Democracy Now pitches the question: "respond to the World Bank saying Lebanon is in one of the worst economic collapses in the last 150 years" |
Want to get clarity about what might possibly be happening now in
Lebanon? You are not going to get it from the reporting of Democracy
Now, or as we might better call it these days, Democracy Not Now What It Once Was
(“DNNWIOW” or #DNNWIOW). What you’ll get from DNNWIOW is that the
situation in Lebanon is confused, awful, pretty much impossible to
explain and just about anything that happens next will probably be
alright, maybe perhaps better, or at least acceptable. Like it might be
acceptable if Lebanon was one more country subjected to the kind of
externally provoked regime operations we conduct? OK if its government
is replaced by a puppet subservient to our interests? Or maybe, not really so bad if, like Lybia or a number of other countries where were
we have meddled, Lebanon was just kept in perpetual chaos?
In other words, DNNWIOW’s `there is terribly confusing awfulness in Lebanon you’ll never understand’
reporting is very much the same thing that you get from mainstream
corporately owned media all the time about Israel and Palestine; it’s
the kind of befuddlement building that then allows Israel, without
significant protest from the American populace, to continue carrying out
its persecution and removal of Palestinians from what was their
country.
In other words, I make the case that DNNWIOW’s reporting
on Lebanon, similar to the New York Times reporting on Lebanon, is just
a useful conduit of the narrative that the United States Government
wants put out there. Or to cut through the crap: It’s pure propaganda.
We
are talking right now about DNNWIOW’s first segment, its opening
segment, on Thursday, October 14, 2021, an interview of more than 20
minutes of Lara Bitar, the editor-in-chief of The Public Source, what
DNNWIOW described as “a Beirut-based independent media organization.”
Probably
the interview question that most quintessentially captures the flavor
and content of the interview is when DNNWIOW host Amy Goodman asks
Bitar: “Can you respond to the World Bank saying Lebanon is in one of
the worst economic collapses in the last 150 years, a bit further
explain?” (Much of the interview was conducted by co-host Nermeen Shaikh, but Amy Goodman chose to step in to ask this question herself.)
Gee, Lebanon is suffering `an economic crisis’?
That’s what’s going on? The World Bank says so? The World Bank’s
assessments and characterizations of what are going on are referred to a
half a dozen times in the interview and any offered understanding of
Lebanon’s plight basically stops there.
To read or watch the interview: Snipers Fatally Attack Protesters in Beirut as Lebanon Reels from Devastating Economic Collapse, October 14, 2021.
Amy Goodman on left, Lara Bitar on right |
The
DNNWIOW propaganda is basically the subtle kind of propaganda that
relies on misdirection and what is tactfully, or, as a matter of
tactics, left out of the picture rather than being an attempt mounted to
sell unadulterated and obviously false misinformation. The best way to
recognize what DNNWIOW was providing as the propaganda, is to hold it
up against some actually good, context-setting reporting that will give
you a very clear view of the situation in Lebanon. I recommend that,
for that contrast, you go to another interview about what is happening
now in Lebanon– Again it is two women. Again it’s a female show host
doing the interview, and again, the interviewee is a woman residing in
Lebanon. I’ll make the case, that in this instance, the dialogue
between these two women and their ability to analytically present
relevant facts does a much better job to qualify each of them as competent
and sincere journalists.
The interview is conducted by Mnar
Muhawesh, founder and editor-in-chief of MintPress News, interviewing
Rania Khalek an American journalist living in Lebanon. Ms. Khalek,
writing under her Breakthrough News brand, was on my National Notice list
of the many alternative media female journalists well worth paying
attention to these days. Ms. Muhawesh should have been on my list also;
sorry I missed her.
Mnar
Muhawesh on left, Rania Khalek on right |
Here is the interview via Twitter, MintPress News' Facebook post, and via PSCP TV: Lebanon
economic crisis, US Sanctions wars & Israeli resource exploitation
in the Middle East region with @mnarMuh & RaniaKhalek
What do we learn from this interview that explains and puts Lebanon’s crisis into perspective?- We learn the following:
• Lebanon, a small country of about six million people, is mostly bordered by Syria a country that’s now war-torn nation in the throws of a regime change violence and destruction largely set in motion by the U.S. government. Syria is naturally an important trading partner for Lebanon (Syria supplied about 10-15% of all of Lebanon’s power- now lack of power is another critical shortage Lebanon deals with), and because of US sanctions against Syria, Lebanon, locked in, cannot now trade across this crucial border.Much of what is important above is pure fact. Some of it ventures into characterizations with a point of view. It is not necessary to agree with all of the characterizations above- some might choose to dispute a few (but everything said seems pretty on target to me)-- Still these points all go a long way in explaining a lot and to provide much needed clarity.
• The other country bordering Lebanon is Israel on Lebanon’s southern border. But Lebanon is on a continuing war footing with Israel so it cannot trade across that other border either, and instead must deal with continued threats by Israel, a country which previously invaded it.
• The only other access to Lebanon is the Mediterranean Sea, but a year ago last August there was a huge destruction in the port of Lebanon from a truly extraordinarily massive explosion. Khalek does not assert she exactly knows the explanation for the explosion that involved stored fertilizer, but can give important background about it and she can expertly recite what she refers as the many politicized theories offered to explain what actually happened.
• The structure of the Lebanon government (set up in compromise when its civil war ended in 1991 and with the intention that the government be “intentionally weak”) carefully divides and shares power between different factions, different sects. A substantial portion of the government, part of its majority coalition, is allied with Hezbollah and for that reason that portion of the government is the subject of US sanctions. The sanctions have the effect of hamstringing the entire country in its dealings with the rest of the world. Plus the US backed and Saudi financed sect has worked in an adversarial fashion to make the harmful US sanctions apply more and cause more harm than they have to.
• Lebanon desperately needs fuel and power, it affects just about everything. Iran was willing to supply oil to Lebanon, but that help was blocked by other US sanctions, the US sanctions against Iran.
• The US also got involved to block help to Lebanon from China, Russia, and from Qatar. At the same time the West is generally pulling back and refusing to help. One excuse is that they want Lebanon to change the structure of its government, which is not about to happen.
• The US and its banks and financial institutions are allied with Lebanese elites and with the International Monetary Fund and they, through this alliance, set up the Lebanese financial systems institutions that are now failing.
• The US and Western powers are also interfering with local Lebanese politics by providing support for both fascist and failing parties and factions in Lebanon. The many factions in the country provide ripe opportunities for co-optation, which the US takes advantage of and tries to weaponize.
• The US, and Israel along with it, wants, dominance and hegemonic power in the region. The US, and Israel along with it, is therefore directing much of its energy toward trying to quash Hezbollah in Lebanon, but Hezbollah is immensely popular particularly in certain parts of the Lebanon because, ‘as a force of protection’ for the country, Hezbollah defeated and evicted Israel when Israel invaded, plus Hezbollah was critical in repelling ISIS and Al-Qaeda when they came into the country, with Hezbollah then pushing ISIS back even into Syria because of its threat.
• Continued chaos is probably what the US and its allies want in Lebanon, because the probably emerging alternative would be Hezbollah running the country.
• The formerly praised structure of the now collapsing Lebanese financial system that was set up with US banks involved was always something of a Ponzi scheme. Hezbollah was shut out of participation in and creation of that now collapsing defective financial system.
• Not that it is high on the list of causes for the current crises and power shortage, but Israel repeatedly bombed Lebanon’s power stations in the past decade.
• Lebanon is also dealing with climate change and wild fires.
• Toward the end of the discussion, all this was related to how have an overall strategy of promoting sectarianism, balkanization and division in the entire region to the extent the US and Israel actually promote and fund right-wing religious fundamentalism. (Reminder: Israel was the first sectarian state in the region.) Without this regional debilitation, Lebanon might, through its relationships with its neighbors might have a much stronger and resilient economy.
By contrast, the 20-minute Democracy Now report (pardon, that's the "DNNWIOW report") mentions absolutely none of the facts set forth above. Its only allusion to Lebanon’s long border with war-torn Syria is to note passingly that for some reason there is a bad situation with destitute Syrian refugees (as well as Palestinian and "other" refugees) who for some reason now live in Lebanon. Nowhere is Israel mentioned nor the threat posed by it at the southern boarder. There is no mention of any of the sanctions imposed by the US or their effect, not the sanctions against trade involving neighboring Syria, not the sanctions blocking aid from Iran, not the sanctions against Hezbollah nor their effect on the rest of the country. Hezbollah does get mentioned, but only to describe the political party that's part of the government as trouble making and a source of problems being faced.
When it comes to trouble making in
Lebanon, there is no mention of any covert involvement of the US to manipulate things or how,
when there is mysterious trouble making, it is hard to know whom to pin
the blame on.
Simply put, coming to it with some understanding,
the DNNWIOW report is so inadequate it’s virtually the most laughable of
jokes. Unfortunately, this is not a laughing matter. The people at whatever this new Democracy Now is cannot be
unaware of the deceptive nature of their Lebanon reporting. This
certainly includes chief show host, executive producer, and long term figurehead for the program, Amy Goodman herself. They must obviously be aware of the
deceptive nature of their reporting because Democracy Now for decades,
since its early origins out of WBAI 99.5 FM New York, has a long and
distinguished history of covering Israel and its occupation of Palestine
in a way that was a meaningful counter on that subject to exactly that
kind of reporting about that situation emanating from the US corporate media.
What is the thinking of those working at DNNWIOW when they
work to put out this kind of misleading reporting? Is the thought that
by acquiescently conduiting mainstream US State Department narrative
one day, they'll get an improved chance at doing something good in the
world the next? Is the thought that they will please their big money
foundation funders by going along to promulgate these narratives so that
they can later go on later, with good, glitzy production values, to accurately cover other more important controversial, undercovered, stories they want to deliver to a big audience on later occasions? . . Maybe?
Maybe,
but if that is the case, DNNWIOW is getting to be an insidiously
dangerous program to watch. That’s because you’ll never know when you
are getting reliable reporting on an important story and when you are
getting a spiel of establishment propaganda. Moreover, as DNNWIOW keeps
promoting itself as “independent global news” and “the war and peace report,” and has a fabled and reputable history, and as DNNWIOW wears its social justice “heart”
on its sleeve, unsuspecting members of the public are all the more
likely to be confused when these ruses in reporting are subtle
enough.
Confused?. . . Here, as just that sort of example- the next
story DNNWIOW was reporting that day on October 14, 2021 (about our
withdrawal from a senseless 20-year war) was this- see if you find any
of its slant identifiable and suspicious:
Afghan Interpreter Who Rescued Biden in 2008 Is Evacuated from Afghanistan with His Family- After weeks of pleading for help, an Afghan interpreter, who helped rescue then-Senator Joe Biden when he was stranded 13 years ago in Afghanistan, has finally escaped Afghanistan. Aman Khalili describes his journey out of the country, and we speak with the reporter who broke the story. “I was in the safehouse for 15 days,” Khalili tells Democracy Now! Khalili is “representative of a group of people that are still appealing for help from America.
Misdirection strikes me as a way of doing something, where perhaps the most people feel as though they are of none effect, intentionally so. A recent webinar made clear to me that the Biblical flood is metaphoric for a people's loss of its memory and mind, and is a sleep during which demons may arise and gain control. It doesn't mean there are no miracles. It means there are none of the grand displays such as occur in apocalypses, which are the stuff of predictability, whereas the miracle of care on a personal level is unpredictable, unexpected, not available on demand, like a Mark Zuckerberg delusion. See Timothy Snyder, "The Five Forms of Freedom," a lecture this month in an hour and a half youtube. I like Amy Goodman.
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