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David Aaronovitch

ByDavid Aaronovitch, David Aaronovitch

Opinion

The dark side of Twitter and the blame game

July 16, 2015 13:49
2 min read

You know what free association is. Freud invented it. You say a word and I say what comes into my head and my choice tells us something about my mind. Anyway, the writer Mehdi Hasan took issue with Howard Jacobson on Twitter and I took issue back. But it's what happened next that provoked this column. A series of people then got involved, some of them very angry with me. Take J, a professional woman photographer based, I think, in Bristol. "Journalism is dead," she tweeted me, "we've a nation of Muslim hating warmongering scribblers, sickening!"

Then J posted a tweet accompanying a story from the Catholic Herald in 1975 about how Jimmy Savile was about to go to Israel. He was shown receiving some scriptures from a couple of British rabbis. J's accompanying comment was "Savile love(d) Israel! It's not a secret!" .

Until that point no one had mentioned either Israel or Jimmy Savile. The only conceivable point of the tweet was somehow to link paedophilia, Israel and - in this instance - me. A couple of minutes later another woman - M - retweeted J's Savile tweet and then added a comment of her own. A friend of hers "in catering" had witnessed "Zionists" wearing Jimmy Savile masks at a Purim celebration.

I tugged on the thread of this one to see where it would lead. How did her friend know they were Zionists? Easy, she replied, they were members of the Zionist Federation. Purim had been in March so I then asked her where in the country this had happened - it would then be easy enough to check. She didn't reply.