Agenda
Driven News
by
Paul Craig Roberts
PaulCraigRoberts.org
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I have known
for a long time that US news is agenda-driven. Tonight (December
18) I was made aware of the extent to which agenda-driven US news
drives the news of the rest of the world.
For reasons
unbeknownst to me, Russia Today Moscow requested a live TV interview
via Skype about the Newtown, Connecticut, school shootings that
killed 20 young children and several adults. I was interested to
know what was Moscows interest in the shootings, and I agreed
to the interview.
I was surprised
to see that RT Moscows interest was to spread the official
US story of the shootings and to ask me if I thought assault
weapons would be banned as a consequence.
Many things
can be an assault weapon. A baseball bat, a knife, a fist, a foot,
a single shot .22 rifle, a double-barrel shotgun, a fireplace poker,
a six-shot revolver, a brick, a sword, a bow and arrow, a lance.
A person can add many items to this short list.
Gun-control
advocates have defined assault weapon to be a semi-automatic
civilian version of military weapons, such as AR-15, the civilian
version of the military M-16, and AK-47. During the Clinton administration
the civilian version of these weapons was not permitted to have
various harmless features because the features made the rifles have
a military appearance, and the weapons were restricted to magazines
that held no more than ten rounds.
Today 20 and
30 round magazines are available. For a professional, the capacity
of the magazines is immaterial. With experience a person can change
clips in a second. A button is pushed, the clip drops out and a
new one is inserted. For reasons hard to follow, gun control advocates
think that a ten-round clip turns an assault weapon
into something else.
I told RT Moscow
that the United States was the most complete police state in human
history. Thanks to modern technology, Washington is able to spy
on its subjects far beyond the capabilities of Joseph Stalin and
Adolf Hitler. Even George Orwells imagination in his dystopian
novel, 1984, has been surpassed by Washingtons current
practice. The war on terror is the excuse for the American
Police State.
A
police state, I said, was inconsistent with an armed population,
and as all other constitutional amendments have fallen, the sole
remaining amendment, the Second Amendment, will not survive much
longer.
But why RT
Moscows focus on assault weapons? The accused,
Adam Lanza, was immediately declared guilty. According to the Associated
Press, the Newtown, Connecticut medical examiner, Dr.
H. Wayne Carver said that all the victims of the Connecticut
elementary school shooting were killed up close by multiple rifle
shots.
Yet
Fox News reports that A CNN reporter said police recovered
three weapons at the scene: a Glock and a Sig-Sauer, which are handguns,
as well as a .223 Bushmaster rifle. The rifle was in the back seat
of the car the gunman drove to the school, the handguns were inside
the school.
The same Fox
News report says: Security measures implemented this year
at Sandy Hook [the school] kept doors locked during class hours,
and people have to be buzzed in before entering. There is a camera
to view whoever enters the building. If this report is correct,
how did an armed Lanza gain entry to the school?
I tried to
point out to RT Moscow that these news reports indicate that the
accused dead gunman, whom no one can interrogate, if he is indeed
the culprit, killed the children with handguns, not with an assault
rifle left in the car, but that the medical examiner said
the children were killed with rifle shots.
The discrepancy
is obvious. Either the news reports are incorrect, the medical examiner
is wrong, or someone other than Adam Lanza shot the children.
This was too
much for RT Moscows news anchor. She cut me off with her statement
that the children were dead by whatever gun. Yet, the focus of the
program was on assault rifles. This focus was reinforced
when I was asked to stay online for a post-interview question.
The question
from RT Moscow was whether I thought assault weapons would be banned.
I answered that I thought all guns would be banned. I had already
told the TV anchor that I thought that all guns would be taken away
from US subjects, but that I doubted the efficacy of the ban. I
told the news anchor that during the early part of the 20th century,
the US, in all its wisdom, had a ban on alcohol, but alcohol was
everywhere available. The alcohol ban was the origin of the crime
syndicates fortunes. Today we have the drug ban, going back
decades. The result is that drugs are everywhere, and drug syndicates
are making billions. It will not be much different with a gun ban.
England has a gun ban, but criminals have guns, and today the formerly
unarmed British police are heavily armed. When I lived in England,
guns were not banned and the police carried nightsticks, not firearms.
The focus on
assault weapons is puzzling for another reason. According
to news reports Lanza had a personality or mental disorder, or perhaps
he was just different.
Regardless,
he was on medication. So does the blame lie with guns or with medication?
As the agenda
is to ban guns, the blame is placed on guns.
In the previous
mass shooting at the Colorado movie theater, eyewitness accounts
differed from the official account, and according to news accounts
the suspect was involved with the government in some sort of mind
control experiments and was found after the shooting sitting in
a car in the movie theater parking lot.
Similarly,
the Connecticut school shooting has puzzling aspects. In the real
time report to the police, a
teacher says that she saw two shadows running past the
gym. The police radio recording also reports two men in a
van at the school stopped and detained, and various news sources
report that the police arrested a man in the nearby woods. The man
says, I didnt do it, but how would a man out in
the woods know what had just happened? There are no TVs to watch
in the woods; yet, the man denied doing the shooting. Very strange.
What often
happens is that there are a number of initial false reports, such
as in the Connecticut case the report that Lanzas mother was
a teacher at the school and was killed at the school, that Lanza
had also killed his father, and that Lanzas brother might
have been involved. Any discrepancies in the official story then
get thrown out with the false reports. As the media simply goes
along with the official story and does not investigate, it is impossible
to know what really happened. People just accept the official story.
It seems odd,
however, that RT Moscow would uncritically follow the US media in
reporting the official story after experiencing, for example, the
US medias intentional misreporting of the Georgian-Russian
war, which was started by the former Soviet republic of Georgia
but blamed on Russia. Does RT Moscow really believe the US media
that the US missile bases surrounding Russia are directed at Iran?
Americans have
been well armed for several centuries, but gun violence
is new. Why?
Are
there more disturbed people? More medicated people? Have Americans
lost self-control, their moral conscience? Are Americans being molded
by violent movies and video games and by eleven years of their governments
slaughter of other peoples? Have Americans lost empathy for others?
Tom McNamara,
a lecturer at the French National Military Academy, asks: Do
Arabs Cry For Their Children Too?
The Connecticut
school shooting is a tragedy in more ways than one. Children lost
their lives, families lost their children, and the tragedy is being
used to disarm Americans faced with a police state growing in power
and menace.
December
20, 2012
Paul
Craig Roberts, a
former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal, has been reporting shocking cases
of prosecutorial abuse for two decades. A new edition of his book,
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions,
co-authored with Lawrence Stratton, a documented account of how
americans lost the protection of law, has been released by Random
House. Visit his website.
Copyright
© 2012 Paul
Craig Roberts
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