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Aiyana Lake's avatar

I've worked in the industry for almost twenty years, and have been to LA a bunch of times, pretty much annually. Years ago, I was stunned when I tried to schedule a trip around Yom Kippur and couldn't get any meetings on that day. I went to see an Arab colleague at a big agency and it was him and a few others in the office, but everyone had taken the day off. He said, "Oh yeah, everyone's off during Jewish holidays. Even when they're not Jewish. No work gets done and no one important is around."

When Oct 7th happened, this agency forced all employees to attend a session with a Rabbi, regardless of their faith. Their CEO came out loud and proud in the press with racist rhetoric against Palestinians. My Arab colleague had an Israeli flag baseball cap dropped on his desk. I saw other Arab colleagues and Muslims demoted or fired for speaking up for Palestine.

There is so much fear because this industry is riven with Zionism. They will speak up against Russia, no problem, but they can't speak up for Palestine because some very powerful people in Hollywood will have them blacklisted and they won't work again. I've seen it. On the ground, there are many artists, representatives, and industry folk who are pro-Palestine, but they are muzzled by fear. Coupled with an extraordinarily rough time in the industry since COVID and the strikes, people are trying to keep their heads down and stay employed.

I don't excuse it and I don't like that there are a tiny handful of people who are risking their livelihoods to protest Israeli brutality while everyone else hides behind them. Until we can move power out of Hollywood and away from Zionists, this will continue to happen. It is very disappointing but it doesn't surprise me at all.

Jordan's avatar

You want to know an insane example of selective outrage like this?

In 2024, Hannah Ritchie (who markets herself as an environmentalist but works for Our World in Data, the progress liberals you've written about before) wrote about a book festival boycott. 

A group called Fossil Free Books arranged the boycott, citing two reasons:

- Baillie Gifford, the sponsor, invests in fossil fuels.

- They invest in the war machine, particularly those companies supporting/profiting from the genocide in Gaza.

Ritchie criticised the boycott, comparing it to book-burning and wrote a long, rambling column on her substack where she didn't mention Gaza once. She only focused on the fossil fuel investment (she literally argued that they only invest 2% of their portfolio into fossil fuels, which is lower than the industry average), and just pretended the genocide wasn't a major reason for the boycott. 

Read their statement, made on the anniversary of the Nakba, and then the article Ritchie wrote (or as much as you can before being sick). It’s genuinely mind-blowing. I couldn’t stop thinking of that while reading this post and it exposes the kinds of people you’ve written about before.

https://x.com/fossilfreebooks/status/1790659934381605047/photo/2 

https://hannahritchie.substack.com/p/book-festival-funding

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