From Yahoo:
“Mark Ruffalo apologizes for
suggesting Israel committed 'genocide'”
Actor Mark Ruffalo's apology for
social media posts that he said suggested Israel was "committing
'genocide'" amid the recent fighting with Palestinians in the Gaza Strip
is drawing praise and backlash — highlighting the delicate and fraught nature
of the longstanding conflict. Ruffalo, an outspoken Emmy Award-winning and
Oscar-nominated actor, tweeted Monday that he had "reflected & wanted
to apologize for posts during the recent Israel/Hamas fighting that suggested
Israel is committing 'genocide'" and that "it's not accurate, it's
inflammatory, disrespectful & is being used to justify antisemitism here
& abroad." The fighting had escalated for nearly two weeks this month,
leaving hundreds dead, the majority Palestinians, and parts of the impoverished
Gaza Strip reduced to rubble. A bilateral cease-fire agreement between Israel
and the Palestinian militant group Hamas took hold Friday, but the conflict
sparked massive pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian demonstrations across the
world.
In the United States, the
protests have attracted diverse groups of people, and pro-Palestinian activists
have demanded that America end its funding of Israel's military, saying the
Biden administration is complicit in "war crimes" in the region, and
are calling for an end to the occupation of the Palestinian territories. Meanwhile,
American Jewish organizations have reported a wave of antisemitic incidents and
apparent hate crime attacks, including against synagogues in suburban Chicago
and Tucson, Arizona. Jewish people have also been physically assaulted and
harassed in the streets of Los Angeles, New York and South Florida, leading
President Joe Biden on Monday to condemn the "hateful behavior."
Mosques have also reported anti-Muslim vandalism this month, with one house of
worship in Brooklyn getting spray-painted with the phrase, "Death to
Palestine."
It's unclear what posts Ruffalo
was apologizing for, but he suggested in a May 11 tweet that Israel's actions
were comparable to apartheid in South Africa and that sanctions could similarly
work against Israel. "1500 Palestinians face expulsion in #Jerusalem. 200
protesters have been injured. 9 children have been killed," he wrote. While
some Twitter users are thanking Ruffalo, who previously told The Hollywood
Reporter that he grew up in a Roman Catholic Italian family, for trying to tamp
down the rhetoric surrounding the sensitive subject, others questioned if he is
being "intimidated into silence" and "backtracking." Several
celebrities have faced similar criticism in recent days for being vocal about
where they stand on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Over the weekend, the
English singer Dua Lipa tweeted in response to an organization that paid for a
full-page ad in The New York Times equating her public support of Palestinians
as antisemitic. She wrote that the ad used her name "shamelessly" to
"advance their ugly campaign with falsehoods and blatant
misrepresentations." "I stand in solidarity with all oppressed people
and reject all forms of racism," she added.
^ It seems Hollywood tends to be
on the wrong-side of an issue (ie. Jussie Smollett, Israel, etc.) and are the
most vocal. Then when the truth comes out most slither away and act as though
they never said anything. The only thing that surprises me here is that Mark
Ruffalo actually publicly admitted his mistake (his Anti-Semitism) and publicly
apologized for it. Most of Hollywood should learn from him and follow his lead
and do the same for their Anti-Semitic statements and posts. They won't, but
they should. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/mark-ruffalo-apologizes-israel-hamas-154500381.html
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