SOLDIERS OF IDF VS ARAB TERRORISTS

SOLDIERS OF IDF VS ARAB TERRORISTS
Showing posts with label Boycotting Israel businesses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boycotting Israel businesses. Show all posts

Sunday, April 29, 2012

British co-op boycotts Palestinian Arab farmers

From The Guardian:
The Co-operative Group has become the first major European supermarket group to end trade with companies that export produce from illegal Israeli settlements.

The UK's fifth biggest food retailer and its largest mutual business, the Co-op took the step as an extension of its existing policy which had been not to source produce from illegal settlements that have been built on Palestinian territories in the West bank.

Now the retail and insurance giant has taken it one step further by "no longer engaging with any supplier of produce known to be sourcing from the Israeli settlements".

The decision will hit four companies and contracts worth some £350,000. But the Co-op stresses this is not an Israeli boycott and that its contracts will go to other companies inside Israel that can guarantee they don't export from illegal settlements.

Welcoming the move, Palestinian human rights campaigners said it was the first time a supermarket anywhere in the west had taken such a position.

The Co-op's decision will immediately affect four suppliers, Agrexco, Arava Export Growers, Adafresh and Mehadrin, Israel's largest agricultural export company. Other companies may be affected by the policy.
Right now, if Palestinian Arab farmers want to export their goods to Europe, they use Agrexco as their distributor. They even have their own brand, Coral.

Agrexco ensures that their goods would be accepted in the international markets by providing quality control and an already existing infrastructure for refrigeration, transportation, marketing and other services. 

In other words, the Co-op is now boycotting Palestinian Arab farmers who have no other means of distributing their goods to the West, and directly hurting them - and the Palestinian Arab economy as a whole. Tomatoes and other produce grown in Gaza will be affected as well.

The Co-op has made a decision that hurting Israeli companies is more important than helping Palestinian Arabs who have no alternative means to market their products to the West. And this is the hypocrisy that shows that BDS cares not one bit about the people they pretend to be helping.

More on this hypocrisy here.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

YNET: Israel boycotters target authors, artists After facing boycotts of its academics, unions and commercial products, cultural snubbing may be hardest for Jewish state to swallow. 'We are used to being threatened physically by our neighbors, but this is a new intellectual threat,' says music promoter

When British novelist Ian McEwan accepted a prestigious Israeli literary award last week, he used the occasion tocriticize Israeli policies in the West Bank and east Jerusalem.

His high-powered audience, which included the nation's president and the mayor of Jerusalem, responded in an unexpected way: They gave him a warm ovation, ecstatic that the renowned writer had even agreed to show up.

Like many other celebrities and artists of late, McEwan faced calls urging him to boycott the Jewish state.

The campaign is led by Palestinians, Israeli leftists and other supporters who oppose Israel's policies toward the Palestinians and are attuned to the power of celebrity in this age.

It has had some success, deterring a string of famous entertainers from performing.

McEwan said he faced "vigorous calls" with "varying degrees of civility" to turn down The Jerusalem Prize – Israel's most prestigious award for foreign writers. Instead, he decided to come to engage Israelis, not isolate them.

"If I only went to countries that I approve of, I probably would never get out of bed," the author of the best-selling book "Atonement" told The Associated Press. "It's not great if everyone stops talking." 

'False sense of business as usual'

Most artists have resisted the pressure and gone ahead with their Israel appearances. Elton John, Leonard Cohen, Madonna and Paul McCartney are among the entertainers to perform in Israel in recent years.

Others have bowed to the pressure.

Over the past year, Elvis Costello and the Pixies canceled concerts, as well as the British dance band Klaxon and the Gorillaz Sound System. Santana and Bjork also called off concerts, without explaining why.

Announcing his decision last year, Costello spoke of "intimidation, humiliation or much worse" inflicted by Israel on the Palestinians and said sometimes "merely having your name added to a concert schedule may be interpreted as a political act." Costello's representatives refused to comment for this story.

Considering how strong and widespread the international opposition is to Israel's 43-year-old occupation, it might seem striking that the country is so well integrated into the world community: a close ally of the United States with a tight association with the European Union and growing trade with the emerging giants of Asia.

Israel has faced occasional boycotts of its academics, unions and in some cases commercial products – but it is the cultural snubbing that may be hardest to swallow.

"We are used to being threatened physically by our neighbors, but this is a new intellectual threat," said Oren Arnon, a music promoter who had to cancel the sold-out Pixies concert after the group bailed out.

"Saying that you are wrong is one thing – which is what McEwan is saying – but saying you have no right to a normal life because of your government's actions is something that is easier to take offense to."

Boycott activists say that's precisely the point.

"When people come to Israel, it gives a false sense of business as usual," said Ofer Neiman, an Israeli boycott activist. "As long as this atmosphere goes on, the Israeli public will not be motivated to change things." 

'BDS Bieber'

Neiman is linked to the Global Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Movement, which "urges a total boycott of the state of Israel until justice and the rule of law are reinstated in historic Palestine." Neiman was among a small group of activists who heckled McEwan at a literary function Tuesday.

Activists connected to the group even produced a clip called "BDS Bieber," parodying Justin Bieber's hit "Baby," with lyrics calling on the 16-year-old pop star to cancel his upcoming concert in Israel.

Israel accuses boycott advocates of capitalizing on artists' ignorance.

"I doubt Justin Bieber would be able to tell the difference between Tel Aviv and Tashkent on the map," said Eytan Schwartz, who has campaigned against the boycott movement.

"I don't hold Elvis Costello responsible for British troops killing people in Afghanistan and I don't hold Justin Bieber responsible for what happens in Iraq. So why are concertgoers in Tel Aviv accountable for the policies of their government?"

Italian writer Umberto Eco, attending the same book festival as McEwan, said boycotting Israelis for their governments' policies was itself "a form of racism" and "absolutely crazy."

McEwan said that despite rejecting the boycott, he felt compelled to voice his opposition to Israeli policies, particularly because his award recognizes writing that promotes the idea of "the freedom of the individual in society."

In his speech, he railed against Israel's "confiscation, land purchases and expulsion in east Jerusalem" – but he also credited the country with "extraordinary vitality" that manifested itself in an abundance of opinion and has produced an "amazing literary culture."

Friday, January 14, 2011

A truly moronic video: Boycott of Aroma Espresso Bar Reaches Ma'ale Adumim



One of the current targets of the BDS (boycott, divest, sanction) movement is Aroma Cafe, a chain of coffee shops throughout Israel (some Kosher, some not), which has a store in New York City. This video was put out by Adalah, an 'Israeli Arab' organization (financed by the New Israel Fund), which is active in the BDS movement. The video is moronic. Please don't have any glasses near your computer when you play it. But I'm showing it to you for a reason that you won't get until you see it.


If you click through to the YouTube site, you will see that the comments are overwhelmingly pro-Israel. But this one is too good a catch not to share.
looking at the length of the shadows and also that no one else was around they must have filmed this at dawn. guess their convictions were not strong enough to do this when normal people were around?
Go back and watch again and you'll see that s/he is 100% correct. There's no one inside. It may have been filmed on Shabbat (I have no idea whether the branch in Maaleh Adumim is Kosher and whether it is closed on Shabbat), but it was definitely filmed shortly after sunrise. These people are clearly afraid that someone was going to see them doing this.

Heh.

By the way, if the Aroma Cafe in New York is Kosher, please patronize it.