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April 10, 2026
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"We shape our tools and thereafter our tools shape us."
"So trying to keep certain things off television or out of books is futile. That same energy should be applied to helping children develop their own capacities for judgment, taste and sensitivity, so that they know how to make decisions that are based, we hope, on positive values."
"I don't think baseball could survive without all the statistical appurtenances involved in calculating pitching, hitting and fielding percentages. Some people could do without the games as long as they got the box scores."
"Our country's healthcare spending is less than one per cent of GDP, even though the WHO recommends 6pc. And only 4pc of Pakistani children receive a 'minimally acceptable diet'. These poor healthcare and standards expose the flaws of the prime minister's reasoning that our youthful demography will protect us against the worst of the pandemic; malnourishment can hardly boost immunity."
"Only up to 3pc of Pakistan's is unionised, and there are few opportunities for for fair wages or safe working conditions. The last year banned 62 labour unions in the province. The disregard for will take on new dimensions during a pandemic, when workers should have ample rights to demand safe working conditions and job protection in the event of sickness."
"Upholding human rights should underpin all policymaking. The challenges the report identifies will take years to address, but there are several ways this administration can signal a commitment to human rights. For starters, it can vow to protect the 18th Amendment. Such are the times, that the mere presentation of a report can be a political act."
"Not surprisingly, initiatives to criminalise disappearances are stalled. The thing is, you only silence critics when you have something to hide. And the HRCP's â documenting everything from to to poor enfranchisement â gives a sense of what this might be. The sad and shocking scale of rights abuses again raises the question of how efficacious the state's censorship strategy can be. When the public narrative significantly diverges from lived experience, the only outcome is more frustration among the people, who realise that on top of being poorly served, theyâre also being lied to and manipulated."
"In light of the pandemic, the plight of prisoners is particularly relevant. Pakistan's prisons are appallingly overcrowded, with an occupancy rate of 133.8pc. More than 62pc of this population comprises pre-trial detainees and those on remand. Jam-packed prisoners are more vulnerable to diseases, including , HIV and now Covid-19."
"DIRE. Thatâs the word the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan uses to describe the state of human rights in our country. Its annual report, released last week, makes for a distressing read, particularly in the midst of a pandemic. One wonders, given how widespread rights violations are, when this brutalised body politic will reach its breaking point. The PTI government has cited concerns of riots fuelled by starvation as a reason to impose light-touch lockdowns. But the HRCPâs report reminds us that the state's fear of its citizenry is rooted in a deeper knowledge of systemic fissures in our country; fissures produced by the disgraceful treatment of an â including women, children, dissenters, religious minorities, labour, prisoners, and more â often by state institutions themselves."
"Pakistan has the somewhat unique problem that the concept of human rights has been deemed toxic among the es because it is too often associated with curbs on media and religious freedoms. Decades of authoritarian state policy have entrenched a suspicion of democracy and secularism, and there is perversely a fair amount of support for policies targeting those labelled unpatriotic or blasphemous. But human rights are also about positive access to food, healthcare, safety, and education."
"Those closest, and so most accountable, to the people are best positioned to protect their rights."
"The report also focuses on failings of our criminal justice system, an issue so endemic that we take it for granted rather than consider it a rights violation. But without a functional judicial system, we have no recourse or accountability. Justice in Pakistan is delayed and denied. And miscarriages of justice â such as Rana Bibi's 19-year imprisonment for a murder she didn't commit â are not atoned for."
"He smiles well and has a gift of gab. Most political journalists in the mass media like him. Heâs an apt frontrunner for the military-industry complex and the corporate power structure that it serves. Whether Biden can win the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination will largely depend on how many voters donât know much about his actual record."
"Activists have been encouraged by his ability to listen, learn and change..."
"When the New York Times front-paged its latest anti-left polemic masquerading as a news article, the March 9 piece declared: âShould former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. enter the race, as his top advisers vow he soon will, he would have the best immediate shot at the moderate mantle.""
"Bidenâs fealty to corporate power has been only one aspect of his many-faceted record that progressives will widely find repugnant to the extent they learn about it..."
"We need a major shift in the U.S. approach toward Russia...The lives -- and even existence -- of future generations are at stake in the relationship between Washington and Moscow... The incessant drumbeat is in sync with what Martin Luther King Jr. called âthe madness of militarism."
"In October 2002, a resolution sailed through the House and Senate to authorize a massive U.S. military attack against Iraq. I could almost hear the raspy and prophetic voice of Senator Wayne Morse roaring in 1964, the year he voted against the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution: âI donât know why we think, just because weâre mighty, that we have the right to try to substitute might for right.â As with the years of sanctions and the deaths they caused, top officials in Washingtonâmaking a âvery hard choiceâ for all-out warâstill figured the human price would be âworth it.â As geopolitical talk and strategic analysis dominated media coverage, the moral dimensions of war got short shrift. I doubt many Americans would have felt at ease on a visit to the Al-Mansour Pediatric Hospital. I can only imagine, with horror, being in that hospital with missiles again exploding in Baghdad. In late 2002, it was much easier to stick with comfortable newspeak about âa lengthy air campaign led by B-2 bombers armed with 2,000-pound satellite-guided bombs.â p. 9/10"
"It is our challenge and responsibility to sort through the propaganda of selective facts, distortions, and images in search of truth. When a country goes on a war track, stepping out of line is always hazardous. All kinds of specious accusations fly. Whether you travel to Baghdad or hold an anti-war sign on Main Street back home, some people will accuse you of serving the propaganda interests of the foreign foe. But the only way to prevent your actions from being misconstrued is to do nothing. The only way to avoid the danger of having your words distorted is to keep your mouth shut. In the functional category of âuse it or lose it,â the First Amendment remains just a partially realized promise. To the extent that it can be fulfilled, democracy becomes actual rather than theoretical. But that requires a multiplicity of voices. And when war demands our silence, the imperative of dissent becomes paramount. We need to hear factual information and not let it be drowned out by the drumbeat of war. We need to think as clearly as possible. And we need to listen to our own hearts. When his visit to Iraq began, Sean Penn expressed the desire âto find my own voice on matters of conscience.â In the near future, each of us will have that opportunity."
"For several decades, Helen Thomas covered the White House as a reporter for United Press International.... and when the specter of war grew large in 2002, she didnât hold back. âItâs bombs away for Iraq and on our civil liberties if Bush and his cronies get their way,â Thomas said... during a speech at MIT. Looking back on a long career, she said: âI censored myself for fifty years when I was a reporter.â Although we may want journalists to keep their personal opinions out of news reporting, we might expect to be provided with all the relevant facts. This is rarely the case. A lot of key information gets filtered out. The process is often subtle in a society with democratic freedoms and little overt censorship. âCircus dogs jump when the trainer cracks his whip,â George Orwell remarked more than half a century ago, âbut the really well-trained dog is the one that turns his somersault when there is no whip.â No whips are visible in Americaâs modern newsrooms and broadcast studios. There are no leashes on editors, reporters, producers, or news correspondents. But in mainstream media, few journalists wander far... Conformity becomes habitual. Among the results is a dynamic that Orwell described as the conditioned reflex of âstopping short, as though by instinct, at the threshold of any dangerous thought . . . and of being bored or repelled by any train of thought which is capable of leading in a heretical direction.â p. 21"
"On November 8, 2002...National Public Radioâs All Things Considered aired a story by longtime correspondent Tom Gjelten. âA war against Iraq would begin with a bombing campaign, and the resources for that phase of action are largely in place already,â he reported. The tone was reassuring: âDefense officials are confident the U.N. Timeline will not get in their way. For one thing, theyâre going ahead in the meantime with war preparations. Says one senior military officer, âWhen the order does come, we have to be ready to rock ânâ roll.ââ It was a notable phrase for a highranking officer at the Pentagon to use with reference to activities that were sure to kill large numbers of people. The comment did not meet with any critical response; none of the news reportâs several hundred words offered a perspective contrary to the numbing language that distanced listeners from the human catastrophes of actual war. Such reporting is safe. Chances are slim that it will rankle government sources, news executives, network owners, advertisers orâin the case of âpublic broadcastingââlarge underwriters. While NPR seems more and more to stand for âNational Pentagon Radio,â objections from listeners have apparently mattered little to those in charge. This should be no surprise. NPRâs president and CEO, Kevin Klose, once served as director of the International Broadcasting Bureau, the U.S. government agency responsible for the Voice of America, Radio Free Europe, Radio Liberty, and Radio and Television Marti. p. 24"
"A bellicose stance toward Russia has become so routine and widespread that we might not give it a second thought... Often the biggest lies involve what remains unsaid. For instance, U.S. media rarely mention such key matters as the promise-breaking huge expansion of NATO to Russiaâs borders since the fall of the Berlin Wall... or the more than 800 U.S. military bases overseas -- in contrast to Russiaâs nine..."
"Meanwhile, we should expect an escalating corporate media assault â in tandem with methodical attacks from establishment Democrats â against Sanders... such an assault is actually an ideological war against the vision of government aligned with social justice. Not only Bernie Sanders but, in effect, all genuine progressives will be in the crosshairs."
"Andrew Cockburn identifies an array of victims in his devastating profile of Biden in the March issue of Harperâs magazine... Media mythology about âLunch Bucket Joeâ cannot stand up to scrutiny. His bona fides as a pal of working people are about as solid and believable as those of the last Democratic nominee for president."
"One of the many industries that Biden has a long record of letting âoff the hookâ is the war business. In that mode, Biden did more than any other Democratic senator to greenlight the March 2003 invasion of Iraq..."
"It wasnât just that Biden voted for the Iraq war on the Senate floor five months before it began. During the lead-up to that vote, in August 2002, as chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, he presided over sham hearingsârefusing to allow experts who opposed an invasion to get any words in edgewiseâwhile a cavalcade of war hawks testified in the national spotlight..."
"The likely Bernie Sanders campaign for president offers a boost and a challenge to progressives.. Much more than the presidency is at stake... More than any other presidential candidate, Sanders has ready access to extensive networks of authentic grassroots support."
"With very few exceptions, the loudest voices to be heard from mass media are coming from individuals with wealth far above the financial vicinity of average Americans. Virtually none of the most widely read, seen and heard journalists are on the low end of the nationâs extreme income inequality. Viewed in that light â and keeping in mind that corporate ownership and advertising dominate mainstream media â it shouldnât be surprising that few prominent journalists have much good to say about a presidential campaign fiercely aligned with the working class."
"With a launch of the Bernie Sanders 2020 campaign on the near horizon, efforts to block his trajectory to the Democratic presidential nomination are intensifying... The ferocity of media attacks on him often indicates that corporate power brokers are afraid his strong progressive populism is giving effective voice to majority views of the public... The overarching fear that defenders of oligarchy have about Bernie Sanders is not that heâs out of step with most Americans â itâs that heâs in step with them. For corporate elites determined to retain undemocratic power, a successful Bernie 2020 campaign would be the worst possible outcome of the election."
"December 14, 2002: Near the center of Baghdad, along the Tigris River, an Iraqi woman showed a few foreigners around a water treatment plant that was seriously damaged during the Gulf War in early 1991. Our guide spoke in steady tones, describing various technical matters. But when someone asked about the possibility of war in 2003, her voice began to quaver. A young American woman tried to offer comfort. She said, âYouâre strong.â âNo,â our guide responded emphatically. âNot strong.â Tears welled in her eyes. Moments later she added, âWe are tired.â She was speaking for herself, but also, it seemed, for most Iraqi people. After so much mourning, hardship and stress, they were exhaustedâand frightened by what the future was likely to bring. For an American in Baghdad, perhaps the most startling aspect of any visit was to encounter, up close and personal, Iraqis so routinely rendered invisible or fleeting by U.S. media coverage. Itâs all too easy to accept the bombing of people who have never quite seemed like people, whose suffering is abstract and distant. Looking them in the eyes can change that. In the words of my traveling companion on this trip, the actor and director Sean Penn: âI needed to come here and see a smile, see a street, smell the smells, talk to the people and take that home with me.â"
"Surveys show that voters are hungry for genuinely progressive policies that have drawn little interest from mainstream media outlets. For instance, polling of the US public shows: 76 percent support higher taxes on the wealthy. 70 percent support Medicare for All. 59 percent support a $15 minimum wage. 60 percent support expanded tuition-free college. 69 percent oppose overturning Roe v. Wade. 65 percent support progressive criminal justice reform. 59 percent support stricter environmental regulation. Yet such popular positions are routinely ignored or denigrated by elite political pros who warn that such programs are too far left for electoral success. The same kind of claims assumed that Bernie Sanders would never get beyond single digits in his 2016 presidential campaign.... pandering to the military-industrial complex â enabling and reinforcing endless US warfare now in its 18th year â may well be touted as a sign of âmoderateâ leadership. But it is far more popular inside the Beltway than it is among working-class voters."
"Itâs mid-October, and the Wall Street bailout that was supposed to save the economy from collapse is a flop... Senate passage came on Thursday, Oct. 2...President Bush signed the $700 billion Wall Street bailout into law... Despite all the media hype about how the bailout measure would quickly steady the stock market, it fell and kept falling... the Dow made history as stocks plunged by 18 percent in five trading days. And what about the ostensible main reason for the humongous bailout... unfreezing the credit markets? Well, in spite of the enormous media outcry..., it didnât. And the key economic factor in the recession â housing â remained just as stuck as before. As the Institute for Policy Studies pointed out on Oct. 1, âA real âbailoutâ would target the troubled households of working American families. A $200 billion âMain Street Stimulus Packageâ could bolster the real economy and those left vulnerable by the subprime mortgage meltdown.â Components of such a stimulus package could include âa $130 billion annual investment in renewable energy to stimulate good jobs anchored in local economies and reduce our dependency on oilâ â and âa $50 billion outlay to help keep people in foreclosed homes through refinancing...â â and âa $20 billion aid package to states to address the squeeze on state and local government services that declining tax revenues are now forcing.â But that kind of discourse for grassroots economic stimulus hasnât gotten into the media storyline..."
"In the last few days, both Politico and the New York Times have reported that freshman Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has ruffled the feathers of fellow congressional Democrats. Chief among the reasons for the tension? Ocasio-Cortezâs apparent support for progressive primary challenges against centrist Democrats. Itâs one of the most significant ideas the young New York congresswoman has brought with her to Washington."
"Orwell [in]"1984" explained that "the special function of certain Newspeak words ⌠was not so much to express meanings as to destroy them." When terrorists attack, theyâre terrorizing. When we attack, weâre retaliating. When they respond to our retaliation with further attacks, theyâre terrorizing again... At all times, Americans must be kept fully informed about who to hate and fear..."
"Well-informed public discussion is a major hazard for Democratic Party elites now eager to prevent Bernie Sanders from winning the 2020 presidential nomination. A clear focus on key issues can bring to light the big political differences between Sanders and the partyâs corporate-friendly candidates. One way to muddy the waters is to condemn people for pointing out facts that make those candidates look bad..."
"In recent weeks, Texas Congressman Beto OâRourke has become a lightning rod... largely because of the vast hype about him from mass media and Democratic power brokers. At such times, when spin goes into overdrive, we need incisive factual information. Investigative journalist David Sirota provided it in a deeply researched Dec. 20 article, which The Guardian published under the headline âBeto OâRourke Frequently Voted for Republican Legislation, Analysis Reveals.â ...itâs better to learn revealing political facts sooner rather than later. Thanks to Sirotaâs coverage... we now know âOâRourke has voted for GOP bills that his fellow Democratic lawmakers said reinforced Republicansâ anti-tax ideology, chipped away at the Affordable Care Act, weakened Wall Street regulations, boosted the fossil fuel industry and bolstered Donald Trumpâs immigration policy.â"
"When Nancy Pelosi and Mitch McConnell teamed up to invite NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg to address a joint session of Congress, they had every reason to expect the April 3 speech to be a big hit with U.S. media and political elites. The establishment is eager to affirm the sanctity of support for the transatlantic military alliance. Huge reverence for NATO is matched by how dangerous NATO has become. NATOâs continual expansion -- all the way to Russiaâs borders -- has significantly increased the chances that the worldâs two nuclear superpowers will get into direct military conflict. But in the United States, when anyone challenges the continued expansion of NATO, innuendos or outright smears are likely... McCain conveyed the common madness of reverence for NATO â and the common intolerance for anything that might approach a rational debate on whether itâs a good idea to keep expanding an American-led military alliance to, in effect, push Russia into a corner."
"More than ever, Bernie Sanders is public enemy number one for power elites that thrive on economic injustice. The Bernie 2020 campaign is a direct threat to the undemocratic leverage that extremely wealthy individuals and huge corporations constantly exert on the political process. No wonder weâre now seeing so much anti-Bernie rage from leading corporate Democrats â eagerly amplified by corporate media."
"Hours later, Sean Penn and I were sitting in the office of Iraqâs deputy prime minister, Tariq Aziz. Dressed in a business suit, he greeted us cordially. His voice reminded me of a foghorn. In a far corner, three large televisions were on, without sound, tuned to Iraqi TV, EuroNews and CNN International. At the outset of the discussion, Penn said: âThe politics for me are a side note to concern about my children, and the children of the United States, and the children of this country.â Aziz launched into a long explanation of why the United States should not attack Iraq. âNow we have brought the international inspectors, who are professionals, and they are doing their jobs freely, without any interruption. And still the warmongering language in Washington is keeping on.â He continued: âIraq is rich in its oil reserves. They want to take it away. But at what cost? At what cost for Americans, and for Iraq and for the whole region? Hundreds of thousands of people are going to die, including Americansâ because if they want to take over oil in Iraq, they have to fight for it, not by missiles and by airplanes . . . they have to bring troops and fight the Iraqi people and the Iraqi army. And that will be costly.â"
"Asked about the White Houseâs evident disappointment in the face of Iraqi cooperation with U.N. weapons inspectors, Aziz referred to the U.N. Security Council resolution adopted in early November. âThey wrote this resolution, the last one, 1441, in a way to be certainly refused,â Aziz said.âYou know, sometimes you make an offer and you are planning to get a refusal. We surprised them by saying, âOK, we can live with it. Weâll be patient enough to live with it and prove to you and to the world that your allegations about weapons of mass destruction are not true.ââ"
"Tariq Aziz welcomed us into his office...Aziz presented his interpretation of the box that Washington had meticulously constructed for Iraq: âDoomed if you do, doomed if you donât.â The date was September 14, 2002. Sitting in Azizâs office were members of the delegation sponsored by the Institute for Public Accuracyâthe congressman along with former U.S. Senator James Abourezk, Conscience International president James Jennings and myself. The Americans took turns contending that the ominous dynamic of recent weeks might be changed ifâas a first stepâIraq agreed to allow unrestricted inspections. Yet it was hard to argue with Aziz when he said in formal English: âIf the inspectors come back, there is no guarantee they will prevent war. They may well be used, in fact, as a pretext for provoking a new crisis.â He was less than eager to grasp at weapons inspections as a way to stave off attack, suggesting instead that a comprehensive âformulaâ would be necessary for any long-term solution, presumably including a U.S. pledge of nonaggression and the lifting of economic sanctions. Two days later, Iraq officially changed its position and announced a willingness to let U.N. weapons inspectors back into the country. Gauging the odds of averting war, the government in Baghdad chose a long shotâone that was at least better than no chance at all, but very risky nevertheless. Several years earlier, Washington had used Unscom inspectors for espionage purposes that were totally unrelated to the U.N.-authorized mission. p. 5"
"In late 2002, new squads of inspectors poking around Iraq could furnish valuable data to the United States, heightening the effectiveness of a subsequent military attack. âWe are now a country facing the threat of war,â the speaker of Iraqâs National Assembly, Saadoun Hammadi, told us. âWe have to prepare for that.â A silver-haired man in frail Target Iraq 6 physical condition, Hammadi was somber: âThe U.S. administration is now speaking war. We are not going to turn the other cheek. We are going to fight. Not only our armed forces will fight. Our people will fight.â As those words settled in the air, the gaunt old man paused, then added: âI personally will fight.â At that moment, I thought I could see the dimming of light in his eyes, like embers in a dying fire. p. 6"
"In contrast to state censorship, which is usually easy to recognize, self-censorship among journalists is rarely out in the open. Journalists tend to avoid talking publicly about constraints that limit their work; they essentially engage in self-censorship about self-censorship. In the highly competitive media environment, you donât need to be a rocket scientist, or even a social scientist, to know that dissent does not boost careers. This is especially true during times of war. The rewards of going along to get along are clear; so are the hazards of failing to toe the line. p. 22"
"Occasional candor from big-name journalists can be illuminating. Eight months after 9/11, in an interview with BBC television, Dan Rather said that American journalists were intimidated in the wake of the attacks. Making what he called âan obscene comparison,â the CBS news anchor ruminated: âThere was a time in South Africa that people would put flaming tires around peopleâs necks if they dissented. And in some ways the fear is that you will be ânecklacedâ here, you will have a flaming tire of lack of patriotism put around your neck. Now it is that fear that keeps journalists from asking the toughest of the tough questions.â Rather added that âI do not except myself from this criticism,â and he went on: âWhat we are talking about hereâwhether one wants to recognize it or not, or call it by its proper name or notâis a form of self-censorship. I worry that patriotism run amok will trample the very values that the country seeks to defend.â p. 23"
"Throughout the day before the summit in Helsinki, the lead story on the New York Times home page stayed the same: âJust by Meeting With Trump, Putin Comes Out Ahead.â ... The Washington Post...editorialized that Russiaâs President Vladimir Putin is âan implacably hostile foreign adversary.â"
"Contempt for diplomacy with Russia is now extreme... No doubt Hillary Clinton thought she was sending out an applause line in her tweet Sunday night: âQuestion for President Trump as he meets Putin: Do you know which team you play for?â"
"We really have to fault the mass media of the United States, not just for the last few days, but the last decades, pretending that somehow, by implication, almost that John McCain was doing the people of North Vietnam a favor as he flew over them and dropped bombs. You would think, in the hagiography that weâve been getting about his role in a squadron flying over North Vietnam, that he was dropping, you know, flowers or marshmallows or something. He was shot down during his 23rd mission dropping bombs on massive numbers of human beings, in a totally illegal and immoral war."
"During the week after U.S. missiles hit sites in Sudan and Afghanistan, some Americans seemed uncomfortable. A vocal minority even voiced opposition. But approval was routine among those who had learned a few easy Orwellian lessons. No matter how many times theyâve lied in the past, U.S. officials are credible in the present. When they... [say the] bombed pharmaceutical factory in Khartoum was making ingredients for nerve gas, that should be good enough for us... Might doesnât make right â except in the real world, when itâs American might. Only someone of dubious political orientation would split hairs about international law."
"Joe Biden is poised to come to the rescue of the corporate political establishment... The direct prey of Bidenâs five-decade âassociation with bankersâ include millions of current and former college students now struggling under avalanches of debt; they can thank Biden for his prodigious services to the lending industry."
"Thatâs because turning the Democratic Party into a truly progressive force will require turning âprimaryâ into a verb. The corporate Democrats who dominate the partyâs power structure in Congress should fear losing their seats because theyâre out of step with constituents. And Democratic voters should understand that if they want to change the party, the only path to do so is to change the people who represent them. Otherwise, the leverage of Wall Street and the military-industrial complex will continue to hold sway."