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To: ncountylee; Mo1; kcvl
Editor Parry's Year-End Letter

By Robert Parry
December 26, 2005

Dear Readers,

The United States is facing a political crisis almost unparalleled in our history, a crisis uniquely dangerous because at its center it is not about a loss of power but about a loss of principle – and even morality.

Instead of following the guideposts of a democratic republic, the U.S. government has veered off into delusions of empire. Instead of promoting international law, it has adopted theories of “preemptive” war. Instead of standing for human rights, it has become known for torture techniques, detentions without trial, and secret prisons.

Yet, this American crisis is also about the manipulation of information – and the failure of the U.S. news media to do its job. Indeed, it is hard to envision that the United States would be in this fix if reporters had asked the tough questions, if they had held dishonest political leaders accountable, if reporters had shown more courage.

But this failure of the U.S. media wasn’t an accident or simply a reaction to the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. Taming the news media has been a longtime goal of the neoconservative operatives who now dominate George W. Bush’s administration.

For years, these neoconservatives have understood that before they could transform the United States into their dream of a uni-polar empire, they had to gain effective control of the information that flows through Washington – and they had to neutralize the honest journalists who got in the way.

The neoconservatives knew the power that would come from controlling how Americans saw the world, a process they called “perception management.” So, over the past quarter century, the neocons and their political allies invested heavily in building their own news media and intimidating the mainstream press.

That is where our Web site, Consortiumnews.com, comes in.

A decade ago, after working many years as an investigative reporter for mainstream news outlets, such as the Associated Press and Newsweek, I felt that a new kind of media institution was needed, one with the courage to resist the pressures brought to bear on journalists. (I had experienced that pressure in the 1980s and early 1990s while investigating what became known as the Iran-Contra scandal.)

So, in 1995, on the advice of my oldest son, Sam, we turned to a new medium, the Internet. I cashed in my Newsweek retirement account to raise the money to get started and we began building our Web site as a home for well-researched journalistic stories that had no place in the sensationalistic, trivialized news media of the mid-1990s.

Since then, we have produced hundreds of important stories that illuminated how our nation drifted into the predicament it’s in today. Among our investigative projects:

--We traced the origins of Republican contacts with Iran’s Islamic fundamentalist regime back to secret meetings during the pivotal 1980 presidential campaign.

--We exposed the hidden history of covert arms deals between the Reagan-Bush administration and Iraq’s Saddam Hussein in the 1980s.

--We showed how international money-launderer Sun Myung Moon used his mysterious wealth to corrupt the American conservative movement and build the Right’s media.

--We laid out the real story behind the myth of Colin Powell, a man whose sterling reputation masked a long record of opportunism.

--We explained how Election 2000 was distorted first by bad reporting, then by inaccurate vote tallies, and finally by more bad reporting.

--We questioned George W. Bush’s case for war in Iraq and his risky military strategy that was based on dangerous wishful thinking. By contrast, most of the U.S. news media was wrapping itself in the American flag and doing features on “freedom fries.”

While we’ve accomplished much with our decade-old Web site, we’ve been hobbled by a chronic shortage of money. At a crucial juncture in early 2000, I had no choice but to make the Web site part-time and take a decent-paying job as an editor at Bloomberg News. (In 2004, I left that job to write Secrecy & Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq and try to rebuild Consortiumnews.com.)

For our survival, we remain dependent on the generosity of our readers. (We have appealed to many large funders for help, but they have not been supportive. They don’t seem to understand the need.)

So, if you can, we would deeply appreciate your help.

You can contribute either by credit card online or by sending a check to Consortium for Independent Journalism (CIJ), Suite 102-231, 2200 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, VA 22201. For contributions of $100 or more, you can get an autographed gift copy of Secrecy & Privilege or one of my other books. Also, since we are a non-profit 501-c-3 organization, your contribution is tax-deductible.

Thank you -- and best wishes for the New Year.


Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Secrecy & Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq, can be ordered at secrecyandprivilege.com. It's also available at Amazon.com, as is his 1999 book, Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & 'Project Truth.'

46 posted on 01/02/2006 7:55:50 PM PST by Howlin (Defeatism may have its partisan uses, but it is not justified by the facts. - GWB, 12/18/05)
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To: Howlin

Parry is one disgusting puke!


47 posted on 01/02/2006 8:01:43 PM PST by ncountylee (Dead terrorists smell like victory)
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To: Howlin
For years, these neoconservatives have understood that before they could transform the United States into their dream of a uni-polar empire, they had to gain effective control of the information that flows through Washington – and they had to neutralize the honest journalists who got in the way.

BAWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

Ok .. back to reading this article

48 posted on 01/02/2006 8:02:51 PM PST by Mo1 (Republicans protect Americans from Terrorists. Democrats protect Terrorists from Americans)
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To: Howlin

Nice to see Parry reduced to begging for money though.


49 posted on 01/02/2006 8:04:24 PM PST by ncountylee (Dead terrorists smell like victory)
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To: ncountylee
While we’ve accomplished much with our decade-old Web site, we’ve been hobbled by a chronic shortage of money.

But I thought he said he

...cashed in my Newsweek retirement account to raise the money to get started and we began building our Web

Must not have been much of a "retirement account," huh?

So now he's FORCED to write a hit piece on GWB.

I hate these SOBs.

50 posted on 01/02/2006 8:07:02 PM PST by Howlin (Defeatism may have its partisan uses, but it is not justified by the facts. - GWB, 12/18/05)
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To: Howlin
While we’ve accomplished much with our decade-old Web site, we’ve been hobbled by a chronic shortage of money

Sooooo these liberals are willing to sell out our country for money??

52 posted on 01/02/2006 8:09:51 PM PST by Mo1 (Republicans protect Americans from Terrorists. Democrats protect Terrorists from Americans)
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To: Howlin
Instead of promoting international law

I hope not.


*****


"Later when I moved over to Newsweek (I guess we can see they weren't biased! /sarcasm!) -- which is owned by the Washington Post-Company and had been involved in investigating the Watergate scandal -- Katherine Graham, the late owner and publisher of the Post, did not really want another Watergate on her hands. There was not really the stomach in some of these institutions to go through that again."

******


How John Kerry exposed the Contra-cocaine scandal Derided by the mainstream press and taking on Reagan at the height of his popularity, the freshman senator battled to reveal one of America's ugliest foreign policy secrets.

By Robert Parry

Oct. 25, 2004 | In December 1985, when * Brian Barger and I wrote a groundbreaking story for the Associated Press about Nicaraguan Contra rebels smuggling cocaine into the United States, one U.S. senator put his political career on the line to follow up on our disturbing findings. His name was John Kerry.


ROFLOL!!!


* Brian Barger, AP reporter & in 1997 a reporter with CNN. (Both UNBIASED! /sarcasm!)

******

"CNN Presents: Crime Stories, Part Two", May 22nd, 1994
by: Brian Barger, CNN Television

"CNN Presents: Crime Stories, Part One", May 21st, 1994
by: Brian Barger, CNN Television


******

September 19, 1998

The CIA, The Contras & Crack Cocaine:

Investigating the Official Reports
Seeking The Truth

by Maxine Waters

snip

As I wrote in * Gary Webb's book, when I read the series I asked myself whether it was possible for such a vast amount of drugs to be smuggled into any community under the noses of the police, sheriff's department, FBI, DEA, and other law enforcement agencies. My investigation has led me to an undeniable conclusion - that U.S. intelligence and law enforcement agencies knew about drug trafficking in South Central Los Angeles and throughout the U.S. - and they let the dealing go on.

snip

Robert Parry and Brian Barger first broke the shocking story of Contra involvement in drug trafficking in 1985, at the height of the Contra war against Nicaragua. As a result of this story's revelations, Senator John Kerry conducted a two year Senate probe into the allegations and published the sub-committee's devastating findings in an 1,166-page report in 1989. Among its many findings the Kerry Report found,

"individuals who provided support for the contras were involved in drug trafficking, the supply network of the contras was used by drug trafficking organizations, and elements of the contras themselves knowingly received financial and material assistance from drug traffickers. In each case, one or another agency of the U.S. government had information regarding the involvement either while it was occurring, or immediately thereafter."

Maxine Waters

The Official Reports

The DOJ Releases its Long Awaited Report, the CIA Keeps its Classified

On July 23, 1998 the Department of Justice's Office of Inspector General (under Clinton!) released its long awaited Report, entitled "The CIA-Contra-Crack Cocaine Controversy: A Review of the Justice Department's Investigations and Prosecutions." However, the Report highlighted misleading headlines and conclusions in its Executive Summary, diverting attention from many of the crucial findings in the body of the DOJ Inspector General's Report.



December 13, 2004 by CommonDreams.org
R.I.P. Gary Webb -- Unembedded Reporter
by * Jeff Cohen

* Gary Webb, a courageous investigative journalist who was the target of one of the most ferocious media attacks on any reporter in recent history, was found dead Friday after an apparent suicide.

In August 1996, Webb wrote one of the first pieces of journalism that reached a massive audience thanks to the Internet: an explosive 20,000 word, three-part series documenting links between cocaine traffickers, the crack epidemic of the 1980s and the CIA-organized right-wing Nicaraguan Contra army of that era. The series sparked major interest in the social justice and African-American communities, leading to street protests, constant discussion on black-oriented talk radio and demands by Congressional Black Caucus members for a federal investigation. But weeks later, Webb suffered a furious backlash at the hands of national media unaccustomed to seeing their role as gatekeepers diminished by the emerging medium known as the WorldWideWeb.

More

* Jeff Cohen www.jeffcohen.org is the founder of the media watch group FAIR www.fair.org.



* Jeff Cohen is a writer, lecturer and media critic who founded the media watch group FAIR in 1986. He has appeared regularly on national TV and radio. He was an on-air commentator (and "Donahue" senior producer) at MSNBC in 2003; a weekly "News Watch" panelist on Fox News Channel from 1997 to 2002: a co-host of CNN's "Crossfire" in 1996.

55 posted on 01/02/2006 10:04:10 PM PST by kcvl
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To: Howlin

Robert Parry


Robert Parry is author of Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, The Press & Project Truth, a narrative published in 1999 about the journalistic struggles in the 1980s to expose the secrets of the Nicaraguan contra operation; and the administration's counterattacks.

Parry's other books are Fooling America: How Washington Insiders Twist the Truth and Manufacture the Conventional Wisdom, published in 1992; Trick or Treason: The October Surprise Mystery, published in 1993; and The October Surprise X-Files: The Hidden Origins of the Reagan-Bush Era, published in 1996.

Parry is the editor/publisher of IF Magazine; an investigative bi-monthly in the independent journalistic tradition of George Seldes's In Fact and I.F. Stones's Weekly. He also edits Consortiumnews.com, the Internet's first investigative magazine. He also was a reporter for PBS's Frontline news and documentery from 1990-1995 and was a Newsweek correspondent from 1987-90 when he covered the Iran-contra affair.

56 posted on 01/02/2006 10:09:28 PM PST by kcvl
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