Sunday, November 4, 2007

Zionist Denounces Canadians Using the Internet to Bypass Zionist Propaganda

Leo Adler: Concerned that Canadians are bypassing the media

by anarchore on August 12th, 2007

Leo Adler of the Simon Wiesenthal propaganda Centre is apparently on tour, with the press dutifully reporting his anti-speech message.

Speaking in Vancouver August 10th:

“Now they bypass the media by creating websites — often based offshore beyond the rule of Canada’s hate laws — to promote their messages, Adler said.”

Why would this Zionist have a problem with people bypassing the media for the news?

Could it be that the media are but mouthpieces for pro-Zionist propaganda, as exemplified by articles like this?

Gee, I wonder why the media is losing viewers to the internet. Could it be that we crave real news and truth, instead of passively sitting there while the likes of Adler brainwash us with their pro-Israel BS, scaremongering about terrorism and attempting to recruit support for stifling of online criticism of Zionists?

We need to regulate the internet, because according to people like Adler Canadians cannot handle the truth. They might fall under the spell of ‘hatemongers’.

http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html?id=18118197-cd55-4994-84b6-2a50190092f9&k=29314

Hate mongers flock to the net

More than 7,000 websites said to be ‘direct-marketing’ racism and violence

Neal Hall, Vancouver Sun
Published: Saturday, August 11, 2007

The Internet has enabled a proliferation of sites that promote racial discrimination and allow hate mongers “direct-marketing” of their message to the YouTube generation, says Toronto criminal lawyer Leo Adler.

“Ten years ago, there was only one site,” said Adler, who is also director of national affairs for the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Centre for Holocaust Studies.

“Last year, we found 6,000 and now it’s jumped to 7,000 sites,” he said Friday in Vancouver, pointing out that one billion people use the Internet.

Some sites create racist video-style games to entice children, Adler said, using his computer to demonstrate how one site features a game called Border Patrol that allows the viewer to shoot Mexicans trying to cross the border into the U.S. — they scream and blood spurts as they are shot.Another site features Kaboom: The Suicide Bombing game, in which a suicide bomber walks along the street and the game player makes him explode in a pool of blood, racking up points by taking out nearby men, women and children.

Another site has a game that promotes homophobia by encouraging violence against gay men, he said.

“We do this presentation not to glorify but to make people aware,” Adler said.

Twenty years ago, hate mongers had to mimeograph or photocopy their message and hand it out, he said.

“The only way they got in the news was if they became the news,” he said.

Now they bypass the media by creating websites — often based offshore beyond the rule of Canada’s hate laws — to promote their messages, Adler said.

Children doing Google searches often stumble onto such sites, which may be cloaked as promoting freedom of speech, he added.

Last year, a girl in Burlington, Ont., went to a site run by a neo-Nazi and became convinced the Holocaust never happened. She went on to convince some of her classmates, Adler said.

He also pointed out that there are suicide-bombing training videos on YouTube. He played one showing a middle-class woman saying goodbye to her young son while holding a detonator device in her hands.

The Internet also provides information on how to build a bomb — the information used by Timothy McVeigh to blow up the federal building in Oklahoma City in 1995 — and how to use a cellphone as a detonator.

This is the dark side of the Internet, he said, as he unveiled a new CD called Digital Terrorism: Hate on Demand, which shows how extremist groups harness the power of the Internet. It’s a joint project of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre and the Canadian Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center.

He pointed out two “problematic” B.C. websites: B.C. White Pride, which operates on a server in Chicago, and Jihad Unspun, which has its server in Vancouver.

He said his group informs the operators of web servers and asks for offensive Internet sites to be removed, or reports them to police.

Adler also presented an award Friday to Ann Fung, president of the Law Society of B.C., in recognition of the society battling intolerance.

The law society, along with the Vancouver Holocaust Education Centre and the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Centre for Holocaust Studies, will sponsor a month-long exhibit beginning Nov. 1 at SFU Harbour Centre called Lawyers Without Rights, which illustrates what happens when politics intervene in the legal system and the rule of law is suspended. There will also be a public evening forum Nov. 22 related to the exhibit.

nhall@png.canwest.com

© The Vancouver Sun 2007

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