By Stephen Lendman
4-15-13
4-15-13
The
Times is America's unofficial ministry of information and propaganda.
Daily managed news misinformation is featured.
Articles, commentaries and editorials are brazenly one-sided. Readers are systematically lied to. Fiction substitutes for facts. Information is carefully filtered. Dissent is marginalized.
Articles, commentaries and editorials are brazenly one-sided. Readers are systematically lied to. Fiction substitutes for facts. Information is carefully filtered. Dissent is marginalized.
When America goes to war or plans one, Times editors,
correspondents and contributors march in lockstep. Independent leaders
are denigrated. Democrats are called despots.
Rule of law principles don't matter. Democratic values
are ignored. Imperial wars are called liberating ones. Mass murder,
destruction and human misery go unreported. What's most important isn't
explained.
Wealth, power and privilege alone matter. Wrong over
right is endorsed. Patriotism means supporting what demands condemnation.
America uber alles matters most.
The
Times features hostile North Korean coverage. It's done so for decades.
It's biased and irresponsible. Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il were vilified.
So is Kim Jong Un. An April 13 report called him "young and defiant."
Nonexistent threats are headlined. Truth is turned
on its head. Readers are systematically misinformed. They're lied to.
It's longstanding Times policy. News most fit to print is omitted.
"What exactly is North
Korea threatening to do," it asked? It "issu(es) near-daily
threats against the United States and South Korea, and sometimes at
United States forces in the Pacific."
Irresponsibly deploying them
there goes unmentioned. America's imperial agenda isn't discussed. Its
global footprint gets short shrift. Its permanent war agenda isn't explained.
Former US diplomat Charles
Freeman commented earlier on Washington's war on terror. "How can
we win," he asked? America's "enem(ies are) so ill-understood
that we must invent a nonexistent ideology" for justification,
he said.
Not according to Times editors.
Iran is Exhibit A. So is North Korea. They're the two remaining components
of Bush's "axis of evil."
Times editors make sure readers
don't forget. "In one of the boldest warnings," they claimed,
"the North said it could carry out pre-emptive nuclear strikes
against the United States."
"(W)hether nuclear-tipped
or not, (s)ome of its missiles could hit South Korea or Japan and American
forces there…."
"Why is North Korea threatening
the United States now? Because" more sanctions followed its February
nuclear test, The Times claimed. It also "ratchets up its political
speech during joint United States-South Korea military exercises…."
It has every right to do so.
They include war games. They target the North. Simulated nuclear bombs
were dropped. Imagine US and other Western responses if North Korea,
Iran, Russia or China held similar exercises off America's east, west,
or gulf coasts. Doing so might be considered an act of war.
"What might North Korea
be trying to accomplish with its threats?" Earlier, Washington
and South Korea promised "concessions, including much-needed aid,
in return for" Pyongyang denuclearizing.
US commitments aren't worth
the paper they're written on. Promises made are broken. Times editors
accused North Korea of "reneg(ing)." They lied saying so.
"Highlighting a perceived
threat from abroad (is a) favorite tool the North Korean government
uses to ensure internal cohesion in an impoverished country" needing
aid.
North Korea wants normalized
relations. It's wanted them for decades. Washington spurned efforts
every time. Pyongyang's more valuable as an enemy. It's hyped threat
is nonexistent. Times editors don't explain.
"What kind of nuclear
weapons and missile technology does North Korea possess?"
"North Korea has conducted
three nuclear tests since 2006." It has every right to do so. America
conducts its own. They go unreported. Doing so belies Obama's claim
about "seek(ing) a nuclear-free world."
America's the only nation
risking nuclear armageddon. It unilaterally asserts a preemptive first
strike nuclear policy. It claims the right to do so against nuclear
or non-nuclear states. Enemies Washington invents are targeted.
Jeremi Suri's hardline, militant
and irresponsible. He calls power "essential." He's University
of Texas, Austin, Professor of history and public affairs. Times editors
gave him featured op-ed space. He took full advantage.
"SINCE February, the
North Korean government has followed one threatening move with another.
The spiral began with an underground nuclear test."
"Then the North declared
the armistice that ended the Korean War invalid. The young dictator
Kim Jong-un followed with a flurry of threats to attack civilian targets
in South Korea, Japan and the United States."
"President Obama should
state clearly and forthrightly that this is an act of self-defense in
response to explicit threats from North Korea and clear evidence of
a prepared weapon."
"If North Korea can use
its small nuclear arsenal to blackmail the region with impunity, why
shouldn’t the mullahs in Tehran try to do the same?"
"The most prudent move
is to eliminate the most imminent threat in self-defense….(This) kind
of pre-emptive action….would save lives and maybe even preserve the
uneasy peace on the Korean Peninsula."
It's hard imagining responsible
editors publishing this type commentary. It's unprincipled, reckless,
and inflammatory. It justifies imperial aggression. It violates international,
constitutional, and US statute laws doing so.
Attacking North Korea risks
global war. It risks nuclear armageddon. It risks what responsible editors
should condemn. Don't expect The Times editorial board to explain.
A Final Comment
Robert Parry called NYT columnist Tom
Friedman's commentaries "disastrous." He "paid no career
price for his misguided judgments and simplistic nostrums."
He supported
Bush's Iraq war. He's unconcerned about imperial aggression. He suggests
America's "designated enemies" border on insanity.
Wherever "you turn, you
see different actors standing with their toes on red lines, seemingly
ready and willing, even itching, to cross them at any moment."
North Korea's "boy king,
Kim Jong Un, who seems totally off the grid, has ordered his strategic
rocket forces to be on standby, ready to hit US and South Korean targets
at a moment's notice."
Iran heads "closer to
a similar combination of a homemade nuclear weapon and delivery system,
and so far no sanctions have deterred Tehran."
"….Syria's mad leader,
Bashar al-Assad, (chose) ruin for his country."
University of Texas, Austin,
Professor of Journalism Robert
Jensen calls Friedman "scary."
He features "underinflated insights," "twisted metaphors,"
"second-rate thinking," "third-rate writing," and
"hack journalis(m)."
What's most concerning is
his political and professional acclaim. His Times columns appear twice
weekly. He's won three Pulitzer Prizes. His books are best-sellers.
He's featured on US television. He "fills lecture halls for a speaking
fee as high as $75,000."
"Although his work is
stunningly shallow and narcissistic, (he's) celebrated as a big thinker."
"How does a journalist
with a track record of bad predictions and a penchant for superficial
analysis - a person paid to reflect about the world yet who seems to
lack the capacity for critical self-reflection - end up being treated
as an oracle?"
He's perfect "for a management-focused,
advertising-saturated, dumbed-down, imperial culture that doesn't want
to come to terms with the systemic and structural reasons for its decline."
He avoids speaking truth to
power. He's not alone. Times' pages are strewn with likeminded columnists.
What's most important goes
unreported. It's longstanding Times policy. Imperial priorities matter
most.
Savvy readers and viewers
are best served by choosing credible alternative sources. Maybe some
day everyone will.
Getting reliable information
depends on it. Imagine the difference that would make. World peace would
be possible. And a whole lot more.
http://rense.com/general95/nknyt.html
http://rense.com/general95/nknyt.html
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago.
He can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
His new book is titled "Banker
Occupation: Waging Financial War on Humanity."
Visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com.
Listen to cutting-edge discussions
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