A Lesson in U.S. Propaganda

Last week U.N. weapons inspectors swooped in to inspect the Iraqi manufacturing plant that U.S. planes bombed in 1991. Iraq said the plant made infant milk formula; the U.S. said it made biological weapons. Mark Crispin Miller examines the evidence and concludes that Iraq's version was correct. Nevertheless, "Iraq, in trying to publicize the targeting of its civilian infrastructure, had engaged in clumsy propaganda (which backfired in the West), while the US counter-propaganda was apparently disinformation (which succeeded).

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Learning to Resist Propaganda

Propaganda. What does it mean? How does it work? How can we resist it, and live more decently with one another? Randal Marlin, a professor in the department of philosophy at Carleton University, has attempted to answer those questions in a new book that reviewer Martha Sully calls "a fascinating historical study."

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Announcing the P.U.-litzer Prizes

Norman Solomon has issued his annual "P.U.-litzer Prizes" for "America's stinkiest media performances." Winners this year include: journalists who falsely reported that Iraq kicked out U.N. weapons inspectors four years ago; Vivendi Universal executive Barry Diller, for his claim that media consolidation is "a natural law"; and right-wing mouth Ann Coulter, for publicly wishing that Timothy McVeigh had bombed the New York Times.

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