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Read Cockburn and St. Clair's Whiteout: the CIA, Drugs and the Press and discover how the CIA gave a helping hand to the opium lords who took over Afghanistan, thus ushering the Taliban into power.

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April 27, 2002

Jeffrey St. Clair
Set This Flag on Fire!

April 26, 2002

Tom Turnipseed
Act Now to Stop the Killing
of an Innocent Man

Mokhiber / Weissman
Anti-Bribery Law Takes a Hit

Tariq Ali
Letter to a Young Muslim

April 25, 2002

Francis A. Boyle
Home Brew? Biowarfare,
Terror Weapons and the US

Adam Federman
"And the Earth Wept"
Bush at Saranac Lake

Stanton and Madsen
US Media Interests:
Champions of Profit, Propaganda and Puffery

Aaron Hawley
Cop a Buzz Day in Vermont:
Education v. Incarceration

David Vest
Code Red: Politics and Wordplay at the Vatican

Bernard Weiner
Time Out! A Pause for Longer-Range Thinking

Rep. Dennis Kucinich
Standing with the Peace Movement

April 24, 2002

David Vest
State of Politics in France:
Code Bleu

Jean Fallow
A20 in Seattle:
Cops Get Rough, Again

Kevin Alexander Gray
Help Save the Life of an Innocent Man: Ask for Clemency for Ricky Johnson

Tanya Reinhart
Jenin, the Propaganda Battle

Todd May
Drowning Children, Palestinians and American Responsibility

Alexander Cockburn
The Loneliest Road

Nir Rosen
The Broken Home:
Revisiting Israel

Mokhiber / Weissman
A Big Blow to Big Tobacco

April 23, 2002

Brian Wood
Where Is the Aid for the Victims in Jenin?

John Chuckman
I, George:
Gomer as Claudius

Norman Madarasz
French Presidential Elections
Absenteeism and Le Pen

Dr. Susan Block
Bernard Parks, Goodbye:
A Farewell to My Chief

Joan Smith
Who Will Rid Us of
These Pedophile Priests?

April 22, 2002

CounterPunch Wire
EPA Ombudsman Resigns
in Protest

Dave Marsh
DeskScan: What's Playing
at My House This Week

Ron Jacobs
A20 in DC: Taking the
Message to the Beast's Belly

Kathy Kelly
An Open Letter to
Israeli Soldiers

Irit Katriel
Word Games and Body Bags

Rep. Cynthia McKinney
We Come for Peace

Daniel Bar-Tal
Is There a Way Out?
Occupation, Terror
and Understanding

David Wilson
A Week of Coups, But Now
The Freedom Train Hits Town

Shaik Ubaid
Today I Was a Palestinian

April 21, 2002

Michelle Campos
Suckered Again in Israel

Mike Leon
200,000 in DC Protest Say:
"We Are All Palestinians Today"

C.G. Estabrook
Sex and Power in Catholicism

Kathy Kelly
Gimme Some Truth Now
A Walk Through Jenin

Resources:
100s of Links About 9/11


CounterPunch:
Complete Coverage of 9/11 and Its Aftermath


Five Days That
Shook The World:
Seattle and Beyond

By Alexander Cockburn
and Jeffrey St. Clair
Photos by Allan Sekula

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Published March 15, 2002

  • Facing Down Rehnquist and Scalia:
  • Jennifer Harbury at the Supreme Court;
  • ADL Throws in Towel, Pays Up:
  • How They Worked for Apartheid Regime and Spied on NAACP:
  • Cockburn on America the Bully:
  • From Teddy Roosevelt to George W.
  • St. Clair on Musicians Against the Death Penalty & The Legacy of the Mekons.


    Search CounterPunch

Read Whiteout and Find Out How the CIA's Backing of the Mujahideen Created the World's Most Robust Heroin Market and Helped to Finance the Rise of the Taliban and Osama bin Laden

Whiteout:
CIA, Drugs & the Press

by Alexander Cockburn
and Jeffrey St. Clair

The New Crusade:
America's War on Terrorism

By Rahul Mahajan

The Memphis Blues Again:
Six Decades of Memphis Music Photographs
Photos by Ernest Withers
Text by Daniel Wolff

The New Intifada:
Resisting Israel's Apartheid

Edited by Roane Carey

 

A Pocket Guide to
Environmental Bad Guys
by James Ridgeway
and Jeffrey St. Clair

The Phoenix Program
by Douglas Valentine

Al Gore:
A User's Manual
by Cockburn
and St. Clair

Buy This Explosive
New Book at an
Amazing Discount!
 

Reviews of Gore:
a User's Manual


Private Warriors
by Ken Silverstein

CounterPunch's Booktalk

April 27, 2002

Inside the J-School Pyramid

Can I Have My Diploma, Now?

By Jordy Cummings

Ah, to be a J-school grad. Indeed, 'tis a world of wonderment, of knowing how to write an inverted pyramid without inverting the pyramid, of knowing how to write a hedder while the world heads right. Now don't get me wrong, my degree will look good in between the Klee print and the Steal-your-face. What worries me, however, is what my j-school experience says about the state of journalism in the era of corporate media, the era of the bloody murder of Daniel Pearl, the era of Greta Van Sustren having to get plastic surgery to keep her career.

Many journalists tend to over-state the power of corporate consolidation, as if it were a cause and not a symptom. As easy as it is to complain about media-ownership being in fewer and fewer hands, conglomerates have controlled much of the mass media for nearly half a century. The current situation can be attributed to labor's aquiescence with management--in other words, journalists have failed to organize in a sophisticated enough manner to defeat these forces.

To the current corporatist media mogul, the bottom-line is no different from the bottom line in a coal-mine. Coal workers, however, have more power to threaten that bottom-line, therefore creating an equilibrium in that industry. Thus the coal consumer is served well, while the consumer of cultural industry is treated with kid-gloves, to be protected against information that may threaten advertisers. Indeed, this has far more to do with the somewhat reactionary middle-class culture from which the mass-media picks its journalists than it does with horizontal integration.

Journalism schools at most elite universities have a self-contained process of selection, both in which students are accepted and cultivated and which professors are hired. Entry is not predicated on experience, rather it is predicated upon "good grades," thus narrowing the circle to "mainstream" people, intelligent but without a broad perspective. The Mike Gashers and Norman Solomons of this world are rare, while mid-level hacks concern themselves with the thankless low-paid task of molding young naive minds into stenographers, in hope that a few will transcend this myopia.

This structure creates, however, a reactionary movement of students completely cut off from all political and social struggles, not to mention the slightest hint of countercultural adherence. What is left are genuinely talented and hungry young journalists who are forced to sacrifice their principles, or more often, a smug and cynical, thoroughly bourgeois polity. Thus, the censorship of any form of dissent - intellectual or political - is internalized among the new vanguard of the corporate media.. No legislation is needed when the propagandists are propagandized, so to speak. An illuminating example is my own experience attempting to experiment in what is supposed to be the avant-garde vanguard - the student press.

I traveled down to working-class Swanton, Vermont on the night of November 7, 2000, on which day there was a coup d'etat by the cowboy-faction of the American establishment. With a photographer in tow, I had a unique, gonzo experience getting chased out of American Legion halls for daring to question the authority of the Bush family. I was tarred with racist language while my obviously queer photographer was gay-bashed. Our experience was a microcosm for what was to happen to America - and indeed, has happened to America.

After writing what I dare say was one of the best things I have ever written and submitting it free of charge to the "progressive" student press, I was told by the editor of this apparently "progressive" student newspaper that my writing was "too experimental." Too experimental for the student press? This in and of itself is an indictment of journalism in 2002, in which professionalism is a more important virtue than experimentation.

Frustrated with the structures of mainstream journalism, I turned to web-journalism, the left and the counterculture to publish my work and it has worked out fine and dandy, thank you very much. What worries me, however, is the impression created in the minds of the young and hungry j-school students that they have to sell out or shut up, and that the psychological profile of their readership is of more importance than writing something that has never been written before.

As it is, we'ree stuck inverting pyramids without inverting the real pyramid. What a shame.

Jordy Cummings lives in Montreal. He can be reached at: yorgos33ca@yahoo.ca