PureFodder wrote:
FEOS wrote:
PureFodder wrote:
So your claim is merely that you've done a superior analysis of the situation than all of the human rights groups in the region combined.
No. Where did I say that?
Human rights groups focus on a single topic, and tend to not worry about anything but the events they are investigating. They have their role...but it is not preeminent over all other roles and context involved in determining systemic or sanctioned abuses.
So that's what you claim to be better than them at, taking all the evidence that they gather and putting it into a broader context. What basis do you have for claiming to be better at it than them?
Please point out where I claimed to be better at anything. Your words, not mine.
I said they don't look at the broader context, not that they're no good at it, or that I'm better at it than they are.
PureFodder wrote:
FEOS wrote:
For this theory to be correct, there would have to be a huge conspiracy involving all democratic governments and all international media to keep the message on theme. Are you claiming that conspiracy exists? Why are you saying that the mass majority of any country needs to be "enforced and controlled somehow"? Is that more Chomsky?
In the US (I can't speak for other democracies), targeting the population for influence operations is illegal. There are multiple non-governmental watchdog groups that independently fact-check everything. Or are they in on it too?
E Herman wrote:
Conspiracy theory. We explained in Manufacturing Consent that critical analyses like ours would inevitably elicit cries of conspiracy theory, and in a futile effort to prevent this we devoted several pages of the preface to an explicit rejection of conspiracy and an attempt to show that the propaganda model is best described as a 'guided market system.' Mainstream critics still made the charge, partly because they are too lazy to read a complex work, partly because they know that falsely accusing a radical critique of conspiracy theory won't cost them anything, and partly because of their superficial assumption that, as the media comprise thousands of 'independent' journalists and companies, any finding that they follow a 'party line' that serves the state must rest on an assumed conspiracy. (In fact, it can result from a widespread gullible acceptance of official handouts, common internalized beliefs, common policies established from above within the organizations based on ideology and/or interests, and fear of reprisal for critical analyses from within the organization or from the outside.) The apologists can't abide the notion that institutional factors can cause a 'free' media to act like lemmings in jointly disseminating false and even silly propaganda; such a charge must assume a conspiracy.
I see. So all you have to do is put forward some theory, then preemptively say anyone who says your theory looks an awful lot like a conspiracy theory clearly isn't smart enough or "too lazy to read a complex work" (just how fucking arrogant and self-serving is THAT, btw?), and you're good. Beyond question. Suddenly your theory becomes a "truism".
Damn that's easy. Wonder why nobody thought of that before?
And please go back and read my earlier posts. I'm NOT saying the
theory doesn't have merit. I'm saying it's a THEORY, not a TRUISM. Since it's not a truism, it should rightly be questioned and examined. Or is that too inconvenient for the Chomsky worshippers here?
Have you even bothered to look into and examine the
critiques of this particular theory? Clearly not, since according to you, there's
no need to critically examine it...because it's a "truism". You present yourself as a scientific person, yet you accept a social theory such as this one as a "truism". Seems rather contradictory, tbh.
Herman basically contends that there
must be a model (why the imperative?), and since his and Chomsky's is the only one offered, theirs is the best one. He defends the model with cherry-picked anecdotes to reinforce it, while carefully neglecting to mention any evidence contrary to the model (excoriation of big oil, investigative reports into government misdeeds, FWA, criticism of banking industry, criticism of pharmaceutical industry...those are just the first ones that come immediately to mind). He invokes the use of PR firms as evidence of the truth of the model, for crying out loud. And he (like the fans of the model here) fails to mention that his book was produced by one of the very conglomerates that supposedly control the populace's "consent" through media filters...it would appear that in the case of the book he's so proud of, his proposed media filters failed.
But all that's OK...because the model is a "truism" that shouldn't be critically examined.