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Fighting Talk: The New Propaganda
Journalism has become a linguistic battleground – and when reporters use terms such ‘spike in violence’ or ‘surge’ or ‘settler’, they are playing along with a pernicious game
Following the latest in semantics on the news? Journalism and the Israeli government are in love again. It's Islamic terror, Turkish terror, Hamas terror, Islamic Jihad terror, Hezbollah terror, activist terror, war on terror, Palestinian terror, Muslim terror, Iranian terror, Syrian terror, anti-Semitic terror...
But I am doing the Israelis an injustice. Their lexicon, and that of the White House - most of the time - and our reporters' lexicon, is the same. Yes, let's be fair to the Israelis. Their lexicon goes like this: Terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror.
How many times did I just use the word "terror"? Twenty. But it might as well be 60, or 100, or 1,000, or a million. We are in love with the word, seduced by it, fixated by it, attacked by it, assaulted by it, raped by it, committed to it. It is love and sadism and death in one double syllable, the prime time-theme song, the opening of every television symphony, the headline of every page, a punctuation mark in our journalism, a semicolon, a comma, our most powerful full stop. "Terror, terror, terror, terror". Each repetition justifies its predecessor.
Most of all, it's about the terror of power and the power of terror. Power and terror have become interchangeable. We journalists have let this happen. Our language has become not just a debased ally, but a full verbal partner in the language of governments and armies and generals and weapons. Remember the "bunker buster" and the "Scud buster" and the "target-rich environment" in the Gulf War (Part One)? Forget about "weapons of mass destruction". Too obviously silly. But "WMD" in the Gulf War (Part Two) had a power of its own, a secret code - genetic, perhaps, like DNA - for something that would reap terror, terror, terror, terror, terror. "45 Minutes to Terror".
Power and the media are not just about cozy relationships between journalists and political leaders, between editors and presidents. They are not just about the parasitic-osmotic relationship between supposedly honorable reporters and the nexus of power that runs between White House and State Department and Pentagon, between Downing Street and the Foreign Office and the Ministry of Defense, between America and Israel.
In the Western context, power and the media is about words - and the use of words. It is about semantics. It is about the employment of phrases and their origins. And it is about the misuse of history, and about our ignorance of history. More and more today, we journalists have become prisoners of the language of power. Is this because we no longer care about linguistics or semantics? Is this because laptops "correct" our spelling, "trim" our grammar so that our sentences so often turn out to be identical to those of our rulers? Is this why newspaper editorials today often sound like political speeches?
For two decades now, the US and British - and Israeli and Palestinian - leaderships have used the words "peace process" to define the hopeless, inadequate, dishonorable agreement that allowed the US and Israel to dominate whatever slivers of land would be given to an occupied people. I first queried this expression, and its provenance, at the time of Oslo - although how easily we forget that the secret surrenders at Oslo were themselves a conspiracy without any legal basis.
Poor old Oslo, I always think. What did Oslo ever do to deserve this? It was the White House agreement that sealed this preposterous and dubious treaty - in which refugees, borders, Israeli colonies, even timetables - were to be delayed until they could no longer be negotiated.
And how easily we forget the White House lawn - though, yes, we remember the images - upon which it was Clinton who quoted from the Koran, and Arafat who chose to say: "Thank you, thank you, thank you, Mr President." And what did we call this nonsense afterwards? Yes, it was "a moment of history"! Was it? Was it so?
Do you remember what Arafat called it? "The peace of the brave". But I don't remember any of us pointing out that "the peace of the brave" was used by General de Gaulle about the end of the Algerian war. The French lost the war in Algeria. We did not spot this extraordinary irony.
Same again today. We Western journalists - used yet again by our masters - have been reporting our jolly generals in Afghanistan, as saying their war can only be won with a "hearts and minds" campaign. No one asked them the obvious question: Wasn't this the very same phrase used about Vietnamese civilians in the Vietnam War? And didn't we - didn't the West - lose the war in Vietnam? Yet now we Western journalists are using - about Afghanistan - the phrase "hearts and minds" in our reports as if it is a new dictionary definition, rather than a symbol of defeat for the second time in four decades.
Just look at the individual words we have recently co-opted from the US military. When we Westerners find that "our" enemies - al-Qa'ida, for example, or the Taliban - have set off more bombs and staged more attacks than usual, we call it "a spike in violence".
Ah yes, a "spike"! A "spike" is a word first used in this context, according to my files, by a brigadier general in the Baghdad Green Zone in 2004. Yet now we use that phrase, we extemporize on it, we relay it on the air as our phrase, our journalistic invention. We are using, quite literally, an expression created for us by the Pentagon. A spike, of course, goes sharply up then sharply downwards. A "spike in violence" therefore avoids the ominous use of the words "increase in violence" - for an increase, of course, might not go down again afterwards.
Now again, when US generals refer to a sudden increase in their forces for an assault on Fallujah or central Baghdad or Kandahar - a mass movement of soldiers brought into Muslim countries by the tens of thousands - they call this a "surge". And a surge, like a tsunami, or any other natural phenomena, can be devastating in its effects. What these "surges" really are - to use the real words of serious journalism - are reinforcements. And reinforcements are sent to conflicts when armies are losing those wars. But our television and newspaper boys and girls are still talking about "surges" without any attribution at all. The Pentagon wins again.
Meanwhile the "peace process" collapsed. Therefore our leaders - or "key players" as we like to call them - tried to make it work again. The process had to be put "back on track". It was a train, you see. The carriages had come off the line. The Clinton administration first used this phrase, then the Israelis, then the BBC. But there was a problem when the "peace process" had repeatedly been put "back on track" - but still came off the line. So we produced a "road map" - run by a Quartet and led by our old Friend of God, Tony Blair, who - in an obscenity of history - we now refer to as a "peace envoy". But the "road map" isn't working. And now, I notice, the old "peace process" is back in our newspapers and on our television screens. And earlier this month, on CNN, one of those boring old fogies whom the TV boys and girls call "experts" told us again that the "peace process" was being put "back on track" because of the opening of "indirect talks" between Israelis and Palestinians. This isn't just about clichés - this is preposterous journalism. There is no battle between the media and power; through language, we, the media, have become them.
Here's another piece of media cowardice that makes my 63-year-old teeth grind together after 34 years of eating humus and tahina in the Middle East. We are told, in many analysis features, that what we have to deal with in the Middle East are "competing narratives". How very cozy. There's no justice, no injustice, just a couple of people who tell different history stories. "Competing narratives" now regularly pop up in the British press.
The phrase, from the false language of anthropology, deletes the possibility that one group of people - in the Middle East, for example - is occupied, while another is doing the occupying. Again, no justice, no injustice, no oppression or oppressing, just some friendly "competing narratives", a football match, if you like, a level playing field because the two sides are - are they not? - "in competition". And two sides have to be given equal time in every story.
So an "occupation" becomes a "dispute". Thus a "wall" becomes a "fence" or "security barrier". Thus Israeli acts of colonization of Arab land, contrary to all international law, become "settlements" or "outposts" or "Jewish neighborhoods". It was Colin Powell, in his starring, powerless appearance as Secretary of State to George W Bush, who told US diplomats to refer to occupied Palestinian land as "disputed land" - and that was good enough for most of the US media. There are no "competing narratives", of course, between the US military and the Taliban. When there are, you'll know the West has lost.
But I'll give you an example of how "competing narratives" come undone. In April, I gave a lecture in Toronto to mark the 95th anniversary of the 1915 Armenian genocide, the deliberate mass murder of 1.5 million Armenian Christians by the Ottoman Turkish army and militia. Before my talk, I was interviewed on Canadian Television, CTV, which also owns Toronto's Globe and Mail newspaper. And from the start, I could see that the interviewer had a problem. Canada has a large Armenian community. But Toronto also has a large Turkish community. And the Turks, as the Globe and Mail always tell us, "hotly dispute" that this was a genocide.
So the interviewer called the genocide "deadly massacres". Of course, I spotted her specific problem straight away. She couldn't call the massacres a "genocide", because the Turkish community would be outraged. But she sensed that "massacres" on its own - especially with the gruesome studio background photographs of dead Armenians - was not quite up to defining a million and a half murdered human beings. Hence the "deadly massacres". How odd! If there are "deadly" massacres, are there some massacres which are not "deadly", from which the victims walk away alive? It was a ludicrous tautology.
Yet the use of the language of power - of its beacon words and its beacon phrases - goes on among us still. How many times have I heard Western reporters talking about "foreign fighters" in Afghanistan? They are referring, of course, to the various Arab groups supposedly helping the Taliban. We heard the same story from Iraq. Saudis, Jordanians, Palestinian, Chechen fighters, of course. The generals called them "foreign fighters". Immediately, we Western reporters did the same. Calling them "foreign fighters" meant they were an invading force. But not once - ever - have I heard a mainstream Western television station refer to the fact that there are at least 150,000 "foreign fighters" in Afghanistan, and that all of them happen to be wearing American, British and other NATO uniforms. It is "we" who are the real "foreign fighters".
Similarly, the pernicious phrase "Af-Pak" - as racist as it is politically dishonest - is now used by reporters, although it was originally a creation of the US State Department on the day Richard Holbrooke was appointed special US representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan. But the phrase avoids the use of the word "India" - whose influence in Afghanistan and whose presence in Afghanistan, is a vital part of the story. Furthermore, "Af-Pak" - by deleting India - effectively deleted the whole Kashmir crisis from the conflict in south-east Asia. It thus deprived Pakistan of any say in US local policy on Kashmir - after all, Holbrooke was made the "Af-Pak" envoy, specifically forbidden from discussing Kashmir. Thus the phrase "Af-Pak", which completely avoids the tragedy of Kashmir - too many "competing narratives", perhaps? - means that when we journalists use the same phrase, "Af-Pak", which was surely created for us journalists, we are doing the State Department's work.
Now let's look at history. Our leaders love history. Most of all, they love the Second World War. In 2003, George W Bush thought he was Churchill. True, Bush had spent the Vietnam War protecting the skies of Texas from the Vietcong. But now, in 2003, he was standing up to the "appeasers" who did not want a war with Saddam who was, of course, "the Hitler of the Tigris". The appeasers were the British who didn't want to fight Nazi Germany in 1938. Blair, of course, also tried on Churchill's waistcoat and jacket for size. No "appeaser" he. America was Britain's oldest ally, he proclaimed - and both Bush and Blair reminded journalists that the US had stood shoulder-to-shoulder with Britain in her hour of need in 1940.
But none of this was true. Britain's oldest ally was not the United States. It was Portugal, a neutral fascist state during the Second World War, which flew its national flags at half-mast when Hitler died (even the Irish didn't do that).
Nor did America fight alongside Britain in her hour of need in 1940, when Hitler threatened invasion and the Luftwaffe blitzed London. No, in 1940 America was enjoying a very profitable period of neutrality, and did not join Britain in the war until Japan attacked the US naval base at Pearl Harbor in December 1941. Similarly, back in 1956, Eden called Nasser the "Mussolini of the Nile". A bad mistake. Nasser was loved by the Arabs, not hated as Mussolini was by the majority of Africans, especially the Arab Libyans. The Mussolini parallel was not challenged or questioned by the British press. And we all know what happened at Suez in 1956. When it comes to history, we journalists let the presidents and prime ministers take us for a ride.
Yet the most dangerous side of our new semantic war, our use of the words of power - though it is not a war, since we have largely surrendered - is that it isolates us from our viewers and readers. They are not stupid. They understand words in many cases - I fear - better than we do. History, too. They know that we are drawing our vocabulary from the language of generals and presidents, from the so-called elites, from the arrogance of the Brookings Institute experts, or those of those of the Rand Corporation. Thus we have become part of this language.
Over the past two weeks, as foreigners - humanitarians or "activist terrorists" - tried to take food and medicines by sea to the hungry Palestinians of Gaza, we journalists should have been reminding our viewers and listeners of a long-ago day when America and Britain went to the aid of a surrounded people, bringing food and fuel - our own servicemen dying as they did so - to help a starving population. That population had been surrounded by a fence erected by a brutal army which wished to starve the people into submission. The army was Russian. The city was Berlin. The wall was to come later. The people had been our enemies only three years earlier. Yet we flew the Berlin airlift to save them. Now look at Gaza today: which Western journalist - since we love historical parallels - has even mentioned 1948 Berlin in the context of Gaza?
Instead, what did we get? "Activists" who turned into "armed activists" the moment they opposed the Israeli army's boarding parties. How dare these men upset the lexicon? Their punishment was obvious. They became "terrorists". And the Israeli raids - in which "activists" were killed (another proof of their "terrorism") - then became "deadly" raids. In this case, "deadly" was more excusable than it had been on CTV - nine dead men of Turkish origin being slightly fewer than a million and a half murdered Armenians in 1915. But it was interesting that the Israelis - who for their own political reasons had hitherto shamefully gone along with the Turkish denial - now suddenly wanted to inform the world of the 1915 Armenian genocide. This provoked an understandable frisson among many of our colleagues. Journalists who have regularly ducked all mention of the 20th century's first Holocaust - unless they could also refer to the way in which the Turks "hotly dispute" the genocide label (ergo the Toronto Globe and Mail) - could suddenly refer to it. Israel's new-found historical interest made the subject legitimate, though almost all reports managed to avoid any explanation of what actually happened in 1915.
And what did the Israeli seaborne raid become? It became a "botched" raid. Botched is a lovely word. It began as a German-origin Middle English word, "bocchen", which meant to "repair badly". And we more or less kept to that definition until our journalistic lexicon advisers changed its meaning. Schoolchildren "botch" an exam. We could "botch" a piece of sewing, an attempt to repair a piece of material. We could even botch an attempt to persuade our boss to give us a raise. But now we "botch" a military operation. It wasn't a disaster. It wasn't a catastrophe. It just killed some Turks.
So, given the bad publicity, the Israelis just "botched" the raid. Weirdly, the last time reporters and governments utilized this particular word followed Israel's attempt to kill the Hamas leader, Khaled Meshaal, in the streets of Amman. In this case, Israel's professional assassins were caught after trying to poison Meshaal, and King Hussain forced the then Israeli prime minister (a certain B Netanyahu) to provide the antidote (and to let a lot of Hamas "terrorists" out of jail). Meshaal's life was saved.
But for Israel and its obedient Western journalists this became a "botched attempt" on Meshaal's life. Not because he wasn't meant to die, but because Israel failed to kill him. You can thus "botch" an operation by killing Turks - or you can "botch" an operation by not killing a Palestinian.
How do we break with the language of power? It is certainly killing us. That, I suspect, is one reason why readers have turned away from the "mainstream" press to the internet. Not because the net is free, but because readers know they have been lied to and conned; they know that what they watch and what they read in newspapers is an extension of what they hear from the Pentagon or the Israeli government, that our words have become synonymous with the language of a government-approved, careful middle ground, which obscures the truth as surely as it makes us political - and military - allies of all major Western governments.
Many of my colleagues on various Western newspapers would ultimately risk their jobs if they were constantly to challenge the false reality of news journalism, the nexus of media-government power. How many news organizations thought to run footage, at the time of the Gaza disaster, of the airlift to break the blockade of Berlin? Did the BBC?
The hell they did! We prefer "competing narratives". Politicians didn't want - I told the Doha meeting on 11 May - the Gaza voyage to reach its destination, "be its end successful, farcical or tragic". We believe in the "peace process", the "road map". Keep the "fence" around the Palestinians. Let the "key players" sort it out. And remember what this is all about: "Terror, terror, terror, terror, terror, terror."


134 Comments so far
Show AllThank you Mr Fisk for once again breaking through the deathly fog of what passes for mainstream journalism these days. I know I should listen to CNN, ABC etc just to find out what "average" Americans are being taught, but my stomach won't put up with it. I'll continue instead to read your columns in the Independant and thank God for an honest reporter.
This is an excellent article that demonstrates exactly how, through the use of the "language of power," the MIC has succeeded in making President Eisenhower's dire warning against the MIC come true!
The author states aptly, "Many of my colleagues on various Western newspapers would ultimately risk their jobs if they were constantly to challenge the false reality of news journalism."
We readers must confront that false reality which is being used to cloak our warmongering in watered-down phrases and language. We must fight against the constant pursuit of unending war which is being perpetrated through the use of reporting language that reduces the actual horrors continuing daily in our name! Killing is nothing less than killing!!!
In the spirit of gaining the linguistic high ground, of staking out a battlefield of our choosing, of coordinating against a single linguistic target, of ceasing to be inadvertent echoers of MIC-terms, I suggest that the term 'DAFT war' be substituted for:
The war in Afghanistan
The war in AfPak
The global war on terror
The war on terror
The war against terrorists
The long war
The war against Islamo-Fascism
etc.
DAFT - Defense against Future Terrorism
If we all agree on 1 term, we can get out of this 'fog of wars' where we can't even agree on what to call this insanity that we have been trapped within for oh these long 9 years.
The reason the word DAFT does not cut it semantically is because it is a silly a word that means non seriousness... it is cartoonish like Daffy Duck,
Like the article above, it gives War a cover of silliness and war is not silly.
Did you take the time to look up the meaning of daft?
Sorry..."Daft War" ain't gonna happen because it does not happen.
"it is cartoonish like Daffy Duck"
or like al Q'yote?
Ridicule is a necessary tool.
Hahaha! Nice one!
A most powerful and much needed article on, as Mr. Fisk notes, the language of power. This is the type of article that belongs in papers like the N.Y. Times and The Washington Post. But this is quite unlikely to happen as the mainstream press is loath to print anything that would be too critical of those in power who continually abuse that handy and much abused word called terror. This article does what programs like Hardball are supposed to do and that is to do the job that journalists are paid to do which is to challenge those who are in power. But people like Chris Matthews, despite his claim, refuses to do what Robert Fisk does and that is to actually ask genuine hardball questions of those who are in, as Eisenhower noted, our councils of government.
Why is a reporter not asking Obama why he is doing the opposite of what FDR said in the 1930s and that is that the only thing that one has to fear is fear itself? We know that Obama, like Bush, wishes to keep stoking fear among the American populace. But that does not excuse the White House press corps from not pressing him on this issue. Or perhaps this was the real reason that Helen Thomas was forced to resign because Obama's handlers did not want their master to feel the sting of Ms. Thomas's direct and pointed questions which, perhaps, were hitting, for the White House, far too close to home.
"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act"-George Orwell
This is the most important and perceptive article I've read in quite some time.
"Many of my colleagues on various Western newspapers would ultimately risk their jobs if they were constantly to challenge the false reality of news journalism, the nexus of media-government power. "
Those of us who have lost careers and jobs for challenging wrongful authority have no sympathy for those who knuckle under and adopt the ways of corruption. Placing your burden on the shoulders of others is pure cowardice and weakness. Corruption feeds on people like you. Cowardice is not an exit strategy. Comfort kills.
In 2003 I downloaded Robert Fisk's photographs. One was of a father holding the shattered, ripped body of his young daughter. the other was the horrific series of shots of a father and 10yr old son, trying to hide during a fire fight. The series of photos ends with both of them killed. I still cry when I remember those pictures. I copied the photo of the little girl and added the caption: "Someone forgot to put a Saddam Hussein mask on this little girl." I posted the pictures on the community bulletin boards along the river in northern California. As fast as I could put one up, another was ripped down.
Marching in San Fransisco, writing letters to editors, politicians, presidents; is a useless activity.
Propaganda is victorious. Even now as I write this, The "History Channel." is once again broadcasting "The Naked Archeologist" Just one example of the continual bombardment of programs designed to reinforce Israel's claim of unquestioned ownership of all the lands written about in the ancient texts.
Americans have grown fat and dishonest. Two-Faced arrogance is the new face of America. With Sarah Palin we now have "Hitler with Boobs."
Direct TV, Dish Network, Broadcast Networks; these are the true weapons of mass destruction.
Thank God for people like Robert Fisk, Scott Ridder, Amy Goodman, Edward Said, David Barsamian, Norman Solomon, Laura Flanders, and so many more.
If it's going to take a meteor strike, or a massive Earthquake to shake the people of America out of their murderous lethargy, then I say, bring it on.
Thank you Mr. Fisk, I almost have a shred of hope.
I would add John Pilger as an important member of that list of journalists.
excellent, we all thank you for posting those pictures. The human face of our slaughter of the innocents all over the world in the name of "freedom" must be thrust in the face of complacent Americans. Just as the televised VietNam war revolted the sensibilities of the average person, maybe the exposure of the horrors done in our name will wake up the masses.
I truly wonder just how many people can see that the "History Channel" is, indeed, little more than a conduit of propaganda for the corporate elite. NatGeo is another which frequently plays fast and loose with historical facts. I've brought this to the attention of many friends and associates who usually give me that queer smile reserved for someone who has lost touch with reality.
Add Chris Hedges to your list.
I agree with most of what you wrote... Except Palin. She has never wielded power of this sort. She hasn't rained death and terror on Muslims... Like the great black hope... Sounds like she might like to... But still... You never know maybe she has a crisis of conscience before she has to give the order to blow human beings away... Mr. Obama has given those orders. He is a black Hitler. He has proven it. Given the choice between Palin and Obama. I go Palin in a heartbeat. Words and actions are 2 different realities.
dboyton, Palin doesn't have a conscience, and seems more like a narcissist with psychopathic symptoms. She can almost taste the presidency, but she would be a disaster.
She doesn't care what she says, wrong or right, and if it's wrong, she doesn't bother to find out the facts. Not interested. She's just going for the effect when she whips up the crowds and they hoot and holler. She's dangerous.
I'm afraid from looking over the crop of possibles, which means that the Corporate government and the Bilderberg Group and other elites have to approve of their new puppet, I don't see anybody out there.
Palin or Obama ... either one now brings chills. Closer and closer to the edge of the precipice.
/cm
I would go Ron Paul in a heart beat. I certainly believe Palin would be a disaster... But she hasn't proved it by getting to give the order to rain death form the sky in Pakistan.... Until she does she has the moral high ground on Obama
Fisk always busts some bubbles...
Hey Obama,,,,,TERROR THIS !!!!!!
People of the world consider the USA as the terrorists.. are they wrong, ask the kid who had his family killed by someone sitting in a comfortable chair outside Reno.. Terror comes from the sky from technology, from the capitalist putting the dollars down..
Because lord knows the communists never killed anybody. LMAO
"...our use of the words of power... isolates us from our viewers and readers. They are not stupid. They understand words in many cases - I fear - better than we do. History, too."
this may be the only debatable point in an overall spot-on article. perhaps it's less so in GB, but from here it seems that the disastrous debasement of language continues precisely because ignorance of history is so pervasive...
Well said Mr Fisk. Here in the South West corner of Canada I hear the phrase "Pacific Northwest" used as a geographical description. My neighborhood is referred to as "Oceanside" although the ocean is on the other side of the island. I hear CBC reporters using the term "stateside" in reference to the USA.
I suspect there are a lot more than Colin Powell going around telling people to change the words they use. This is getting more Orwellian even as I type.
Sophie Scholl-The Final Days
"There lexicon goes like this: terror,terror,...
This brought back some memories from an old Tulsa, OK TV show, Fantastic Theatre.
http://tulsatvmemories.com/wav/hardtall.wav
Plenty of good comments here.
What has got Fisk upset is that we are machines. Our language, and also the language of our media and our leaders and manipulators, consists almost exclusively of catch phrases and buzz words and hackneyed repetitions that we assume have meaning because our reality is made out of them.
Every visionary of the human condition from Plato to Dawkins confirms this dismal truth. There is nobody home in here. We're a piece of talking gadgetry.
Floating in this matrix of inertial chatter is akin to sleep, as any mystic can tell you. Temporarily waking up from it is temporary enlightenment. Fisk, who has been viscerally engaged for decades in the horrors and hypocrasies of the Middle East must find that even he is at a loss for words, that even his sympathetic listeners are nodding their heads like zombies and fitting his urgent jeremiads into the tidy pigeonholes of established language. In this world sleep is king.
Torpor, like television, is a drug, an irresistible opiate. Most of us will do anything to avoid an original thought, a new concept, a direct encounter with reality seen fresh and unmediated by verbal salve.
What was that famous essay by Nietzsche? The Birth of Tragedy? We can't all be stabbing our eyes out like poor Oedipus. We need a chorus of storytellers to make it into familiar poetry before we dare to take it in.
It is an interesting vision isn't it? The kind of thing that led Wittgenstein to a complete philosophical flummox. Carried to its logical conclusion it is nearly identical to Eastern metaphysics, which does not mix well with political activism. Which in turn explains why this wonderful linguistic thread has attracted only 36 comments so far. We are talking about something, like the subsurface rage you mention, the imps that set the collective agenda, that likely can't be discovered or fixed. I don't have a diagnosis myself or a plan, except to lighten up a bit and watch the human phenomenon with interest and fear.
This article and thread are examining the symptom... Not the cause. The cause is the US adoption of the Prussian style of public school education in the early 1900s. We were taught inaction and learned our lesson well. Belief in the leadership principle... Trust in the givernment... They know best afterall. Lol... John Taylor Gatto. Not something you are supposed to talk about on a progressive site since they love those teachers' unions. Gag!
are you suggesting we rethink private property? I suggest that...
are you suggesting we retake the land that was taken? I suggest that...
you speak of 'open air prisons', I ask about 'private property'...
you don't consider this relevant?
not surprising...
Perhaps words are the bars for the Id.
At the same time words are and building blocks to try to unravel the marvels and secrets of the universe to try to copy this code in inferior ways; to tool up and build our propertied distractions that reinforce the subjective ‘how am i doing’ dialogue while offering objective snapshots of ‘this who I think I am.’
Symbols and “progress” go hand in hand while at the same time preventing us to be open to that ‘other’; that mysterious and more powerful dynamic.
Namasta;
'I think therefore I am stupid': Yet those moments of existential exhilaration permeate a goodness that is also human.
'I think therefore I can be one with the Whales and Dolphins'
At least the ones far away from the Gulf of Mexico! And the ones not imprisoned in Sea World, etc.
Oh people people why have we feigned canabalism and then release the black Tar of the Under world?
The paradoxical beauty of Life is in the NOT KNOWING! The only rational choice is to follow Goodness and Empathy in spite of all that appears dark!
Keep Talking and Doing what you can! Use words that express a clarity for the Love of Life!
Any other choice is a waste of time. And TIME is on our side!
And when I say 'OUR'; I mean all living creatures. Evolution has no End.
This should be required reading for students of journalism, media studies, history, political science, sociology, psychology. It should be required reading for all politicians and the citizens who elect them.
There are only two terrorists: ignorance and greed. These two alone are responsible for all the evils of this world. Their main facilitators are rich white men, who are dead men walking. They "know not what they do", their unconsciousness reigns supreme, and they are willing to destroy the earth in order to satisfy their short-term goals. Testosterone is killing all that is precious in our world, and this problem is so wide-spread that it will take an apocalypse to stop it. Not to worry, one is on the way.
genierae:
So that's it then, testosterone!? That's what's killing "all that is precious in our world..."!? Well then, why don't we just elect a government willing to eradicate testosterone from our lives? We'll still be able to reproduce new generations of humans in labs and I won't have to worry about shaving my face on a daily basis!
Isn't it crazy it took humanity this many thousands of years to figure out that an organic hormone that is mainly responsible for gender differentiation, and therefore our procreation as a species (before modern science figured it out) was the cause of human suffering all along - how ironic!
So, how do we spread the word, further the cause, initiate the anti-testosterone revolution? We can't just sit around in web forums posting about it, we have to take action! Is there an anti-testosterone website I can make a donation to? Any marches planned?
Look... Stupid... Don't u get it? We kill all white men. Then... Utopia... Because everyone knows only white men are capable of evil.
This master piece is a "declaration", and also a "constitution"
for conscientious journalism.
And it should be kept prominantly and permantly, at a good place
on CD's main page, and on all conscientious websites and individual's
blog, for the benefits of wider range of readers from the five
continents of the Earth.
Like lady Helen Thomas, Mr. Robert Fish has become immortal
and will be remembered after this master piece. Perhaps, it
will be the most read of all the articles written by Mr. Fish
in his entire career.
May human conscience continue to shine out brightly over the
darkness of brutality and lies.
Fisk
To Mr. Robert Fisk:
I am very sorry for misspelling your last name. It should be FISK (not H).
===
To vdb:
Thank you very much for pointing it out. Mucho gracias!
Yeah, wasn't Fish that old guy on "Barney Miller"? : )
A provocative and timely article. The most blatant misleading term permeating the media is "war" (war "in" X, Y, or Z, war "on" terror, "war" against al Qaeda or the Taliban). We have warplanes and soldiers deployed, but that doesn't make the actions in Iraq and Afghanistan wars. There are no armies deployed against us. There are no nations with standing armies arrayed against us. There isn't even the sort of organized resistance put up by the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong in Vietnam. There is only the pretense of war, a pretense aided by the mainstream media, a pretense that functions to bolster and justify the military-industrial complex, as FrankS aptly points out.
I am very glad to see this excellent analysis on the specific language being used to promote endless war and conquest.
It seems to me that Bush 43's " War on Terror" as a reaction to the 9/11 attacks has created an subconscious association in Americans minds of "terror" with "9/11", so that when we hear "war on terror" we subconsciously STILL think, GOOD, we are getting back at the attackers.
Actually, the attackers were mostly citizens of was it Saudi Arabia with backing from a former CIA asset who the USA trained and armed to fight the Russians. If we had truly wanted to strike back it would have been "war on the 9/11 terrorists", and we would have zeroed in on Bin Laden.
So we not only went where the attackers weren't, we coined a a label "terror" which along with "preemptive strikes" we use to basically invade other countries, not because they attacked us, but for conquest.
even bush 43's "war on terror" was not original.
reagan ran one back in the 80's.
how soon history fades.
tomas, do you really still believe BinLaden blew up the towers?
toubical, and Justice arcs.
I have been aware of the conquest-y part of our foreign policy since the age of 12, when I read Prescott's Conquest of Mexico, so, one more try, I would like to underscore the point I was making, which I attempt to rephrase, is that the terms 9/11 and war on terror have become conflated, and have become subliminal triggers for anger for us in the USA, and that that anger was then, as now, misdirected. So, every time we hear terror or war on terror we are sparked again, and as Mr. Fisk point out, we are hearing it several times A DAY.
I thought it a good point to add to Mr. Fisk's article. Still do. Just a small nod of agreement, and thanks.
I hear you both saying in your posts above that you think there was no real investigation of the building collapses, that there are people who think there was thermite used, and that all kinds of just physical evidence were not looked at, that it was not the size and duration and type investigation one would expect to what was a 3 thousand plus people e murder scene, and that the real and complete story is very complex, and not known.
I totally agree.
toubibcal,
yes.
Is this your way of saying, "someone else did it, I know who it is, but I am not going to tell you who?"
When one side captures the language, it has won the war.
do you mean captures the land?
I associate life with land...
'Predator drone strike' is actually 'video bombing'. The first implies a strategic procedure, a 'strike', done with the precision of a machine 'a drone', in the manner of a bird of prey, perhaps an Eagle, a 'predator'. But, what is actually going on is someone on a video console half a world away is bombing someone on the ground. And everyone around that person.
The words 'video bombing' convey the reality that in this new kind of warfare, one of the combatants is too cowardly to even show up to the field of battle, prefering to 'dial in' his contribution before taking his lunch break. And, in this, it resembles nothing so much as an 'IED', a favorite tool of 'the terrorists'.
But, of course, we aren't terrorists. My media told me so.
In America, someone who believes we could tax the rich more than we presently do is now a 'communist'. This label is repeated so regularly it's validity is unquestioned. When I tell people that communists actually believe there should be no private property at all, much less rich people, they are often surprised. They don't actually know the meaning of the word, but they know that communists are 'godless', and the association of 'communist' with the existential threat posed by the former USSR and Red China.
'Communist' in 2000s America = 'Witch' in 1600s America
By contrast, its kinda cool, now, to be called a witch.
Yes .... Exactly... If we just give our political leaders the entire wealth of the country to distribute as they see fit... Then Utopia on earth will have arrived. U r a moron. Considering the political class has wasted the wealth of this country blowing up the various brown skinned people of the middle east the last 20 years... Why are you advocating an even bigger bloodbath
"Why are you advocating an even bigger bloodbath"
I'm not. I'm pointing out how the new ability of the oligarch to define language includes the ability to call anyone advocating the reigning in of their financial power a 'communist'. I do think the oligarch have too much power, and I'm not a communist, and I deeply resent their ability to define me in their terms. If I were defining them in my terms they would be Nazi's, and the discussion would be about as fruitful as it is now.