JonBenet Ramsey and Abeer al-Janabi

Overseas readers who don't watch US-based cable news may not know that
there is a news blackout on the 24 hours news stations, which have
shown endless hours of useless speculation on a ten year old small
town murder case. Why the cable news channels in the US behave in this
stupid and lemming-like fashion no doubt has to do with the severe
discipline of the advertising market and its dependence on ratings.
I.e., news has to generate 20 percent profits, which it cannot do, and
so lurid infotainment is substituted. It is also possible that they
are deliberately attempting to turn American gray matter into mush so
as to ensure that nobody on this continent notices what is really
going on around them.

But although I mind this pollution of the air waves with something
that is not, whatever it is, news, the main thing I mind is the
racism.

The case of Abeer al-Janabi, the little fourteen-year old Iraqi girl
who was allegedly raped and killed after being stalked by a US
serviceman would never be given the wall to wall coverage treatment.

That is frankly because the victim was not a blonde, blue-eyed
American, but a black-eyed, brunette Iraqi. Both victims were pretty
little girls. Both were killed by sick predators. But whereas endless
speculation about the Ramsey case, to the exclusion of important real
news stories, is thought incumbent in cabalnewsland, Abeer al-Janabi's
death is not treated obsessively in the same way. In the hyperlinked
story above, CNN even calls the little girl a "woman" at first
mention, because the US military indictment did so. Only later in the
article is it revealed that she was a little girl. The very
pedophiliac nature of the crime is more or less overed up in the case
of al-Janabi, even as looped video of Ramsay as too grown up is
endlessly inflicted on us.

The message US cable news is sending by this privileging of some such
stories over others of a similar nature is that some lives are worth
more than others, and some people are "us" whereas other people are
"Other" and therefore lesser. Indeed, it is precisely this subtle
message sent by American media that authorized so much taking of
innocent Iraqi life in the first place. British officers have
repeatedly complained that too many of those serving in the US
military in Iraq view Iraqis as subhuman (one used the term
Untermeschen). Where did they get that idea?

[for those disgusted by the whole JonBenet phenomenon, I recommend the
flick "Little Miss Sunshine."]
--
Jim Devine / "Advocates of capitalism are very apt to appeal to the
sacred principles of liberty, which are embodied in one maxim: The
fortunate must not be restrained in the exercise of tyranny over the
unfortunate."-- Bertrand Russell

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