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'Iran Talks': Why Don't Americans Listen?

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  • 'Iran Talks': Why Don't Americans Listen?

    'IRAN TALKS': WHY DON'T AMERICANS LISTEN?
    Shannon Bell Monitor Staff Writer

    Los Alamos Monitor, NM
    July 20 2007

    Iran's biggest problem may not be politics or the global oil
    competition. It could be Paris Hilton.

    "Corporate media is dumbing-down the population," said National
    Public Radio talk-show host David Barsamian during his talk at UNM-LA
    Thursday night.

    The author is on tour discussing his latest book, "Targeting Iran,"
    a collection of interviews with Noam Chomsky, Ervand Abrahamian and
    Nahid Mozaffari that examine the rise of the Islamic regime and Iran's
    relationships with the U.S., Iraq and Afghanistan.

    The T-shirt and shorts-clad Barsamian considered reasons why Paris
    Hilton's prison adventure is more newsworthy to Americans than Iran,
    and linked the nation's misperceptions of relevancy and reality to
    the causes of the U.S. predicament in the Middle East.

    Popular culture is a clue to what's on people's minds, he said, and
    wondered about a world where sports fans apply the same analytical
    vigor to Iran as they do to NFL draftees' knee conditions.

    He described the pawns of corporate media as "lapdogs with laptops,"
    singling out Woodward, Bernstein and Connie Chung as journalists who
    have become celebrities themselves, sucked in by the very establishment
    they use to monitor.

    The vocabulary and visual portrayals that the media and U.S. policy
    makers use in reference to the Middle East further serve to cloud
    American public opinion, he said, as he held up issues of Time and
    Newsweek bearing covers of Middle Easterners with ever-scowling faces.

    "Use of language shapes and frames the debate," he said. "When they
    say 'collateral damage,' why can't they say what they really mean?

    'Civilians were killed.'"

    For Barsamian, the government not only has it all wrong, but President
    Bush and his administration are committing war crimes.

    "The U.S. is ruled by warlords," he said, adding that Iran isn't a
    danger to America; America is a danger to Iran.

    "They don't hate us for our values and freedom," he said, but because
    we occupy their country, kill their innocent and take their most prized
    resource, oil, with imperial entitlement. "This is what creates the
    resistance and deep loathing of the U.S."

    America's ventures in Iran are no accident, he said. They're "by
    design of the U.S. foreign policy."

    Amnesia has plagued the nation's government officials since the 1950s,
    Barsamian said, when they failed to listen to President Eisenhower's
    warnings of the dangers of a military industrial complex. Barsamian
    insisted that while the term "imperialism" remains on the "no-no"
    list of government vocabulary, the world is undeniably dominated by
    American culture and power.

    The author suggested that Americans remove the veil of corporate
    media and "connect."

    "One rock in the water can cause many ripples," he said, and displayed
    T-shirts of New Mexico anti-conflict groups like Albuquerque's Stop
    the War Machine and N.M. Peace Action in Santa Fe.

    "Democracy is in the ICU (Intensive Care Unit)," he said, calling
    for citizen activism to breathe new life into government.

    After the talk, the self-proclaimed "Armenian from New York who has
    to make deals" plugged his merchandise, offering discounts and signed
    copies of his books.
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