Thursday, September 8, 2022

Proxy War In Ukraine Has Unintended Consequences Corporate Press Are Hiding

Censored mural by Peter Seaton in Melbourne was immediately attacked by Ukranian officials in Australia for its message of shared humanity and the longing for peace. It used to depict Russian and Ukranian soldiers hugging, but has now been painted over.

I've written previously about the intense narrative control that is a key feature of the U.S./NATO proxy war with Russia in Ukraine. As the military becomes an increasingly undesirable option for young people in the U.S. (currently only 9% would consider enlisting, according to Pentagon researchers) the pressure is on to make sure Ukrainians are the ones fighting and dying in the imperial war to topple Russia.

This necessitates:

Lying about the progress of the war and repeatedly claiming Ukraine is "winning" when it is doing no such thing (former U.N. military expert Jacques Baud's current analysis of this is worth a read).

Promoting false claims about the Russian military shelling its own POW camp or the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.


Current headlines on Cold War propaganda outlet Radio Free Europe's website


Mischaracterizing the combatants, as Yale professor Timothy Snyder did recently in Foreign Affairs: "Russia, an aging tyranny, seeks to destroy Ukraine, a defiant democracy." (Actually, Ukraine is resolutely undemocratic at this point in its history and maintains a "hit list" of everyone, including international rock stars, who doesn't support the official narrative -- while Putin's approval rating among Russians last month was over 80%.)

Coordinating messaging in corporate media internationally so that specific key words e.g. "unprovoked" are repeated ad nauseum without examination of copious evidence to the contrary.

Suppressing narratives in the alternative press and on social media (and, apparently, the sides of buildings) by canceling accounts, deleting archives, unleashing trolls, and shadow banning.

Intervening to squelch any attempt at peace talks between Russia and Ukraine.


Source: TeleSUR "In Prague, 70,000 people took to the streets on Saturday [Sep 3] to protest against the sharp rise in energy prices and to demand a neutral position on the war in Ukraine. Photo: Twitter @oriolsabata"



Blaming Russia for the fact Europe is reeling from the effects of economic sanctions that cut off much of Europe's fuel supply -- for home heating, among other uses.

At a time when Russian pipeline gas supplies have been in free fall, the EU had no choice but to ramp up imports from the US at all costs, generating unprecedented profits for US gas suppliers, Lin Boqiang, director of the China Center for Energy Economics Research at Xiamen University, told the Global Times on Saturday.

Pushing the false claim that the Russian economy is in trouble after six months of war in Ukraine. In fact, the ruble has never been stronger while the nations of the world are abandoning the petrodollar like rats fleeing a sinking ship. And as of this week the  is trading below the US$, a two-decade low for that currency.


What's a U.S. taxpayer to do? 


Find some sources of reliable information (you can use many of the links above for that purpose), grow your own food, and diversify your heating fuels. Note that false narratives enrich weapons manufacturers, but will do little to keep you warm and fed this winter.


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