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Useful idiots "bury Gaza in flour"
The Boston Globe has just run an op-ed under the headline "Ending the Stranglehold on Gaza." The authors are Eyad al-Sarraj, identified as founder of the Gaza Community Mental Health Program,
That's working well...
and Sara Roy, identified as senior research scholar at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard University. The bias of the op-ed speaks for itself, and I won't even dwell on it. But I do want to call attention to this sentence:
Although Gaza daily requires 680,000 tons of flour to feed its population, Israel had cut this to 90 tons per day by November 2007, a reduction of 99 percent.
You don't need to be a math genius to figure out that if Gaza has a population of 1.5 million, as the authors also note, then 680,000 tons of flour a day come out to almost half a ton of flour per Gazan, per day.
I tried to find a statistic for how much flour the U.S. consumes in a year, or how much Pillsbury grinds, or some such, for the sale of comparison. By any measure, half a ton per person per day is a helluva lot of filafel.
(On the other hand, maybe that explains Sufa Arafat's ample charms.)

A typographical error at the Boston Globe? Hardly. The two authors used the same "statistic" in an earlier piece. They copied it from an article published in the Ahram Weekly last November, which reported that "the price of a bag of flour has risen 80 per cent, because of the 680,000 tonnes the Gaza Strip needs daily, only 90 tonnes are permitted to enter." Sarraj and Roy added the bit about this being "a reduction of 99 percent."

Note how an absurd and impossible "statistic" has made its way up the media feeding chain.
Shooed along by people who aren't real good at arithmetic...
It begins in an Egyptian newspaper,
If you can't trust an Egyptian newspaper, who can you trust?
is cycled through a Palestinian activist,
... almost as trustworthy as an Egyptian newspaper...
is submitted under the shared byline of a Harvard "research scholar,"
... but not, we might add, a math major. Not even a business major...
and finally appears in the Boston Globe, whose editors apparently can't do basic math.
Well, I have it on good authority that the math requirement for journalism majors has been cut, so they don't hafta know how to add and subtract!
Now, in a viral contagion, this spreads across the Internet, where that "reduction of 99 percent" becomes a well-attested fact.

What's the truth? I see from a 2007 UN document that Gaza consumes 450 tons of flour daily. The Palestinian Ministry of Economy, according to another source, puts daily consumption at 350 tons. So the figure for total consumption retailed by Sarraj and Roy is off by more than three orders of magnitude, i.e. a factor of 1,000. . . .
Posted by: Mike 2008-01-28
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=222015