jews’,” host Molan pointed out following the clip.

In response Abdel-Fattah took matters beyond even the level of biometric science. “I didn’t hear anything,” she said.

Someone call NSW Police. We need an expert ruling on this.

And, personally, several daytime drinks.

 ?? ?? Former ABC presenter Antoinette Lattouf. Picture: Instagram
Former ABC presenter Antoinette Lattouf. Picture: Instagram
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