Empire news.

Brazil's fraudulently elected president Jair Balsonaro visited with the marginally less detestable Donald Trump this past week - a reported love fest in which Trump not only announced Brazil's new status as a "non-NATO ally" (which means lots more weapons for Balsonaro to use against his own people) but breezily suggested elevating Brazil to full NATO membership .... which is a little strange, and may have taken Trump's advisors somewhat by surprise. The two pretenders also discussed the ongoing U.S. attack on Venezuela, which Balsonaro is happy to join in on. Of course, that would only make him like most of our political class here at home, which has openly supported the coup attempt by right-wing Venezuelan politician Juan Guaido ... as have much of our corporate media.

Just to single out a particularly egregious recent example, NPR's insipid Morning Edition ran a piece by one-time journalist Phillip Reeves about the crisis in Venezuela. The framing of the piece was typical of Reeves and NPR - through the lens of U.S. historic role in the hemisphere; that of a hegemonic power. "How is the president of Venezuela still in power?" asks host Steve Inskeep in the intro, adding that the U.S. is "moving to choke off the oil revenue that supports the socialist government." First of all, that revenue has already been "choked off." Second, NPR always characterizes these siege-like sanctions as only punishing the government, not the people of Venezuela. Finally ... "socialist"? What the hell kind of socialist country has as many wealthy people as Venezuela does? Yes, the government controls the oil industry, but that pre-dates Chavez. The neo-colonial economy of the country is one based principally on export of petroleum - that's largely why the economy is in turmoil.

NPR: Giving Venezuela the Iraq treatment

Reeves's story suggests an opposition under pressure, but what he's describing is a self-proclaimed president, Guaido, who is still functioning inside the country, openly calling for intervention by the hemispheric superpower ... and yet, still not incarcerated by this supposedly very oppressive government. Every mention of Maduro or the government emphasizes the label "socialist" and paints the regime as dictatorial. Chavez, Reeves writes, was Maduro's "socialist mentor" who "took power in 1999" (i.e. won the first of several elections). Reeves talks to several Guaido supporters, most English-speaking, but only one Maduro supporter, whom he describes as "a lifelong communist" who lives in a "ramshackle home." This sixty-five year old man, Reeves reports with seeming disbelief, is "convinced the U.S. is at war with Maduro to seize Venezuela's oil." Where would he get THAT idea? (Well ... from Trump himself, from John Bolton ... from recent and not-so-recent history.)

Pretty amazing stuff to run on the 16th anniversary of the invasion of Iraq - an anniversary that Morning Edition didn't see fit to mark in any serious way. You'd think that any outlet that was as flat-footed as NPR was in the run-up to the Iraq War might have learned enough from the experience not to mindlessly serve the interests of a bellicose administration set on regime change. And you would be disappointed.

luv u,

jp

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