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From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, December 20, 2001 7:07 PM
Subject: [anti-imperialist] Media hides truth about the war


> Media hides truth about the war
> >From People's Weekly World, 15/12/01 18:32:56[En Español] [Em Português]
[En Français] [In Italiano] [Auf Deutsch] [-]
> Media hides truth about the war
>
> by Terrie Albano
>
> People's Weekly World Newspaper, Dec 15, 2001
>
> It&#8217;s pretty hard to be among the 10 percent or so against
> Bush&#8217;s war in Afghanistan. Even though that&#8217;s 11 million of us
> in the U.S., the corporate media&#8217;s pro-war, pro-Bush stance can make
> you feel kind of lonely.
>
> Has everyone really gone war-mad? Do the majority of people in this
country
> and the world really think Bush&#8217;s war is going to bring justice,
> democracy and a good quality of life to all?
>
> Dr. David Miller, from Scotland&#8217;s University of Stirling Media
> Research Institute, analyzed international public opinion polls and found
> that the world is against the war.
>
> When alternatives to war &#8211; such as extradition and trial &#8211;
were
> suggested, support for the bombings dropped markedly.
>
> Funny thing about that &#8211; Miller found that the U.S. pollsters give
> little options to war.
>
> When polls include the possibility of civilian casualties, Miller found,
> support for the war drops even more, including in the U.S., which was one
> of three countries whose majority supported the war.
>
> Miller concludes that the most fundamental problem with the polls is that
> they assume the public has all the information. But the majority of the
> U.S. media has been distorting what is happening in Afghanistan,
especially
> in the coverage of civilian casualties and alternatives to war.
>
> One such story that has been kept out of the mainstream media, only being
> carried in alternative and non-corporate media, is of a study of the
> numbers of civilian casualties, conducted by Marc W. Herold, a professor
of
> Economics, International Relations and Women&#8217;s Studies at the
> University of New Hampshire.
>
> According to Herold&#8217;s study, more than 3,500 civilians have been
> killed in Afghanistan by U.S. bombs, and that number is climbing.
>
> In a press release, Herold said he decided to do the study because of his
> concerns &#8220;that there would be significant civilian casualties caused
> by the bombing.&#8221; Herold tracked news agencies, major newspapers, and
> first-hand accounts. &#8220;I was able to find some mention of casualties
> in the foreign press,&#8221; he said, &#8220;but almost nothing in the
U.S.
> press.&#8221;
>
> The media, Miller said, also plays down any opposition or questioning of
> the Bush administration&#8217;s war policy. However, Miller&#8217;s
> analysis also found that sizable numbers of the U.S. population had
> reservations about the bombing.
>
> There are significant numbers in the labor, civil rights and liberties,
and
> other democratic and people&#8217;s organizations that have questions
about
> the war policies aren&#8217;t quite willing to come out against them. The
> Bush administration has gone on the ideological offensive by claiming that
> if you are against their policies, you are helping the terrorists.
>
> Yet some significant U.S. organizations have come out against the U.S.
> bombing of Afghanistan, like the 50-million-member National Council of
> Churches, the American Public Health Association and the Coalition of
Labor
> Union Women. Even more have raised questions about it, like the U.S.
> Catholic Bishops&#8217; Conference.
>
> According to 100 Nobel laureates, who signed a statement on the 100th
> anniversary of the Nobel Prize, a vast class divide exists and &#8220;the
> only hope for the future lies in cooperative international action,
> legitimized by democracy.&#8221;
>
> They go on to say, &#8220;Some of the needed legal instruments are already
> at hand, such as the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, the Convention on
> Climate Change, the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaties and the
Comprehensive
> Test Ban Treaty. As concerned citizens, we urge all governments to commit
> to these goals that constitute steps on the way to replacement of war by
> law.&#8221;
>
> Bush&#8217;s war on terrorism goes in the exact opposite direction of the
> laureates&#8217; vision. The bottom line is that the majority of the
> world&#8217;s people, including in the United States, would agree with the
> laureates. That&#8217;s why the Bush administration is conducting an
> unprecedented ideological public relations campaign for the war, with the
> corporate media&#8217;s help.
>
> Many would agree that the U.S. corporate media, with a few notable
> exceptions, is pro-war and pro-Bush and that agenda prevents them from
> doing the job of a free press, which is to inform the public.
>
> The censorship in the U.S. media must end. The American people have a
right
> to know the full impact of a war, as well as the meaningful alternatives
to
> it &#8211; alternatives that would bring real justice for the Sept. 11
> victims and an end to terrorism, not continue it.
>
>
> *******************************************************
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