Saturday, February 11, 2017

John Stauber

I feel for John Stauber.

He's a truth teller.

He's a person of integrity.

He did an interview over the summer with COUNTERPUNCH and this is from it:

I founded CMD in 1993 to publish my news magazine PRWatch revealing how the business of public relations functions to thwart democracy and maintain the power and control of the rich and their corporations.  I also wanted to show how western governments use PR to control their citizens, and how corporate media is an echo chamber for both corporate and government propaganda.  I ran CMD until 2009, but then stepped down, feeling that I had taken its mission as far as I could after co-authoring six books through the Center.   I am now pursuing more personal interests neglected for all my decades as an activist and author.  I am no longer writing books or running an organization, and glad of it.   CMD continues under new leadership, but it has become much like other US progressive think tanks, part of the Democratic Party’s liberal echo chamber.  It has done some important work since I left in confronting and exposing ALEC, a brilliant rightwing operation that allows corporations to draft and write laws at the state level in the United States. CMD’s web address is www.PRWatch.org.


CMD is a joke.

It wasn't always that.

While John Stauber ran it, it pursued real issues and didn't care whether the Democrats or the Republicans (or both) were implicated.

It's nothing but a Democratic Party whore house these days.  It merged with THE PROGRESSIVE magazine in 2014 and then that fell apart.  There's a whole story to tell about that -- and readers of the gina & krista round-robin know all about it.


CMD is a joke.

It should have been so much more.

Under Stauber, it was.

Could it be again?

No, it's awash in controlling money, as those of us who read the round-robin know too well.

It will never be able to back to what it was.

That's too bad because it was an import outlet.

Maybe it's original works will inspire something?

Stauber's an Izzy Stone admirer, for example.

I know  Mike, for example, loves the work of John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton.  I'm sure many others have been influenced by them.

It's all a step.

A footrace really.

Each year, more people wake up.

Each year, some of those people pass away.

Will we have enough people awake in time to make a difference?

It's a footrace.

But Izzy Stone mattered, Ida B. Wells, Ida Tarbell, George Seldes, etc.

They influenced people and the work of John Stauber has as well.

"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):
Friday, February 10, 2017.  Chaos and violence continue, a NYT piece of work outdoes Judith Miller, the ban continues to be discussed, should a Supreme Court Justice step down from the Court, and much more.


THE NEW YORK TIMES.

Where the Iraq lunacy began in print and was fostered daily.

All these years later, the best it can do is offer foolishness with the occasional fact.

Take this piece of work who's violated every ethic in place this week.


1 For the last 2 days, I've been reporting from eastern Mosul, now under Iraqi control. It's amazing to finally be able to walk freely here
 
 
 



If ever there was a time to use Cher's favorite word, this would be it.  But I'll just bite my tongue on that.

It must be wonderful, to be an embed, and wonder as you wander the streets of eastern Mosul.


It must be amazing, when you're part of a military detail (as an embed) to walk protected.

Because, never forget, you are the story, you whorish little minded person.

You are always the story.

Not where you sent to cover because you are the story whereever you are.


The whorish one doesn't grasp that she's reporting for THE NEW YORK TIMES.

That means she doesn't offer opinions.

Certainly not on political issues.

Or, that's what it's supposed to mean.

When whores play, it gets messy -- that's why penicillin was invented after all.


15. When you're standing in the liberated streets of (eastern) Mosul, it's clear who this ban is hurting: The people who helped us.
 
 

Let's be clear about what the whore just did.
The whore is taking a side on the ban.
The whore's not an analyst.
And the whore's not talking about the Iraqi people.
She's talking about the Iraqi forces.
Which is confusing because if you're part of the Iraqi forces fighting in Mosul, are you really trying to come to the United States?
Seems like if you're part of the Iraqi forces, you'd want to stay in Iraq.
But logic is hard for whores, they're too busy calculating traffic and how much to charge per trick.
Whores take sides.
The paper bans that.  The paper bans reporters offering opinions on political issues.
But whores do what they want.
And the Iraqi forces in eastern Mosul that she's so concerned about?
MIDDLE EAST MONITOR reports:

Grim footage has emerged from eastern Mosul, supposedly “liberated” from [the Islamic State] control late last month,showing members of the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) and men who appeared to be from the Shia-dominated Popular Mobilisation Forces (PMF) paramilitary organisation executing unarmed men in the streets.
The footage shows armed Shia militants, who are fighting under the banner of Iraq, dragging a bound and clearly terrified man through the streets. The militants are heard abusing the man, and can be clearly seen beating him as they drag him to his death.
The victim is then placed at gunpoint by two other unarmed men in front of a row of houses, before about a dozen Shia jihadists fighting with the PMF and Iraqi soldiers open fire and gun them down in cold blood.
Even after the men have been shot and are clearly dead, the Iraqi soldiers and Shia militants continue to taunt and curse them, and occasionally other soldiers would walk over to the dead men and beginning firing at their corpses at point blank range. They would also stamp on the heads of the unarmed men, which is a deep sign of disrespect in Arab culture.
“Sadly, we have become accustomed to seeing such violence against people who are likely civilians,” Ahmad Al-Mahmoud, an analyst with the London-based Iraq monitoring group Foreign Relations Bureau of Iraq (FRB), told MEMO. “Even if they are ISIS, they should be tried in transparent and just courts, not shot dead in the middle of the street,” Al-Mahmoud said, using another acronym for the [Islamic State] extremist organisation.



Guess she can't notice that because she's too busy Tweeting about how great she feels walking through the streets of eastern Mosul with her military guides.
Again, it's not about the people in Mosul, apparently, it's about the delights of the fish out of water who decides she's the center of the world because she's a reporter.
Does it matter that she requires a translator?
No.
Apparently not.
Apparently she's just the best reporter there ever was (after failing at poetry) and can be dropped anywhere and, embedded with the Iraqi military, know just what the Iraqi people -- that she doesn't speak to freely -- are thinking.
I would say "The spirit of Judith Miller lives on" but I believe even Judith Miller had more integrity than this piece of trash.
We'll come back to THE TIMES in a minute.
Since we're on the ban, let's not Trudy Rubin (PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER):
As the courts ponder President Trump's ill-advised immigration ban, nothing better illustrates its cruelty and carelessness than its impact on Iraqis who risked their lives to help Americans.
By now you probably know that Trump's claim that a mere 109 visa-holders were affected was nonsense. At least 60,000 U.S. visas were canceled, causing chaos for foreign students, academics, high-tech workers, doctors who serve rural America, family members of U.S. citizens, and tourists. That's beside green-card holders - permanent U.S. residents - who were originally included in the ban (most were eventually permitted to enter).
What you may not know is that the ban included Iraqis who held Special Immigrant Visas (SIV) issued to interpreters who helped the U.S. military. Thank heavens the Trump administration was shamed (and pressed by the Pentagon) into revising that decision. However, that affected relatively few Iraqis, since the SIV program ended in 2014; only 19 such visas were issued during the last three years, according to the State Department (around 500 cases are still in process).
And what you probably don't know is that many other Iraqis who risked their lives helping Americans are still excluded by the ban.
Trudy Rubin never forgot Iraq.  She covered regularly in the last 8 years and continues to do so.
Whether you agree with her take or not, hopefully you respect that it is an informed opinion and not an attempt to turn an issue into political football.
Perry Chiaramonte (FOX NEWS) covers another viewpoint:

The Archbishop for the Christian community in Iraq said President Trump’s travel ban on immmigrants from terror hotspots is a good thing and will help minority religious groups in the region.
Bashar Warda, the Chaldean Catholic Archbishop of Erbil in Iraq, said as long as Trump's executive order includes special preferences for all victims of ISIS, it can be a positive for Christians in the region, whose plight Trump has been sympathetic to.
“I would personally prefer that our people stay here in their ancient homeland, but I also understand that many have lost hope,” Archbishop Warda said to Fox News. “They have suffered too much and want to leave. It is not my place to force them to stay. 
“That said, the fact that an American administration seems to know that there are Christians and other religious minorities here who need help is something I find heartening. I hope this means that we will no longer be excluded from U.S. government and UN aid, which our people desperately need.”
The issue will likely be going to the Supreme Court.
On that, a four to seven vote may be the outcome.
Do I mean four to four?
No.
Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg may have to recuse herself from every case the administration is a party to as a result of her idiotic and unprofessional comments during the election.
Judges are not supposed to inject themselves into the electoral process.
Sandra Day O'Connor had her moment and she handled it well.
She was not pleased when Al Gore was being predicted winner and made some sort of a grunt.
Realizing what she did, she then left the room she was in.
Her husband, however, destroyed her removal by explaining to those present that she was upset because if Bully Boy Bush won, she could retire but if Gore won she'd have to wait at least four years before retiring.
[O'Connor was appointed by Republican Ronald Reagan.  She was stating Democrat Al Gore would replace her with someone closer to the Democratic Party so she'd have to stay on the bench until he was not president.]
I like Ruth.
I supported her nomination.
But we've all like Ruth a little too much on the left and she's gotten addicted to applause.
So she makes comments no sitting judge should make.
And we all looked the other way when she started speaking about issues that come before the Court -- when we shouldn't have.
There's an argument to be made for removing her from the court right now because she's not impartial on the Donald Trump administration by her own comments.
She should have to recuse herself repeatedly from case after case.
But, again, there's also a strong argument to be made for her stepping down from the Court immediately.
Again, I've applauded her many times -- most of us on the left have.
She's begun to seek out that applause outside the court room and given speeches and interviews on topics she should not be weighing in on as a sitting justice.
She completely crossed the line with her comments on a candidate for presidency.  Now that the candidate is president, her actions need to be scrutinized.
Let's go back to THE NEW YORK TIMES now.  David Zucchino offers some facts:
Nearly eight months after the recapture of Falluja showed that Iraq’s government could wrest one of the Islamic State’s major support bases away from it, the victory now seems at risk.
The Shiite-dominated national government has not yet demonstrated that it can secure and rebuild this shattered Sunni city, soothe sectarian grievances or provide for 250,000 returning residents. Iraqi and American security officials now fear that if the Sunnis of Falluja are given no reason to trust the government, they may once again embrace the Islamic State, also known as ISIS and ISIL.
Local officials say Islamic State sleeper cells remain active, and many residents continue to aid the insurgents. Guerrilla attacks have resumed; in one of the most recent episodes, a suicide car bomb on Jan. 28 killed two police officers.


Enjoy it.  It's the only real reporting on Iraq will likely see for a few more installments.  Having offered some facts, they'll now return to fluff.

That's liberated Falluja.  "Liberated" Falluja.

Today is day 116 of The Mosul Slog.

The operation to liberate or 'liberate' Mosul began 116 days ago.

It's still not done.

Now they're saying it will be done in 180 more days.


The following community sites updated: