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New Print Edition of CounterPunch Available Exclusively to Subscribers: Liberation Four Years After: Iraqis Should Look to Serbia to Find Out What "Freedom" Will Be Like; Unfolding Nightmare: Inside the Humanitarian Disaster in Post-War Iraq; Good News, Bad News: Countering the Flood of Propaganda; You Want Victory?: Return to Vieques; Iraq's War Message to Latin America: You Could be Next. Remember, the CounterPunch website is supported exclusively by subscribers to our newsletter. Our worldwide web audience is soaring, with more than 60,000 visitors a day. This is inspiring news, but the work involved also compels us to remind you more urgently than ever to subscribe and/or make a (tax deductible) donation if you can afford it. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now!

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Recent Stories

April 30, 2003

Ashley Smith
Under Uncle Sam's Thumb: a History of Washington's Occupations

Steve Perry
Bush's War Web Log 4/30

Gary Leupp
Shooting Schoolboys: Preliminary Thoughts on the Fallujah Massacre

Robert Jensen
Fighting Alienation in the USA

Wayne Madsen
The Four Horsemen of Propaganda

Ahmad Faruqui
Bush's Strategic Myopia About the Middle East

Gabriel Kolko
Iraq, the US and the End of the European Coalition

Adolfo Perez Esquivel
A Nobel Laureat's Letter to Bush: "You Talk of Freedom; You Detest Freedom"

 

 

April 29, 2003

Gary Leupp
Disorder and Opportunity: the Results of the Iraq War

Uri Avnery
Don't Envy Abu-Mazen

Anthony Gancarski
Brush with the Law

Mickey Z.
POWs: Then and Now

CounterPunch Wire
How to Spin Israel on the Hill: Internal Lobbying Documents

Robert Fisk
Did the US Murder Journalists?

Chris Floyd
Bush Telegraphs His Punches on Syria

Wayne Madsen
About Those Iraqi Intelligence Documents

Wallace Gagne
Pilgrimage or Demolition Derby?

Eliot Katz
Playing Catch with Cracked Globes

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Bush's War Web Log 4/29

 

April 28, 2003

Ann Harrison
Fighting Back: Medical Marijuana Patients Sue Ashcroft

Robert Jensen
Lack of WMD Kills the Case for War

Peter Phillips
Total Information Control

Ron Jacobs
Get the US Out of Iraq and Its Military Out of Our Minds

Mark Hand
Peace Park: The Pentagon Solution to a Baseball Stadium Dilemma

Linda S. Heard
Repeat After Me: Iraq is Weapons Free

Kurt Nimmo
US Military Bases: the Spoils and Deceptions of War

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Bush's War Web Log 4/28

 

April 26 / 27, 2003

Elaine Cassel
The Other War: Bush, Ashcroft and the End of Civil Liberties

Saul Landau
Iraq War: a Policy of Christian and Jewish Fundamentalism

William A. Cook
Sharon Recruits US as Mercenaries Against Syria

William S. Lind
Now the Real War Starts

John Chuckman
In Jesus's Name:
Franklin Graham's Christian Empire

David MacMichael and Ray McGovern
Ex-CIA Analysts on WMD: Where? Find? Plant?

Gary Leupp
Why the War on Iraq was (and Remains) Wrong

Robert Sandels
Cuba Crackdown: a Revolt Against Bush's National Security Strategy?

CounterPunch Wire
An Open Letter to Jerry Brown on Oakland Police Violence Against Peace Activists and Dock Workers

Mickey Z.
Our Ba'athists

Anthony Gancarski
Nader Plays Pullman

Scott Handleman
The Mumia Abu-Jamal Case in Its True Colors

Claud Cockburn
Evelyn Waugh's Ear Trumpet

Poets' Basement
Matt Simon, Sam Hamod, Hammond Guthrie and Stew Albert

Steve Perry
Bush's War Web Log 4/26

 

April 25, 2003

David Vest
It's Not the Oil; It's the Art!

Steven Higgs
All About Tucker Carlson

Walt Brasch
The Shock and Awe of American Ignorance

Alexander Cockburn
The Decline of American Journalism: the Case of Judy Miller

Zeynep Toufe
A Letter to the People of Iraq from an Anti-War Activist

CounterPunch Wire
Season of the Witch: Jeane Kirkpatrick Unbound

Hammond Guthrie
Springtime in Iraq

Steve Perry
Bush's War Web Log 4/25

Website of the Day
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April 24, 2003

Lois Whitman
An Open Letter to Rumsfeld on the Child Detainees at Guantanamo

Uri Avnery
Abu vs. Abu: It's Not About Egos

David Lindorff
Day Care in the Name of National Security? About Those Kids in Camp X-Ray

John Grebe
Rev. Pat Robertson's Message in the Temple

Dokhi Fassihian
Monster.Com: Ethnic Cleansing on the Web?

CounterPunch Wire
Israeli Army Chief Threatens Peace Activists

Sam Hamod
Our Man in Baghdad

Annie C. Higgins
Do You Regret Being an American?

Harold A. Gould
Will They Hate Us Forever?

Stew Albert
Big Brother in Bed

Steve Perry
Bush's War Web Log 4/24

Website of the Day
Muscles Abroad

 

April 23, 2003

Anthony Gancarski
When Young Mothers Die in Combat

Chris Floyd
Desolation Row: Bush's Barbarians Teach by Example

Marjorie Cohn
Tax the War Profiteers

William Lind
The Fourth Generation of Modern War

Dave Marsh
Nina Simone: Freedom Singer

Binoy Kampmark
Malayasia's America: the War on Iraq

David Vest
Who's Looting Whom?

Standard Shaefer
Super Imperialism: an Interview with Michael Hudson

Andrew Rodman
Lawn Poem

Steve Perry
Bush's War Web Log 4/23

Website of the Day
Weapons of Mass Destruction in the Middle East

 

April 22, 2003

Edward Said
The Appalling Consequences of the Iraq War are Now Clear

Sam Hamod
What's the Deal with This War?

Kurt Nimmo
Shi'a Will to Power

Gary Leupp
At last! The Necessary Evidence

Carl Estabrook
Oblivious Americans: They Distort, We Subside

John Stanton
Iran's Reza Pahlavi: a Puppet of the US and Israel?

Ramzy Baroud
What Else Hasn't Israel Told America?

Steven Sherman
About That Cuba Letter

Wayne Madsen
Bush's "Christian" Blood Cult

Stew Albert
Creep

Steve Perry
Bush's War Web Log 4/22

Website of the Day
Critical Media Literacy in Times of War

 

April 21, 2003

Elaine Cassel
An Administration in Contempt

Gary Leupp
Easter Thoughts on Liberation, Jesus and Kanaka WaiWai

Roger Witherspoon
Why Michigan Needs Affirmative Action

Uri Avnery
At Midnight, a Knock on the Door

Col. Dan Smith
Early Lessons from Iraq

Jo Freeman
After the Protest Comes Politics

Michael Berry
The Friedman Absurdities

Gray Brechin
Hang Black Banners: Mourning the Cultural Loss

Bob Riedel
The Taliban from Texas

Steve Perry
Bush's War Web Log 4/21

 

April 19, 2003

Gary Leupp
The Rape of History

Saul Landau
Shop, Go to Church, Support Bush's War, Wait for Armageddon

Michael J. Fellows
Off With Their Heads: the Constitution According to Scalia

Pablo Mukherjee
Roadmap to Resistance

Omar Barghouti
Sharon's Bloody Beat

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Tony Blair: the Most Powerful Man in the World

Mickey Z.
Animals: the Other Collateral Damage

Will Potter
When Police Attack Journalists

William MacDougall
America's In-Bedded Journalism

Neve Gordon
Haunted by History

Adam Engel
Wal-Mart and Peace

Dr. Susan Block
Art Bombs: American Libertines for Peace

Poets' Basement
Albert, Buono, Guthrie

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War Web Log 4/19

Song of the Weekend
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April 18, 2003

Uri Avnery
Operation "Syrian Freedom": This One's Not About Oil

Jorge Mariscal
"They Died Trying to Become Students": the Future of Latinos in an Era of War and Occupation

Mickey Z:
Coalition of the Unindicted: Only Losers Get Tried for War Crimes

Hussein Ibish
Syria and the Road to World War IV

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Matania Ben-Artzi
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Bruce Jackson
Jews Like Us

Joe Allen
My Lai Revisited

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Support Our Euphemism

Steve Perry
War Web Log 4/18

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April 17, 2003

Jeffrey St. Clair
Patriot Gore: the Fatal Flaws in the Patriot Missile System

Joanne Mariner
Looting Antiquity: the Legal Implications for the Pentagon

Issam Nashashibi
Zalmay Khalilzad: the Neocon's Bagman to Baghdad

Wayne Madsen
Another Sign of the "End Times" for American Journalism

Robert Fisk
The Army of Occupation

Boris Kagarlitsky
Virtual Saddam Takes Aim

Biljana Vankovska
A Personal View of Iraq: Where is the Truth?

Dan Brook
Oil War: Fueling the Empire

Stanley Heller
Bomb and Steal: This is What Privatization Looks Like

Tim Robbins
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Harold A. Gould
Iraq After the War

Steve Perry
War Web Log 4/17

 

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May Day Edition
May 1, 2003

Take Back the Air Waves!

A May Day Message to the FCC:
"We are Many; They are Few"

By IAIN BOAL

Text of remarks delivered at the Federal Communications Commission Hearing on Media Ownership Rules at the City Hall, San Francisco, Saturday April 27th, 2003.

My name is Iain Boal. I am a historian of science and technics, with a longtime interest both in radio and in the history of enclosure and privatization. I have stood once before in such a room, some eight years ago, in Washington DC, during the effort to derail the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which quite predictably led to a vast plunder of the public airwaves.

The jackals are back again - this time to scavenge for what is left of the carcass. The hearings were a travesty then; now they have the makings of a farce. There is only one commissioner here today; Chairman Powell has not seen fit to show himself to the people of Northern California. Nor have the rest of the commission. None of the corporate interests poised to profit from the new ruling has bothered to show up either; the fix is already in. They should know; they paid for it.

The people, on the other hand, have turned up, and in some numbers; the hall is full to overflowing. This public comment period is, it might be said, just another ludicrous symptom of the grotesque constriction of the public realm, a parody of the network soundbite - the polyphony of voices reduced to videotaped snatches of vox pop in a broom closet (for viewing "later" by the FCC), to invitations to "fill out" 3 by 5 postcards, to one hundred and twenty seconds of "feedback" permitted at this microphone - no doubt a veritable eternity in the context of Viacom and Clear Channel programming. Our moderator was about right when she called these proceedings, quite without irony, ''your two cents worth".

But despite the elements of farce, and in the wake of the predictable looting of public assets sanctioned by the 1996 Act, there is finally a movement building of people who well understand what is happening here, and what is at stake. The FCC is not the cause of this disaster; in its current condition it is just another symptom. For that reason I do not address the FCC or other specialists in capitalist regulation. I just want to say one thing, as we approach Mayday, to those both inside this chamber and those locked outside in the hallway, to those listening on KPOO and KPFA, and to all who intend harm to the system of state-sponsored private tyrannies that calls itself "free enterprise", that even dares to call itself "democracy".

The flourishing of life in this city, in this country and, I dare say, around the planet, now depends on the reappropriation of the commons, and that includes - because the means of communication without limits is the very condition of possibility of all else - the seizing back of the electromagnetic spectrum, the de-commodification of the airwaves. Affected as we all were this morning by the eloquent testimony of Professor Bagdikian, dean of critics of media monopolization, what really is the difference between a mediascape owned by twenty or six or two masters? Another degree of oligopoly is hardly the point. Regulation at this stage is disreputable; it is like demanding regulation of the slave-quarters, instead of abolition. The 1934 Act was bad enough; the1996 Telecommunications Act is a scandal. The whole thing stinks; the corpse is rotten. Let us take it out for burial, and start over.

Perhaps Commissioner Adelstein will take this news back to Washington, to his fellow commissioners and to his focus groups. There are thousands in San Francisco, and millions around the world - many of us recently in the streets on related business - who have rumbled the claptrap about "the market", who know that its more accurate name is the "anti-market", and who recognize the lethal connections between the so-called market, concentrated media ownership, and untrammeled militarism. That is why there are connections between the "anti-globalization" and the "anti-war" movements, and, as I now see, historical links to an earlier moment of reaction, the high tide of parliamentary deregulation and enclosure, when in the bitter aftermath of a devastating imperialist war, the poet Shelley, enraged by reports of a police riot against defenseless protesters, composed the indelibly encouraging words: "We are many; they are few".

Iain A. Boal, an Irish social historian of science and technics, teaches at the University of California, Berkeley. He can be reached at: iboal@socrates.Berkeley.EDU


Today's Features

Ashley Smith
Under Uncle Sam's Thumb: a History of Washington's Occupations

Steve Perry
Bush's War Web Log 4/30

Gary Leupp
Shooting Schoolboys: Preliminary Thoughts on the Fallujah Massacre

Robert Jensen
Fighting Alienation in the USA

Wayne Madsen
The Four Horsemen of Propaganda

Ahmad Faruqui
Bush's Strategic Myopia About the Middle East

Gabriel Kolko
Iraq, the US and the End of the European Coalition

Adolfo Perez Esquivel
A Nobel Laureat's Letter to Bush: "You Talk of Freedom; You Detest Freedom"

 

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