Sunday, March 10, 2024

Is There a Journalism That Doesn’t Love a War?


 
 MARCH 8, 2024
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Image by Marek Pospíšil.

War, what is it good for? Well, the media for starters.

Shortly after the Biden administration responded to the killing of three American soldiers in a drone attack on a base in Jordan by bombing 85 Iran-connected targets in Iraq and Syria, the Columbia Journalism Review (CJR) asked in a headline: “Is the press dragging America to war again?”

Again? I thought. Shouldn’t that be “still”?

That headline was on a recent Media Today newsletter by Jon Allsop who regularly covers what could be considered the favorite topic of journalists: themselves. He was mulling over media criticism of how the government had (or hadn’t) disclosed information about that just-launched bombing campaign, as well as its goals, while considering the accusation that some news platforms were rooting for a wider regional war. CJR is a fair-minded publication, so Allsop warned against generalizing (as I’m about to do), pointing out that “asking questions about planned strikes isn’t the same as advocating them.” Yes, I thought, but when you focus your questions on that subject, as so many media reports did after those American deaths and before the Biden administration launched its attacks, not surprisingly it can have that effect.

As the death toll in Gaza passed 30,000, on-the-ground reporting on the increasingly impossible living conditions there was making Israel’s belligerence seem ever less defensible. Little wonder coverage in the American media focused ever more on prospects for a cease-fire. And seemingly in tandem with that possibility, coverage of anxiety over the course of the war in Ukraine returned to the digital equivalent of the front page, making me wonder whether the media requires at least one war to cheerlead for or fret about at any given time.

The situations in Ukraine and Gaza are anything but the same militarily, strategically, politically, morally, or journalistically, and there are timely reasons for focusing once again on Ukraine. It was, after all, the second anniversary of Russia’s February 24, 2022, invasion. Cue up the requisite assessments of the situation, with predictions about Ukraine’s military prospects ranging from grim to dire, and photos showing the hard, inglorious miseries of war. The U.N. verified that at least 10,582 Ukrainian civilians had been killed by late February, while estimates — assumed to be wild undercounts — put soldiers’ deaths at more than 45,000 for Russia and 31,000 for Ukraine, with tens of thousands more wounded on both sides.

Add to the list of news pegs Donald Trump’s extortionate claim that, were he to win the presidency again, he would encourage Russia “to do whatever the hell they want” to any NATO country that doesn’t ramp up its military funding to his standards; the opportunely revealed threat that Russia might put a nuclear weapon into orbit; and the suspicious death of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, and you’ve certainly got the attention of American news consumers. Meanwhile, funding for U.S. military aid to Ukraine has become a political football in Congress, whose dysfunction, while hardly new, was still headline-making.

So, war in Ukraine certainly counted as newsworthy, but beyond that there does seem to be something about war that journalists can’t resist and blind spots they can’t overcome.

The Wages of Fear

It’s an open debate whether the press, the mainstream media, the legacy media, whatever you want to call it, leads or follows public opinion. Polls show Americans increasingly go to social media and podcasts for their news. Only 5% of adults now prefer to get it from print publications and no one seems to trust any news outlet other than the Weather Channel very much. Yet, like it or not (and usually we don’t), the news media continue to influence what we know and how we think about world events, as they set the priorities, language, framework for, and spectrum of public discussion.

Even at a time when a scoop, or exclusive, seldom lasts more than a couple of minutes and news sources from around the world offer alternative reporting and viewpoints, it’s still the newsrooms of a handful of newspapers, magazines, and broadcast and cable channels that generate much of the news we consume on our various devices and apps. That’s especially true for international issues and even truer for the wars the U.S. gets itself involved in, distant as they are.

It’s not that journalists are a particularly callous or bloodthirsty lot. It’s that war makes good copy. Accounts like former war correspondent Chris Hedges’s anguished War is a Force That Gives Us Meaning attest to its seductions. As he wrote, “War is an enticing elixir. It gives us resolve, a cause. It allows us to be noble.” That “us” includes politicians whom war spurs to soaring pledges of fealty to principles and journalists who thrive on quoting them.

“In the battle between democracy and autocracies, democracies are rising to the moment, and the world is clearly choosing the side of peace and security,” President Biden said of the just-begun Ukraine war in his 2022 State of the Union address. Never mind that his version of peace and security would be propped up by more than $44 billion in military assistance by the time he delivered his 2023 State of the Union address. The president, of course, reaffirmed then that, when tested, America would stand up for democracy. “For such defense matters to us because it keeps peace.” (I don’t quite get how war keeps peace, but we’re undoubtedly not supposed to probe such rhetoric too deeply.)

Not only was democracy imperiled, we were told, but so, too, were neighboring NATO countries. In March 2023, exercising his skill at engaging allies, Ukrainian President Zelensky said, “If we are no more, then, God forbid, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia will be next.” Eleven months later at the Munich Security Conference, Vice President Kamala Harris amplified the threat: “If we stand by while an aggressor invades its neighbor with impunity, they will keep going — and in the case of Putin, that means all of Europe would be threatened.” And, predictably, such war rhetoric reminded us again and again and again that history, that relentless scold, is watching.

Politicians say such things and journalists, of course, report them. Moreover, journalism’s portfolio isn’t history, but what’s happening now, giving us an eternal snapshot of an evanescent present. Not surprisingly, then, a complicated situation can quickly be reduced to a few catchphrases and, repeated often enough, such phrases become our only reality. (Just ask Donald Trump how that works, if you don’t believe me.) In the process, it can become an underlying and unchallenged assumption that the pathway to future security and peace is ineluctably through war. And when, according to your government and the media, you have democracy and history on your side, it’s hard to imagine an alternative like negotiating with the enemy as anything less than craven betrayal.

I don’t question that Ukraine’s sovereignty is in danger; or that a country under attack has a right to defend itself; or that Russian President Vladimir Putin will continue to live up to his reputation for provocation and brutality, offing his opponents by defenestration, poison, or means yet to be revealed. The Western commentariat has been fooled before and even Putin may not know what he’s going to do next. Still, there are knowledgeable sources who think that, even with a victory in Ukraine, he would leave NATO alone, at least for the foreseeable future. However, you’d have to read deep into most recent U.S. news stories on the topic to find that side of the argument.

Who Benefits?

On the New York Times podcast “The Daily,” diplomatic correspondent Steven Erlanger observed of European countries now increasing their military spending, “I mean, there’s nothing like scaring people to get them to do things.” And who benefits from a fearful political class and citizenry anywhere? How about the news media?

Reporting doesn’t necessarily intend to make us uneasy, alarmed, or generally bummed out, but that’s often its result. Such results are baked into our idea of news, which, to be news, must be ever-evolving. If you turn away, however anxious you may feel, the implication is that you’ll miss it. What that it you’ll miss is may not always be clear, but social media and its attendant technologies have trained us to thirst for a bottomless tumbler of “content” replenishing itself in lickety-split time.

Fear is profitable not only for the media, but also, of course, for defense contractors. It may be a flaw in our natures or an instinctual reflex, but Americans respond to national anxieties, real or imagined, by arming themselves to the teeth, both personally and nationally, and their allies, too. In 2022, a typical year, this country spent more on “defense” than the next 10 countries combined and, in the two years since Russia invaded Ukraine, it has sent $46.3 billion in military assistance to that country alone (and that’s not even counting other spending related to that war).

And still, if you’re to believe the media, it’s not been faintly enough. Current reporting from Ukraine seldom fails to stress its army’s desperate need for more weapons, equipment, and ammunition. One opinion piece, headlined “This is no time to give up on Ukraine,” even resurrected the tired trope that the Ukrainians are being forced to fight with one arm tied behind their back. And assuming Congress finally passes the necessary appropriation bill, who must step up and produce that weaponry, equipment, and ammunition? Why, the giant American weapons manufacturers of the military-industrial-congressional complex, of course, and if they make a bundle in the process, that’s the definition of good business, right?

It isn’t all a one-way deal, you’ll be relieved to know. The U.S. military, having completed a classified year-long study, is using the Ukraine war to rethink its playbook. And not surprisingly, that war coincides all too well with American economic interests. Speaking at the U.N. Security Council’s 11th meeting on arms transfers to Ukraine last December, Ann Wright, a retired Army colonel, retired State Department official, and peace activist, quoted Secretary of State Antony Blinken as saying that 90% of what this country invested in Ukraine’s defense was spent in the United States, making it a boon for the American economy. “So this has also been a win-win that we need to continue,” he added all too tellingly.

“The ‘win-win’ is not for civilians in conflict areas,” Wright observed. “The win-win is for the military-industrial complex and the politicians and retired government officials who receive senior positions in the weapons industry after their retirements.”

But Enough About Ukraine, What About the U.S.?

By the way, that U.N. meeting wasn’t covered in the media. Why would you report on the 11th meeting of anything? But the Ukraine war remained a lead domestic story before its anniversary in part because of Congress’s deadlock over that supplemental aid package and the way support for and opposition to it tended to break down along ever fiercer and more Trumpian party lines. As a result, the media gets to treat the situation in Ukraine as another American political horserace to hell and back.

After Senate Republicans insisted that funding for Ukraine be tied to Mexican border-security changes and then killed an aid package that did just that, a number of them finally agreed to join Democrats in giving bipartisan approval to a stand-alone military aid bill that included $60.1 billion for Ukraine. That package passed the Senate with the support of 22 Republicans, six military veterans among them. But House Speaker Mike Johnson declined to bring the package to the floor, where it would undoubtedly pass, and instead sent everyone home for two weeks.

“The Republican-led House will not be jammed or forced into passing a foreign aid bill that was opposed by most Republican senators and does nothing to secure our own border,” Johnson said on Valentine’s Day. “The weight of history is on [Mike Johnson’s] shoulders,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer responded not long after, while on a visit to Ukraine.

And all of a sudden, with Republicans stalling and Trump bad-mouthing NATO, the media are talking about American isolationism, a wildly Trumpian America First phenomenon that hasn’t been truly fashionable here since 1941, when the attack on Pearl Harbor shifted the support of the American public — and the American press — toward internationalism. Of course, today’s “isolationists” are anything but doves. They want lots of money for weapons, too, but they want to put a lot of those weapons to use right here at home by militarizing the Texas border, big-time.

This may all seem topsy-turvy — once upon a time, Democrats talked peace dividends used for civic programs — until you recall that defense spending has long had bipartisan support in Congress, thanks to giant weapons makers who spread their largesse to politicians of every stripe in a staggering fashion.

Amid all of this, the American public seems to be rethinking its support for Ukraine. A healthy majority supported funding for the war there from the start, but over the last year that support has been weakening (as, far more quickly, has support for the war in Gaza). An October 2023 poll found that, for the first time, a plurality of those asked, 41%, thought the U.S. was doing too much to help Ukraine, while about two-thirds thought neither side was winning there. A poll from early February found, surprisingly enough, that 69% of respondents wanted the U.S. to urge Ukraine to negotiate with Russia as quickly as possible.

Polls, like journalism, show a single moment and can tell us only so much, but public sentiment and news coverage do interact, and, over time, both can influence public policy. No one other than a coalition of stalwart antiwar groups is yet truly beating the drums of peace, but there are reasons why both Ukraine and Russia could benefit from talking to each other now, not the least of which should be the recognition that this devastating war, like most wars, has gone on too long. So, in a roundabout and unintended way, it may end up that a group of American politicians who don’t give a damn about the wellbeing of Ukraine, following a man who gives a damn only about himself, could be the impetus for negotiations toward peace to begin.

Now, wouldn’t that be something worth reporting?

This piece first appeared in TomDispatch.

The Right to Your Life Movement

BY KATHLEEN WALLACE


MARCH 8, 2024



Photograph by Nathaniel St. Clair

Personhood for Embryos, no isolation requirements for active respiratory infections, advancement of genocide—it’s a recipe for early-onset dementia to try and unravel the current “pro-life” atmosphere hanging over the United States and to grapple with the logical fallacies being advanced as principled stands.

The Christian extremists in America now have some common themes going. Polls indicate they are very much against abortion due to a proclaimed belief that a pregnancy is a life with inherent rights, and that it is worth negating any bodily autonomy concerns for the women (or even children who tragically become pregnant through the lawless behavior of others). In short, they have made allowances that one stand is worth the erosion of rights for the other. In this manner, no other considerations can be put forth, no room for any nuance. The woman or girl does not have a right in this situation, so they are making a line in the sand with no room for any other consideration.

Amazingly (but not surprisingly to most non-orthodox Christian Americans) the hypocrisy begins to show when looking into often shared conservative stances such as being pro-death penalty, supporting the deaths of untold numbers in Gaza, or simply backing policy that allows for Covid to wreck more lives. These are very real situations with a clear decision to back policy that kills and overwhelmingly, this contingent of the population opts for the slaughter of adults, even rejoices in it. The embryo or fetus is conveniently an entity that makes no real demands on you, literally has no voice, but can act as a place to put all of your so-called humanitarian and Christian love. This while backing policy and behavior that very clearly kills those out there with overt feelings and voices. The moment the baby is born, the interest wanes, of course. The pregnancy acted as an abstraction and a place to derive self-esteem and a notion of moral superiority. The hard work of actively caring for humans that have autonomy and voice is not anything that they are interested in.

I am discussing the reactionary right, but they simply pave the way for these types of policies, which then become part of the mainstream due to a lack of push-back from any sort of left in this country. It is no accident that far right demagogues through history, however, have shoved a forced pregnancy narrative in with policy quite hostile to the life of all others. It’s a clear means of control over the populace who want to feel they are morally upright people, but have absolutely no desire to do the hard work of true good. You can slip in a lot of evil policy if you allow the population to believe they are righteous. It’s a superficial label with no depth or reality-based meaning.

The normalization from the far right has allowed for the other elements of the ruling class to accept and use the issues for fund raising and hand wringing, all the while moving everything more clearly into reactionary and fascist territory. It becomes something advanced beyond just the evangelical circles, into all political parties. One recent example is the fact that the comically named Centers for Disease Control have decreed that you really don’t need to stay home when you’re kinda sick with covid. If your symptoms are improving and you aren’t febrile, you go right out and flip those burgers and expose others. It’s not like you have sick leave anyway, so it’s all good. This right to be sick and work is basically accepted in the United States now by those of all political stripes. It started as a right-wing thing, but when Biden occupied the oval office, those who had disgust at Trumpian policies became fine and even enamored with this “return to normal”. The lack of concern for others is truly bipartisan in the current United States. This new CDC policy moves forward and makes a new normal, even as excess death data piles up and long covid clinics have wait-times to get in that indicate a mass disabling event is going on. Again, embryonic and fetal life matters, workers in the United States, not so much.

Biden has said “I’ve never been supportive of, you know, It’s my body, I can do what I want with it”. I don’t think the man has ever been more honest than he was with that statement. It is a perfect synopsis of what the ruling class thinks about each and every one of our bodies, that is, they have the right to control them—to expect a willing and docile class that throws itself into the meat grinder, whether it be in War is a Racket adventures or meat grinders in the service sector economy. And by god women had better offer up the little precious ones they carry as fodder for that workforce or army. To consider that human life is truly an intangible spark without limit, with full self-directed rights is not anything our current leaders believe. Fetishize the fetus, hate your neighbors, hope for the extermination of Palestinians. Americans are very, very sick right now.

So anyway, who knew the United States were being held together with gunpowder, toothpaste and cognitive dissonance?

I don’t write the above to plunge others into a state of depression, but to join in the shared relief of clearly recognizing the ploys of the ruling class (and yes, I’m using that term as solidarity with Aaron Bushnell’s words and worldview). It’s our responsibility to continue to see this all clearly, even when difficult, and to continue to serve as a push-back to the insane times we find ourselves alive in. Let’s hope and attempt to “infect” others with our worldview just as effectively as our oppressors have been able to do throughout history.


Kathleen Wallace writes out of the US Midwest. Her writing is collected on her Substack page.

Gold Can be a Curse in the Amazon


 
 MARCH 8, 2024
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Image by Paola Bilancier.

Illegal gold mining is a scourge throughout the Amazon, causing severe environmental damage and affecting the health and wellbeing of the indigenous populations living in that region. Gold mining is the biggest producer of deforestation in Venezuela, and one of the largest in Bolivia. Like the other countries affected by it, Peru, the largest producer of gold in Latin America and sixth largest in the world, is experiencing a surge in illegal gold mining.

Although many jungle mining concessions in the country’s Amazon rainforest operate under government grants, the growth of the informal sector is such that estimates place it at almost a quarter of the total gold mining activity. The invasion of indigenous lands by illegal miners has led to increased deforestation and the displacement of local communities. According to RAISG, the Amazon Network of Georeferenced Socio-Environmental Information, there are 4,472 localities where illegal gold mining is carried out in the Amazon region.

Indigenous communities depend on the forests to maintain their way of life in terms of food, medicine, building materials and cultural resources. Because many of those indigenous communities are located in remote areas, they already suffer from lack of basic health services. Indigenous lands hold 80 percent of the planet’s biodiversity.

Illegal gold mining has also led to contamination of the rivers with mercury, a substance highly toxic to humans, especially children. A report by the Carnegie Amazon Mercury Project states that the mercury level of children in native communities is more than five times higher than the safety limit.

According to the World Health Organization, mercury produces serious neurological and psychological changes in adults; in children, it provokes delays in their physical and mental development. Because children are still growing and their immune systems and detoxification mechanisms are not fully developed, toxic or infectious agents and air and water pollution have a more serious impact on them than on adults.

In Peru, much of the mining activities take place in the southeastern province of Madre de Dios, that borders Brazil and Bolivia which is known for its biodiversity. Madre de Dios is a region rich in cotton, coffee, sugarcane, cacao, Brazil nuts, and palm oil. However, the abundance of gold has attracted tens of thousands of illegal miners whose activities are detrimental not only to precious species in the environment but also to the health and quality of life of native and new populations in the region.

Several studies have shown that small-scale miners are less efficient in their use of mercury than industrial miners, with 2.91 pounds of mercury used in the mining processes released into waterways for every 2.2 pounds of gold produced. More than 40 tons of mercury are absorbed into the rivers of Madre de Dios, poisoning the food chain. According to the World Wildlife Fund, “After fossil fuel burning, small-scale gold mining is the world’s second largest source of mercury pollution, contributing around 1/3 of the world’s mercury pollution.”

Mercury not only contaminates waterways but is also a serious threat to human health. It is also a dangerous toxin for fish, which in the area contain three times more mercury than the safe levels permitted by the World Health Organization. An analysis by The Nature Conservancy, an organization created to protect the environment, states that there are at least 2,600 freshwater fish species in the Amazon rivers, 1,260 of which are endemic.

Small-scale mining causes other negative effects. Because the trees of the rainforest act like an umbrella that regulates the temperature, deforestation results in drastic temperature variations that can be lethal to many species, while a greater amount of greenhouse gas is released into the atmosphere. Deforested areas have less water in the air to be returned to the soil. This causes dryer soil, hindering the ability to grow crops.

The enormity of the damage has been documented in a study by American, French, and Peruvian researchers published in the peer-reviewed magazine PLOS ONE. According to the study, using satellite imagery from NASA, they were able to assess the loss of 7,000 hectares (15,200 acres) of forest due to artisanal gold mining in Peru between 2003 and 2009. This is an area larger than Bermuda. Jennifer Swenson, the lead author of the study, says that such enormous deforestation is “plainly visible from space.”

In addition to its negative environmental effects, illegal gold mining attracts organized crime groups who extort, kidnap, and create prostitution rings, whose activities are a constant source of concern for governmental authorities. While they have sent security forces to destroy river dredgers used by illegal gold miners in Madre de Dios, more drastic measures are needed, including stricter vigilance and regulations. Approaches that focus on environmental protection while addressing human rights concerns are also needed. The survival of what has been recognized as one of the most biologically rich areas in the world is at stake.

Dr. Cesar Chelala is a co-winner of the 1979 Overseas Press Club of America award for the article “Missing or Disappeared in Argentina: The Desperate Search for Thousands of Abducted Victims.”