Most Popular This Week
- Not to Worry, Rape Victims Who Want An Abortion: We Won't Charge You With Felony Tampering With Evidence, Just Your Doctor
- The Non Zero-Sum Society: How the Rich Are Destroying the US Economy
- The Right of the People, Even At the Airport
- Obama Administration Compromise Would Implement No-Cost Birth Control
- To End Extreme Poverty, Let’s Try Ending Extreme Wealth
- The Non Zero-Sum Society: How the Rich Are Destroying the US Economy
- Don’t Put a Fork in It: On the Perils of Genetically Engineered Salmon
- Five Possibilities for the Next Great Progressive Push
- UN Report: Israel Must Immediately Dismantle Settlements or Face ICC
- An Economic Alternative to Exploitative Free Market Capitalism
Popular content
Today's Top News
Another March to War?
As a journalist, there’s a buzz you can detect once the normal restraints in your business have been loosened, a smell of fresh chum in the waters, urging us down the road to war. Many years removed from the Iraq disaster, that smell is back, this time with Iran.
You can just feel it: many of the same newspapers and TV stations we saw leading the charge in the Bush years have gone back to the attic and are dusting off their war pom-poms. CNN’s house blockhead, the Goldman-trained ex-finance professional Erin Burnett, came out with a doozie of a broadcast yesterday, a Rumsfeldian jeremiad against the Iranian threat would have fit beautifully in the Saddam’s-sending-drones-at-New-York halcyon days of late 2002. Here’s how the excellent Glenn Greenwald described Burnett’s rant:
It’s the sort of thing you would produce if you set out to create a mean-spirited parody of mindless, war-hungry, fear-mongering media stars, but you wouldn’t dare go this far because you’d want the parody to have a feel of realism to it, and this would be way too extreme to be believable. She really hauled it all out: WMDs! Terrorist sleeper cells in the U.S. controlled by Tehran! Iran’s long-range nuclear missiles reaching our homeland!!!! She almost made the anti-Muslim war-mongering fanatic she brought on to interview, Rep. Peter King, appear sober and reasonable by comparison.
Like Greenwald, I was particularly struck by Burnett’s freak-out about Iran’s nuclear program, about which she said, “No one buys Iran’s claim that [it is] for peaceful purposes.” She then cited remarks by Director of Intelligence James Clapper, which, she said, “drove that message home.” But then she ran a clip with Clapper’s quote, which read as follows:
Iran’s technical advances . . . strengthen our assessment that Iran is more than capable of producing enough highly enriched uranium for a weapon if its political leaders, specifically the Supreme Leader himself, choose to do so.
In other words, “If Iran were to decide to be capable of making nuclear weapons, it would be capable of making nuclear weapons.” Unless I'm missing something, that’s a statement that would be true of almost any industrialized country, wouldn't it?
Virtually all of the Iran stories of late have contained some version of this sort of rhetorical sophistry. The news “hook” in most all of these stories is that intelligence reports reveal Iran is “willing” to attack us or go to war – but then there’s usually an asterisk next to the headline, and when you follow the asterisk, it reads something like, “In the event that we attack Iran first.”
An NBC report Greenwald also wrote about put it this way: “Within just the past few days, Iranian leaders have threatened that if attacked, they would launch those missiles at U.S. targets.”
There’s a weird set of internalized assumptions that media members bring to stories like this Iran business. In fact there’s an elaborate belief system we press people adhere to, about how a foreign country may behave toward the U.S., and how it may not behave. It reminds me a little of a passage in Anna Karenina about the belief system of noblemen in Tolstoy’s day:
Vronsky’s life was particularly happy in that he had a code of principles, which defined with unfailing certitude what he ought and what he ought not to do… These principles laid down as invisible rules: that one must pay a cardsharper, but need not pay a tailor; that one must never lie to a man, but one may lie to a woman; that one must never cheat anyone, but one may a husband; that one must never pardon an insult, but one may give one, and so on.
We have a similar gentleman’s code, a “Westernized industrial power” code if you will, that operates the same way. In other words, our newspapers and TV stations may blather on a thousand times a day about attacking Iran and bombing its people, but if even one Iranian talks about fighting back, he is being “aggressive” and “threatening”; we can impose sanctions on anyone, but if the sanctioned country embargoes oil shipments to Europe in response, it’s being “belligerent,” and so on.
I’m not defending Ahmadinejad, I think he’s nuts and a monstrous dick and I definitely don’t think he should be allowed to have nuclear weapons, but to me this issue has little to do with Iran at all. What’s more troubling to me is that we’ve internalized this “gentleman’s code” to the point where its basic premises are no longer even debated.
Once upon a time, way back in the stone ages, when Noam Chomsky was first writing about these propaganda techniques in Manufacturing Consent, our leaders felt the need to conceal – or at least sugar-coat – these Orwellian principles. It was assumed that the American people genuinely needed to feel like they were on the right side of things, and so the foreign powers we clashed with were always depicted as being the instigators and aggressors, while our role in provoking those responses was always disguised or at least played down.
But now the public openly embraces circular thinking like, “Any country that squawks when we threaten to bomb it is a threat that needs to be wiped out.” Maybe I’m mistaken, but I have to believe that there was a time when ideas like that sounded weird to the American ear. Now they seem to make sense to almost everyone here at home, and that to me is just as a scary as Ahmadinejad.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


97 Comments so far
Show All"He is subordinate to the Supreme Leader, and is content with that status. "
Uhh, he isn't content with that subordinate status. There has been something of a power struggle recently between Ahmadinejad (and his supporters), and those of Khamenie.
Why is no one talking about Iranian human rights abuses of its Kurdish population in Eastern Kurdistan?
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/MDE13/088/2008/en/d140767b-5e45-11dd-a592-c739f9b70de8/mde130882008eng.pdf
Do you think Iran should be attacked for this? and should all abuser nations suffer that same fate?
Hold it! Don't let them make you into an armchair warrior. Notice that when they suck you in, then it becomes a relevant debate to you whether Iran should be attacked or not. And such ideas as melting down all weapons on the planet become irrelevant to this insane focus on war.
Only when you resist them sucking you into the warrior armchair can you view the debate over whether or not to attack Iran as irrelevant, and view the melting down of all the weapons to be the most crucial imperative.
We want most, if not all people on the planet waving their arms in the air declaring it absolutely insane that all the weapons are not already melted down. We have to have the vision first, before it can ever become reality. The corollary is quite exciting: When we do have the vision, hardly anything can stop us. Be sure to discover this for yourself.
rtdrury: I don't think acg149 was advocating attacking Iran for human rights violations. I think (s)he's doing a setup for showing how many countries you'd have to attack if your criteria is the abuse of a group in the country.
ctrl-z
I agree that sometimes it's difficult to discern the meaning and the writer's intention in a few lines of text, but I think your interpretation is pretty close to being the accurate take on acg149’s comment:
“Do you think Iran should be attacked for this? and should all abuser nations suffer that same fate?”
Actually, that’s a very fair question for a variety of reasons too obvious to belabor even for the sake of argument, because the numerous examples have spanned the globe for many decades to the present day and are part of the historical record.
Clearly, if the U.S. were going to attack “all abuser nations” as the writer’s question suggests, the U.S. – unparalleled as the world’s largest and most abusive “abuser nation” -- should begin that onslaught by first attacking itself.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Wolf (Jerusalem Post) Blitzer has been promoting war with muslim countries for a very long time and Erin Burnett is an advisor to the racist idiot Donald Trump who never gets tired of bashing foreigners for everything that the Americans themselves have caused to go wrong. Both parties are completely dominated by zionist hucksters and the war they want is definitely on track.
Who the hell are we to try and tell any other country what they can or can't have in the way of nuclear weapons? We're the one with the vast capability to destroy the Earth ten tmes over, and the only country in the history of mankind to actually use some of that capability to kill hundreds of thousands of civilians.
No one can have weapons of mass destruction but us (or Isreal, which possesses some 200 nukes), that is our basic foreign policy credo when it comes to nuclear proliferation, and if you try and arm yourselves for self defense even, we'll invade your country and kill your people. Just stop and think how ridiculous we look to the rest of the world,folks. The greatest purveyor of violence in the world, as MLK said so many years ago. This country is a joke, and I ain't laughing anymore. If we go to war with Iran and bring on the deaths of thousands and thousands of innocent people, than I will consider it the final act of a government gone totally insane and unaccountable, one that needs to be taken down now, for the benefit of humanity. Are you ready to join me, brothers and sisters?
limeres... Thanks. You said it, now I won't have to. The US lost any moral authority on this issue when we used nuclear bombs to slaughter civilians.
Matt what's up ? Jamie Lee Curtis kills her credibility by taking money from Activia. And Alec Baldwin would be happy to sell our asses to Capitol One. Don't kill your credibility by looking like you're on the take from Iran's detractors.
In accordance with kivals (9:13am), medmedude (10:30am), tomcarberry (12:22pm), dreamjoehill (1:09pm), drosera (9:45am), Amurkan (9:54am) and Memory_Hole (12:18pm) (so far):
In a previous article*, Taibbi naïvely or disingenuously wondered whether "Obama's 'Economic Populism' [is] for Real", as if this were an open question.
In the associated comments thread, Birdbrain Alley led off a critical response by noting, "People tell me that Matt Taibbi hesitates to draw clear distinctions because of the mental difficulties which afflict the majority of the readers of Rolling Stone."
This time around, Taibbi tosses in the seemingly obligatory cringeworthy disclaimer, "I’m not defending Ahmadinejad, I think he’s nuts and a monstrous dick and I definitely don’t think he should be allowed to have nuclear weapons...".
Even a superlative journalist like Robert Fisk can't mention Ahmadinejad without crassly dubbing him a "crackpot"; perhaps Taibbi's stumble is a conscious homage to the masterful Fisk's Achilles heel.
Personally, I take exception to the popular notion that it's OK, even necessary, for pundits to adulterate their writing with gratuitous demagogic rhetoric in order to reach, entice and persuade complacent or simple-minded readers.
This approach is breezily and knowingly proffered as valid, constructive "white sham"-- a smart, shrewd "teaching tool", i.e. a means justified by the laudable end of educating and raising the consciousness of "Rolling Stone" readers with inferior intellects.
It's impossible to tell from the text whether the author is expressing an authentic, genuine belief or is professionally adding an arch rhetorical twist as defenders assert. But if it indeed is the latter, I think this tactic is supercilious, patronizing, and insulting to anyone who ISN'T such a bozo that he or she benefits from the artifice.
I just don't buy into the facile insistence that writers (or teachers) must be willing to take the low road in order to reel in the unenlightened, and that in the long run the benefits outweigh the disadvantages of the practice.
On the flip side, Taibbi provides trenchant insights, to wit:
“We have a similar gentleman’s code, a 'Westernized industrial power' code if you will, that operates the same way. In other words, our newspapers and TV stations may blather on a thousand times a day about attacking Iran and bombing its people, but if even one Iranian talks about fighting back, he is being 'aggressive' and 'threatening'; we can impose sanctions on anyone, but if the sanctioned country embargoes oil shipments to Europe in response, it’s being 'belligerent,' and so on.”
I hope that Eric Margolis, who in an article last week** lamented that "Iran shows spectacular public relations ineptitude by fulminating against Israel, calling it a 'tumor' that must be removed, and firing obsolete tactical missiles and staging flamboyant military exercises by its feeble armed forces." reads and learns from this passage.
As I commented then:
--------------------
... It's beyond question that Iran has been persistently menaced, beleaguered, and scapegoated by the Western hegemony for decades.
So it's inevitable that Iran's government will respond by asserting itself exactly as any other national government does-- denouncing its detractors, flexing its muscles, and letting the world know that it's not willing or able to just sit back or roll over while a thuggish confederation of fellow nations trash-talks and bullies it to extinction.
Deploring this as "public relations ineptitude" implies that the domestic, internal "public relations" value of Iran's assertive and unapologetic stance is negligible or irrelevant.
--------------------
I'm glad that Taibbi is also calling attention to the Amerikan corporate mass-media commentariat-conditioned public's monstrously pathological inability or disinclination to consider reality from the Other's point of view.
____________________
* http://www.commondreams.org/view/2012/01/27
** http://www.commondreams.org/view/2012/02/11-5
Well Said
Some of us are old enough to remember the original popular ad campaigns that had the catch-phrases "Where's the beef?" and "Help me, I've fallen and I can't get up." Recently ads trying to recreate the original successes, using the same phrases, appeared. They simply haven't caught on. They could just as well tried "Twenty-three skidoo."
The phrases hit some nerve in their time and the time passed. I think "weapons of mass destruction" and "evidence in the form of a mushroom cloud" are also phrases whose time has passed. Now they're using similar phrases to try to emulate the success of the Iraq War ad campaign but the whole war/weapons meme has grown stale. People aren't buying it.
Let's hope it stays that way.
The only thing keeping Erin Burnett from being on Fox Noise Channel is that she is a brunette. Additionally, Matt Taibbi knows well enough that Ahmedinejad is a trained chimp at the command of Ayatollah Khamenei & Co.
Since one of my points has been covered - by O.S. for one - i shall simply make a couple of short comments. I have heard M.T. on cable shows and he was pretty disappointing, sounding much in tune with the msnbc punditry. I think he was being asked about his now famous general in Afghanistan story. He was pretty mainstream when discussing these 'great men' or something to that effect.
Secondly, and don't get me wrong, i think there is some good stuff in his piece, i think he is about twenty years too late in his realization of how the u.s. no longer needs a theoretically high minded excuse to invade nations. I was saying this when the u.s. invaded Iraq in the 'first Gulf war'. Democratization (the modern, u.s. version of evangelism), is no longer necessary. And wasn't Iran part of the 'axis of evil'? So, there you go!
By the way, my take on his perfunctory need to bash Mr. A., is to be certain that his readers and publishers know that he is right in line with the American line. I am sure he would be doing the same when writing about Saddam, but i don't know for sure.
I agree with both points, readytotransform.
BTW, in my previous comment, I got so distracted by carrying on about the lame excuse that Taibbi has to write in a way that plays to the peanut gallery that I ignored the complementary point you raise: Taibbi also knows which side his bread's buttered on.
One frequently sees writers, especially on this site, employ disclaimers to reassure readers that they don't actually "defend" (or "credit", "support", or "justify") the likes of the Super-Villain du jour, e.g. Ahmadinejad, Gaddafi, Saddam Hussein, Slobodan Milošević, etc.
Like a similar disclaimer, "I'm no pacifist, but...", I interpret these disclaimers as a marker that proclaims that the writer is a MODERATE, and no RADICAL.
Moderates, of course, are always welcome in the Sphere of Legitimate Discourse-- whereas radicals are denizens of the Sphere of Deviance.
Radicals-- like lepers of old-- may only be sporadically and cautiously admitted to the Sphere of Legitimate Debate, are properly kept at arm's length and are not to be embraced, and must be taken with a stiff dose of salt.
Thanks for raising the point.
You are very welcome, O.S.
readytotransform
Good points all -- but I'm curious about whom and what you mean by Taibbi's "famous general in Afghanistan story" -- because that story is not ringing a bell with me.
Are you sure that you're not confusing Matt Taibbi with Michael Hastings, who published the piece in Rolling Stone -- "The Runaway General" (2010) -- that exposed the downside of General Stanley A. McChrystal, who was soon forced to resign from his post as NATO Commander in Afghanistan in the wake of the scandal only to be replaced by General David Petraeus?
That would be the same Michael Hastings who has just published a recent piece, also in Rolling Stone, about Army Lt. Col. Daniel Davis, who issued a scathing report on conditions in Afghanistan, declaring that the "Senior ranking U.S. military leaders have so distorted the truth when communicating with the U.S. Congress and American people in regards to conditions on the ground in Afghanistan that the truth has become unrecognizable."
Amy Goodman and Nermeen Shaikh interview with Michael Hastings about Lt. Col. Davis on Democracy Now!
Army Whistleblower Lt. Col. Daniel Davis Says Pentagon Deceiving Public on Afghan War
http://www.democracynow.org/2012/2/15/army_whistleblower_lt_col_daniel_davis
Hastings discusses Lt. Col Davis and his damning report on the scale and scope of the failures of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan despite the upbeat spin we continue to get from President Obama and Leon Panetta. Lt. Col. Davis, who returned in October from his second year-long deployment in Afghanistan, reports that military officials have misled the American public about how poorly the decade-long war is actually going to date.
Anyway, just curious.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sarah, thank you for pointing this out. You are correct!
Taibbi wrote a good piece until ..
"I definitely don’t think he should be allowed to have nuclear weapons, "
Well, Matt, and what, precisely do you propose to do to stop them? Once you have made that statement you have bought into the neo-con argument and the rest of your piece is basically worthless.
Iran, unlike Israel, IS a signatory to the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty and under the terms of that treaty IS allowed to enrich uranium. So it is allowed to make the stuff that could be used for a bomb as is Japan and a bunch of other countries. And, as others have pointed out , our threatening actions toward it give it every incentive to do so. The difference between what has happened to 2 of the original members of the "axis of evil" pivoted on the availability of nukes - Iraq didn't have any and got wiped out, N. Korea does and has remained "intact". Doesn't take a "rocket scientist" to figure out what the best course to take is ... Any country that doesn't have nukes is a potential victim of US aggression ...
Excellent comment. Thanks!
The truth, for a change. Thanks Aquifer.
"I’m not defending Ahmadinejad, I think he’s nuts and a monstrous dick and I definitely don’t think he should be allowed to have nuclear weapons"
Tabby once again shows his true colors. One wonders, would he say the same of Israel and the United States?
"I’m not defending Ahmadinejad, I think he’s nuts and a monstrous dick and I definitely don’t think he should be allowed to have nuclear weapons ... "
I’m not defending _____, I think he’s nuts and a monstrous dick and I definitely don’t think he should be allowed to have nuclear weapons ...
Fill in the blank with anyone of the following:
Bush I
Bush II
Obama
Netanyahu
Uncle Sam
and the list goes on ...
LOL!
Really scary as the terminology of cause changes.....
Now it is 'capability to produce' a bomb, ratcheted up from 'producing'
'We don't really want to go to war.....but, gee, I guess we hafta...just in case.....
Excellent article Matt...
Hacktastic!
Matt Taibbi informs us that “journalists” like himself can detect a “buzz” once the “normal restraints” in their business have been loosened and claims that he can “smell” the injection of “fresh chum in the waters” leading us down the road to war with Iran. If ever there were such “normal restraints” (whatever that means) in the media’s coverage of Iran since the overthrow of the Shah in 1979, then I must have missed those occasions when the exercise of such “restraints” was the norm.
On the contrary, there is ample evidence to suggest that the paranoia and saber-rattling and threats and sanctions and aggression -- the funding and arming of Saddam Hussein (with chemical weaons) to attack Iran and engage in a brutal eight-year proxy war from 1980 to 1988 -- have been consistent and relentless in the American media as one Iranian leader after another is demonized and degraded with equal fervor and zeal so that they become interchangeable in the eyes of the public. There have been no “restraints” to be loosened, “normal” or otherwise.
So, operating in a mode entirely consistent with the U.S. corporate media's knee-jerk habit of personalizing international disputes and demonizing political leaders of countries relegated to America's enemies' list, Taibbi feels it necessary to reassure the reader: "I’m not defending Ahmadinejad, I think he’s nuts and a monstrous dick and I definitely don’t think he should be allowed to have nuclear weapons" – Whew! That’s a huge relief!
Devoid of original insights, perspective, and analysis of his own to contribute to the debate, Taibbi then links to the genuinely insightful -- and somewhat “restrained” god forbid! -- critical analysis of Glenn Greenwald on the topic of the USA, Israel, and Iran and the march of folly led by the cheerleading network and cable news hosts who enthusiastically rattle the sabers, stoke the fearmongering, beat the drums of war, and “catapult the propaganda” as Bush the Lesser so helpfully explained.
Taibbi picks up the “smell” of “fresh chum in the waters” after reading Greenwald’s truly excellent and in-depth critical analysis of the USA/Israel/Iran axis of tensions and the various stenographers in the corporate media who quote “senior Pentagon” and “senior administration" officials who hide beneath the cloak of anonymity. He then lazily serves up large chunks of Greenwald’s piece with links and block quote (filler) -- all passages which those of us who read Greenwald on a regular basis have already seen in the context of his extensive body of work on the subject.
Taibbi complains that “virtually all of the Iran stories of late have contained some version of this sort of rhetorical sophistry” and laments: “There’s a weird set of internalized assumptions that media members bring to stories like this Iran business." So, where exactly does his opinion that Ahmadinejad is “nuts" and a "monstrous dick” who "definitely should not be allowed to have nuclear weapons" fit into his "internalized assumptions" model? Is not his own hyperbolic statement an example of sophistry? Does that opinion not express a “weird set of internalized assumptions that media members bring to stories like this Iran business”?!
Taibbi is concerned: “What’s more troubling to me is that we’ve internalized this ‘gentleman’s code’ to the point where its basic premises are no longer even debated.” And, yet, here we have Taibbi – gifted by several column inches reserved for his screed in Rolling Stone -- and what does he contribute to the debate? Nothing but the same sophistry and broad applications of the internalized “gentleman’s code” – sophomoric name-calling and demonizing of Iran’s current president and his alleged determination to produce nuclear weapons -- that he otherwise purports to decry with such muddled insistence.
Barack Obama, in a recent interview with Matt Lauer on NBC, made the following statement:
"My number one priority continues to be the security of the United States. But also, the security of Israel. And we're going to make sure that we work in lockstep, as we proceed to try to solve this -- hopefully diplomatically."
Obama 'in lockstep' with Israel on Iran issue
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/americas/2012/02/201225222448276649.html
The U.S. in “lockstep” with Israel? And if the matter, which has recently changed before our eyes -- from Iran's actual enrichment of yellow-cake uranium to weapons grade material to the "capability" to enrich to that level -- is not solved “hopefully” and “diplomatically”…what then? I shudder to think.
But, alas, poor Taibbi thinks that Ahmadinejad is “scary.”
PS -- If Taibbi wants to play the "scary" card, I would refer him to Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, who does have nuclear weapons and lusts for the excuse to carry out violent acts of aggression against his neighbors from Gaza to Teheran.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
At exactly 0:11 in the narrative, the "reporter" states, as though undisputed supposedly in all quarters, that, "No one buys Iran's claim that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes."
Are Israel's 300 nuclear bombs intended to be used for peaceful purposes? When did Israel sign the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty? When did Iran sign the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty?
Iran/Hezbolla are terrorists? The CIA overthrew the democraticlly elected government of Iran in 1953, installed a "friendly dictator" called "The Shah" who subsequently established "The SAVAK", a secret police agency that ran rampant killing without due process "enemies of the state". All during the reign of "The Shah", the US bought oil from Iran at dirt cheap prices, and encouraged the development of nuclear power in Iran. Currently, Israel and the United States co-sponsor a terrorist group inside Iran called the MEK. Do a net search on the MEK.
And, now, someone bearing the unfortunate name of "Clapper", warns of possible blowback in the form of attacks, UNDISPUTEDLY in all possible quarters by "Iranian backed" Hezbollah of course, inside the sacred homeland?
I defy anyone to "make this shit up".
I feel like I'm living on some bizarro world where there is no logic.
*Surrounded by American and NATO military bases, without nuclear weapons and no history of invading any nation in modern times, Iran is a threat. Israel, with hundreds of nukes and a record of assaulting its neighbors, and the U.S, with hundreds of military bases all over the world and the only nation to ever use nuclear weapons, are guardians of the peace.
If you believe that, you need to take a sedative and see a mental health professional. The rest of us need to further investigate our supposed democratic reality before we allow it to be imposed on other nations.*
http://tinyurl.com/8xj86ns
Taibi himself adds to the smell of chum in the water. Demonization of "the enemy" is a prelude to war and Matt is a member of the lynch mob ready to hang Ahmadinejad without benefit of either trial or even rational consideration.
Scariest factor is that budget-cutting has actually reduced the potential flow of $$$$$$$$$$ to the pentagon, a monster that must be fed, so that military contractors are prowling for a new BAD GUY to ramp up fear/profit margins.
Taibi's glib '"he's nuts and a monstrous dick'" comment may have been his toll for remaining a part of the msm. Or he may have really meant it. Ahmadinejad is in fact, not a friend of the people. But either way, Matt's comment at this particular juncture has a smell all its own.
The whole point is that the government is again trying to convince us to go to war,.
It has nothing to do with what Iran or any other country is doing that threatens us. Any justification that works is sufficient, as long as we can go to war.
The Middle East is a prize. Rich with hydrocarbons (and some uranium) the west needs a reliable way to get that hydrocarbon to market, which means safe pipeline routes to the sea. Look at a map of the area https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/cia-maps-publications/maps/803428.jpg .
Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan are rich with hydrocarbons, but how do you get it to Europe and the US (and India)? What countries do you go through (without paying Russia)? Look at the countries bordering the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea. The West requires that none of these countries threaten our Energy Security.
Any person or organization that aspires to practice journalism (collectively, the press) should be licensed annually by a professional body that upholds standards, such as, factuality, lack of bias, no anonymity for sources (unless said source would be punished by government or other institution), i.e., absolutely no propagandizing for state or powerful non-state institutions. If, e.g., CNN lost its journalism license for the wretched eructations of Ms. Burnett, then it could no longer tout itself as a "news" organization. Entertainment, marketing, magical realism, whatever, but not journalists. The professional body should be comprised of citizens, non-partisan, advised by dis-interested professional journalists and academics. Really, no public corporation can deliver journalism services, ever. To do so would cause corporate officers to be sued for breach of duty. It's as simple as that, but, apparently, Americans can't fix this.
If they're all nuts and monstrous dicks, why single out Ahmadinejad?
That para about Ahmenijad spoiled your entire piece. When you say he should not be allowed to have nuclear weapons you are practically in the war party's camp. Compared to the US and Israeli leaders, Ahmenijad is a statesman.
How would Israel feel if there were daily reports from Iran that it may bomb Israel and Russia and China were counselling it not to do so yet but all options were on the table? But perhaps this needs to be done as Israel, along with the US, is a far greater threat to world peace than Iran which in its history has never attacked any country.
The US and Israel have constantly been waging aggressive war against countries weaker than them, though they would never attack a strong country.The only reason war may be avoided are those missiles Iran is said to have.If Iran does acquire a nuclear weapon then peace will prevail in the region for a long time.The real reason Israel does not want Iran to have a nuclear weapon is because it would stop Israeli and US aggression in the area.The US does not talk of attacking North Korea.
And Matt, what is meant by a monstrous dick? What other kinds are there? Angelic ones ?
yep and after the war has completely bankrupted the nation, Goldman Sachs will be there to foreclose and name it New Israel. Wanna bet?
I think that all the players in the Middle East who own oil and all the energy companies have a financial incentive in playing up and orchestrating the "instability" in the Middle East in order make lots of money on high oil prices. They must all be laughing all the way to the bank.
Many international corporate entities are laughing all the way to their offshore accounts. Now who is the brave soul who will pull back the rest of the curtain and shine the spotlight on the true "players". This is scary stuff. How do you play by the rules, when the game is fixed?
Israel feels VERY BAD when Ahmedinijad and mobs of his supporters claim that Israel should be wiped off the map of the world. Jews also feel bad when Muslim masses all over the world scream Death to Jews (even in Europe, Australia and US where they are enjoying freedom of expression). Jews indeed feel bad when they are threatened in Sweden and Holland by Muslim thugs and beaten up and when at "peaceful" demonstrations of Muslims there are posters adoring Hitler.
Yes, indeed, Israel is being threatened by Ahmdinijad and Ayatollahs who do NOT represent Iranian people, as it was clear in 2009 "elections", which were rigged to maintain oppressive murderous against its own people regime brought about by "Iranian revolution" similar to Arab spring. They got rid of the Shah only to replace it with a vile medieval sharia run regime that does not even know the concept of human rights, because Islam is about SUBMISSION to the will of Allah, as explained by mullahs and imams, who spout their hatred against Jews and Israel in mosques and TVs all over the world.
Islam itself is INCOMPATIBLE with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and therefore it MUST reform before it causes even more damange, as it is doing in Europe, Australia and US where Islamists think that they can take over our US Constitution and replace it with their medieval evil sharia, under the guise of "human rights".
Political correctness has no place when reality needs to be confronted rather then white washed as it is done at this forum, filled with treasonous anti-American and anti-semitic ideologues who do not understand history of reality of Islam and Mohamed.
Israel feels VERY BAD when Ahmedinijad and mobs of his supporters claim that Israel should be wiped off the map of the world. Jews also feel bad when Muslim masses all over the world scream Death to Jews (even in Europe, Australia and US where they are enjoying freedom of expression). Jews indeed feel bad when they are threatened in Sweden and Holland by Muslim thugs and beaten up and when at "peaceful" demonstrations of Muslims there are posters adoring Hitler.
Yes, indeed, Israel is being threatened by Ahmdinijad and Ayatollahs who do NOT represent Iranian people, as it was clear in 2009 "elections", which were rigged to maintain oppressive murderous against its own people regime brought about by "Iranian revolution" similar to Arab spring. They got rid of the Shah only to replace it with a vile medieval sharia run regime that does not even know the concept of human rights, because Islam is about SUBMISSION to the will of Allah, as explained by mullahs and imams, who spout their hatred against Jews and Israel in mosques and TVs all over the world.
Islam itself is INCOMPATIBLE with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and therefore it MUST reform before it causes even more damange, as it is doing in Europe, Australia and US where Islamists think that they can take over our US Constitution and replace it with their medieval evil sharia, under the guise of "human rights".
Political correctness has no place when reality needs to be confronted rather then white washed as it is done at this forum, filled with treasonous anti-American and anti-semitic ideologues who do not understand history of reality of Islam and Mohamed.
If "Israel feels VERY BAD" it should be about their slaughter and mistreatment of the Palestinians.
But hey, don't let me interfere with your bigoted propaganda.
Gea...you are misquoting Ahmadinejad: he never said Israel must be "wiped off the map" physically. He was referring to its political ascendancy within the Middle East.
Fortunately the international news and world don't seem to be reporting it that way. Yesterday the rest of the world were reporting that America had signed onto the fact that Iran did not have nuclear weapons aspirations. As always what is happening inside the bubble head press and country is not happening internationally.
Rights...human rights. Wow what a startling comparison with what is going on with Israel today. (Israel denies solar power to West Bank). Pretty soon they will be denying them toilet paper. Our glaring double standards on human rights, war, aggression etc make me sick. But the MSM just glosses over it. I am sick of our war on the world and sick of our support for Israel.
Matt Taibi, thanks for trying to illuminate the country. You are a voice crying out in the wilderness.
Well, Matt, your comparison between Iran and USA in your final comment here: "Now they seem to make sense to almost everyone here at home, and that to me is just as a scary as Ahmadinejad." is acutely accurate.
Both countries are extremist at core; both are, naturally, intent upon maintaining their superiority within their spheres of influence; and both habitually indulge in warmongering rhetoric ("all options are on the table" mantra) when words fail them.
As I've said elsewhere here at Common Dreams, the real problem is Israel and the open secret about its own store of nuclear weapons. To resolve this Iranian issue, and potentially others in the region, the USA should categorically call for Israel to give up all its nuclear weapons. If that happened, Iran's case for nuclear weapons (if it has one) would fade away.
The goal is to rid the world of nuclear weapons, Matt: isn't it smarter to start where the risk of real problems grows every day?
The problems with Israel and the surrounding countries are not solvable by any means of persuasion that is considered normal in the western way of thought and many of the Israelis know this.
Many of the countries surrounding Israel are given to barter and have been for thousands of years. They feel that they have been intruded upon and want to have compensation for it, but the Israelis are not being compensation minded. Instead the are taking the stance of their mentor the United States, and following their lead.
The proliferation of nuclear arms in the Middle East is not new to that area of the world and Americans should know this. Israel is the most heavily nuclear armed nation in the area.
And no, if they are the most nuclear armed then why are they afraid or why are they brandishing their capabilities to a country like Iran that is hated by most of the other countries in the area? It is simple really. And it is not oil.
It is political and regional in the sense that they are greedy and want more than they have. The Israelis have one of the smallest pieces of property in the region and it is one of the most desolate pieces of property.
They are expanding with population growth from their interior and Immigration from countries all over the globe. Hebrews from all corners of the world are flocking to Israel as a Mecca and with the hopes of a new birth within their religion and culture. In plain language they are out of room.
What does Iran have to do with this?
If anyone takes the time to think outside of the box it will be evident. Iran takes the attention away from Israel and the Palestinians for just long enough to capture some more acreage. Just long enough that the worlds eyes and attention will be focused on the Iranians and when they discover that Israel has moved further into Palestinian lands no one will care very much, because Israel will have been doing it for protection of their people.
I am not condoning Iran or their leaders. I am condemning everyone involved in this situation, especially those that see the profit and are trying to do their best to stir up anti Iranian sentiments, and will the world to attack the Iranian people.
The west does not have conclusive evidence that Iran has nuclear weapons or that they as a country are planning to deploy nuclear weapons. It is all speculation. They may have them and they may have someone in power that is determined and crazy enough to deploy them, but no one knows this for certain.
What do we know?
We know that Israel has hundreds of nuclear warheads. Not one or two, hundreds. And we know that they have the capability to launch them today, tomorrow, or yesterday.
We know that the United States has the most sophisticated satellites in orbit of all of the nations on earth and that they can detect any kind of changes within a meter of a rock in Iran. Does it bother anyone that the United States has not been alarmed by Iran until the last few years? Does anyone for a minute believe that the US does not watch the Iranian landscape and see what they are doing?
The latest arguments have been that Iran is building their nuclear missile silos underground but that doesn't wash either.
The US has heat and geothermal sensor technology that can detect underground installations. That is how they found out about all of the oil shale fields and natural gas reserves in the United States that are being developed today.
The US doesn't need Iran's oil. The US has enough oil and gas to last for 70-100 years. It is the richest natural gas and oil nation on the planet right now.
So what is in it for the US to get involved in Iran and a war the will cost 10's of billions of dollars, and thousands of American lives? Greed. Corporate greed. It is what drives most of the American economy today.
Not too long ago the United States was a land that offered opportunity and equal chance at raising yourself to a higher level of income and self worth.
It was a nation that welcomed newcomers and Immigrants. It offered hope to thousands of foreign people every month.
Today the Americans export people and treat their citizens like criminals at the airports.
Why did Americans become like this? Reviled in most other countries and hated by some to the point that they will take their own lives to kill a handful of American citizens.
Think about it. It shouldn't take too long to figure out.
Why are the rich in America growing smaller and wealthier and the middle class disappearing, while the lower class and the impoverished grow at an alarming rate?
Turn off the television, the computer, and the newspaper, an think about your answers for a spell.
You can read an interesting take on this on PoliticalNews.com: http://politcalnews.com/blog/world-news/iranian-nuclear-weapons-an-excuse-for-war-or-reality/.html