What bokononists whisper whenever they think of how complicated and unpredictable the machinery of life really is.



By Elton Beard

There are two kinds of people in the world, those who divide people into two kinds and those who don't. I don't.



 Roll your own
 me-zine!

 Players
 BuzzFlash.com
 Cursor
 Media Horse
 Tapped

 Weblogs & zines
 Blowback
 Daily Brew
 Daily Kos
 Demosthenes
 Eschaton by Atrios
 Ethel the Blog
 get donkey!
 Groupthink Central
 Junius
 kill your tv dot com
 Looking Glass
 MadKane
 MaxSpeak WebLog
 NakedWriting.com
 Pigs & Fishes
 Plastic Words
 Silt by vaara
 Stage Left
 Talking Points
 T. C. MITS
 Ted Barlow
 The SideShow
 This Modern World
 Truth Laid Bear
 vanitysite.net
 Warblogger Watch

 Boutique
 Daily Howler
 Mark Poyser
 Spinsanity
 Stupidistan
 Tiny Polemics

ARCHIVE ARCHIVE ARCHIVE

02/23/02 11:15pm link

Admiral Craig Quigley
"There's a lot of other ways to convey information to the American people than through news organizations" said Admiral Craig Quigley. He made this unarguably correct statement while defending this means of conveying information to the American people: an upcoming ABC reality series named "Profiles From the Front Line", in which the stars are American soldiers combating terror in stylish and exotic locales such as Afghanistan, the Philippines and South America.

According to co-producer Bertram van Munster, vice president Dick Cheney and defense chief Donald Rumsfeld were favorably inclined towards the project:

They haven't given me any restrictions as of yet; they're very enthusiastic about the thing. Obviously we're going to have a pro-military, pro-American stance. We're not going to criticize.
Well, obviously.

Meanwhile, this is what happened to a real reporter who had not filed his pledged to refrain from criticizing the military: American soldiers threatened to shoot him. This happened to Doug Struck of the Washington Post, who was attempting to investigate a site near the city of Khost where Afghan civilians had been killed by US precision bombing. US soldiers prevented this American reporter, at gunpoint, from coming close to the site of the civilian deaths.

And this is not an isolated incident; according to Reporters sans frontiers:

20 December 2001, Joao Silva and Tyler Hicks, photographers with the New York Times, and David Guttenfelder, photographer with Associated Press, were roughed up and threatened by Afghans in the presence of members of American Special Forces in Meelawa, near Tora Bora (east of the country). The American commandos refused to allow US journalists to be present in this area, and local Afghan forces were in charge of preventing the press from reaching it. According to David Guttenfelder, members of the US special forces personally gave orders to Afghans to arrest them. Film was confiscated from the photographers.
Why didn't the Pentagon think of this sooner? It took thirty years, but they've honed the technique from raw lying in Vietnam, to fully controlled press pools during the Gulf war, to finally neutralizing and bypassing the press altogether in order to directly present the American people with a partially fictionalized, non-critical, fully patriotic TV version of the war on whoever it is we're fighting this week. And America's enemies had better really watch out during Sweeps!

War can be hell, entertaining and profitable too.

By the way, the reference to South America as a future wartainment (wartertainment?) site comes from this CNN article. No war with direct US involvement has been officially scheduled for that part of the world, so the producers of "Profiles From the Front Line" must know something the rest of us don't. Stay tuned.

Home


ARCHIVE
July      8th - July     14th, 2002
July      1st - July      7th, 2002
June     24th - June     30th, 2002
June      3rd - June      9th, 2002
May      20th - May      26th, 2002
May      13th - May      19th, 2002
May       6th - May      12th, 2002
April    22nd - April    28th, 2002
April     1st - April     7th, 2002
March    25th - March    31st, 2002
March    18th - March    24th, 2002
March    11th - March    17th, 2002
March     4th - March    10th, 2002
February 25th - March     3rd, 2002
February 18th - February 24th, 2002
February  4th - February 10th, 2002
January  28th - February  3rd, 2002
January  21th - January  27th, 2002
January   6th - January  13th, 2002
December 10th - December 16th, 2001
December  3rd - December  9th, 2001
November 26th - December  2nd, 2001
November 19th - November 25th, 2001
November 11th - November 18th, 2001
November  4th - November 10th, 2001
October  11th - November  3rd, 2001



Busy, busy, busy.

What bokononists whisper whenever they think of how complicated and unpredictable the machinery of life really is.



 Archive




 ALL
 YOUR
 BASE
 ARE
 BELONG
 TO
 US
The floggings will cease when morale improves.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]