by Patrick ➕follow (60) 💰tip ignore
« First « Previous Comments 767 - 806 of 1,306 Next » Last » Search these comments
In the early hours on Saturday, government-affiliated reporters labeled the Wagnerian dustup a Russian “Civil War.” The Atlantic ran one of my favorites of the headlines, which by no means was the only one:
Russia didn’t slide into Civil War very far! ...
The New York Times, which on Saturday ran no fewer than SEVEN separate top-of-fold stories celebrating Putin’s imminent fall, any second now, was reluctantly forced by the rough pace of current events to display a much more muted tone this morning:
Uh oh. I guess the Weekend Civil War didn’t really help Ukraine that much. The Times’ sub-headline, above, glumly admitted, “The Ukrainian Army is encountering an array of challenges.” An array! An “array of challenges” is even worse than just regular challenges.
If the Times admitted THAT, you know it’s got to be BAD. The best news that diligent Times reporters could scrape together was the alliterative headline suggesting “Ukraine COULD Capitalize on Chaos,” maybe, who knows, plus a 12-minute audio podcast where some talking head opined about “How the Wagner revolt challenges Putin’s power.”
But does it, though?
Now begins the great face-saving, the re-spinning, the narrative un-weaving, the shucking-and-jiving by all the corporate media reporters and expert shills who on Saturday ran with hot takes that the situation in Russia was REALLY SERIOUS and Putin was teetering on the brink of finally being deposed by the brave, democracy-loving, freedom-fighting Wagner forces (freedom fighters who were long labeled as war criminals, as of Thursday afternoon at least, but never mind, they would again be war criminals by late Sunday afternoon). ...
So, we’ll keep waiting to find some clarity, and in the meanwhile enjoy corporate media mocking itself.
Our media is a laughingstock. You literally can’t believe anything they say these days. I feel like we should apologize to the Russians for mocking their Soviet-era newspaper ‘Pravda’ back in the day. Now we know what it feels like.
Russian President Putin gave a speech yesterday about the uprising. As usual it was credible and coherent. Unlike someone else’s speeches, but I digress. I’ll link it (it’s not too long), not because I “love Putin” but because our corporate media won’t print a single word.
http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/71528
Honestly, it baffles me that, after building Putin up into the ONE REASON for this entire conflict, our media proceeds to black out everything the man has to say about it. How can they possibly justify that? If everything Putin says is a lie, expose him as a liar every time he talks. The media’s ONE JOB is to inform us about newsworthy events, not carefully curate the information we are exposed to so that we won’t think wrong.
It’s a time of war and the government-controlled media is deliberately deceiving us. That’s arguably treason. ...
I have a modest proposal. How about this? How about we end the era of the state secret. Maybe we need to decide, once and for all, that a huge undercover secret government military-industrial apparatus is antithetical to a ‘small-R’ republican form of government.
Look at it this way — we gave it a solid try, but it didn’t work out. Let’s move on.
Speaking of western intelligence involvement, I haven’t had the time to quite work this up yet, but dots are coalescing. I find very interesting the collective timing of the massive rush Saturday-morning rush by corporate media to label the Wagner uprising a “Civil War.” Nearly every corporate media outlet had at least one long-form piece ready Saturday morning when events had unfolded in Russia over Friday night.
Including outlets that don’t usually report breaking news, like The Atlantic magazine. How was all of that possible without outside coordination?
Remember, the New York Times had no fewer than SEVEN articles ready to go first thing Saturday morning, all written by different reporters. Then yesterday we found out that our intelligence agencies briefed Congress earlier in the week about the expected uprising.
The CIA and Congress knew about Wagner ahead of time. Which means corporate media knew ahead of time.
They wrote the Russian Civil War narrative AHEAD OF TIME.
It sure looks to me like Saturday morning’s media blitz was a CIA psyop on the American people. The goal perhaps was to help manufacture a color revolution in Russia on the strength of Prigozhin’s popularity, or at least, what the intelligence agencies believed about his popularity.
Boy, were they wrong. Nobody cares about Prigozhin.
I wonder what else we’ll discover going forward.
The way thigns are gonna be done now- it's gonna be changed from this point on. There's gonna be a new direction in this country.
People aren't buying the media like they used to. Because they, you know, the stuff that happened on Hunter Biden laptop. Okay. Two years you told us not true. Okay, I believe you, you're the media. Then it's true.
And then for 7 years we learned that Donald Trump is a Russian spy. Well, that's wrong. Thank you media for telling us that. Durham report drops, he's not a Russian spy. ...
80% that you told us is all false. So the public is all going, "No, you don't have the power you used to."
Our media is a laughingstock. You literally can’t believe anything they say these days. I feel like we should apologize to the Russians for mocking their Soviet-era newspaper ‘Pravda’ back in the day. Now we know what it feels like.
80% that you told us is all false. So the public is all going, "No, you don't have the power you used to."
jeepers you guys, it looks like the new york times is still saying that “covid-19 vaccines do not prevent transmission of the disease” is “debunked claims from vaccine skeptics!”
...
but jeez i hope nobody tells the CDC, because it seems like probably that would hurt their feelings…
The internet has eclipsed TV, I think.
There's nothing on it worthwhile, and we're not going to watch it in this household, and I don't want it in your intellectual diet.
« First « Previous Comments 767 - 806 of 1,306 Next » Last » Search these comments
patrick.net
An Antidote to Corporate Media
1,258,408 comments by 15,014 users - Patrick, stereotomy online now