Morality vs. Propaganda: Boycott Eurovision or Bend a Knee to Genocidal Regime
Propaganda Wars: When Boycotts Become “Hate”
Ireland’s decision to boycott Eurovision because Israel remains invited has been spun into a morality play: Ireland is the villain, Israel the victim. According to the one of many pro-Zionist propaganda articles on MSN, Ireland is “hardly bothering to hide its anti-Semitism anymore.” Ah yes, the classic trick — label anyone who dares to criticize war crimes as a bigot, while the actual perpetrators of destruction are painted as bullied innocents.
Eurovision: From Glitter to Gaslighting
The European Broadcasting Union insists Eurovision must remain apolitical, yet somehow hosting a state accused of genocide is perfectly fine. Ireland, Spain, the Netherlands, and Slovenia say “no thanks,” and suddenly the headlines scream “hate for Israel.”
- Boycotting a song contest = “delegitimizing Israel.”
- Bombing refugee camps = “security.”
- Bulldozing homes = “necessary defense.”
It’s propaganda so absurd it could win Eurovision itself — if only lies were judged on choreography.
The Good Boy vs. The Bad Boy
In this twisted narrative:
- Israel, with its bulldozers and drones, is the “good boy.”
- Ireland, daring to say “stop committing war crimes,” is the “bad boy.”
It’s the equivalent of accusing the fire alarm of arson because it dared to make noise while the house burned.
Copy-Paste Propaganda
On MSN boards, the same accounts churn out identical talking points:
- “It’s all Hamas’ fault.”
- “Palestinians deserve collective punishment.”
- “Israel is just defending itself.”
It’s a copy-paste chorus, shadow-banning dissent by sheer volume. The goal isn’t to persuade — it’s to exhaust, to drown out nuance until only the propaganda remains.
Shadow Bans and Silenced Voices
Meanwhile, voices like mine, get buried. Algorithms throttle dissent, while propaganda flows freely. The irony? The very people accusing Ireland of censorship cheer when Palestinian voices are silenced, jailed, or buried under rubble.
Conclusion: The Real Delegitimization
The campaign to delegitimize Israel isn’t gathering momentum because of Eurovision boycotts — it’s gathering momentum because people can see the rubble, the orphaned children, the bulldozed homes. No amount of copy-paste propaganda can erase the evidence.
So let’s call it what it is: Ireland isn’t leading Europe’s “hate.” Ireland is leading Europe’s refusal to clap along while genocide auditions for a song contest.
Author: Mel Reese
EMAIL ADDRESS:
melreese72[at]outlook[dot]com
Propaganda Wars: When Boycotts Become “Hate”
Ireland’s decision to boycott Eurovision because Israel remains invited has been spun into a morality play: Ireland is the villain, Israel the victim. According to the one of many pro-Zionist propaganda articles on MSN, Ireland is “hardly bothering to hide its anti-Semitism anymore.” Ah yes, the classic trick — label anyone who dares to criticize war crimes as a bigot, while the actual perpetrators of destruction are painted as bullied innocents.
Eurovision: From Glitter to Gaslighting
The European Broadcasting Union insists Eurovision must remain apolitical, yet somehow hosting a state accused of genocide is perfectly fine. Ireland, Spain, the Netherlands, and Slovenia say “no thanks,” and suddenly the headlines scream “hate for Israel.”
- Boycotting a song contest = “delegitimizing Israel.”
- Bombing refugee camps = “security.”
- Bulldozing homes = “necessary defense.”
It’s propaganda so absurd it could win Eurovision itself — if only lies were judged on choreography.
The Good Boy vs. The Bad Boy
In this twisted narrative:
- Israel, with its bulldozers and drones, is the “good boy.”
- Ireland, daring to say “stop committing war crimes,” is the “bad boy.”
It’s the equivalent of accusing the fire alarm of arson because it dared to make noise while the house burned.
Copy-Paste Propaganda
On MSN boards, the same accounts churn out identical talking points:
- “It’s all Hamas’ fault.”
- “Palestinians deserve collective punishment.”
- “Israel is just defending itself.”
It’s a copy-paste chorus, shadow-banning dissent by sheer volume. The goal isn’t to persuade — it’s to exhaust, to drown out nuance until only the propaganda remains.
Shadow Bans and Silenced Voices
Meanwhile, voices like mine, get buried. Algorithms throttle dissent, while propaganda flows freely. The irony? The very people accusing Ireland of censorship cheer when Palestinian voices are silenced, jailed, or buried under rubble.
Conclusion: The Real Delegitimization
The campaign to delegitimize Israel isn’t gathering momentum because of Eurovision boycotts — it’s gathering momentum because people can see the rubble, the orphaned children, the bulldozed homes. No amount of copy-paste propaganda can erase the evidence.
So let’s call it what it is: Ireland isn’t leading Europe’s “hate.” Ireland is leading Europe’s refusal to clap along while genocide auditions for a song contest.
Author: Mel Reese
EMAIL ADDRESS:
melreese72[at]outlook[dot]com
