Erick Stakelbeck had gained much
controversy before coming to speak at Portland State University on
Monday, May 14. The week prior to his arrival Students United for
Palestinian Rights (SUPER) had put out a call for “all students,
faculty, staff, and members of the broader community to join us for a
silent protest against hate and intolerance.” A few days later
Erick's blog reported that Christians United for Israel (CUFI) who
sponsored the event had put up posters promoting the event. Several
of these posters had been defaced with swastikas drawn over the Star
of David. Several other posters were ripped down shortly after being
posted.
In response to the controversy the
presentation had been upgraded to a larger room, moving from a
conference room into the much larger ballroom. Outside of the
ballroom was a posted sign stating that all bags, purses, and
backpacks would be searched.
Erick was scheduled to go on at
7:00pm. At 6:50 a single-file line of forty-five social activists
poured into the ballroom. The group, ranging in age and ethnicity,
entered filling the easternmost side of the room. The westernmost
side was already filled. The activists came holding signs and with
tape covering their mouths in a silent protest. The red, black, and
white tape read, “peace”, “NOH8”, and “justice”. Their
signs read, “Jews, Muslims, everyone unite against apartheid.”,
Pro-Israel against racism”, “No more war in the Middle-East”,
and “Your bigotry is showing.”
Before Erick's introduction was made
the room sat uncomfortably – two groups sitting on opposite sides
of the aisle like a wedding of feuding families. Erick's supporters
chatted idly on the bride's side, while SUPER patiently sat comforted
in their silence on the groom's side. Two uniformed officers lounged
in the back corner peering around the room, cautiously eying anyone
who dare walk to back table for a cookie or bottle of water. The
stage remained empty except for a large blue backdrop with a golden
emblem of the United States and Israel flags reading, “Christians
United for Israel”.
A student walked up onto the stage and
informed the audience of how the posters for the event had had
swastikas drawn on them in the middle of the Star of David,
clarifying, “This is hate speech – no different than burning a
cross on the lawn of an African American.” Moving along to address
the other public relations move made in anticipation of Erick's
arrival. “A student forwarded me a flier stating that our speaker
is racist and Islamaphobic. If someone is telling you we're racist or
Islamaphobic you're being manipulated.” He went on to introduce
the speaker, “He is an expert on terrorism and extremism. You can
often see him on the Glen Beck TV show.” The crowd feigns at
muffling their laughter. “Don't be afraid to take the tape off of
your mouth and ask a question.”
Erick Stakelbeck hearing his cue takes
the stage. Erick briefly reemphasizes the swastikas being etched on
his posters. “Does everyone here condemn the swastika over the Star
of David?” The entire audience bursts into applause denouncing this
act of hate.
Erick then discussed how he had coped
with the threats. “I will read from the Bible. I know it's scary, I
quote from the Bible.” Quoting Isiah 54:17 “'No weapon that is
formed against you shall prosper; and every tongue that shall rise
against you in judgment you shall condemn.' So I went to bed in
peace.”
Erick went on to talk about how Jews
had lived in Israel thousands of years ago when they were killed,
“were cleansed”, he corrected himself, “by the Roman empire.”
How Israel had continued to be threatened today by fifty-thousands of
missiles lined up by Hezbollah on Israel’s border.” Stakelbeck
did not mention the Iron Dome anti-missile defense system which the
United States is expected to announce they will fund with $680
million as part of $947 million aid package they plans to spend to
support Israel’s missile defense.
“Free exchange of ideas and the
truth will set you free.” It's not clear if he's being facetious or
not. He continues, “Well the Bible, that pesky Bible again.
Comparing Israelis to Nazis is the intellectual thing to do this
day.” While humor often works as an effective way to defuse
emotionally-charged situations, here Stakelbeck's use of sarcasm is
inappropriate. His reasoning continues to be full of simple and
sarcastic one-liners.
“While Christians in Muslim nations
are being cleansed. Christians in Israel have increased one-thousand
percent.” Stakelbeck continues to paint Christians as the
modern-day victim, never addressing the treatment that Muslims have
received in the United States and around the world following
September 11, 2001.
At 8:05 the collection of forty-five
Students United for Palestinian Rights stand together and leave. The
room tries not to notice, but can't help but turn and watch them.
Stakelbeck pleads, “Come back for the Q and A.” Other members of
the bride's side yell, “God bless you.” as the activists file out
mostly silent, mouths covered. They leave as they had arrived, and in
leaving empty the bulk of the groom's side. The void, immediately
apparent in the seating, also become apparent in Stakelbeck's ego. As
if attacked, he becomes defensive. “That was real productive and
enlightening. I'm a changed man. I've got nothing to hide. Read my
book and watch my show.” Defense transitions in to an apparent
fallback of marketing his media as a well-balanced truth.
Next, Stakelbeck introduces the Muslim
Brotherhood - “Terrorists in suits, that's what I call them, were
in our White House... They are talking to al-Qaeda, 'We have the same
goal, but our methods are different.” He goes on to describe the
Muslim Brotherhood as being nonviolent and moderate, working through
education and the democratic medium. “Why be violent when you can
get elected into office? And now they're in our White House!”. He
portrays this method as being more dangerous than violence, because
it is effective.
Next Stakelbeck takes on Iran.
“Iranian leaders say America is the Great Satan and Israel is the
Little Satan, and they're goose stepping – as the Nazis did – on
American and Israeli flags... You see? They bunch us together like
that. America and Israel, whether we like it or not. I don't know
about you, but I like it!... We are the ultimate prize to Iran. Do
you think if they wiped Israel off the map they'd be satisfied there?
Does anyone think they'd stop there?”
This is where Stakelbeck really hits
his stride. Selling the idea of terror, that everyone is out to get
us, and the bride's section remains engaged, hanging on his every
word. He goes on to talk about how Iran has nuclear tipped, ballistic
missiles which are capable of striking the east coast. “Now you
guys don't have to worry about that. You're safe out here, but you
have to be careful of Korea.” He won't be stopped, “The Iranians
are planning a serious terror attack and apparently they're not
scared of the repercussions. A regime like that where it's all about
martyrdom... No, I'm not making this up. I'm not speaking out of
ignorance. I'm not just making this up and speaking out of blind
ignorance.” He peppers his speech with these phrases, prodding his
audience along.
Stakelbeck goes on to speak of Iran's
growing number of embassies in Latin America and their interest to
develop missile bases in Cuba. If this expert on terror and extremism
hasn't scared you yet, he cites a congressmen who reports that
“Hezbollah has hundreds of operatives here on US soil. We suspect –
these are members of Congress speaking here – not a raving,
lunatic, racist, Islamaphobe Stakelbeck. These are members of a
freely-elected congress. They're here. It's not alarmism. It's a
fact. Let's not be caught blindsided again like we were in
nine-eleven.”
“The Muslim Brotherhood's creed is
jihad – holy war. Jihad is our way – dying in the way of Allah is
our highest hope. They've never changed that creed and motto... The
terrorist is here and the Muslim Brotherhood is here. They're even
guests at the White House. I encourage you to Google them. Apparently
our leaders don't have Google.”
Erick then turns plays a video of a
Red Cross member who works in Palestine. He sums up her testimony,
“She said in a very robotic, brainwashed way, 'Israel is the
occupier', so we get the left. Where's the left on woman’s rights
in Islam? The burka is very liberating. Where is the feminists?”.
Continual condescension, setting up an expert witness only to mock
her and her views for not conforming to his.
Stakelbeck closes with a Bible verse
from Isaiah 62:6. “'I have set watchmen upon thy walls, O
Jerusalem, which shall never hold their peace day nor night:
ye that make mention of the LORD, keep not silence.' So speak out, be
bold. Don't let cowards intimidate you. What can they do? You have
the truth on your side.” An “Amen” is belted from the crowd.
“Anyone who doesn't see what 's happening, there's some nasty times
coming. Instead of debating, call me Islamaphobe and a racist. I'm
here to educate. We need to be bold and confident.”
By the time Stakelbeck finishes the
educational Q and A he's promised only has time for three questions.
The first is by a woman who congratulates Stakelbeck, “You present
yourself as someone who really believes what you're saying, and you
say you need to educate us, but I see many people watching you and
became visibly upset with what you're saying. You believe your side
and they believe theirs. I don't believe you were entirely
respectful.”
What this woman is eluding to is
Stakelbeck's style. A true demagogue Erick's strength comes from
appealing to prejudice over reason. He coaxes his audience –
perhaps himself, that he can be trusted. He's the expert on the
situation, categorizing his opinions as “fact” and his
hate-spinning as “education”. Like a skilled surgeon, he goes to
work. First, applying the general anesthetic through Bible verses.
The audience responds to hearing the Bible the way our analytical
minds respond to comedic commercials – by shutting down, not
questioning anything, just taking in the message. Then he continues,
feeding them through the intravenous drip. Bits of how Christians,
Israelis and Americans are clearly being targeted. Then, the only
proper response is to target Muslims and Palestinians in a similar
fashion.
He sarcastically demonizes himself,
degrading his personal experience and knowledge. “But don't worry.
I don't know what I'm talking about. I'm just spouting off out of
ignorance.” This is his one-two combo. Setting himself as the
authority and then attacking straw men who would dare to challenge
his opinion. “This rabble-rouser, he's just a hater and a bigot,
but he's got all these facts – man!” His delivery drips with
condescension.
His approach was particularly
hypocritical while basing his monologue on othering Muslims as a
separate, different, and lesser person than us, while simultaneously
portraying Christianity as a persecuted religion - unjustly harassing
one religion while commending his own religion for being unjustly
harassed. If you need any more evidence that Stakelbeck's career has
been established on fear-mongering, look no further than his latest
book, titled, “Terrorist Next Door”.
Whether it was intentional or not,
Stakelbeck did not address that earlier that day Palestinian
prisoners had ended a nearly month-long, twenty-four hour hunger
strike. Over 2,000 political prisoners had united in the hunger
strike to challenge Israel's indefinite detention of Palestinians
without charge. Their condition sounds very similar to a new law in
the United States that Obama signed on New Years Eve 2011 – the
National Defense Authorization Act. The Palestinians ended their
hunger strike on agreement to terms that nineteen prisoners be
released from solitary confinement, approval of family visits from
relatives living in the Gaza Strip, and an agreement to no longer
hold prisoners without charge once they complete their terms.
A member of Students United for
Palestinian Rights was reached following the event for an interview
on their direct action. He stated, “Religious intolerance towards
the Muslim community is not OK. We forced him to hide his racism. He
really curved what he would normally say and what he says in his
interviews. We already had an effect and forced him to not be so
blatant about it.” The activist went on record to distance himself
and the group from the swastikas drawn on Stakelbeck's posters. “We
don't want any part of racism or hatred. Actually, SUPER along with
Jewish Voice for Peace will be hosting a discussion panel next week.”
Al-Nakba Awareness Week will be held at PSU and includes a discussion
on “Challenging anti-Jewish Oppression and the Misuse of
Antisemitism”, spoken word by Remi Kanazi, and Keynote speakers
Nora Barrows-Freidman and Neda Elia. In Palestine they will also be
commemorating May 15 which marks Nakba, meaning “catastrophe”.
Nakba is the day in 1948 when Israel declared statehood and exiled
hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their homes. Palestinians
will have a day of action including a massive rally in the Gaza Strip
with other actions scattered along the West Bank.
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