An exchange between The Atlantic‘s liberal editor Peter Beinart and Rich Lowry, his counterpart at the right-wing The National Review, went viral overnight after the two veteran journalists sparred on CNN Monday over Israel’s treatment of Palestinians and the recent move by the Israeli government to bar U.S. Congresswomen Rashida Tlaib and Ilhan Omar from visiting the Occupied Territories.
Beinart clashed with Lowry over the U.S. government’s and corporate media’s long history of ignoring the plight of Palestinians who face restricted movement and checkpoints manned by armed Israeli guards,
food shortages, and a decimated healthcare system.
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During the exchange, Beinart said it took him visiting the occupied West Bank and seeing its oppressive nature in-person before he changed his position on the longstanding Israeli-Palestinian conflict—and suggested the same could be true if lawmakers end their tradition of traveling to Israel on trips sponsored by AIPAC.
“The first time I went to spend time with Palestinians in the West Bank, it was a shattering experience,” Beinart said. “When you see people living under the control of the state with no rights—they cannot become citizens. They cannot vote for control of the state that controls their lives. They do not have free movement…People need to go and see for themselves. I’ve never seen anyone who’s gone and seen for themselves and not been transformed by the experience.”
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