"Ah, but then we're back to the usual stuff Rictor likes to use to beat his chest: anti-americanism. "America Bad!"So, again we come down to this. I thought that it has already been established (and I remember you agreeing) that criticism of American policy does not constitute anti-Americanism. If I ever have a complaint, against America or against Canada or against Mars, that complaint is based on factual, specific events or policy and not some vague hatred of this and this and this. Posting a lot of stuff that is critical of American policy does not make me anti-American, it makes me a critic, a skeptic and someone who believes that important events and viewpoints (but then again, important to who?) should be brought to the attention of and discussed by as large a number of people as possible.
Thats one of my basic beliefs: ****, important **** that is shaping our world, needs to be discussed. Without that, you've got a world made up of a handful of dictators and 6 billion sheep.
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Now, moving on the the article itself.
Its interesting that he speaks ill of 20th century imperialism, but ignores imperialism from the 15th to 19th centuries. He says "imperialism only got its bad name when Hitler decided he, too, was an imperialist". I guess we should completely ignoring the French, the British, Dutch, Spanish and the rest. Who cares if the Spanish massacred North American Indians in the name of expaning their empire, or Napoleon's and the Kaiser's attempts to unite Europe by way of conquest. Those don't count. Honest.Well, did imperialism have a bad name before Hitler showed up? From what I understand, imperialism was not something to be ashamed of, it was something to be proud of. As in, my country has the most colonies, we rule. I mean, the Persians, the Greeks (under Alexander), the Romans, the Byzantines, the Ottomans, the British, the French and countless others had empires. Large ones. Brutal ones. But, how often is Alexander or Augustus thought of as a tyrant, a madman. By those with an "average" knowledge of history, not damn often. I hardly think that the author looks kindly on the actions of these empires. The reason, I believe, why they were not included in the article is a) You can't talk about all of history in a 5 page article. You need to extablish some context and more importantly b) the American empire is currently happening. It is the only one with which we are today living and the only one which we can influence. The Roman Empire is gone, so it is confined to the category of history. Not much you can do about the Punic Wars now. Not so with America.
Sometimes I wonder, had Hitler stuck to killing Jews and Gypsies instead of invading foreign countries, would we today be learning about how he was a great man, a visionary who united his people and brought prosperity to all those under his leadership?
Eventually, he moves on, and starts talking about Afghanistan. Me and him see eye to eye here. I know how badly the US screwed up over there (and indeed, the dozens of other places we screwed up before and since). I really like, however, how the author levels a claim ("Girls are routinely abducted, raped, murdered.") without a single footnote to establish the claim as fact. The rest of his carrying on about the war on terror is reasonably correct. He decries the much of the silliness we let our government push on us as hollow, meant to appease. He's right.Ok, so you pretty much agree. Nothing much to dispute here. However, about the rape comment, I think (and ofcourse, I may be wrong here) that it is indeed a genuine statement. A true statement without proof is better than a false statement with false proof, which would seem to be the tone for many of the world's media outlet.
Ah, but then we're back to the usual stuff Rictor likes to use to beat his chest: anti-americanism. "America Bad!" reads the next several paragraphs. America is the real source of terror, not terrorists. Really. Honest. They fly planes into buildings and bomb ships in port. I'll not deny that the US has been involved in some of the stupidest goings on in the history of the 20th century (Vietnam? Korea? Chile? oh yeah. Absolutely.). Entertainingly, the ignores the British Empire's role in the Middle East and the splitting of the Ottoman Empire, which directly led to the problems we see in Iraq and Iran. But why bother with the facts, just do like George Bush and attack the biggest, most public face you can. In this case, attack America.Terrorists are not born. They're created. Created by actions, by ideaology, by pain and suffering. If you inflict harm on a people, do not be surprised to have terrorists popping up. So America is reposnsible for the people currently attacking them. Not only in the sense that they gave them a reason to fight, someone to hate, but in the more literal sense that the US is responsible for training, supporting and funding these terrorists. Keep that in mind next time you decide to fund a violent front in order to bring down a governent that is not to you (and I mean your as in American) liking. I agree with you on the actions of the US during the Cold War (Vietnam, Cambodia, Iran, Chile). I also agree with you that the British empire is reponsible for

of the **** going on now. However, how many of these conflicts would have been resovled peacefully (or rather, *more* peacefully) had not America not kept them alive.
Yes, the Brits are in part responsible for the state of Iran for example, but before America decided to fund the Shah's little coup, Iran had a peaceful and democraticaly elected President. The Islamic Revolution in Iran was a direct result of the dictatorship set up in Iran by the US. Had that not occured, who is to say that Iran would not today be a peaceful and prosperous nation?
Sidenote: I find it rather englightening that the author implies that the US didn't concern itself with 'terrorism' before Sept 11. I guess he completely missed the entire Clinton administration. Hell he must have missed a large part of the 1970s, come to think of it.Oh Clinton was *very* concerned with terrorism, no doubt about it. Except what he was concerned with was funding it and supporting it. Back in '93, bin Laden and the US were the best of friends. Remember, they're not terrorists if they're working for us, they're freedom fighers.
Back to the article. He claims "It’s the only paper in Australia in which I’ve been able to report the evidence of the disaster in Iraq – for example, that the attack on Iraq was planned from September 11". This is factually inaccurate. As a matter of the public record, it has already been reported here, in the US, that the attack on Iraq was planned when Bush was appointed president. Sept 11 merely gave him a convenient trigger. I guess American papers reporting stuff doesn't matter, only Australian ones. Of course, this guy claims that Australian papers don't run factual articles (ie, HIS), only foreign papers do. The guy doesn't ever directly contradict himself on this point, but his implications do contradict themselves.I may be just slow on the uptake, but I dont see how his implications contradict themselves. As for the war in Iraq being planned as of Bush's inaugration, I would have to agree with the author on this. While it may very well be true that Bush had planned it all along, there is factual evidence that shows that days, even hours after 9/11, the government was trying to lay the blame on Iraq. In either case, I think that the point trying to be made is the same, that the war in Iraq was pre-planned. Neither case presented is the official story, and both are just as bad.
From here, the author talks about the media, big business and advertising, et al. He's absolutely right and seemingly, this guy seems to think he's the first to point this stuff out. I didn't notice that, about him being the first one to point it out. He is right, yes, but ask most people and they will have no idea what he's talking about. That means that despite it being repeated over and over, the majority of people have yet to hear it. Which means that more repeating is in order.
All in all, there's only one thing moving, or really interesting in this whole address and it wasn't said by the author. He quoted it from Alex Carey, who wrote that the three most significant political developments of the twentieth century were, "the growth of democracy, the growth of corporate power and the growth of corporate propaganda as a means of protecting corporate power against democracy."
You know, if he'd addressed that point from the first, rather than meandering through all the other bull****, this might have been a wrothwhile read. Instead, it reads exactly like Rictor's original post: full of self-declamatory spin. The tone of the entire article is one of superiority and revelation: "if you only saw things the way I did, you'd know the truth". He's got some good facts in there, along with some good quotes. He nails some issues that have already been nail-gunned to the wall, so his targets aren't exactly moving. Mostly its a lot of self-puffery, wrapped up in politically charged, and yet still aimless, wandering.I get the impession, and I may be wrong, that you have more of a problem with his format and style than with the arguements being presented. As I said in the previous paragraph, the fact that most people are oblivious to some very imporant facts remains distressing, and calls for those facts to be repeated as often and for as long as is needed to get them out into the public's perception. I mysellf often think "If people knew what I knew, we would be living in a very different world". Well, barring telepathy, the media is the best way of achieving that, and thats exactly what he was doing. Quite aside from any ideaology and ****, there are *facts* which people are not aware of and in the interests of a democratic Earth, need to be made so. Whats wrong with that? When a certain set of facts are presented in a certain way, that is called a viewpoint. All spin is viewpoints, but not all viewpoints are spin. I didn't think that the author missed any important facts or intentionally skewed the reader's opinion. This to me is spin, and since I percieved none of the above, I feel that no spin was present, aside from that inherent in every expression of one's beliefs.
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Wow, long post. I'm off to eat some Nutella. And mik, whatever I may disagree with you on, its better than ignoring the discussion alotogether, which it would seem that most people are doing. Not to say that I am some wise dude and everyone has to listen to what I say and discuss it, but atleast you had an opinion.