Thursday, December 30, 2010

Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. This world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children...

–Dwight Eisenhower, Apr. 16, 1953.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

How CNN covered the wikileaks Iraq revelations

CNN reporter ... faced with documents revealing the killing/murder of over 100 000 people in Iraq ... completely ignores this ... and instead launches into some weird character-assassination attempt on the messenger (Julian Assange):

The interview starts with something like:  "There have been 'a lot of reports' of internal disputes within Wikileaks .... 'People'  have said that they've quit  etc...". The CNN "reporter" then has to admit that the  whole "internal disputes" tangent has been constructed for her around just one former staffer (who had been suspended by wikileaks) ... she nonetheless continues to try and make the whole interview about that disgruntled former employee's personal views of Lassange ... spouting doozies like: "this criticism that the story around you is eclipsing the work of Wikileaks ... must concern you ... etc". The irony in her own line of questioning (culminating in that last question) apparently didn't strike her .

And one wonders if this astoundingly stupid (or "sold-out") reporter really considers herself to be doing ... "journalism". I'm surprised Lassange didn't tell her to go f***k herself. Yet this kind of drivel passes for serious news-coverage in the USA. One can imagine that this is meant to make everybody forget the very real, very serious and very troublingly "newsworthy" (and legal) questions that are raised by the death of these many tens of thousands of people.

BBC News - What would Americans think of the French strike?

BBC News - What would Americans think of the French strike?

Friday, July 23, 2010

Though Charlemagne has always tended to be hostile to Europe, as is typical of the Brits, last week's  'The Economist' does not simply display its customary anti-European slant, it does so in an especially nonsensical manner. And that is disappointing. I've long been a fan of 'The Economist' magazine, considering it be one of the precious few sources of intelligent current-affairs analysis in English.
To illustrate, the article starts:
"VIEWED from afar, Europeans are a complacent, ungrateful lot. Nannied from cradle to grave by the world’s most generous welfare systems, they squeal like spoiled children when asked to give up just a few of their playthings."

"Squeal", "spoiled children" and "playthings"?!? And of course what this author is referring to as "playthings" are useless toys like ... a decent healthcare, a decent standard of living (for regular citizens) and ... generally ... a government doing the job it is meant to be doing ... namely to try and improve the lives of its citizens. Brits are 'subjects', as opposed to 'citizens', and maybe they forget what a government is for, but still ... WTF?

And it's like that for the whole article:
"Even President Nicolas Sarkozy, usually averse to abstract nouns, has spoken of “the politics of civilisation” and asked economists to measure output in terms of happiness, not just [economic] growth. Put simply, if Europe stands for something, it is decent treatment for all. To this way of thinking, to guarantee a comfortable retirement is akin to banning child labour or giving women the vote: not optional perks, but badges of a civilised society. Such social preferences are what Europe is for, and what makes it different from America"



And according to this author this is a bad thing!!! He offers "America" (the United States of ) as the 'right' model. He seems to consider that a "high standard of living" ... ought not to be shared by the majority of citizens but must instead be reflected by bizarre extravagance from some economically boated multi-gazillionaires ... the lifestyles of whom the majority of citizens may vicariously enjoy through vacuous 'lifestyle' TV and magazines.

The article ends thus:
"Until now, much of Europe has chosen to put its values before growth. In reality, the 35-hour working week in France was not a mark of progress, but a brake on job creation and a spur to deindustrialisation to lower-cost countries; the French may have more time on their hands, but they have little money to do anything with it. Retirement at 60 in an ageing society is not a sign of civilisation, but a cruel joke played on the next generation. The Euro-zone crisis has exposed such hypocrisy. It may still take time before Europeans conclude that they must compromise their ideals in order to secure the growth needed to preserve what they can of their lifestyles. But if they did, that would be real progress."

So, this guy scoffs that "the French may have more time on their hands, but they have little money to do anything with it". Well, how much money do you really need to read Montaigne in a park, meet a friend at a cafe, invite friends for a spaghetti-dinner or take your family on a pick-nick in the beautiful French countryside? Instead, this article is basically advocating unhappiness for the sake of stuff like 'job creation', 'economic growth' and 'more money'. Stuck in a 'going to the mall' mentality, for him, 'free time' can only mean 'time to consume stuff'. It's simply idiotic!

The Economist's Charlemagne

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