Writing in the neoliberal mouthpiece, The Atlantic, May 17, Graeme Wood adopts a tone suave enough to persuade those who still give Israel, its Western backers and our systemically corrupt media benefit of doubt. On what? On black being white. Or at any rate – since Western aided mass murder in Gaza, post October 7, is “complicated” – a shade of grey best left to the policy makers.
(Like the Nazi Holocaust was a moral grey zone? Like there being two sides to every ‘conflict’?)
This in a piece implicitly defending IDF smashing of all records for the liquidation of journalists, while explicitly. pushing apologetics for infanticide.
Mr Wood even manages in his opening paragraph to make an urbane joke about the same:
Between May 6 and May 8, the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) revised its estimates of how many women and children had died in Gaza. The numbers appeared to drop drastically: first, it reported at least 24,000 dead women and children, and two days later, it reported exactly 12,756 “identified” dead women and children. One could be forgiven for wondering whether the UN had raised about 6,700 Gazan children and 4,500 Gazan women from the dead. [Emphasis added.]
Writing today, Caitlin Johnstone picks up the thread:
Israel Massacres Children, Which The Western Press Says Is Fine
Israel has not only completely disregarded the orders of the International Court of Justice to cease its assault on Rafah as we expected it to do, but has actually ramped up its ruthlessness as though trying to make a point. There were reportedly more than 60 Israeli airstrikes on the southernmost city in the Gaza strip in the 48 hours after the ICJ ruling, including a horrifying massacre on a displacement camp full of civilians in tents.
The ABC reports:
Israeli air strikes have killed at least 35 Palestinians and wounded dozens in an area in the southern Gaza Strip city of Rafah designated for the displaced, Palestinian health and civil emergency service officials said.
Gaza’s Health Ministry said women and children made up most of the dead and dozens of wounded.
The strike took place in Tel Al-Sultan neighbourhood in western Rafah on Sunday, local time, where thousands of people were taking shelter after many fled the eastern areas of the city where Israeli forces began a ground offensive over two weeks ago.
Yes they insist on calling genocide a “war”. But my main point here is that I thought I could no longer be shocked by anything coming out of the mouths of the criminals who rule over us or their media mouth pieces, but seeing in print “legally killed children”. Words fail me.
We live in a society which normalises lies – with euphemisms like “legally killed children” and “enhanced interrogation” a particular variant; the claims implied by dementedly shrill advertisers another.
(On the latter, have you ever come back after a TV-free period – a camping trip, say – to switch on your set and wonder not only at how excruciatingly bonkers the ads actually are, but at how quickly we adjust to them and cease to see their insanity. How could this normalisation of lying not be deeply corrosive of sanity, morality and the capacity to think critically?)
You may recall how Caitlin, cited in my April post, Mass murder and the shelf life of lies put it:
And why did “Western civilization” so invest? Because the mirage of an open, genuinely democratic society requires – for it to be reconciled with class rule – a greater degree of psychological manipulation. We have to be persuaded that choices objectively made by and for the few, are in truth the Will of the Many.
It’s my contention, and that of others including I dare say you, that we are moving into a new phase of class rule where even the pretence of consensus is being allowed in stages to slip away. (Did you vote for austerity for the many, super riches for the few? Did you vote for genocide in Gaza? Did you vote to play “nuclear chicken” in Ukraine?)
But there’s still a way to go, and in the meantime pompous fools like Graeme Wood will find eager hirers in our systemically corrupt corporate media
I don’t think legally killed children is a euphemism, to me it’s just showing shockingly blatant disregard for the suffering and death of murdered children and callousness on such an extreme level to leave anyone with a shred of humanity lost for words. You have to wonder at how far these people are prepared to go to support the empire.
I would have thought most people know that enhanced interrogation means torture. That is an actual euphemism.
I haven’t watched or listened to ads for years. The fast forward and mute functions are great. But they are utterly bonkers, but as loads of people point out, advertising sells.
Advertising does indeed sell. We should draw the correct conclusion from that. So few of us will put our hand up and say, “Me, I’m heavily influenced by ads”. Rather, we speak as if commercial propaganda works on other, less intelligent, souls. Yet hundreds of billions of dollars change hands annually on the understanding that it does work. (Albeit at largely subliminal levels and in roundabout ways.) Are the Mad Men deluded? Do their deep-pocketed clients have more money than sense?
Unlikely.
And are we to suppose that psychological manipulation starts and ends with persuading us we’ll have richer and happier lives by buying their products and services?
Off the scale unlikely. Ditto that it’s mere coincidence that our opinions on such as China, Russia, Syria, North Korea, Venezuela – and infanticide in Gaza being morally complex if not valid self defence (by a colonial occupier) – align with those of billionaires. As with our marketplace choices, we assume we arrived at those opinions unaided.
Which is to say that the techniques of opinion manufacture used 24/7 by commercial advertisers are scrupulously shunned by those with an interest in ensuring we see the political realm in ways that suit them.
Not so much unlikely as preposterous. I’ve gone into the mechanisms elsewhere and many times. Here for instance: What of ideology when reality intrudes?
Here (edited for brevity) is a passage from a post – It’s a rum do and no mistake – I wrote in December 2019:
Finally, you may be right on “legally killed children” being not an actual euphemism. I try to use words precisely but don’t always succeed.