I would most definitely keep a weblog chronicling the hundreds of non-news-stories being thrown out there by the big American networks. I’m afraid I’d have to quit my job and dedicate my life to it, though, there are so many bullshit stories being published lately. The latest: Marines discover Iraqi 9/11 mural, about a mural depicting a plane crashing into a building that was found in Iraq the other day. Another was the completely loaded story that UK troops had found Iraqi chemical suits, which obviously (to them) means that they plan to use chemical weapons. I guess the fact that the US troops all have chemical suits proves that the US is about to use chemical weapons too, eh? After all, it was the US who provided the foundation of the whole Iraqi chemical program.
Archives for 2003
M-J Milloy has posted
a great rant about CNN, and in particular about Paula Zahn, that muddle-headed cheerleader they have anchoring their morning show.
One of the nice things to come out of the war
has been the ascendence of Howard Dean‘s candidacy for President in 2004. He’s moved up with words like this, “What I want to know is what in the world so many Democrats are doing supporting the President’s unilateral intervention in Iraq?” I’ve been watching Gov Dean on PBS for about 10 years now – he was a regular guest on a weekly public affairs show out of Montreal, and he’s always seemed to me to be a very straight shooter with opinions that come from his own assessment of an issue, not from some pre-fab party line. He’s a leader, not a follower.
Clark was also interviewed
in Salon.com today: Gen. Wesley Clark, unplugged.
Last September
the Washington Monthly published an article entitled An Army of One? by Gen. Wesley Clark, the former top guy at NATO. The article effectively made the case that networks are not always easy to work with, but though annoying at times it is the network that ensures the possibility of success – robust, real success. As he put it:
Since September 11, America has been in a similar position: the most powerful nation in the world, but facing a deadly enemy. The United States has the opportunity to use the power of the international institutions it established to triumph over terrorists who threaten not just the United States, but the world. What a tragedy it will be if we walk away from our own efforts, and from 60 years of post-World War II experience, to tackle the problem of terror without using fully the instruments of international law and persuasion that we ourselves created.
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