Filthy Media: Scaring Americans into coughing up more “aid” for Ukraine

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the establishment media is an enabler of endless wars and illegitimate oligarchic power


Annotated by Patrice Greanville


CBS, "the Tiffany Network," has long been a bulwark of disinformation in the US constellation of TV disinformation assets. CBS has the dubious distinction of being a favorite legacy media choice of "elegant liberals", the really well-heeled crowd, making it a significant component of the "Blue Media Mafia", in the service of Democrats. (Contrary to what many liberals have long believed, in the US the mainstream media is almost 3/4 liberal, and so is social media, since "Big Tech"/ Silicon Valley—Facebook, Google, and until recently Twitter—have long been heavily infiltrated and controlled by pro-Dem / Deep State operatives.  This phenomenon also holds for much of the EU, especially Britain. Today's liberal, of course, is a fascist globalist with "good manners". 



Which brings us to this pathetic attempt at naked manipulation, as the goals of the Empire and the Democrats (the current "War Party"), clearly coincide. The Biden gang, momentarily distracted by their depraved investment in the Gaza genocide, would love to keep the Ukraine war going as long as possible to prevent an embarrassing collapse right before the 2024 election. They will probably lose anyway. For its part, the Deep State, in charge of managing the Empire of Lies big portfolio, finally cognizant that the war is lost, is busy trying to carve up some more time in Ukraine to secure a plausibly dignified off-ramp. Hence all this cynical noise we keep hearing in some quarters about the "need" to support Ukraine to fight as long as possible in our behalf, or soon Putin will take over Europe and our boys will have to fight and die "over there" to stop the big ugly Russian bear. How many times have we seen this lousy movie before?

 

Western Gall: First we push NATO right up to Russia's doorstep, forcing them into a war. When they defend themselves, and win, we accuse them of pushing Russia into Europe.


Our audience will not be surprised to hear that some of the most despicable Neocons have been at the forefront of this psyop for quite some time. Indeed political excrement like Lindsey Graham and Adam Schiff —and of late Nikki Haley—have been busy drumming up support for an endless war on Russia, "to fight them over there", yea, this is their rational option, which shows this is a fully systemic bipartisan goal. All of which is only logical as per the insane logic of the Empire. The US military industrial complex (which owns practically all politicians and big media, among other things, not to mention cutouts like NATO), is the most profitable and influential enterprise in the collective West. It is also the backbone of what remains of America's industrial economy.  Like rust in some old ships, often present in every nook and cranny, if you scrape it off, they'll sink. It's the main thing that keeps them afloat. The vast implications of the latter fact have been explored by a number of Pentagon critics, few as eloquent as Joan Roelofs, who certainly deserves a much bigger audience. Our associate editor, Jeff Brown, brought her to our attention on Dec 9, 2023. Be sure to have a look: 

JOAN ROELOFS SHARES HER NEW BOOK, “THE TRILLION DOLLAR SILENCER: WHY THERE IS SO LITTLE ANTI-WAR PROTEST IN THE UNITED STATES”.

Joan sketches out the subtle ways the military has embedded itself in US society.


ADDENDUM
As usual, some more food for thought

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Patrice Greanville is editor in chief and founding editor of The Greanville Post.


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Debt Ceiling Nonsense

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Jim. Kavanagh
THE POLEMICIST (SUBSTACK)
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100 K Wilson bill

 

“Could the Treasury skip the rigamarole and pay its bills without bonds? Economically, sure. Why doesn't it? Well, the Fed has regulations governing “overdrafts” -- but apart from these, the answer is plain: to do so would expose the ‘public debt’ as a fiction, and the debt ceiling as a sham.”

- James K. Galbraith

It is infuriating to watch this “debt ceiling” charade play out again, and terribly depressing to see so many self-identified leftists accepting, and bargaining within, the ridiculous, fictional framework that guarantees their perpetual defeat within a never-ending cycle of such nonsense.

Stop the Charade: The Federal Budget Is Its Own ‘Debt-Ceiling’.)

Did I say “Republicans”? We all know, too, that the Democrats, who constantly moan and groan about the reactionary absurdity of the debt ceiling, refused to abolish it, even when they had a supermajority (Did someone say: “codifying Roe”?), and will always end up caving to the “fiscal cliff” blackmail.

When, during the last lame-duck session, some progressives called for using reconciliation to raise the debt ceiling precisely to preempt the extortion that’s happening now, Democratic senator Dick Durbin demurred, because “It takes too much time." When a group of House Democrats led by Pennsylvania Rep. Brendan F. Boyle suggested eliminating the statutory debt limit altogether (the proper thing to do),  Joe Biden’s response was firm: "You mean, just say we don't have a debt limit? No. That would be irresponsible." 

It’s almost as if both parties like—or think it’s necessary—to have this sword of Damocles hanging over the federal government’s social programs.

calling to freeze/cut Social Security and Medicareand praising austerity hawks like Paul Ryan, does believe eliminating the debt limit would be “irresponsible”—i.e., agrees with the fundamental premises of the right-wing Republicans. He follows in the footsteps of Barack Obama, who, as a Senator in 2006, when it discomfited a Republican president, voted against raising the debt ceiling, saying: "America has a debt problem and a failure of leadership. Americans deserve better. I therefore intend to oppose the effort to increase America’s debt limit"—i.e., agreeing with the fundamental premises of right-wing Republicans.

Five years later, when the shoe was on his presidential foot, Obama, having embraced “entitlement reform” and Paul Ryan’s “serious … entirely legitimate proposal” for austerity, explained his senatorial vote thusly:

I think that it's important to understand the vantage point of a senator versus the vantage point of a president. When you're a senator, traditionally what's happened is, this is always a lousy vote. Nobody likes to be tagged as having increased the debt limit - for the United States by a trillion dollars. As president, you start realizing, you know what, we, we can't play around with this stuff. …And so that was just an example of a new senator making what is a political vote as opposed to doing what was important for the country. And I'm the first one to acknowledge it.

(Amazing, isn’t it, how, by claiming “the first one to acknowledge it” prize, Obama makes an admission that he acted out of political opportunism as opposed to doing what he considers “important for the country” seem so inconsequentially banal.)

So, not only was Obama as hypocritical as right-wing Republicans in his partisan weaponization of the debt limit, he and Biden and virtually all Democrats are as committed as right-wing Republicans to the necessity and importance of the debt limit, and to the notion that those—including Democrats—who cannot respect it are “failing”: "The fact that we are here today to debate raising America's debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the U.S. Government can't pay its own bills." 

that “pares back federal spending by at least an estimated $234 billion over the next two years…at the cost of massive automatic spending cuts that both sides see as too steep.”

ensuring that the growing costs for “overseas contingency operations [i.e., war] … and certain other funding,” remain explicitly “not…constrained.” It’s a deal that cements the precedent of allowing a minority congressional faction to hold the economy and government operations hostage whenever. Oh, and it “barely dents” the “debt.”

Well-intentioned progressives see all this and say: “Why don’t they raise taxes? The Democrats are betraying us by cutting spending instead of raising taxes to enable the government to “pay its bills”—in this case, the debt bill.” Here’s David Sirota:

 

Biden could close a $50 billion tax loophole that mostly benefits the very rich.

He could do this right now to deal with the debt.

He refuses.

Instead, he’s joining with Republicans to try to limit food stamps.

Really think about that.

https://twitter.com/davidsirota/status/1663369944770449409?s=20

Washington Post, Biden’s opening “pitch” to McCarthy was right along that standard left-ish line: “A proposal to raise the debt ceiling that didn’t just slash spending but also generated new revenue, particularly through tax increases targeting the wealthy.”

But there is no problem here that can be, or is being, solved by spending cuts or tax increases. Squeezing people who have about $9 a day ($281 per month max SNAP benefit) to buy food is not going pay the government’s bills. And no tax increase is going to pay infinitely expanding “overseas contingency operations” bills, or the ever-growing non-discretionary spending (Social Security and Medicare) bills, or the $6 trillion dollars the government created in 2020-21—i.e., the $50 trillion+ “debt” expected by the end of the decade.

this New York Times “debt ceiling” explainer:

What is the debt ceiling? The debt ceiling, also called the debt limit, is a cap on the total amount of money that the federal government is authorized to borrow via U.S. Treasury securities… to fulfill its financial obligations. Because the United States runs budget deficits, it must borrow huge sums of money to pay its bills. [my italics]

If this is correct, then Obama and Biden and Jeffries and Ryan and McCarthy are right: it is “reasonable”—indeed, necessary—to consider spending cuts as part of an important-for-the-country solution, no matter what tax increases you want to insist on.

But it is not correct. The second sentence of the NYT explainer is false—the USG does not have to, and does not, borrow money “to pay its bills,” and the second sentence does not follow (there is no “because”) from the first.

In regard to the second point: The “debt limit/ceiling” itself says nothing about spending. It sets a maximum amount the government is authorized to borrow via selling Treasury securities. It does not explicitly set a maximum amount the Congress is authorized to spend via legislation. Nor does it require or authorize the government to “default” on, stop making, payments that are extant legal obligations mandated by legislation the Congress itself passed.

It’s prima facie constitutionally ridiculous to think that any legislation could authorize such a default. Could a law Congress passed in 1917 require it, in 2023, to ignore all the budgetary legislation it has passed in the intervening years? That absurd notion has been invented by enemies of social programs to create an infinite series of Groundhog Day “do-overs” where legislators get to renege on popular legislation they have passed, while pretending it’s not because they oppose the programs but only because they have to “pay the government’s bills.”

But what does limiting the government’s authorization to borrow going forward have to do with the government’s legal obligation to spend what it has already authorized? To pay recipients what they are legally entitled to?

And please understand what “borrow” means here: selling Treasury securities. Why can’t the government stop selling Treasury securities (I’m all for it!) and keep on spending as authorized and obligated by law?

Because there’s an assumption—an implicit policy—that is not part of the 1917 “debt limit” law,  but upon which it rests, that if the government’s tax receipts don’t equal the spending authorizations it has made, it “must borrow”—must make up the difference by selling Treasury securities—in order to “fulfill its financial obligations” and pay its bills, But that assumption is wrong.

I repeat, and ask you, dear reader, to stop and think whether you agree or not: That assumption is wrong. It’s politically persistent, but it’s economically wrong. As Galbraith says: “Could the Treasury skip the rigamarole and pay its bills without bonds? Economically, sure.”

Indeed, that assumption has been known to be wrong for decades, and was flatly contradicted by a Chairman of the New York Fed, Beardsley Ruml, in 1946: Because the U.S. is a country “whose currency is not convertible into gold or into some other commodity…our Federal Government has final freedom from the money market in meeting its financial requirements.”

Economically, there was some reason for that assumption in 1917, when “everybody knew” that our monetary system was based on the gold standard, and spending was constrained by the need to control the ratio of currency in circulation to gold—which was the real money and something the government did not create and had to get from somewhere else.

That reason no longer exists. See what it says on that lovely $100,000 bill that’s my headline image (It’s a receipt for a quantity of gold) and what it doesn’t say on the dollar bill in your pocket (It’s a receipt for…a dollar). As Galbraith says, the notion that the government needs to borrow money is “an anachronism… based on the idea that the government must raise money from elsewhere, before it spends.”

But the implicit assumption and policy persist—in the form of the household paradigm, where the government, like a household, must get its money from somewhere outside of itself to “pay its bills.” It persists in the minds of the masses of people because they have been thoroughly ideologized to accept it as a natural fact, and it persists in the hands of the few people who oversee the actual money system we have because they benefit from everyone else clinging to that anachronistic framework, which hides the progressive potential of that system. It persists so that we will continue to argue, irrelevantly, about raising taxes and/or cutting spending to “pay the bills.”

Please, please, take a moment or two to register and think about—not just give it an obligatory nod and pass over—the fact that makes such bargaining ridiculous: We have a fiat money system, which means the federal government creates money. And it creates money by spending. No matter what circuitous route they take to get various places, all—every single one—of the interest-free dollars in every nook and cranny of the economy, including your pocket, has been created by the federal government and spent into the economy. There is no place else they can come from.

Ask yourself, and give a minute or two to think through the answer: Why, and from whom, would the institution that creates dollars have to borrow them? The answer is obvious: It doesn’t. And that answer—also obviously, if you give it a moment more thought before retreating to the comfort of the conventional framework—abolishes the fiction of “public debt” and the sham “debt ceiling” that derives from and depends on that fiction. If you could create dollars, would you have to go around borrowing dollars from someone else? Really, think about that.

The entire amount of the principal of all that Treasury bond “debt” sits in those “CD” accounts, could right now be, and will at the end of the bond’s term be, transferred instantly back into the lender’s checking account.  The government "pays back" those bonds by moving the extant money back into a checking account, along with the new interest money it creates.

The purpose of selling these bonds is not to get money for the government to spend, it’s to prevent spending, to hold money out of the economy for a while. These bonds are used not as a funding source but as an anti-inflationary offset. They are explicitly used as the favored tool against inflation, whether related to government spending or not. The cost of that—the reward the government pays the bondholders for not spending money for a while, and the only new money created in the transaction, is the interest paid. That is, indeed, a lot of new money created—which means selling the bonds just defers and tends to increase inflation.

If you could create dollars, would you go around borrowing dollars from someone else, so that you could hold them in your pocket for a while and then create and pay that person more dollars for that service? Really, think about that. Because you do that, through (what’s ostensibly) “your” government, which obscures the real process in a “pay the bills” fiction.

The whole rigmarole of the government borrowing money it doesn’t need for the spending it has already approved, by selling Treasury bonds, is a relic of the gold-standard age and an unnecessary gift to the wealthy, sold to us under the false pretense that it’s necessary to “fulfill its financial obligations.”

takes back. It's a good thing only a portion is taken back—creating a “deficit"—or there would be no interest-free dollars left anywhere in the economy, including your pocket. The federal government’s deficit is the economy’s surplus, a good thing.

Bernanke—keep telling us this. Leftists should listen.)

A primary purpose of levying taxes—progressively, surtaxing the rich—is to limit inequality. We need to surtax the rich not because the government needs their money to pay its bills, but because they are too rich, and that excess wealth gives them excess power that inevitably undermines democracy.  That’s a social purpose, not an economic need. A conservative Fed chairman understood this in 1946. You’d think today’s leftists and socialists might:

[A] principal purpose of federal taxes is to attain more equality of wealth and of income than would result from economic forces working alone. The taxes which are effective for this purpose are the progressive individual income tax, the progressive estate tax, and the gift tax. What these taxes should be depends on public policy with respect to the distribution of wealth and of income. … These taxes should be defended and attacked it terms of their effects on the character of American life, not as revenue measures.

Instead of constantly arguing about whose taxes to raise how much to meet a revenue need that doesn’t exist, leftists should start with proposing that there should be noincome tax on lower (than median?) income levels, and that the most regressive and burdensome taxes on working people— payroll taxes—be eliminated. People “chip in” by working to produce goods and services of value (and “value” is not to be confused with money). It’s ridiculous and unnecessary to require anybody who was paid just enough to have a decent life for the work they have done, for the value their labor helped to create, to “chip in,” “tighten their belt,” or “contribute” money to a government that can literally create an infinite amount of it.

Then, yes, argue for extremely high rates of taxation on upper tiers of income—at leastthe 94% highest marginal rate in place in 1946, which was understood and accepted by Fed Chair Ruml and most of the country as not a revenue but a wealth-equalization measure. Nothing but ignorance of how the monetary system works, and/or cowardice about their own persuasive powers, and/or contempt for their working-class audience prevents leftists from making that argument today.

Leftists who are reluctant to argue for that had better give up trying to argue for socialism.

Leftists should refuse to engage in adjusting the elements of an activistic, regressive tax system based on the false premise that taxes pay the government’s bills, and instead propose a truly progressive tax structure based on how our monetary system actually works.

created by—federal spending.

Leftists have to realize that by accepting the “taxpayer money” framework, and the notion that taxes and borrowing are necessary to enable spending, they are accepting the whole anti-social Thatcherite paradigm in which private wealth is the source of public wealth. Somehow, in a polity where the federal government creates money, it has to go to the wealthy to borrow or collect the money for all public programs? If that’s true, we owe every public good to the quantitatively ranked contributions of “taxpayers” and “lenders.” Which means we depend on the wealthy and must keep them around. That’s the framework you place yourself in, and help reproduce for everybody, every time you use the term “taxpayer money” or argue for raising taxes to pay bills. Really, think about that.

There is an alternative framework out there, which comports with the facts of our monetary system, has been explained a number of times, avoids all this nonsense, and is actually kind of obvious. That most leftists continue to avoid it is another sign of what a weak, confused, self-destructive “left” we have.

Leftists who do not recognize that the federal government creates money and does not need borrowing or taxes to “pay the government’s bills” are helping to reproduce the “public debt” fiction and the perennial "debt ceiling" crises that flow from it, which they know will always end badly for progressive social programs.

Everyone who wants to defend and promote progressive social programs should understand what a grim fairy tale it is and stop engaging in it. Those who think adding a “tax the rich” prince to the “borrow money” frog can make it a happily-ever-after story, are perpetuating our imprisonment in the private money market castle from which, we were told long ago, we can be free.

Really, think about that.


Jim Kavanagh’s (The Polemicist) Substack is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. 


ABOUT THE AUTHOR / SOURCE
Jim Kavanagh is a former college professor doing political analysis from a left-socialist perspective. Website: The Polemicist (www.thepolemicist.net) Twitter: @ThePolemicist_
Facebook: www.facebook.com/polemicist.


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Demonising China: Insidious television for recalcitrant fools

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the establishment media is an enabler of endless wars and illegitimate oligarchic power


Patrice Greanville


American television—especially when it comes to its "news programs"—is supremely insidious. Mind you, I use the word advisedly. The dictionary tells us that in·sid·i·ous is the equivalent of underhanded, sneaky, deceitful and dishonest. You get the point. This is their default mode, learned in over a century of promptly executing the desires of their masters, the shady billionaires whose cliques control the shaping of all US international policy. Because US foreign policy is imperialist, that is, it sees the world with malignity as only comprised of vassals or sovereign countries to conquer, the system's mainstream media‚ in reality a gigantic machine of distraction and propaganda, is well trained to deliver the requisite poisonous slant when covering a particular nation in America's cross-hairs. Right now, China, Russia, Syria, and Iran are in the cross-hairs, along with North Korea, Cuba, Nicaragua, and newcomer Venezuela. There are others, of course, as the Hegemon has no sense of humor, is compulsive in its bullying and meddling, and never forgets an offense, the cardinal one being a country who refuses to worship Neoliberalism. 

So watch this closely. I can tell you that everything this correspondent says, an old hand at this game of character assassination, is basically tainted with a big lie, the lie in this case being that China has committed great human rights crimes against the Uyghurs. Devoid of honest historical context, such insinuations stick to the back of people's minds, with the persistence of some insolent dirt that refuses to be wiped off.  Which is what these low-down hypocrites and contemptible disinformers want. So watch this filthy "report" with Elizabeth Palmer and then do yourself a favor: read some credible dispatches on this issue. The Grayzone has many articles on this topic that can help you clarify your mind. Some date back to 2018 or even earlier. The US has been trying to blacken China's image for years, and more recently, via Taiwan (another probable proxy like Ukraine in the Far East), even threatening an all-out war to stop Beijing. This disgusting and immoral policy first materialised under Obama and his "pivot to Asia", when the US elites realised that China's peaceful growth was likely to leave the US empire in the dust. A key stipulation in the US empire's Neocon doctrine is not to allow any nation to match, let alone surpass, the Empire. Resting on its trillion plus "defence" budget, the US empire is all about undisputed supremacy. Period. Unipolarity forever. Unfortunately for these believers in "exceptionalism", with the rise of Russia and China, that ship sailed some time ago and is not likely to return. Ever. And indecent lying will not help matters much, either.


After its hypocritical participation in the despicable Gazan genocide, the wholesale destruction of Syria and Libya, the US now expects us to believe its gives a hoot for the fate of some muslims in Xinjiang?


Rebranding China's conflicted Xinjiang region as a tourist destination

Incidentally, my friend and colleague Godfree Roberts, a recognised expert on China, has this to say on this issue:

There is zero evidence of mistreatment of Uyghurs in China. Zero, despite the fact that we have been sponsoring terrorism there for 70 years, as US Ambassador Chas. H. Freeman, Director for Chinese Affairs at the U.S. Department of State from 1979-1981, said:

"The CIA programs in Tibet, which were very effective in destabilizing it, did not succeed in Xinjiang*. There were similar efforts made with the Uyghurs during the Cold War that never really got off the ground. In both cases you had religion waved as a banner in support of a desire for independence or autonomy which is, of course, anathema to any state. I do believe that people who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones applies here. I am part American Indian and those people are not here (in the US) in the numbers they once were because of severe genocidal policies on the part of the European majority”.
https://supchina.com/podcas...

UNITED NATIONS, Oct. 29. 54 countries on Tuesday jointly voiced their support for China's counter-terrorism and de-radicalization measures in its Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region at a UN session. Belarusian Permanent Representative to the United States Valentin Rybakov presented the statement on behalf of the 54 countries during a discussion on human rights at the Third Committee of the United Nations General Assembly, also known as the Social, Humanitarian, and Cultural Committee. Noting China's people-centered development philosophy and remarkable development achievement, the statement spoke positively of the results of counter-terrorism and de-radicalization measures in Xinjiang. These measures "have effectively safeguarded the basic human rights of people of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang," according to the statement delivered at the session. The statement expressed opposition to relevant countries "politicizing the human rights issue" and called on them to stop baseless accusations against China.

No cultural, religious repression of Uighur Muslims in Xinjiang: Pakistan diplomat
A senior Pakistani diplomat on Thursday put up a staunch defence of the controversial education camps in China's volatile Xinjiang province where thousands of Uighur Muslims have been reportedly detained, saying there is no forced labour or cultural and religious repression in the region.

China recently took diplomats from 12 countries with large Muslim populations, including India and Pakistan, to its Xinjiang province where tens of thousands of members of the minority Uighur Muslims have been interned in education camps.

"During this visit, I did not find any instance of forced labour or cultural and religious repression," Mumtaz Zahra Baloch, the Charge d'affaires, Pakistan's Embassy in China, told The Times of India.

"The imams we met at the mosques and the students and teachers at the Xinjiang Islamic Institute told us that they enjoy freedom in practicing Islam and that the Chinese government extends support for maintenance of mosques all over Xinjiang," said Baloch, who visited Xinjiang as part of delegation of diplomats.

"Similarly, I did not see any sign of cultural repression. The Uighur culture as demonstrated by their language, music and dance is very much part of the life of the people of Xinjiang," she said.

Asked about the security situation in Xinjiang, which has been "beset by terrorism", Baloch said, "We learned that the recent measures have resulted in improvement of the security situation in Xinjiang and there have been no incidents of terrorism in recent months."

"The counter-terrorism measures being taken are multidimensional and do not simply focus on law enforcement aspects. Education, poverty alleviation and development are key to the counter-terrorism strategy of the Chinese government," she said.

 

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Media critic Patrice Greanville is The Greanville Post's founding editor.


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The Jimmy Dore Show • Fiorella Isabel — Craig Pasta Jardula (The Convo Couch) • Mike Prysner & Abby Martin (The Empire Files) • Lee Camp's Redacted Tonight • Caleb Maupin • Jonathan Cook • Jim Kavanagh • Paul Edwards • David Pear • Max Blumenthal • Ben Norton  • Anya Parampil (The Grayzone) • Caitlin Johnstone • Alex Rubinstein • Alexander Mercouris • Alex Chistoforou • Margaret Kimberley • Danny Haiphong • Bruce Lerro • Israel Shamir • Ron Unz • Andrei Raevsky • Alan Macleod • Eric Zuesse • Ed Curtin • Gary Olson • Andrei Martyanov • Jeff J Brown • Godfree Roberts • Jacques Pauwels • Max Parry • Matt Orfalea • Glenn Greenwald • Rick Sterling • Jim Miles • Janice Kortkamp • Li JingJing • Margaret Flowers • Brian Berletic (The New Atlas) • Regis Tremblay • Bruce Gagnon • Scott Ritter • Aleks • Big Serge • Simplicius The Thinker


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Just saying: Who runs Hollywood? C’mon

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the establishment media is an enabler of endless wars and illegitimate oligarchic power


JOEL STEIN
Los Angeles Times


Who runs Hollywood? C’mon

Casablanca poster

A mainstream Hollywood product: The director, the producer, the writers, and half of the cast (including Conrad Veidt, who played a Nazi) were Jewish.

I have never been so upset by a poll in my life. Only 22% of Americans now believe “the movie and television industries are pretty much run by Jews,” down from nearly 50% in 1964. The Anti-Defamation League, which released the poll results last month, sees in these numbers a victory against stereotyping. Actually, it just shows how dumb America has gotten. Jews totally run Hollywood.

How deeply Jewish is Hollywood? When the studio chiefs took out a full-page ad in the Los Angeles Times a few weeks ago to demand that the Screen Actors Guild settle its contract, the open letter was signed by: News Corp. President Peter Chernin (Jewish), Paramount Pictures Chairman Brad Grey (Jewish), Walt Disney Co. Chief Executive Robert Iger (Jewish), Sony Pictures Chairman Michael Lynton (surprise, Dutch Jew), Warner Bros. Chairman Barry Meyer (Jewish), CBS Corp. Chief Executive Leslie Moonves (so Jewish his great uncle was the first prime minister of Israel), MGM Chairman Harry Sloan (Jewish) and NBC Universal Chief Executive Jeff Zucker (mega-Jewish). If either of the Weinstein brothers had signed, this group would have not only the power to shut down all film production but to form a minyan with enough Fiji water on hand to fill a mikvah.

The person they were yelling at in that ad was SAG President Alan Rosenberg (take a guess). The scathing rebuttal to the ad was written by entertainment super-agent Ari Emanuel (Jew with Israeli parents) on the Huffington Post, which is owned by Arianna Huffington (not Jewish and has never worked in Hollywood.)

In the Producers (1967), Mel Brooks' irreverent sendup of Jews, Nazi Germany, and Broadway, the director, the main cast, the producer, etc., were all Jewish. Including (again) the guy who played the Nazi, Kenneth Mars. (Wonderfully).

The Jews are so dominant, I had to scour the trades to come up with six Gentiles in high positions at entertainment companies. When I called them to talk about their incredible advancement, five of them refused to talk to me, apparently out of fear of insulting Jews. The sixth, AMC President Charlie Collier, turned out to be Jewish.

As a proud Jew, I want America to know about our accomplishment. Yes, we control Hollywood. Without us, you’d be flipping between “The 700 Club” and “Davey and Goliath” on TV all day.

I called ADL Chairman Abe Foxman, who was in Santiago, Chile, where, he told me to my dismay, he was not hunting Nazis. He dismissed my whole proposition, saying that the number of people who think Jews run Hollywood is still too high. The ADL poll, he pointed out, showed that 59% of Americans think Hollywood execs “do not share the religious and moral values of most Americans,” and 43% think the entertainment industry is waging an organized campaign to “weaken the influence of religious values in this country.”

That’s a sinister canard, Foxman said. “It means they think Jews meet at Canter’s Deli on Friday mornings to decide what’s best for the Jews.” Foxman’s argument made me rethink: I have to eat at Canter’s more often.

“That’s a very dangerous phrase, ‘Jews control Hollywood.’ What is true is that there are a lot of Jews in Hollywood,” he said. Instead of “control,” Foxman would prefer people say that many executives in the industry “happen to be Jewish,” as in “all eight major film studios are run by men who happen to be Jewish.”

But Foxman said he is proud of the accomplishments of American Jews. “I think Jews are disproportionately represented in the creative industry. They’re disproportionate as lawyers and probably medicine here as well,” he said. He argues that this does not mean that Jews make pro-Jewish movies any more than they do pro-Jewish surgery. Though other countries, I’ve noticed, aren’t so big on circumcision.

I appreciate Foxman’s concerns. And maybe my life spent in a New Jersey-New York/Bay Area-L.A. pro-Semitic cocoon has left me naive. But I don’t care if Americans think we’re running the news media, Hollywood, Wall Street or the government. I just care that we get to keep running them.

--

jstein@latimescolumnists.com

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The Standard, a UK newspaper, publishes harrowing account of Gaza animals caught in a hellish genocide

Please share this article as widely as you can.


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SOURCE: The Standard (London) / BY DANNY HALPIN

Animals in Gaza are starving, say volunteers

No animal food or medicine has been allowed into the territory since the blockade began.
 

If this is the fate of human beings, imagine what the animals are suffering. (Credit: Jim Kavanagh)


MANY ANIMALS HAVE BEEN LEFT TO WANDER THE RUBBLE AS FIGHTING PREVENTS THEM BEING RESCUED

Cats, dogs and other animals in Gaza are starving to death as Israel is preventing food and medicine from crossing the border, rescue volunteers have said.

Sulala Society for Animal Care is the only official rescue organisation in the territory and it is close to running out of supplies. Hundreds of animals have already died of starvation while Sulala has only two bags of food left for the 120 cats and 30 dogs under its care, volunteers said.

The biggest issue right now is food

ANNELIES KEULEERS, SULALA SOCIETY FOR ANIMAL CARE

Heavy fighting is preventing them from saving other animals while volunteers on the Israeli side of the border are not allowed to cross over and help out.

Many Palestinians have had to abandon their animals while fleeing the conflict, with some having to leave pets at the Egyptian border as the animals are not allowed to cross over. There is now so little food left in Gaza that animals and people can no longer find it in rubbish bins, volunteers said.

Annelies Keuleers, a Sulala English language spokesperson, said the organisation’s founder Saeed Al Err was forced to leave hundreds of dogs in a shelter with the doors open and some food before evacuating south and has been unable to reach them since. 

Speaking from outside Gaza, she said: “The biggest issue right now is food. In the beginning of the war, the first days, Saeed bought a huge amount of food, everything he could find, but it’s now running out.

“In the beginning of the war, they picked up the disabled dogs because they knew they wouldn’t be able to survive on the streets and now they’re in a temporary shelter.

 “They’re looking for a more permanent place to move south, but they have to take all the animals with them.

“It’s really challenging and stressful and especially for them, not knowing how many more times they will have to move and refusing to go without the animals.”

Sulala is part of an international group of animal rescue organisations that are calling on the Israeli government to allow animal food and medicine into Gaza.

Many people have been struggling to feed themselves since Israel began its blockade late last year and while some aid for people is now crossing over in trucks, animal food is not.

In Defence of Animals, an American animal welfare campaign group, has published an open letter to the Israeli Knesset and members of the war cabinet urging them to allow rescuers to help the animals.

Volunteers also want to access chicken farms that have been destroyed by missiles along the northern border.


Yael Gabay, one of the signatories and founder of Israel’s Freedom for Animals, said her organisation rescued a lot of turkeys, chickens, cats and dogs early in the war but her volunteers are now no longer allowed into Gaza. 

She wants the Israeli military to allow her to take food into the Strip and to accompany her while she rescues abandoned animals from the warzone.

Donkeys, as larger, draft animals, have suffered immensely from inevitable starvation, thirst, overwork, and incessant bombardment. (TGP screenshot)

She told the PA news agency: “We really feel that there’s an opportunity to rescue so many other animals now in Gaza and also on the northern borders.

“We wish that the Israeli government would give us an opportunity to do that. And to provide food.”

Israeli soldiers have been giving water to some of the wandering animals and bringing some back in their tanks, she added, although they are prohibited from doing so.

We really feel that there's an opportunity to rescue so many other animals now in Gaza and also on the northern borders

YAEL GABAY, FREEDOM FOR ANIMALS

One member of the Knesset, the Israeli parliament, said she is “very sceptical” that the authorities will take animal lives in war zones seriously.

Politician Yasmin Sacks Friedman has been pushing the Israeli government to support the animals and the volunteers trying to rescue them.

She said: “My life’s mission is to improve the state of the animals in Israel, and for two-and-a-half years in the Knesset, the ministry of agriculture has not been co-operative on improving the state of the animals inside the country.

“Like everything else relating to the treatment and rescue of animals in the past, at the end, the care and rescue is done exclusively by animal loving volunteers and activists, and this should not happen!”

Thank You THE STANDARD for caring enough to run this report. 

The views expressed herein are solely those of the author and may or may not reflect those of  The Greanville Post. However, we do think they are important enough to be transmitted to a wider audience. 

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