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Corruption Galore at the Washington Post

By Mark Ames, The Nation. Posted May 15, 2009.


The Washington Post's editorial page is busy whitewashing Bush's disastrous wars, which the newspaper encouraged all along.
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    The May 7 edition of the Washington Post features one of the most poorly timed op-ed commentaries in recent memory. Carrying the harmless headline "A Friend to Georgia and Russia," it features the soothing bipartisan co-byline of Democratic Senator John Kerry and Republican Congressman David Dreier. The editorial argues that the best way to "reset" relations with Russia while at the same time support Georgia's "fledgling" democracy would be--are you ready?--to enact a free trade agreement with Georgia.

     

    There are only two problems with this position: 1) free trade agreements are widely considered to be a big cause of the mess America and Georgia are in today; and 2) Georgia doesn't have a functioning democracy, as the tens of thousands of antigovernment protesters can attest. Just hours before the Kerry-Deier editorial was published, Georgian riot police brutally attacked protesters in the capital, Tblisi, using truncheons and rubber bullets, according to the protesters, sending dozens to the hospital, including some of the opposition leaders as well as several journalists. A popular singer turned protester, Giorgi Gachechiladze, was reportedly pinned to the ground by police and beaten with truncheons, breaking one of his ribs. Police reportedly were chanting the nickname of Georgia's authoritarian president, Mikhail Saakashvili, during the melee.

    Pro-democracy demonstrations against the savvy English-speaking Georgian strongman first gelled in November 2007, when 100,000 people took to the capital's center square to demand real democratic reforms. Saakashvili responded with force, sending in his Special Forces to brutally crush the demonstrations, shutting down the opposition media and imposing martial law, leading to worldwide criticism. Last year he nearly sparked World War III after recklessly invading South Ossetia and provoking a war with Russia, leading to war crimes accusations by Amnesty and Human Rights Watch.

    Over the past few years, human rights organizations have increasingly condemned Georgia's deteriorating democracy record, while most of Saakashvili's prominent former allies have abandoned him for the opposition, accusing him of turning into a mini version of Vladimir Putin. Critics have been jailed and forced into exile; powerful figures mysteriously died, including a former prime minister and Georgia's former top oligarch. Others have been harassed with classic police-state tactics, such as Nino Burjanadze, the former parliamentary speaker who co-led the 2003 Rose Revolution with Saakashvili, but who last year joined the opposition after accusing Georgia's leader of creating a dictatorship. On the eve of the recent protests, members of Burjanadze's party were arrested on trumped-up charges of allegedly trying to acquire weapons to stage a violent coup d'état.

    In response to these crude attacks on Burjanadze, other former allies of Saakashvili's, including his former prime minister as well as Georgia's former UN ambassador, a figure popular among Western diplomats and journalists, rushed to her support. Both are now in the opposition calling for Saakashvili to resign and for democratic principles to be restored.

    This past week, again, Saakashvili has been arresting figures in the military, accusing them of planning a coup. He regularly dismisses any opposition as a Russian plot to unseat him, which suggests that he's spinning deeper and deeper into the sort of paranoia common to tinpot Third World dictators.

    Yet none of this is mentioned in the Kerry-Deier commentary; rather, some variation of the word "democracy" appears seven times in their short editorial, reinforcing the sense that Georgia really has a democracy. Interestingly enough, the name of the country's authoritarian strongman, Mikhail Saakashvili, doesn't appear once.

    Freedom House recently issued a report placing Georgia 128th in the global press freedom ranking--lower than coup-plagued Mauritania and tied with authoritarian Egypt. This is ironic, because in the same day's section as the Kerry-Deier op-ed praising Georgia's democracy and calling for it to be rewarded with a free trade agreement, the Washington Post published an editorial that condemns Georgia's autocratic equal, Egypt, and President Obama specifically for "appeasement" toward Egypt's strongman, Hosni Mubarak. But the Post then veers into the sort of bizarre non sequitur for which its editorials have become famous, claiming that the Obama administration blamed the worst crimes of the Bush administration--torture in Guantánamo Bay and the disastrous Iraq War--on President Bush's brief, half-assed lip service he gave to democracy-promotion in Egypt. Say what? That's right--despite all of the reasons Obama has publicly stated as to why he opposed Guantánamo and the Iraq War (wrong, illegal, distracts us from the real war, creates new terrorists, diminishes America's moral authority, etc.), the Post ignores all of that and instead puts words into Obama's mouth. With that fake claim "established," the editorial then flips it around and throws it back in Obama's face: today, by "embracing" the "autocrat" of Egypt, Obama is guilty of "appeasement" and of producing the next "Osama bin Laden, Hamas and Saddam Hussein."


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Read more of Mark Ames at eXiledonline.com. He is the author of Going Postal: Rage, Murder, and Rebellion: From Reagan's Workplaces to Clinton's Columbine and Beyond.

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What can we expect from a RW corporate newspaper?
Posted by: Mrs. Jefferson on May 15, 2009 8:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They fail to tell the truth and lie us into wars. The media is the "Fourth Front" against democracy.

We haven't heard this from them.

Believe it or not there is a law that states as the population expands more representatives should be in Congress (one representative not to exceed every 30,000 people). They have not kept up resulting in 650,000 people for every representative. Not since 1901 or so has Congress added many. It's a dangerous concentration of power to the few.

If Illinois had 30,000 people (population 12,901,563) for every representative we would have 430 representatives in Congress. Right now we have 18. NC for every 30,000 people (population 9,222,414) would have 307 representatives. Right now you have 13.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
United_States_congressional
_apportionment#Controversy__and_History

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
United_States_congressional
_apportionment#Proposed_expansion

Try and talk with your representative on the phone. They are too busy and ignore us.

Oath of office and Constitution? Forget it. We do not have "representation for and by the people" right now. It is representation for the corporations who give them money (who write the laws and give positions after office). With so many representatives they would have trouble paying them all.

Obama complained he just couldn't keep up with all the e-mails and calls from such a large number of people when he was IL Senator. He solved it by ignoring them all. Actually it is easy since most of us want the same thing.

It is a violation of our right to representation at this present number in the House.

Now this is something worth writing about newspapers.

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The military - industrial - congressional - ideological complex
Posted by: goodsensecynic on May 16, 2009 5:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In times to come (if not already), the most enduring words of former president Eisenhower will surely be among the last he spoke as Commander-in-Chief. His warning to beware the influence of the "military-industrial complex" is familiar to most attentive citizens. What is less well known is that he originally intended a more expansive version of this alleged threat to the national interest.

As first composed, his farewell address was to have referenced the "military-industrial-congressional" complex, which implicated the Senate and the House of Representatives as enablers of the armed forces and private corporations which constituted a large part of what C. Wright Mills called The Power Elite.

Today, it might be well to expand the analysis, add another dimension and speak of the "military-industrial-congressional-ideological complex." In this fourth category, I would include the media and education. (If, of course, someone were to object that the two principal elements of the ideological dimension [de]merited their own categories, I would not stongly object.)

Despite foolish claims that the print and broadcast media on the one hand and the schools, colleges and universities on the other display a "liberal" bias and are to be implicated in the alleged corruption of traditional American values, the fact is that, with some rare and noble exceptions, corporate influence over the style and substance of weapons of mass instruction is determinant of the messages (propaganda?) that they consciously or unconsciously disseminate.

From the news stories of the New York Times to the op-ed pages of the Washington Post to the all-crisis all-the-time format of "the best political team on television" at CNN, the overwhelming effect of the "fourth estate" has been to encourage bellicosity and to discourage critical reflection on the calumnies of the Bush-Cheney era and to praise the image of President Obama as an agent of change while systematically undermining the need the real change in governance in the United States (with, of course, Mr. Obama co-operating with his timid, tepid and tentative reforms meant mainly to shore up a corrupt political economy rather than to transform it.

Education? What is not learned from the corporate media directly is taught in the classroom from pre-school to post-graduate programs. Throughout, the ideology that sustains the ruling class ("What? A ruling class in America? Who knew?) is, itself, sustained by the same corporate entities that innoculate themselves against criticism by controlling communication and, no doubt, chuckling to themselves as the rabid, religious, Republican right excoriates them as somehow subversive of traditional cultural values.

The "complex" is to be commended; it has played the game brilliantly ... and won.

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