One current talking point in the corporate media's coverage of the situation in Iraq talks about Iraq supposedly being near civil war.
Report finds Iraq teetering toward civil war (U.S. News and World Report)
Civil War Looms With 66 Killed in Baghdad (ABC)
More attacks take Iraq to brink of Sunni, Shiite holy civil war (The Tennessean)
Similar headlines and statements have claimed that Iraq is on the verge of chaos. Of course, in the real world, rather than GOP/corporate Spinland, a civil war has been going on in Iraq ever since the Bush regime's invasion. The Bush regime's bungling has forced our troops to fight on the side of Iranian-aligned Shi'ite religious extremists, who are doing more than their share of killing as well.
The situation has been one of worsening chaos since the occupation began, bringing a firestorm of undeterred looting. Even before the Shi'ite mosque was blown up, Iraq was so dangerous that most reporters remaining in Iraq are under orders from their employers to stay in or near their hotels. Electricity is a fleeting thing. In addition to the tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians being killed by the Bush regime, countless others are being slaughtered by other Iraqis.
Finding humor in the absurd, even surreal, headlines may be gallows humor, but one cannot help but laugh at how hard the corporate media tries to manipulate the gullible.
Wednesday, March 01, 2006
Unintentional Humor in Iraq Coverage
Posted by
libhom
at
8:22 AM (permalink)
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: humor, Iraq, media bias, war
Saturday, February 18, 2006
Holy Halliburton! Corruption Will Keep Gitmo Open
While the pundits and public debate the merits of keeping the detention centers at Guantanamo Bay open, no such debate is taking place in the Bush regime. Why?
You don't have to dig far to find out why. Last year, Halliburton received another construction contract for work on yet another prison facility there. This $30 million contract was not the first for a company that was Dick Cheney's former employer and where Cheney continues to have incredibly valuable stock options in the company. It is extremely unlikely that this will be the last Halliburton contract at Gitmo.
Throughout the War on Terror, protecting the country has been of little or no concern to the Bush regime, which is far more interested in justifying bilking the taxpayers than fighting terrorism. If Bush cronies could make money by handing bombs to bin Laden, the Bush regime would do everything possible to facilitate the transaction.
Posted by
libhom
at
6:14 AM (permalink)
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: Bush, corporations, corruption, Guantanamo
Thursday, February 16, 2006
PFAW Calls for Special Prosecutor on NSA Domestic Spying
People for the American Way has started an online campaign calling for a Special Prosecutor to investigate the Bush Administration's domestic spying program.
http://action.pfaw.org/SpecialProsecutor
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales' public statements have made clear that he is unwilling or unable to conduct the independent, objective, criminal investigation that is needed to resolve the legal issues involving warrantless NSA spying. Gonzales' efforts to spin the massive spying on Americans eliminate any credibility he would have to address the issue.
A special prosecutor is desperately needed to independently investigate the Bush Regime's domestic spying activities, bring criminal charges, and make sure that nobody is above the law.
Posted by
libhom
at
6:50 PM (permalink)
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: Bush, civil liberties, corruption
Sunday, February 12, 2006
More Questions the Press Should Be Asking About the Cheney Shooting
When were the local police informed?
Was a police report filed?
If so, will that police report be made public?
Have the Secret Service agents present at the time been deposed?
Will those Secret Service agents be deposed later?
Was the shooting victim wearing the bright orange clothing hunters usually wear?
Posted by
libhom
at
9:03 PM (permalink)
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: dick cheney, media bias
Should Cheney Be Arrested?
The latest news about Dick Cheney's alleged hunting accident raises some serious questions.
Why was there a one-day delay between the time of the shooting and the reports of it in the media?
Has Dick Cheney been tested to find out if he was under the influence of alcohol, prescription drugs, or illegal drugs at the time of the shooting?
Has there been a medical exam to determine if Cheney is suffering from Alzheimer's or some other kind of senile dementia, which might have contributed to or caused the shooting?
Were there any personal disagreements or hostilities that Cheney might have harbored towards the man he shot, hostilities which the man who was shot had no knowledge of?
Would an ordinary person have been arrested under the same circumstances?
Will Cheney be placed under arrest?
Will the corporate media ask any of these questions, or will they assume their typical role as propagandists for the GOP?
Posted by
libhom
at
8:05 PM (permalink)
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: dick cheney, media bias
Thursday, February 09, 2006
The Thirteenth Cartoon
Much has been made of the twelve famous cartoons mocking Islam and its founder, Mohammad. However, there is a thirteenth cartoon which deserves considerable attention.
It appeared in the satirical French publication, Charlie-Hebdo, along with the twelve more famous cartoons.
View the Cartoons
The cartoon, at the upper left of the gallery, shows a saddened and angry Mohammad saying, "C'est dur d'ĂȘtre aimĂ© par des cons" ( It's tough to be loved by morons). This cartoon deserves far more attention than the original ones that have caused the wave of anger, protest, and terrorism.
I wonder how many of the Muslim fundamentalists have realized that their wave of hysteria has resulted in millions of people seeing cartoons that otherwise would have been unknown to all but a few readers of an obscure Danish publication.
Posted by
libhom
at
6:53 PM (permalink)
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: cartoons, Militant Islam
Signs of Hope Against Religious Hysteria
Ayaan Hirsi, a Somali-Dutch member of Holland's parliament, has backed the decision of Jyllands Posten to publish the cartoons which have depicted the founder of Islam in an unfavorable light and the decisions of other papers to republish them.
Today the open society is challenged by Islamism.
Note: I think the BBC could have done a better job of translating the quote.
Ms. Hirsi describes herself as a "dissident of Islam." She has praised some of Mohammad's teachings, while condemning the founder of Islam's decree that gays and apostates should be killed.
Even the commentary of Ahmed M. Rehab, director of communications for the Council on American-Islamic Relations-Chicago, offers some hope. Although the author does not adequately defend the free speech rights of the publishers, there is a recognition that the response is inappropriate.
Muslims would do well to consider angry and destructive mobs as a personal insult to the Prophet, who preached that "the best amongst you are those who can reign themselves in when angered."
One can only hope that the feeding frenzy of religious extremism will subside.
Posted by
libhom
at
6:39 PM (permalink)
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: cartoons, Militant Islam
Monday, February 06, 2006
Wave of Islamic Terrorism Over Cartoons
The current wave of Muslim fundamentalist insanity is becoming a source of international terrorism. A Danish lawyer was shot in Russia by an Islamic terrorist. Terrorist mobs have attacked Danish and other European embassies.
If Muslims are offended by Islam being equated with terrorism in the cartoons, you would think that there wouldn't be so many Muslims trying to prove the cartoons right.
Australian commentator Tim Blair has taken the courageous step of republishing the cartoons on his blog as have newspapers in many European countries, Israel, and in New Zealand. I hope that more people on the left stand up for freedom and secular values. People like George W. Bush would like nothing more than to see the left give in to the notion that critiques and satire of religion are forbidden. Freedom of expression always must come before religious extremism.
It's funny how George W. Bush and Tony Blair talk tough about terrorism when they want to justify an illegal war in Iraq, but they refuse to stand up to these terrorist threats and publish the cartoons on the web sites of their respective governments.
Posted by
libhom
at
9:02 PM (permalink)
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: cartoons, Militant Islam, terrorism
