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Haircuts and Gossip -- Pageantlike Presidential Election Coverage; Where's the Real News?

By Allan Uthman, Buffalo Beast. Posted May 31, 2007.


Election coverage is deplorably shallow: The media salivate over the Obama-Clinton rivalry just like they do over Paris and Nicole. Here's a look at the real news that's being overlooked in the process.
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There's a semantic problem with the word "politics." It has two major meanings, which are connected but distinct. Politics is the art of governing nations, but it can also mean the tactics employed to attain or retain governmental control. This creates an obstacle for the person who reads the "politics" section of his favorite newspaper or website, or who watches shows that purport to cover politics, with the intent of learning about what his government is doing. Often, there's really nothing at all about running the government; it's all about running for government. Check out the last four stories that plopped out of the Associated Press' "Politics" feed:

  • Sharpton denies disputing Romney's faith

  • Obama overstates Kansas tornado deaths

  • Edwards discusses time at hedge fund

  • Spitzer, O'Malley to endorse Clinton

There's nothing there about what's happening in the outside world, nor any coverage of actual governmental activities. It's just gossip about celebrities. The fact that those celebrities happen to be members of our government is incidental. These stories aren't about policy, or politics, really. They're about the candidates' chances to be the last one standing.

This is not a new phenomenon, of course, but it does seem to get a worse every time, and in vast increments. Election coverage is not only deplorably shallow; its nonstop, news-cycle-dominating prominence is obscuring larger reality. It's stealth entertainment news, wearing the guise of legitimate national affairs journalism. There's nothing significantly different in the tone of coverage of the Obama-Clinton rivalry from that of Paris and Nicole. Romney's Mormonism is handled no differently than Tom Cruise's Scientology.

That would be bad enough in itself, but the worse problem is, while we're torturing ourselves with a harrowing, incessant, two-year pageant of inauthenticity, real shit is still happening all over the world. And we're hearing even less than usual about it, because it's just so much easier for commentators to talk about what has essentially become the Olympics of fund-raising than to address the actual government or what it actually does. By comparing stats and rumors about presidential hopefuls, columnists and talking heads are able to give the impression of covering the government without actually doing anything of the sort. Watch Joe Scarborough segue easily from a segment about the latest presidential gaffe to a schadenfreude session over Paris Hilton's jail sentence, and you'll see. He doesn't even have to switch gears; it's the same damn thing. This type of presidential infotainment is not even taking up half of the space allotted for political coverage; it's taking up nearly all of it, the remainder of which is mainly filled by "White House says this, critics say that." And we're a year and a half from what will surely be too brief a reprieve. For all this time, the presidential one-note symphony will drown out what little serious news our already atrophic press might otherwise present.

Let's take a serious, and seriously neglected, news item for example: The Iraqi Hydrocarbon Law.

The Hydrocarbon Law is universally detested by Iraqis and hasn't passed yet, but "tremendous" pressure is being exerted on the parliament by the United States and the International Monetary Fund, the mother of all loan sharks. The IMF has a habit of lending huge amounts of money to struggling nations and making the privatization of their natural resources a condition of said loans. The same has been done doubly in Iraq. The administration and the IMF describe the law as a benevolent revenue-sharing program that gives oil money to the Iraqis, but the law makes 81 percent of Iraq's known oil deposits available to multinational firms -- Exxon, Shell, BP, Chevron and the like. While the proposed law has met ironically unified resistance in Iraq and may not pass even in a compromised form, its initial draft -- reviewed by nine oil companies and the U.S. and U.K. governments long before Iraqi MPs ever got a peek--should have been a major story itself, because it was the other shoe, the inevitable punch line to the WMD joke. What the Hydrocarbon Law in its pure form said was yes, after all, this thing was always about the oil.


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The news biz has abandoned the collection of news
Posted by: pgj1949 on May 31, 2007 3:54 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It should be no surprise to anyone that for-profit news corporations are offering up marshmallow stories as 'news'. Such entites do not exist to inform the public regarding vital issues of the day, they exist to produce profits for their shareholders.
To better do so, they are constantly looking for ways to reduce their costs of product production and, in the case of the 'news' business, this means cutting the numbers of staff who actually develop and investigate events in order to develop news stories. Since the product is intimately linked with the newsreaders and studio production, these things remain as if nothing has changed. Without substantial reportage behind their product, though, the 'news' biz must rely on stories that are mostly air and sugar--marshmallow stories. They amount (at best) to political gossip.
This may be tantalizing and momentarily filling, but a democracy can't live on it.

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No wonder we love America!
Posted by: polyquat50 on May 31, 2007 3:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't know whether to laugh or cry.

btw - for the benefit of some American readers, unfortunately including a few Alternet scribes, the title is IRONY.

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The lesser of two evils is actually one and the same.
Posted by: rabblerowzer on May 31, 2007 4:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Americans are trapped in a corrupt political system where our choices are apparently limited to choosing between the lesser of two evils, but our choices are actuality limited to choosing between the two heads of one snake. And that snake is the Military Industrial Congressional Complex.

The owners of the Military Industrial Congressional Complex are our de facto rulers, and they have been since World War II. The politicians we elect don’t determine or make national policy, they merely carry out instructions issued by their masters, the owners of the Military Industrial Congressional Complex. Actually the MICC should be called it the Military Industrial Congressional Media Complex because the Media is the propaganda arm of the MICC. This diabolical union of interlocking conglomerate corporations is owned by the richest one or two per cent of our population.

These richest one or two per cent of our population define and determine our “National Interests,” which amazingly always seems to coincide with their own self-interest. That’s what we call “Democracy” here in America.

.

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Politics,states and authority
Posted by: citizenjoe on May 31, 2007 4:02 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Politics is the practice of combining to establish and exercise authority in States, not in Nations except where they are Nation-States.Athens and Sparta were City-States, not Nation-States. The essay is correct that news coverage of American politics is pageantry about personality and about how entertaining our "system" is. Today we are facing the greatest challenge to our republican form of government since the Civil war-- Bush is an authoritarian bent on destroying our republic. There is no concern about this in our campaign ("champaign") coverage. The "news" gives us tidbits about candidates personal lives. Its as if the news in Italy in 1923 was about Mussolini's girlfriends rather than his bid to take power. "Corporate democracy" is disgusting, I agree.

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I hope Alternet doesn't think it's a source for real news!
Posted by: Poe on May 31, 2007 4:11 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry, this may be off topic in regards to the article.
The only media source, that I know of, that's truly fair and balanced is Cspan.

Just my two cents.

Poe

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» Curious conservasaurus Posted by: eddie torres
» RE: Curious conservasaurus Posted by: Illiteratilumen
» Thanks - Posted by: eddie torres
» Rational conservatives? Posted by: Ellie1
» What a foolish remark. n/m Posted by: Illiteratilumen
Laziness
Posted by: kepstein7777 on May 31, 2007 4:17 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You seem to assume that TV and crappy newspapers are our only source of information. However many of our freedoms have been chipped away, we still have the option of checking out BBC, Guardian, Aljazeera, Alternet, and a zillion other alternative news sources. If some people are too lazy to get up from their couch, whose fault is that?

I like the gossip for entertainment purposes. The gloom and doom of the real news can be depressing, so watching the Rosie/Elizabeth Smackdown provides comic relief. But it doesn't mean they're my only source of news.

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» RE: Laziness Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Laziness Posted by: jingles
Both Ideological and infotainment Corruption, deforms Western Journalism
Posted by: Universal on May 31, 2007 4:30 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I despise the Corporate media, so much so, that I go out of my way not to buy their newspapers, watch their Cable shows, and get my news excusively, on alternative news. It accomplishes two things. While not completely disconnected from the Corporate Headlines, I use Counterpunch, Znet, Democracy Now, Alternet, Common Dreams, and socialist - left websites, to see what their ideological class filtering and superficial tainting has left out. This becomes then my indirect way to BOYCOTT THE CORPORATE MEDIA, and at the same time inform myself and support active causes, and on line information, which is much more democratic and honest.

There are those class liberals who would automatically point out that I have an ideology, which is no worse than that of Corporate news. On the one hand they would claim that they are "above" politics, having found some magic way to remove themselves from an ideology, by falsely claiming, like the Corporate media, that their class ideology is the true center, above corruption. In fact, there is no such thing as having removed oneself from an ideological outlook, and the truth really comes down to admitting your outlook, while at the same time arguing for a true center, and universal values.

The Corporate media, its Universities, and political classes all share mostly some variant form of class ideology, corporate values, that corrupt into double standards, and class standards, primarily dividing between class liberals and class conservatives. Real independence does not mean taking this narrow class range, between the class nationalism of democrats, and class nationalism of the Republicans, and finding the center, its false center between them, as the Unity Party tries to do, by calling the class liberals, the "hard left" and the Republicans, the "hard right", when in fact they both produce the class center, false center, and rightward shift, from universal standards.

We must understand the historical development of ideology, class ideology relates to the emerging Capitalist, class oligarchy, which came onto the scene, once the commercial classes put property rights over universal values. This class betrayal and failure, of the entire government, which Olbermann referred to, the typical capitulation, "Nevile Chamberlain moment" of class liberals, class elites to class thugs, Republicans, appeasing class mercenaries, did not suddenly appear today, but has been with us as a long history of class corruption, since the democratic revolutions were betrayed, displaced as revolutionary liberals, into the class liberals, who corrupted the goal to establish a universal social mechanism, of a fully developed middle class, without class masters. Instead, the corporate oligarchy deformed, displaced, its middle elites, into class mercenaries, because they were only partially devoloped, subordinated by industrial classes, hence their warped "existential" reality, toward the right wing shift, class shift, betraying the universal center, of middle layers, without class masters, and its class ideology.

The Corporate media, class liberals, have never accepted, admitted, that this class deformation, generic class corruption, distortion, on the inherent universal and revolutionary, democratic values of a untainted middle class, once class society was re-established after the French Revolution, by the class laws of Napoleon, whose goal was to remove the Feudal class order, for a universal social mechanism. In the Universities, this denial of class corruption, and its historical degeneration, as a regressive class process, almost takes psychotic denials, when the issue of Nazi Fascism is linked to Germany's Corporate industrial classes, who financed Hitler and middle class regression, servility to the Corporate State. They absolutely will not admit, especially the class liberals, that Fascism, represents class regression. Liars.

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"Real news".........
Posted by: Poe on May 31, 2007 5:01 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
....is in the eye of the beholder.

To each his own.

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» RE: "Real news"......... Posted by: cardboardurinal
The Facts on the Ground
Posted by: the islander on May 31, 2007 5:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The facts on the ground are the real news. eg. Torturing of prisoners is real news.

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WNBC catches Giuliani getting 'tripped up' by 9/11 activist
Posted by: Free Truth on May 31, 2007 6:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here is some real news pulled from the front page of another site:
WNBC catches Giuliani getting 'tripped up' by 9/11 activist

Giuliani is caught on tape in a big lie. This should be the beginning of the end of his career.

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If we want to get real news...
Posted by: Illiteratilumen on May 31, 2007 6:27 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...one place to start is with REAL CANDIDATES.

So far we have only four by my count - Paul, Kucinich, Gravel and Guiliani.

Go Rudy go! Remember to remind the people about 9/11! They may have forgotten! Be sure to mention that you were there!

These guys, especially Paul, are starting to get some trickles of mainstream media coverage but not nearly the amount granted to the other candidates.

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» RE: If we want to get real news... Posted by: cardboardurinal
A Most Excellent Article
Posted by: wobblies on May 31, 2007 6:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hi~
I learned more about issues in an article about he media not covering issues than in most stories on issues.

God Speed,
David

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Blogs are making a difference
Posted by: daw13 on May 31, 2007 6:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but not enough. Big (fake) news has the big money. People need to understand how important it is to create, fund and support independent journalism. My community college sociology students tell me every semester that they assume TV news to be only entetainment, and bad entertainment at that. Many, if not most, watch Jon Stewart and/or Steven Colbert. Fewer (until my class, anyway) read alternative news sources.

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RON PAUL is clearly my choice
Posted by: Maggieb on May 31, 2007 7:21 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would like to have unfiltered news coverage but that isn't what the corporate media feeds us. Keeping the box off seems to make any static less offensive. C-span can be a good source to listen to candidates who aren't being double-talked by big-mouth bullies.
If you haven't looked seriously at Paul's record and issues, you've missed our chance to be free of big government and the rich elitist who run our country.

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Nothing makes me feel more dumbed-down...
Posted by: rockpicker on May 31, 2007 7:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...and in tune with the masses than going through the day having missed Amy Goodman's Democracy Now program. It downloads here in Montana at about 9:00 a.m. Kill your tv!

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mykie149
Posted by: sam401 on May 31, 2007 7:45 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
CNN news just now-A press conference about the supposed health risk of a person with drug resistant TB- An interviewer asks what the guy was wearing. Cnn was only on to keep the dog company while I run errands. What else is it good for?

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Meanwhile on AlterNet, check out these headlines
Posted by: Rune on May 31, 2007 7:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here are the headlines from the media wire on AlterNet at this moment:
# Coke Plans Sweetener Launch To Compete With Splenda
# High-End Advertisers Fuel Luxury Magazine Boom
# Gates And Jobs Make Rare Joint Appearance


It's everywhere, folks. And it is going to get worse as more and more newspapers lay off their reporters, hire "reporters" in India to merely read and rewrite the official record as the local news (yes, it is happening), and press releases from mostly commercial interests are relied upon as the basis for "news" content. Meanwhile, the FCC is giving away yet another slice of the public airwaves to corporate media interests. . . .

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Café Media Elite
Posted by: HughScott on May 31, 2007 8:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Every newscaster, talking head and political pundit on national television earns a million bucks a year, has medical insurance and a guaranteed retirement plan.

Those who work in Washington, D.C. enjoy an additional benefit -- free membership in the private Georgetown speakeasy, Café Media Elite.

There you will find conservative, moderate and liberal news persons shaking hands, rubbing elbows and sharing stock market tips.

Table chatter focuses on books, Broadway plays, movies and sports. The Iraq War? That’s Bush’s problem. Tax breaks for the rich? They’re working -- leave ‘em alone. Universal health care? Too complicated, it would never work.

Occasionally someone mentions poverty. Meant as a joke, others at the table laugh, congratulate themselves again for being members of Café Media Elite, then return to more important discussion -- such as which airline has the best First Class service.

Meanwhile, outside the Beltway, millions of hard-working Americans worry about no medical coverage, losing their jobs and how they will pay next month’s bills.

Real news on TV? Forget it.

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I remember Darren McGavin as Kolchak
Posted by: zooeyhall on May 31, 2007 8:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the '70s, there was a series and a pair of TV movies that featured the late Darren McGavin playing a newspaper reporter called Karl Kolchak. While the series was based on the supernatual and bizaare, what always impressed me was the portrayal of the newpaper reporter. He was shown as someone who pestered people, was obnoxious, cynical of officialdom, stood-up to authority, wasn't afraid to ask tough questions; but most of all was consumed by a passionate belief that it was the reporter's duty to investigate and get to the bottom of things for the sake of the public in general.

There is a great line by Kolchak where he gets eyeball to eyeball with an editor who wants to suppress a story: "This is NEWS! and news is MEANT TO BE REPORTED!"

Karl Kolchak and Ed Murrow---where are you? We need you now more than ever!

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Concur, Concur, Concur
Posted by: DrgonzoSB on May 31, 2007 8:45 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
About twenty years ago, Neil Postman wrote the book, "Amusing Ourselves to Death," which discusses the dangers inherent in trivial information masquerading as News.

We're at that point now. Most Americans of voting age don't read Alternet, the Nation, or search the BBC to find out what is happening beneath the veneer of "official" babble.

It's good to see some bonafide anger over this deplorable situation, and some awareness that the average American citizen is screwed by forces beyond his or her control.

This is a terrible period in our history, but as long as there are people agitating for change, for truth, for substance, there's still a glimmer of hope. All of us who have commented on this story are part of that agitation, and we need to spread the word as fervently as right-wing Christians spread their brand of Gospel.

We the People need to wake up and take back what is rightfully ours.

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Turn off the TEEVEE and stop paying for cable/satellite
Posted by: maxpayne on May 31, 2007 8:50 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hell, our ancestors did it and they've lived healthier lives as a result. Don't worry though, once oil peaks out for good, TV viewing will decline as those bills go further up up up up !!!!

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Something for everyone
Posted by: willymack on May 31, 2007 8:56 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Step right up, folks and behold the candidates in all their glory! Don't like candidate C? No problem, there's candidate O. Don't like him? Then take a look at E. So on down the line. Too bad one can't combine all of them into one by taking all the good things and throwing out all the bad things about them and coming up with the perfection we all so desire, but NEVER get. Do we expect too much from mere mortals? Of course, we do, and therein lies the problem. A successful candidate has to bamboozle the public to the extent that he or she is considered a demogod-just under the Pope, in the eyes of many. Then, said candidate has to have the support of shadowy monied interests to whom extravagant promises of fidelity are made. With almost unlimited financial backing, the candidate with the most attractive (you fill in the blank) show wins in a "fair" election. Only problem with this is what we usually get is schlock-not quality of any kind. Just look at the gem we have for "Leader of the Free World"!

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Hard news? Doesn't make any money...
Posted by: MTguy on May 31, 2007 9:46 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's face it; we're a consumer society. We want only good news and that's what we'll pay for. If you're dealing in hard news, the truth... we don't want to hear it. Might spoil our mood.

So it is with our government. Karl Rove has figured out that telling us what we want to hear becomes perceived to be the truth. Brain washing, propaganda... there are actual words for what our government is putting out there for our consumption. The biggest problem is that major media publicize what they're saying without question. There is no time in the instant news cycle to investigate anything thoroughly and provide an in depth analysis of what the government said.

Unfortunately for us, major media operate on a for profit business model. It's why major newspapers are going away from print and towards electronic distribution of their articles and ads. They don't have a choice if they want to survive.

So all of what we're getting here is because it works.

As Pogo once said, We have met the enemy... and he is us.

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Where's the real news?
Posted by: BJT on May 31, 2007 9:58 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I believe the real news is in the very real, very active, and very exuberant grassroots support for Ron Paul.

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The rich vs the poor. Same old story.
Posted by: WitchyNy on May 31, 2007 10:05 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That is all it is. The rich control everything. It is all their game. They are all members of the same club.

The Democrats just funded the war!!!
I would only vote for one person at this point...Michael Moore. And he said NO WAY would he ever run for office.. Why?
He does not want to 'get shot'.

DOES THAT NOT SAY IT ALL? WHO RUNS THIS COUNTRY?
The military industrial system-
the rich jews-

THE MAFIA.

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Jefferson Said:
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on May 31, 2007 10:25 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What makes you think there will even be, an election..!

Read: NSPD-51 and HSPD-20...!

And Remember Jefferson said:

"Our is not a system based upon trust, but one of suspicion..!"

Get it..?

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It's a freakshow election and one has to really wonder why
Posted by: ateo on May 31, 2007 12:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The first thought that came to mind was that the Democrats feel so confident that they will be able to take the Whitehouse from Bush that they can throw up highly non-traditional candidates such as Obama and Clinton and still win. However, after further consideration I have come to the conclusion that these two candidates are actually simply out there as one part trial balloon and one part fundraiser.

I believe that neither Clinton or Obama will be on the Democratic ticket for president (though either could show up as vice presidential nominees). Their immense war chests, minority voter support to include newly registered voters energized by Obama/Clinton, will be funneled into a more traditional candidate to trounce the Republicans in 08. Of course I have some friends who don't believe the Democrats are smart enough to do that and they may be right.

Obama - black with a sparse political career

Clinton - woman with a sparse political career

Romney - mormon, energizes blacks to vote against him

Giuliani - Italian American, married multiple times with many other "moral infractions", no real political experience on the national scale beyond 9/11

McCain - clearly insane from years of torture inflicted at the hands of the Vietcong, ultra hawkish (openly)

It's a freakshow from the ground up. The Republicans are running people who have nothing going for them other than name recognition and the Democrats are running people who have nothing going for them but minority status (which will actually work against them in the long run I'm sure) and charisma.

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dayenta
Posted by: dayenta on May 31, 2007 12:32 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since that vital element of a free society, a free press, is defunct, no wonder we no longer live in a free society.

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Dennis Kucinich spoke on the House floor 5/23 re the hydrocarbon law
Posted by: gbreez on May 31, 2007 1:03 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He was mocked by not only the right but his own party members who were "embarrassed" by his speech. Disgusting. He spoke the truth, that we have only been after the oil, something I believe we all really know as truth, all along in Iraq, and, we are proving it by forcing Iraq to sign away all its rights to oil (privatization), building the biggest embassy in the world in Bagdad, and ensuring that our forces must remain in Iraq indefinitely in order to safeguard our oil interests.
Here is the complete text of his bold and marvelous speech, the one the Dems as well as the Repubs held in contempt:
The Truth About Oil and Iraq.
Do you all get it yet?

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Why Bother Voting?
Posted by: kimidol on May 31, 2007 1:06 PM   
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The United States is building one of the largest American embassies in Iraq. The current embassy will be moved to the new site from its current one, one of Suddam's palaces. The new embassy will cost 1.2 billion dollars a year to run. It is lucky that there are no social deficits in America that might benefit from this money or this would seem a waste and it signifies that American leaders intend to annex Iraq and never leave.

This event also certifies the fact that those who lead us want to be kings. It is not that American power brokers are the only enemy, it is the fact that there is a international class of power brokers who can not see the "ants" they rule as human beings. American leaders are simply part of this class.

They don't hear us. Voting, even in America, is a waste of time. The Supreme Court has certified that it does not matter if each vote is counted. Cindy Sheehan has left the peace movement because it is failing to affect policiticians' view of the war. We have alternative newspapers, T.V. programs, political parties. None of these entities significantly affect the interests of the tiny group of monied emperors who are controlling our destinies.

I don't believe in giving up, nor do I believe in picking up a gun or a torch, except in my dreams, to make myself known to those who should be driven by what is best for me, but what are my options? Given that the popular vote is of interest to no politician I know, what are my options?

I teach and I have met few students, all of voting age, who are the idiots the media coverage of the world events and issues suggests the public is, so why is the protocol of promoting the bland assessements and stupid events the mode of success for the news media?

What can we do that works because I am out of ideas. I vote, I speak out, I join organizations that represent my interest, which is a view of society in which multiple interests are addressed. I write letters to my representatives. I volunteer for my candidates. Yet, I can not, afford a doctor, pay to gas up my car, which I need because I can not afford to live near work. My environment is being toxified. My society has been sectioned into competing interests comprised of individuals who have been told they can't work with competing ideologies, sexes, ethnicities, etc.

It's a stalled game. I am, in fact, out of options. The big guys have won. What are my options? What are yours?

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» I hear you loud and clear! Posted by: gbreez