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War on Iraq

Corporate Media's Virtual Blackout on Iraq Atrocity Hearings

FAIR. Posted March 20, 2008.


Independent media outlets such as AlterNet did the bulk of the Winter Soldier coverage, while the rest of the press shied away.

Dozens of veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars gathered in Silver Spring, Maryland last weekend for the Winter Soldier: Iraq and Afghanistan hearings (3/13/08-3/16/08), where they offered harrowing testimony about atrocities they had witnessed or participated in directly. The BBC predicted that the event, organized by Iraq Veterans Against the War, "could be dominating the headlines around the world this week" (3/7/08). The hearings were covered as far afield as the U.K. (Guardian, 3/17/08), Australia (Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 3/14/08), Croatia (Javno, 3/16/08), and Iran (Press TV, 3/14/08). Yet there has been an almost complete media blackout on this historic news event in the U.S. corporate media.

Despite being noted in the New York Times' Paris-based International Herald Tribune (3/13/08), Winter Soldier has yet to be mentioned in the New York Times itself. No major U.S. newspaper has covered the hearings except as a story of local interest; the few stories major U.S. newspapers have published on the event have focused on the participation of local vets (Boston Globe, 3/16/08; Boston Herald, 3/16/08; Newsday, 3/16/08, Buffalo News, 3/16/08).

The Washington Post, too, published their account in the metro section (3/15/08). In contrast, the paper published an article about pro-war demonstrators protesting the Winter Soldier hearings in the A section (3/16/08), despite the fact that they were, according to the Post, "small in number."

None of the major broadcast TV networks (ABC, NBC, CBS) have mentioned the hearings in their newscasts. PBS has been silent as well.

But for a couple of exceptions (Time, 3/15/08; NPR, 3/16/08), the hearings have been virtually ignored by all but the independent media (Democracy Now!, 3/14/08; 3/17-19/08; In These Times, 3/17/08; Alternet, 3/14-3/18/08) and military publications (Stars and Stripes, 3/15/08 and the four Military Times newsweeklies, 3/15/08, 3/17/08), in a pattern reminiscent of the near complete corporate media blackout on the first Winter Soldier hearings. FAIR founder Jeff Cohen (Huffington Post, 3/16/08) traces the beginning of his career as a media critic back to his experience of watching as “one of the rare mainstream camera crews showed up at Winter Soldier ... and then abruptly packed up to leave in the middle of particularly gripping testimony.”


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If a tree falls...
Posted by: Urstrly on Mar 21, 2008 5:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I didn't even know about Winter Soldier until an Amy Goodman fan told me on Wednesday. Maybe someone can post the links to Alternet's stories about these hearings.

There's only one possible explanation: we really don't want to know.The news this week has been so caught up with race and sex that who knows how we could have been made to watch. And the News Hour has broadcast another of its dreary town halls in which people swap misinformation.

As for Cheney's trip to Afghanistan and McCain's to Iraq, the myth goes on that we're doing something constructive there. People still want to believe it, and many are profiting from their mindset. And now I'm going to read Ray McGovern's piece about impeaching Cheney. I wish!

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» RE: If a tree falls... Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: If a tree falls... Posted by: Malamute
» RE: If a tree falls... Posted by: LinearBob
Ditto for 'Maintstream [read Corporate] Media in Canada
Posted by: neilemac on Mar 21, 2008 7:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Am currently writing a scathing rebuke to Canadian broadcasters for failing its citizens too; they should be informed of the truth about the what's really going on perpetuating the wars in the middle east, OIL!!! and space for more US Military bases, which will, of course, protect the oil pipeline from heading to China. Wink, wink, nod, nod!

But no, we keep getting swoon from the Corporate thugs, even citizen owned CBC. Not a peep about the Winter Soldiers from them either. Cretins!

Even the NHL's [Hockey] "Stanley Cup" was brought over to swoon the Canadian troops [armed puppets] in Kandahar, Afghanistan a couple of days ago supplying ample 'photo ops' for Corporate media to use, distracting tv viewers from actual events; and all while Baghdad is being destroyed by divided ethnic violence.

That's what the NWO wanted to do and does, 'divide and conquer..

One may watch a good many of the 'Winter Soldiers' horrific stories online at The Real News.org and Democracy Now.org sites. Please do so too.
e.g.
Half a Decade of War: Five Years After Iraq Invasion, Soldiers Testify at Winter Soldier Hearings

Peace in all its dimensions ...please!

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Corporate media blocks
Posted by: steven w on Mar 21, 2008 7:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
a plethera of information- hurts their bottom to go to the expense of investigative reporting! They shit on the country provided them with an environment for their success and bite the hands that feed them.

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» RE: Corporate media blocks Posted by: peacefullaim
You're surprised?
Posted by: sawdust on Mar 21, 2008 8:12 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
C'mon now, folks. You can't tell me that those of you who regularly vist and read this site are the least bit surprised about this? The Winter Soldier had no sex, political tomfoolery, significant fraud/money angles or enough overt tear-jerking material to make any real money on...much less spend any money on... to cover. Of course you didn't hear anything! It is important! It really has value and should mean something to the American people! You expect the media goof-mogul/mongols to cover that? You must be reading this venue from your computer in a cave somewhere. Get real! Go to Wal-Mart (where America shops) and buy a copy of US TODAY. Sheesh!

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So much for "freedom of information" in America!
Posted by: PakiBoy on Mar 21, 2008 9:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
handful of big corporations (5-6), own almost all of what goes for US MSM (print, electronic). These corporations decide what Americans get to see, hear, and read.

Yet Americans smuggly claim to have all these "freedoms" not enjoyed by citizens of any other state. What retards!

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Corporate Terrorism
Posted by: rgoalierob on Mar 21, 2008 10:12 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's more subtle, but more effective.
Examples: Exxon/Mobile's claim on Iraqi oil despite not having paid reparations to the People of Alaska for the Valdez disaster, or our current media, still too afraid to tell the truth about this disaster in Iraq.
The only beneficiaries of this paradigm are the wealthy corporate interests.

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My fuel program..
Posted by: zengei on Mar 21, 2008 10:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
An AP article on my Sunny Corner Fuel Assistance was posted in every major newspaper in the US and in the newspapers in most cities/towns...also in the UK, Singapore, China, ....the testimony on the murdering of thousands of innocent Iraqis gets no coverage....Disgraceful...Rev G.

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More than half of U.S. citizens are cowards
Posted by: outsideagitator on Mar 21, 2008 10:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and bullies in my opinion. It is not only msm that is responsible for this shameless inaction in the face of such evil and willful ignorance. We have never before in history had such access to so much information as we do now, especially those who have access to computers.

No, this is cowardly of the majority of citizens in this country whose ignorance is willful and the turning the eyes away is the action of cowards.

We shall rue the day.

Joseph
Vietnam Nam Vet.

Joseph

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Only themselves to blame
Posted by: chowderhead on Mar 21, 2008 10:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the mainstream media is afraid of losing market share to internet news and the blogs, they have only themselves to blame. People go where the stories are, where news is reported accurately -- not the networks, not the New York Times, but Alternet and Raw Story. Like the sign says, "Ignore Corporate Media" -- they have nothing to give us.

Dave Scherman
Support Peace

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nobody likes military service except political climbers
Posted by: luzmejor on Mar 21, 2008 7:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A sad fact, but our Coast Guard, police officers and firemen are in constant danger too, and far longer than those in the military.

So what is the difference in respect received? Just work it out, people! Do we ever hear so much about "war" heroes as we do during political campaigns?

The current crop of leaders is so crass as to deny our Iraq wounded their promised health benefits and take back their signing bonuses when they are unable to return to combat duty!
They assume we are too stupid and complacent to care about their cruel selfishness.

Let's get out the vote so they can't fail to see how we regard their faithlessness!

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Winter Soldier hearings
Posted by: janelynne on Mar 21, 2008 8:03 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
NBC,CBS,ABC, and NPR have done nothing about reporting on the Winter Soldier hearings. They are pro-war and pro-corporate mouthpieces for the Bush administration. They are part of the Military Industrial Complex that Dwight Eisenhower warned against. They want to keep the war going. They profit from the war. They do not serve the American interest.

They want the Winter Soldier testimony to seem like it is fringe and illegitimate. The next time these networks appear before the FCC to get their licenses renewed, they should have their licenses suspended for not serving the public.

But the FCC is also on the payroll. They will turn a blind eye. The corruption is hiding in plain sight.

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corporatism = fascism
Posted by: RegK on Mar 21, 2008 8:17 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mussolini's word for fascism was 'corporatismo', which is exactly what we have in the US today. Between the corporate takeover, the big money in politics, and the surveillance-happy PATRIOT Act thugs we can kiss our Republic good-bye. Was it John Adams who said that every democracy commits suicide?

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THE MILITARY INDUSTRIAL JOURNALISTIC COMPLEX
Posted by: gexrobert on Mar 23, 2008 4:10 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why does this surprise anyone who lives in America? The military learned their lesson from Vietnam and the swallowing up of US media began in the 1980's. The corporate oligarchy who runs the country realized the power of what is NOT said in the USA. The non posting of these stories simply proves who is running the show in America. Keep the people ignorant, in debt with no raises in 30 years and you have a compliant workforce that even forgets about Iraq. Maybe the current perfect storm of financial crisis hitting the globe will wake some Americans up. It does not look like Iraq did.

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