Sunday, February 16, 2014

New York Times: Syria Most Repressive. O’ Really?

New York Times: Syria Most Repressive. O’ Really?
American standards of evaluation.

The American government has only one method of evaluation human rights violations: is the government in question pro or anti-American? The United States, for the most part, engaged in opportunistic criticism of human rights.

If the regime is submissive and friendly, its human rights record is neither of concern nor ever subject to lengthy State Department reports. But if the regime is, for whatever reason, hostile to American goals in a specific region, all of a sudden America waxes poetically about how intolerable such abuses are and how the regime needs to start respecting human rights. And, if the regime is lucky, it will be singled out for “liberation” all in the ostensible name of human rights.

And the U.S. media does not exercise and independent judgement in this realm, but takes its cues from its government. So Saddam during the ’80s is a “moderate” and a “pro-Western” leader, but then overnight he is “Hitler revisited”. Ditto with Qadafia. Neither of these men behaved any differently toward their people, but their posture toward American empire changed and thus the change in perceptions which negates or amplifies human rights abuses for political convenience.

That is why, say, Syria is roundly criticized for its abuses. Admittedly Syria is a dictator ship, but the New York Times recently opined that Syria “may be the most restrictive of all”.

This is so patently false. The Committee for the Protection of Journalists reports that the U.S. client Tunisia is the worst Arab offender which has imprisoned more journalists since 2001 than any other Arab country and has “prompted more alerts and reports and letters to its president than any other Arab ruler from international groups committed to freedom of expression.”

And the other American client, Saudi Arabia, is one of the most oppressive regimes in the world, and certainly in the region. With horrific Medieval punishments, religious intolerance and misogynist policies which make diverse, culturally open and socially liberal Syria a bastion of freedom in comparison.
latakia syria jD5Mb 19672
A swimming pool in Syria. In sexually segregated and veil-enforcing Saudi Arabia such an act would get the two lynched by bearded fanatics and imprisoned. 

But, alas, such are the arbitrary standards of evaluation.




http://www.instablogs.com/new-york-times-syria-most-repressive-o-really.html

[sidebar:  The most criminally insane of the human being species kill our own and think the act is somehow KILLING HATE.

Gotten so sophisticated IT has drones to do the job or other forms of vilEvil to mass murder our Homo Sapiens into extinct.  Not at all higher intelligent acting.

And IT isn't exactly working globally and especially NOT in Syria ]

2 comments:

  1. There are far too many criminally insane in charge of programming the brains of humans. How did this happen? Well when you think about America as a land-locked island and the controllers as what they are, mass murderers of our own species - time to be very afraid of USA!

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  2. Why would the USA benefit from only reporting the Syrian LAWFULLY ELECTED Gov, alleged atrocities? Israel and Saudi Arabia aren't really liberal democracies and now Iraq and Libya aren't even habitable after USA and Israel and Saudi Arabia and the EU have spread the fascist corporate military ruling dictatorship worse than Stalin's USSR!

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