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Fox News & The Imaginary Cuban Troops in Syria

October 21, 2015 By Matt Peppe Leave a Comment

Fair-and-balanced Fox News reported last week that “Cuban military operatives reportedly have been spotted in Syria, where sources believe they are advising President Bashar al-Assad’s soldiers and may be preparing to man Russian-made tanks to aid Damascus in fighting rebel forces backed by the U.S.”

Fox’s claim of an imaginary enemy alliance relies on two sources: the University of Miami’s Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies and an anonymous U.S. official.

Despite the thinness of the report’s sourcing and the improbability of its content, other news organizations were quick to parrot its claims. Spanish newspaper ABC noted the next day that media from Germany to Argentina to the Middle East had echoed the Fox News report, while ABC did the same themselves.

Filed Under: Foreign Affairs, Media & Culture Tagged With: Cuba, Fox News, Middle East, Russia, Syria

Interpreting Media Coverage Of The Chapel Hill Shooting

February 12, 2015 By Amel Guettatfi 3 Comments

The fatal shooting of Deah Barakat, 23, his wife Yusor Mohammed, 21, and her sister Razan Mohammed Abu-Salha, 19 in a Suburban neighborhood in North Carolina was reported more than 12 hours after the fact on national television. Chapel Hill Police released the identity of the self-confessed killer, Craig Hicks, 46, approximately seven hours after a 911 call by a distressed neighbor. He reportedly shot all three of them, point blank, in the head.

Why did it take so long for national media to pick the story up? Their silence stood in stark contrast to prompt coverage of the Charlie Hebdo shooting in Paris last month. Only after a social media outburst protesting their lack of coverage did we see CNN, FOX and MSNBC headline the shooting of 3 Muslims in Chapel Hill.

This initial radio-silence reinforced the other-ness of Muslim Americans as well as other minorities in the US. It spoke louder than any anti-Muslim messages online could have.

Filed Under: Media & Culture, National News Tagged With: #ChapelHillShooting, #MuslimLivesMatter, Abdisamad Sheikh-Hussein, Albuquerque, California, Chapel Hill Police, Chapel Hill Shooting, Charlie Hebdo, CNN, corporate media, Craig Hicks, Deah Barakat, Dean Obeidallah, FOX, Fox News, Freedom of Religion, hate crimes, Islam, Islamophobia, Kansas City, mainstream media, Missouri, MSM, MSNBC, Muslim Lives Matter, Muslims, New Mexico, North Carolina, Paris Attacks, police, propaganda, racism, Raleigh, Razan Mohammed Abu-Salha, San Francisco, Seham Jaber, social media, terrorism, The Daily Beast, victim blaming, Yusor Mohammed

Benign Intent: Tools of Corporate Media Propaganda

January 2, 2015 By Simon Wood 4 Comments

In a healthy society governed by democratic principles and the rule of law, news media would be analogous to a powerful telescope, a roving, scrutinizing eye from which little or nothing can hide. Corrupt societies — ones that require the vast majority of the population to be passive, obedient, misinformed, ignorant, distracted and consumptive — require instead a media that acts as a kind of prism, a distorting lens that presents a perversion of reality.

The scale of this distortion varies greatly around the world, with some — mostly independent — media (sometimes lone journalists) laudably aiming to shine a torch as best they can on state and corporate power. At the other extreme, dictatorships like North Korea use state media to portray a false reality to help control their people, who nonetheless are surely aware that their freedoms are strictly limited.

Western corporate-owned media, however, is unique and quite remarkable in that while it depicts a reality as laughably false as that shown to the North Koreans, its readers/viewers — more accurately its consumers — are overwhelmingly unaware that they are being fed a pack of lies, that the picture given to them is — in key areas that concern corporate power and Western control of world resources — diametrically opposite to reality. With a corporate media monopoly over the information that enters people’s brains, information that is crucial to the formation of their worldview, reality is skewed with ease to serve the interests of capital and control. Not only are consumers of such information not aware of this cynical manipulation, they are not even aware that they are not aware.

Filed Under: Media & Culture Tagged With: 20th Century Fox, ABC News, Abu Ghraib, Alex Koppelman, Amplify, banks, Barack Obama, Barron’s, bias, Bill of Rights, Brazil, capitalism, Catechism of the Catholic Church, Catholic Church, CBS, Center for Research on Globalization, Central Intelligence Agency, Chechnya, CIA, CIA torture, class war, CNET, CNN, Comcast, Congo, Corporate America, corporate media, corporations, corruption, Cruise Lines, democracy, Disney, DJX, Dow Jones & Company, DPRK, Economist Magazine, Edward Bernays, Edward Snowden, Ellen Goodman, ESPN, Financial Times, Fox News, Fox News Channel, Fox News Corporation, freedom, freedom of speech, freedom of the press, GCHQ, GCHQ JTRIG, Geneva Convention, Glenn Greenwald, Gustave Le Bon, Harper Collins Publishers, HBO, Hong Kong, Human Rights, Hyperion Books, IMF, imperialism, In Search of Enemies, intelligence, International Monetary Fund, Iraq, John Pilger, John Stanton, John Stockwell, Joint Threat Research Intelligence Group, journalism, Latin America, mainstream media, Malala Yousafzai, Marvel Comics, MAX, Move Inc., National Security Agency, NBC Universal, neutrality, newspeak, Nobel Peace Prize, North Korea, NSA, oligarchy, Patrice Lumumba, Pearson, Penguin Random House, People Magazine., Philadelphia Flyers, poverty, propaganda, real estate, Reedy Energy Services., Russia, Russia Insider, Safa Younis Salim, Salon, Senate Intelligence Committee, Seymour Hersh, Simon & Schuster, Smithsonian Network, Sports Illustrated Kids, starvation, tax havens, taxes, The Intercept, Time magazine, Time Warner, Time Warner Cable., Tony Blair, torture, Touchstone Pictures, Umbrella Revolution, UNICEF, United Kingdom, United Nations, United Nations Convention Against Torture, United States Constitution, Vladimir Putin, Wall Street, Wall Street Journal, War, war crimes, weltanschauung, whistleblowers, World Bank

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