The Ceremony of Innocence Is Drowned
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
DIGG THIS
In
the oceans of newsprint and tsunamis of pixels expended on the London
bomb plot stories over the last two days, I don't recall seeing
anywhere, either in the US or UK media that one little
word which differentiates honest journalism from the noxious regurgitations
of state propaganda: "alleged."
Everywhere,
you read that a "bomb plot was thwarted" not an alleged
bomb plot. Everywhere, you read that the plotters (or most of them)
have been captured not the "alleged" plotters. Everywhere,
whatever line is being laid down by "intelligence officials"
and government poo-bahs is accepted uncritically and megaphoned
out to the public. Everywhere the presumption of innocence one
of the bedrock liberties of the "way of life" that we
are supposed to be defending is gleefully tossed aside.
Now it may
be that there was a bomb plot. It may be that those who have been
rounded up were indeed planning to blow up airplanes with IPods
and Juicy Juice with a nitro twist. Certainly, the state terrorism
of the Bush and Blair regimes which has killed more than 100,000
innocent Muslims in Iraq alone has fomented a whole new wave
of hatred and extremism that will inevitably result in non-state
terrorist violence directed against the West: an incontrovertible
fact confirmed by Bush's and Blair's own intelligence services.
But in the
present case, neither the existence of a plot nor the guilt of the
alleged plotters have been proven in a court of law. This doesn't
mean that the claims of government officials should not be reported
or taken seriously. (Although anyone who remembers John Ashcroft's
deathless pronouncements from Moscow about thwarting the "dirty
bomber" Jose Padilla among many other hair-raising scare
stories in both the US and UK that turned to be far less than meets
the eye, albeit politically well-timed will retain a healthy
skepticism until all the facts are in. This is only natural when
dealing with proven liars like the Bush and Blair regimes liars
who have used mendacious fearmongering over and over to enhance
their own weak political standing, and moreover, liars who in this
case control all of the information about the case; there are no
outside, independent agents making charges, or bearing witness to
open incidents just the same governments who have lied to us
about "intelligence" and "security" issues time
and again, telling us about secret plots tracked in secret by secret
forces, who now hold the alleged plotters in secret). Nor does the
lack of judicial judgment mean that talking heads and scribbling
scribes shouldn't speculate wildly to their heart's content about
the alleged incident and its implications, if that's what floats
their boats (and sells their product).
But it does
mean that every now and then they ought to toss in an "alleged"
if they are interested in retaining at least the form
of independent journalism, that is. But not many are concerned with
that sort of thing these days. The presumption of innocence
like the Geneva Conventions is just another "quaint"
relic of a bygone era.
August
12, 2006
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2006 Chris Floyd
Chris
Floyd Archives
|