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Thoughts and Googling on the NYT Analyst Article

by: LithiumCola

Sun Apr 20, 2008 at 20:15:57 PDT        
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(10 am - promoted by ek hornbeck)

Take a look at this paragraph from page 4 of today's blockbuster NYT article:

Two of NBC's most prominent analysts, Barry R. McCaffrey and the late Wayne A. Downing, were on the advisory board of the Committee for the Liberation of Iraq, an advocacy group created with White House encouragement in 2002 to help make the case for ousting Saddam Hussein.

Hmm.  Why don't we have some fun with google?  This goes some interesting places.

LithiumCola :: Thoughts and Googling on the NYT Analyst Article
Going to Wikipedia, we find this:

The Committee for the Liberation of Iraq (CLI) was described as a "non-governmental organization" which described itself as a "distinguished group of Americans" who wanted to free Iraq from Saddam Hussein. In a news release announcing its formation, the group said its goal was to "promote regional peace, political freedom and international security through replacement of the Saddam Hussein regime with a democratic government that respects the rights of the Iraqi people and ceases to threaten the community of nations." It had close links to the Project for the New American Century (PNAC) and the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), important shapers of the Bush administration's foreign policy.

The Washington Post reported in November 2002 that "the organization is modeled on a successful lobbying campaign to expand the NATO alliance. Members include former secretary of state George P. Shultz, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and former senator Bob Kerrey (D-Neb.). ... While the Iraq committee is an independent entity, committee officers said they expect to work closely with the administration. They already have met with Hadley and Bush political adviser Karl Rove. Committee officers and a White House spokesman said Rice, Hadley and Cheney will soon meet with the group."

Did you see John McCain in that list?  I knew you did!

Continuing . . .

With the successful removal of Saddam Hussein, the committee appears to have disbanded, and its once-prominent website no longer exists. However, its offices still remain on Pennsylvania Avenue and 10th Street.

The film Syriana portrays a similar group, using the same initials, but bearing the name 'Committee for the Liberation of Iran'.

Well, I guess in a conspiracy movie like Syriana, you can get away with naming a group "Committee for the Liberation of Iran" after you just got done having a group called "Committee for the Liberation of Iraq."

But not in real life.  That would be to conspiratorial.  So how about we form a group and call it the "Iran Policy Committee"?

Wiki sez:

The Iran Policy Committee (IPC), formed in February, 2005, is a pressure group meant to influence US government policy towards Iran. IPC is made up of former White House, State Department, The Pentagon and CIA officials as well as scholars from think tanks and academia.

Okay.  Well, who is on this Iran Policy Committee?

James E. Akins

Bill Cowan (CEO of private military corp the WVC3 Group, Inc.)

Paul Leventhal

Neil Livingstone

R. Bruce McColm

Thomas McInerney

Charles T. Nash

Edward Rowny

Paul E. Vallely

Well that's interesting!  A lot of those names appeared in today's New York Times article, too!

Paul Vallely, Thomas McInerney, and Bill Cowan were specifically mentioned in the NYT article as media military analysts.  Charles T. Nash I don't see in the NYT article but is a Fox News military pundit.

So it looks like we had a lot of the media analyst-type people in on the policy-making to invade Iraq and then, lo and behold, there's four right there on this group to invade Iran.

So what kind of access does this Iran Policy Committee have to Capitol Hill?

The IPC demonstrated its strong ties on Capitol Hill in April 2005 when it convened a briefing at the invitation of the Iran Human Rights and Democracy Caucus of the House of Representatives. Co-chairs of this caucus are Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-CO) and Rep. Bob Filner (D-CA)

Two congressmen - Bob Filner (Democrat, California) and Tom Tancredo (Republican, Colorado) - chaired a April 6 Capitol Hill meeting of a think-tank called the Iran Policy Committee, US Newswire reported. Filner described the meeting as an effort by the Iran Human Rights and Democracy Caucus of the House of Representatives to learn more about Iran and to consider ways to confront it. Tancredo called for an end to the State Department's designation of the Mujahideen Khalq Organization (MKO) as a terrorist group.

Radio Farda reported that the Middle East sub-committee of the US House of Representatives discussed legislation relating to Iran on April 13 in Washington, DC. The Iran Freedom Support Act (HR 282) defines its purpose as, "To hold the current regime in Iran accountable for its threatening behavior and to support a transition to democracy in Iran." The legislation calls on the White House to support pro-democracy forces that oppose the Iranian regime.

And here is a summary of the Iran Freedom Support Act:

Iran Freedom and Support Act of 2005 - States that: (1) U.S. sanctions, controls, and regulations relating to weapons of mass destruction with respect to Iran shall remain in effect until the President certifies to the appropriate congressional committees that Iran has permanently and verifiably dismantled its weapons of mass destruction programs and has committed to combating such weapons' proliferation; and (2) such certification shall have no effect on other sanctions relating to Iranian support of international terrorism.
Amends the Iran and Libya Sanctions Act of 1996 to: (1) eliminate mandatory sanction provisions respecting Libya; (2) impose mandatory sanctions on a person or entity that aids Iran acquire or develop weapons of mass destruction or destabilizing types and numbers of conventional weapons; (3) revise multilateral regime reporting requirements, including provisions respecting sanctions on individuals aiding Iranian petroleum development; (4) enlarge the scope of sanctionable entities; and (5) eliminate the sunset provision.

The Iran Freedom Support Act had 62 co-sponsors in the Senate.

To recap: The Iran Policy Committee has at least 4 TV military pundits on its board.  It meets with Congress.  Congress drafts a bill to put the squeeze on Iran.  The bill gets 62 co-sponsors in the Senate.

It never passed because the Congress ran out of time.  But that's hardly the point.

All I'm doing here is following a fairly obvious google trail from hit to hit.

Now, consider these passages from the New York Times article.  I have a point I want to make later.  Page 2 of the article:

Some network officials, meanwhile, acknowledged only a limited understanding of their analysts' interactions with the administration. They said that while they were sensitive to potential conflicts of interest, they did not hold their analysts to the same ethical standards as their news employees regarding outside financial interests. The onus is on their analysts to disclose conflicts, they said. And whatever the contributions of military analysts, they also noted the many network journalists who have covered the war for years in all its complexity.

Page 11 of the article:

CBS News declined to comment on what it knew about its military analysts' business affiliations or what steps it took to guard against potential conflicts.

NBC News also declined to discuss its procedures for hiring and monitoring military analysts. The network issued a short statement: "We have clear policies in place to assure that the people who appear on our air have been appropriately vetted and that nothing in their profile would lead to even a perception of a conflict of interest."

Jeffrey W. Schneider, a spokesman for ABC, said that while the network's military consultants were not held to the same ethical rules as its full-time journalists, they were expected to keep the network informed about any outside business entanglements. "We make it clear to them we expect them to keep us closely apprised," he said.

A spokeswoman for Fox News said executives "refused to participate" in this article.

Look.

We're willing to believe that the CEOs of the telecoms were engaging in collusion with the government, but the we balk at the idea that the CEOs of media companies are doing the same thing?  Why?  

Isn't it at least worth asking whether this is a bullshit line?

CBS News declined to comment on what it knew about its military analysts' business affiliations or what steps it took to guard against potential conflicts . . .

NBC News also declined to discuss its procedures for hiring and monitoring military analysts . . .

Jeffrey W. Schneider, a spokesman for ABC, said that while the network's military consultants were not held to the same ethical rules as its full-time journalists . . .

The New York Times casts this 11-page story as though it's about the Pentagon duping the media with analysts who were bought off with contracts and access.  But that's only about 1/4 of the story here.  The "analysts" are in fact just members of an overlapping group of circles of think-tanks, companies, and government officals who make policy for this country, and then go on TV to propogandize it.  It is simply missing the point to suggest that at least many of these people needed to be "convinced" or "bought" or "intimidated" into backing Cheney policy.  Cheney's policy is their policy.

It is also worth asking, asking forcefully, the extent to which the powers-that-be at CBS, NBC, CNN, ABC, and the newspapers knew about all of this, and let it go on, just as the powers-that-be of the telecoms let wiretapping go on.

Did I mention that John McCain, media darling, was on the Iraq Committee cited in the NYT article?

Perhaps I'm drawing connections too quickly here, and engaging in conspiracy mongering.  The details might be off.  But where is the line between conspiracy theory and everyday boring fact, anymore, in the Bush years?  All I did was a simple google search.

Syriana indeed.

I suppose we can entertain any number of reactions to the NYT article.  We can say "Wow!" or "Tell me something I don't know" or "Finally the media is pointing out the obvious" or "It's more deliberate than I thought."  And I suppose each of those reactions is valid, and that there's no reason to choose one as the "correct" one.  

But I want to point out that what the NYT article is actually doing is providing a window, however off-angle, however darkly, and however fleetingly, into a much larger conglemeration of power and influence than anything suggested by "manipulation of media analysts."  And that is worth looking into.

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Thanks for reading. (4.00 / 37)
Also at DailyKos.

"Oh, you are just the worst type of person." -- Stewie Griffen

Glad you posted it here. (4.00 / 12)
More progressive conversation here, at least at times.  

[ Parent ]
Glad it's here, too. (4.00 / 13)
Nice post LC. Well done. My feeling is you nailed it. And a big thanks for posting here. I can only glance sideways and fleetingly over the the Big O these days.

A couple of years ago while researching a rogue billionaire (is there any other kind?) I came across a social network mapping tool on the web with an .au tail on the address. You could plug in a name and see the most prominent connections to it. A very nice connected graph presentation. Once there you could hop around on the connected names and see those graphs. Does anyone on this blog know of such a tool? I've lost the link. I'd love to take some cycles and run down the Iraq and Iran committee lists with that code.

"Three things cannot be long hidden: the Sun, the Moon and the Truth." Buddha


[ Parent ]
That sounds like a scary tool! (4.00 / 4)
But also one that would make this sort of research a lot easier to do.

"Oh, you are just the worst type of person." -- Stewie Griffen

[ Parent ]
My take? Similar to yours... (4.00 / 12)
HUGE window into the corruption at the top levels of government...the deliberate undermining of our safeguards against conflict of interest...the precise thing that Eisenhower warned against--because it's ALL about the military-industrial complex and how it has subverted public policy and contributed to the bankrupting of the US Treasury.
In fact:

But I want to point out that what the NYT article is actually doing is providing a window, however off-angle, however darkly, and however fleetingly, into a much larger conglemeration of power and influence than anything suggested by "manipulation of media analysts."  And that is worth looking into.

That's why the whole story was worth reading, and why I left my copy of that section of the Times with a (right-leaning) friend today:  Get Out the Word!  His reaction was that it's just another scandal...but he hadn't read it yet.  We'll see what he says after he has a chance to digest the whole thing.

Meanwhile, my second reaction upon reading the full story in the dead-tree edition, and then going through the rest of the section to see what else I'd missed, was:

Now that you have proven the military/industrial complex is completely bought and paid for by the Pentagon:

Why should I ever again believe any of your (or anybody else's) reporting about the war in Iraq?  Certainly, I will never trust another TV pundit (as if I ever did; chortle).

But that's the larger point:  We (those of us here and on the left in general) haven't trusted this government for the past seven years; how can we hammer home to those idiots who have, and who might be McCain supporters (...um, jockstraps?) that nobody in the GOP is trustworthy?

Gah.  To paraphrase Mary McCarthy:

Every word the GOP ever said was a lie, including "and" and "the"!

One function of the income gap is that the people at the top of the heap have a hard time even seeing those at the bottom. They practically need a telescope.--Molly Ivins


[ Parent ]
Actually I'm kind of bemused about it, too. (4.00 / 3)
What the heck ARE we supposed to do with big media?  Some people say, "ignore them" but that doesn't seem like the right answer: they determine the direction of world events and we live in the world.

But what to do about them or what attitude to take towards them is certainly a good topic to be discussing.

"Oh, you are just the worst type of person." -- Stewie Griffen


[ Parent ]
and herein lies the rub (4.00 / 2)
thye typical way to motivate change on a large scale like we're discussing is to dispense knowledge of the issue to the masses - and the best way to accomplish this is to use the media as the outlet to inform the public, as well as record the angry reaction of We, The People. Of course, in this case, the media is trying to pretend they were duped. To me, their excuse sounds strikingly familiar - like when Gen. Richard Myers claims that he was "hoodwinked" by the Bush administration. Where I come from, this is called CYA - covering your ass.

The media truly understands that they have a responsibility to provide analysts who do not have a vested interest/ability to profit from the opinions they give on the airwaves. They just don't care to honor that responsibility. They try to mask it with the notion of having analysts "providing alternate viewpoints" (i.e. a pro-occupation voice vs. an anti-occupation voice). This is an unacceptable ploy to distract us from the truth - they know their analysts AND their corporate bosses are profiting from the opinions these analysts are trying to sell - on our airwaves, with our press.

The media in this country have the duty to investigate their analysts and contributors, to ensure that whatever opinions given on OUR airwaves and in OUR press are not bought off. They have the responsibility to investigate and tell the public of any bias their analysts may have.

Therein lies the rub... they just don't care to take their responsibility to the people seriously. They allow themselves to appear "hoodwinked", just like Gen. Myers, Colin Powell, and so many other enablers.

So, what do we do?

Complain vociferously on the internet. Complain to our legislators and push for laws to better regulate media ownership - remove the ability for media congolomeration. We need to ensure our airwaves and press are not managed by a handful of puppeteers.

I don't know if we get anywhere with this... so I'm eager for other ideas.

Americans know they've been hoodwinked. I'm concerned that we'll continue to roll over with this shocking revelation - it's just another to heap on the pile of stunning "wow, they totally lied to us" revelations.

We have to come up with a way to make sure the public is never so completely manipulated again. As bad as the past 8 years have been, I shudder to think what future administrations could get away with. This manipulation has been so simple for the Bush team, and it appears they'll walk away unscathed. They've used every institution possible to lie, cheat, break laws, and be inhumane.

And We, The People, just shrug our shoulders.


[ Parent ]
What we're all over looking is (4.00 / 2)
the media is owned lock, stock and barrel by the WE SAY SO
CORP
.  It's pretty hard to get the truth out when the 'owners'
don't want to be outed.

Always forgive your enemies.  Nothing annoys them so much. ~Oscar Wilde

[ Parent ]
sigh... thank goodness for the power of the internet (4.00 / 2)
if we didn't have the ability to share our voices and learn from each other through this medium, how depressed we'd all be.

I'm so glad to see that NYT did a lot of research and trumpeted this story. When smart people take the NYTs research a bit further, and unearth even more important information, we get a clearer picture. This story shouldn't die.


[ Parent ]
the military-industrial-congressional-media- (4.00 / 14)
wingnutosphere-coalition-of-the-willing...it is getting complex!

Compound F (4.00 / 10)
good to see you

gone fishing

[ Parent ]
good to see you, as well. (4.00 / 2)
I couldn't reply last night due to script snafus.  I still check in here, only mostly refrain from commenting lately.  Speechlessness is not necessarily pathological.

[ Parent ]
I have been having script snafus too! (4.00 / 2)
do you have a mac? I hear there is alot of this happening to people with macs

gone fishing

[ Parent ]
I have them all the time on my laptop.... (0.00 / 0)
It uses Vista.
I miss my old laptop.

I still want Bush and Cheney in jail!

[ Parent ]
yes, Mac using firefox. (4.00 / 1)
snafu city.

[ Parent ]
LC if you were here I'd kiss you (4.00 / 9)
I resorted to begging people here not to let this story die

Thank you`

gone fishing


Thanks for begging (4.00 / 1)
In the hinterlands of the frozen left coast (Its snowing out side my window in the Great NorthWest) the WSJ is often viewed as an alien orifice. However this story does prove that it has some of it's roots in American soil, even if the branches are waving is some rarified air not known to the common folk like me.  

visualize: the act of the mind using spiritual energy to manifest in the physical realm  

[ Parent ]
And most importantly thanks to you LC (4.00 / 4)

RUKind spoke for me too......

Nice post LC. Well done. My feeling is you nailed it. And a big thanks for posting here. I can only glance sideways and fleetingly over the the Big O these days


visualize: the act of the mind using spiritual energy to manifest in the physical realm  

[ Parent ]
hanks crystaljim (4.00 / 1)


"Oh, you are just the worst type of person." -- Stewie Griffen

[ Parent ]
Supposed to be NYT instead of WSJ, my bad (4.00 / 1)

Doh

visualize: the act of the mind using spiritual energy to manifest in the physical realm  

[ Parent ]
forgot to add (4.00 / 7)
tipped recommended outstanding work

gone fishing

Thanks breathingstill ! :) (4.00 / 7)


"Oh, you are just the worst type of person." -- Stewie Griffen

[ Parent ]
I am now rereading incredible work here (4.00 / 10)
 DO NOT LET THIS STORY DIE  (0.00 / 0)

I have a masters in public administration and I am 60 and retired after 15 years working for the government at the highest levels. This is some of the best investigative journalism I have ever read. I thank the New York times for publishing it. I now want you to do one more thing that is imperative to all your readers and the paper itself. I might ad the country needs you to do this also. Do not let this story drop. Keep it up dig deeper and keep us informed. If you do this this country may have a chance. I wrote my final paper for my masters on the power of the press. You have the power to make change more than any politician. The government knows this and that is why they spined those generals. Please I beg of you get this info out and not just for a day or a week but for months until they are held accountable to the people. My mother a Biologist is 89 and I asked her if there was ever in her lifetime anything as bad as this and she said no. I also agree with this. The country is falling on all fronts and if we are not careful it will slip away. Please try and find out for us how much Bush and Chaney have made on this war. Look into Bush Sr, who will pass his fortune to his son, and his connections to the Carlyle Group. They think we are all dumb.See if you can find these connections and than the real truth will be told.
- wixie, east Hampton

http://community.nytimes.com/a...

gone fishing


meanwhile... (4.00 / 7)
our congressional representatives are all googling themselves..and the MSM blowhards are all googling brittney spears....

...sigh...

the article is long...my eyes quit on me on page 8...and it was NOT the bedtime story i was hoping for ;)

your work is excellent!  thanks for this....

"You don't have a soul.
You are a soul.
You have a body." ~C.S. Lewis


In the cases you mentioned, (4.00 / 3)
I dare say "googling" is an exceptionally climactic exercise done by themselves.

visualize: the act of the mind using spiritual energy to manifest in the physical realm  

[ Parent ]
exactly (4.00 / 2)
in my experience, emotionally/mentally healthy people dont seek those types of jobs.  the ones who do are sycophants and narcicists...(or something i can spell)..and in some cases, both.

its almost as if they cant conceive of a reality that doesnt contain them in it...so peripheral events dont matter to them...or something like that...

"You don't have a soul.
You are a soul.
You have a body." ~C.S. Lewis


[ Parent ]
connecting the dots (4.00 / 10)
this is excellent LC.  That article is a goldmine of information.  The connection with McCain is huge and the IPC and the media complicity and and and....  This is just the tip of the iceberg.  All the Google Monkeys should be going bananas right now.   Keep digging!    

Every year is getting shorter, never seem to find the time. Plans that either come to naught or half a page of scribbled lines.  ~ Pink Floyd

Keep digging, indeed. (4.00 / 3)
I hope a lot of people give it a shot!

"Oh, you are just the worst type of person." -- Stewie Griffen

[ Parent ]
to achieve the desired result (0.00 / 0)
... the Pentagon had secretly awarded him [Rendon] a $16 million contract to target Iraq and other adversaries with propaganda. One of the most powerful people in Washington, Rendon is a leader in the strategic field known as "perception management," manipulating information - and, by extension, the news media - to achieve the desired result. His firm, the Rendon Group, has made millions off government contracts since 1991, when it was hired by the CIA to help "create the conditions for the removal of Hussein from power." Working under this extraordinary transfer of secret authority, Rendon assembled a group of anti-Saddam militants, personally gave them their name - the Iraqi National Congress - and served as their media guru and "senior adviser" as they set out to engineer an uprising against Saddam. It was as if President John F. Kennedy had outsourced the Bay of Pigs operation to the advertising and public-relations firm of J. Walter Thompson

gone fishing

[ Parent ]
"That was one of my jobs then (0.00 / 0)
When Kuwait was liberated in 1991 - a strange concept, Kuwait having been free neither before being invaded by Iraq nor since - its citizens lined up the streets of their capital and waved thousands of American flags as troops drove by. "Did you ever stop to wonder," a man called John Rendon proudly asked during a speech to a government agency, "how the people of Kuwait City, after being held hostage for seven long and painful months, were able to get hand-held American, and for that matter, the flags of other coalition countries?" He answered his own question: "That was one of my jobs then.

gone fishing

[ Parent ]
This is a unique moment in time (4.00 / 7)
To bring the major media players to their knees.

This is the first year on-line advertising dollars have eclisped  TV.

The writers strike has left the major nets vulnerable

An organized boycott of only one night during the next ratings sweep would be devastating

gone fishing


Tipped rec'd and a huge (4.00 / 8)
thank you.... I would have never been able to slog through
all of this.  This is way too important to not yell louder
about!

Always forgive your enemies.  Nothing annoys them so much. ~Oscar Wilde

i sent a comment on that NYT story yesterday (4.00 / 10)
... heh. they didn't print it.

and all i said was i wondered how any of the mainstream news media could seriously use the word "analyst" to describe themselves. i wanted to know what they had been analyzing these years... that their stories and representations seemed more like an amalgamation of White House and Pentagon press clippings pasted together as "news"

further, i told them those of us on the blogs had been light-years ahead of them, using their own limited portrayal of information. i wondered where was the courage of reporters and editorial boards...

fantastic work LC...................

Well the first man comes along that can read Latin is welcome to rob us, far as I'm concerned. I'd like a chance t' shoot at a educated man once in my life. Gus McCrae, Lonesome Dove


Truth to power pf (4.00 / 1)
Love it!!  Funny that they didn't print it :-0

Always forgive your enemies.  Nothing annoys them so much. ~Oscar Wilde

[ Parent ]
hi ml... (4.00 / 1)
how's things? no mail today.....................

Well the first man comes along that can read Latin is welcome to rob us, far as I'm concerned. I'd like a chance t' shoot at a educated man once in my life. Gus McCrae, Lonesome Dove

[ Parent ]
Might just be time (4.00 / 1)
to take a drive (and bring a baseball bat!)  No more of this
shit!

Things are great.. the sun is shining, the trees and flowers
are in bloom... it's just a shame that the republicans are
so much better at controlling and directing the message.
Liberal Media my ass  :-0

Always forgive your enemies.  Nothing annoys them so much. ~Oscar Wilde


[ Parent ]
Excellent investigative reporting. (4.00 / 5)


Some interesting background on McCain (4.00 / 3)
can be found at Counterpunch.

NYT (4.00 / 3)
Still falls under the heading of M$M and that should carry the very same caveats as  watching Faux.  Why did they bring this up now.  Why did they not make another think tank known as PNAC a household word long ago.  Or how about the cottage industry of 911 truth springing up.
I look upon the NYT with great unease and wonder what the real motive is.

Whatever you do to others you also do to yourself!

One possiblity? (4.00 / 4)
A good cover for the North American Summit meeting in NOLA.
http://www.gregpalast.com/

Whatever you do to others you also do to yourself!

[ Parent ]
"Repeat a Lie Often Enough" (4.00 / 4)
I recently commented on another blog about the GOP's ability to "repeat the 'big lie' often enough to manipulate the masses.  That comment was about how they're using lies in the current Presidential campaign,--but it's all a piece of the same picture.  

The bush administration certainly has taken Goebbels' & Lenin's statements to heart:   "If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it."   and "A lie told often enough becomes the truth".  

At least that's what they're counting on.  The problem is, that if they're looking to propaganda master Goebbels for direction, they've forgotten to take into account this part  of his quote:

"...The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie."

The problem is that "the State" has lately been having mounting problems "shielding the people from the "political, economic, and military consequences" of the "lie".  

The real problem for us all is what happens when the truth starts getting out?

(Goebbels continued) "...It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State." Joseph Goebbels.

IMHO, We're at the point where we will see whether "truth will out" and overcome the lies of the propagandists, or whether they can continue to manage to "repress the dissent".  

That's why I believe that hope, action and shouting the truth from the rooftops-in the blogs, in LTE's on the phone, in e-mail comments to newspaper columnists, in e-mails to friends and family, and word of mouth is the only way to counter the "big lie".  


The Truth will ALWAYS come out (4.00 / 4)
Always. It can't be stopped.

Truth

Gandhi dedicated his life to the wider purpose of discovering truth, or Satya. He tried to achieve this by learning from his own mistakes and conducting experiments on himself. He called his autobiography The Story of My Experiments with Truth.

Gandhi stated that the most important battle to fight was overcoming his own demons, fears, and insecurities. Gandhi summarized his beliefs first when he said "God is Truth". He would later change this statement to "Truth is God". Thus, Satya (Truth) in Gandhi's philosophy is "God".

Ghandi again, one of the best:

   "When I despair, I remember that all through history the way of truth and love has always won. There have been tyrants and murderers and for a time they seem invincible, but in the end, they always fall - think of it, always."

My bold and italics.

Shanti.

"Three things cannot be long hidden: the Sun, the Moon and the Truth." Buddha


[ Parent ]
Impressive LC (4.00 / 3)
Great work. I hope it got good play at DK as well because this is substantive stuff.

It didn't make the rec list, if that's what you're asking : ) (4.00 / 5)


"Oh, you are just the worst type of person." -- Stewie Griffen

[ Parent ]
Yes and it should have..... (4.00 / 3)
made the rec list. But it is all candidate sticks n stones these days, a shame when really good writers like yourself, who are talking about gasp ..ideas and policies and stuff that might make you think ( brain bruise help me ) gets shuttled aside in favor of partisanship that isn't particularly interesting. I don't mind partisanship, let me say, but boring partisanship is less interesting than watching saliva dry on pavement.  

[ Parent ]
be afraid very afraid (0.00 / 0)
His speech(rendon) wide of scope and blasts through a slew a topics. His scenario of a cyber attack perpetrated on a sovereign country by a community of interest geographically located in America raises an interesting legal point related to the legality of the US invasion of Afghanistan: can a country claim the right of self defence if attacked by a group within a sovereign country? Rendon brings up a number of diverse issues, connecting them in interesting ways that will give you a new appreciation of the problems in "official" communication in the 21st century.


gone fishing

Great job! (0.00 / 0)
I am glad I didn't miss this article!

I still want Bush and Cheney in jail!

Good article, but why are we surprised? (4.00 / 1)
Ever hear of Operation Mockingbird?

Here's some an article on it by Mary Louise:

Starting in the early days of the Cold War (late 40's), the CIA began a secret project called Operation Mockingbird, with the intent of buying influence behind the scenes at major media outlets and putting reporters on the CIA payroll, which has proven to be a stunning ongoing success.  The CIA effort to recruit American news organizations and journalists to become spies and disseminators of propaganda, was headed up by Frank Wisner, Allen Dulles, Richard Helms, and Philip Graham (publisher of The Washington Post).  Wisner had taken Graham under his wing to direct the program code-named Operation Mockingbird and both have presumably committed suicide.

Media assets will eventually include ABC, NBC, CBS, Time, Newsweek, Associated Press, United Press International (UPI), Reuters, Hearst Newspapers, Scripps-Howard, Copley News Service, etc. and 400 journalists, who have secretly carried out assignments according to documents on file at CIA headquarters, from intelligence-gathering to serving as go-betweens.  The CIA had infiltrated the nation's businesses, media, and universities with tens of thousands of on-call operatives by the 1950's.  CIA Director Dulles had staffed the CIA almost exclusively with Ivy League graduates, especially from Yale with figures like George Herbert Walker Bush from the "Skull and Crossbones" Society.

Many Americans still insist or persist in believing that we have a free press, while getting most of their news from state-controlled television, under the misconception that reporters are meant to serve the public.  Reporters are paid employees and serve the media owners, who usually cower when challenged by advertisers or major government figures.  Robert Parry reported the first breaking stories about Iran-Contra for Associated Press that were largely ignored by the press and congress, then moving to Newsweek he witnessed a retraction of a true story for political reasons.  In 'Fooling America: A Talk by Robert Parry' he said, "The people who succeeded and did well were those who didn't stand up, who didn't write the big stories, who looked the other way when history was happening in front of them, and went along either consciously or just by cowardice with the deception of the American people."

We live in Orwell's world now. The news we hear is almost all massaged and manipulated. Even the "opposition" is often bought and sold (out).

These are terrible times.

And what are we supposed to do, we little ones, too small to truly affect anything, but too smart not to see the veil slipping, slipping all too often. And then? And then?

"Presumption is our natural and original malady" -- Montaigne


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