8:16 pm By la Macha · honduras · 3 Comments
6 Jul 2009To add more complexity to the various conversations we’ve had here at VL about the media coverage of the coup in Honduras, there is this really important interview on Democracy Now! with John Pilger, a journalist covering Honduras.
But for most people, the primary source of their information is the mainstream. It is mainly television. Even the internet for all its subversiveness has still a very large component of the mainstream. And that means we’re getting still either its this singular message about wars, about the economy, about all those things that touch our lives. All we are getting is what I would call is a contrived silence, a censorship by a mission. I think this is almost the principal issue of today because without information, we cannot possibly begin to influence government. We cannot possibly begin to end the wars.
All of this, it seams to me, has come together in the presidency of Barack Obama who is almost a creation of this media world. He promised some things, although most of them were more for us, and has delivered virtually the opposite. He started his own war in Pakistan. We see the events in Iran and Honduras in quiet subtlety, but very directly influenced in the time-honored way by the Obama administration. And yet the Obama administration is still given this extraordinary benefit of the doubt by people, who in my view are influenced by the mainstream media. It is a time when I think, where either we are going to begin to understand how the media really works, or we’re going to let that opportunity pass. Its almost a historic opportunity the we understand that the perception of our world is utterly distorted, most of the time through what are seen as credible sources of information.
There was also discussion in the interview about comparisons between the election in Iran and the election Honduras. It is a really important interview, if only because it asks all the questions I haven’t been able to think through because I’m not sure of the exact history in Honduras.
7:03 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Health| Internet| Latin America| Venezuela| drink| media justice| society · Comments Off
22 Jun 2009Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez continues his quest to drive the population towards consumption of local goods and, like a good marketer, he’s telling his people to set down their Coca Cola and pick up a new grape juice product called Juvita. On Chavez’s weekly TV show this past weekend, the message rang like a late-night informercial: Juvita means eternal youth, Coke means evil. From Reuters TV transcripts:
“It is a soft drink that is healthy, nutritious, here it is, its called Juvita. To maintain eternal youth, Juvita. Drink Juvita. Be young eternally instead of drinking that soft drink that, I don’t know, coca, I don’t know, cola, I don’t know what. Drink Juvita. Let’s taste it to see, to stay young eternally. You fathers and the mothers, encourage all parents to drink Juvita.” CHAVEZ BEGINS TO DRINK FROM BOTTLE OF JUVITA SOFT DRINK, SAYING: “Let’s see. Ah, eternal youth. Drink Juvita. How tasty. Did you all try?”
Getting Latin Americans to put down Coca-Cola is a mission impossible. Kind of like getting people in América Latina to give up corn-based products. Not gonna happen. Read more…
9:29 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Politics| TV| iran · 2 Comments
20 Mar 2009It’s really refreshing to see a U.S. President address the country in a medium that resonates with the regular citizen: late night TV. Refusing just to stand behind a podium and stick to talking points, President Obama sat down with Jay Leno to chat about the country’s biggest issue: the economy. If nothing else, he has guts like no other president has ever had with regard to facing the public. Check out the video:
What’s also refreshing is that he’s explaining complex issues like the AIG crisis in layman’s terms. It remains to be seen what kind of president Obama will be, but at least he’s speaking clearly to the public and not just dodging bullets.
Another really good sign? His opening of doors to the people and the government of Iran. Obama recorded a special New Years video message which was distributed through the Voice of America network, and which you can watch after the jump.
Read more…
7:42 am By Maegan La Mala · Politics| Venezuela · 2 Comments
29 Sep 2008
Wanna scare ‘mericans into voting McCain? Easy. Create a new brown menace to go with Ahmadinejad. As we saw in the debate last week, all it takes is saying Ahmadinejad, Castro, Chavez in one breath.
“In Venezuela we are interested in development of nuclear energy, of course for peaceful purposes, for medical purposes, for purposes of electricity generation,” Chavez said at a political rally.“Brazil has various nuclear reactors, so does Argentina. We will have ours.”
Chavez noted that Venezuela, which is a member of the oil-producing cartel OPEC, developed a nuclear reactor decades ago but abandoned it under pressure from the United States.
He said Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin had offered help with a reactor, adding that “we already have a commission working on this issue.”
I can’t be the only one expecting an invasion of Venezuela, can I?
Via / Reuters
While I’ve been dancing around to the beat of the LAMC, Iran is testing missiles and the U.S. government is getting antsy about it.
Iranian state media reported that Iran test-fired more long-range missiles in the Persian Gulf on Thursday, bringing a pledge from the United States to defend its allies from an Iranian attack.
Iran state television is reporting that the missiles have what it called “special capabilities,” but the report did not elaborate on what they were. The missiles were launched throughout the night, with another report saying the new tests included the Shahab-3 missile.
Officials have said the Shahab-3 could reach targets almost 1,250 miles away. It was the second day in a row that Iran conducted missiles tests.After Wednesday’s military exercise, Washington called on Tehran to halt further tests if it wanted to gain the world’s trust. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice warned Iran that Washington will not back down in the face of threats against Israel.
“We are sending a message to Iran that we will defend American interests and the interests of our allies,” Rice said Thursday in Georgia at the close of a three-day Eastern European trip.
The U.S. has said it wants to resolve the dispute over Iran’s nuclear program diplomatically, but neither it nor Israel has ruled out a military option against Iran. Iranian officials have said the tests are intended to show the country can defend itself.
I’m not saying that what Iran is doing is not provoking. Clearly they are aware of the reaction such testing would cause. Is their going forward anyway a misguided attempt at showing their national sovereignty?
Via / NPR
5:38 pm By Maegan La Mala · Argentina| Controversia| Culture| Religion| iran · 1 Comment
26 Dec 2007
Maradona might be considered an untouchable demigod in his home country of Argentina, but the embattled soccer star has fallen from grace in the eyes of some in Argentina’s Jewish community because of a controversial comment. La mano de Dios was quoted as saying that he wants to meet the president of Iran: “I’ve already met (Hugo) Chávez and Fidel (Castro). Now the only one I’ve still got to meet is their [the Iranian] president. I want to meet Ahmadineyad.”
The comment was not well-received by the Jewish community, which
…”strongly laments” the words of ex-soccer player Diego Maradona in favor of Iran and hopes that “he rectifies [the situation]“, said the secretary of the Israeli and Argentine Mutual Association (AMIA), Edgardo Gorenber.“We are admirers of Maradona as a player and we strongly lament his expressing his opinion on such delicate an issue as this one,” he said, after citing that in 1994 the AMIA was the target of a terrorist attack which left 85 dead and which the Jewish community attributes to terrorists protected by Iran.
“Diego is the most well-known Argentine in the world and our soccer embassador. It would be good to tell him the true story about how much pain [Iran] brought us 13 years ago,” said the Agencia Judía de Noticias.
I think the relative gentleness of this chiding of Maradona is a testament to how powerful he still is in Argentina. I doubt anyone else could get away with such statements as that one given the history of the relationship between Iran and Argentina and Ahmadinejad’s denial of the verity of the holocaust.
Via / 20 Minutos
12:36 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Politics| Venezuela| World · 1 Comment
5 Jul 2007
Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez is defending the nation of Iran, saying that it is being attacked unfairly for its nuclear program. In a move that puts the president even closer to an “enemy” of the U.S., Chavez complimented Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution in a press conference this past Monday in which he met with the President of Iran, Mahmud Ahmadineyad. Chavez also used the opportunity, in his tangential way, to expand on atrocities committed by the U.S. and Europe over the ages:
The Venezuelan leader harshly criticized U.S. policy towards Iran, and accused “American imperialism” of attempting to present Iranians as “some barbarians who are looking to create atomic bombs.”“Barbarians are those who occupied and destroyed Iraq…Barbarians are those who strike out againt the Palestinian people…Barbarians are those who left Europe to destroy our civilization in Latin America,” said Chavez.
“Barbarians are those who destroyed the thousands-year-old Inca civilication…Barbarians are the genocidal people that destroyed the Aztec and Maya civilizations,” he added.
Somehow I don’t think that little speech will do much for Venezuela’s relationship with Spain, already chilly due to the fact that Spain’s foreign minister, Miguel Moratinos, dared express “concern” for the RCTV situation.
Via / El Universal (Venezuela)
1:13 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Politics| Venezuela| World · Comments Off
26 Apr 2007
In a move likely to ruffle some feathers in Washington, the Venezuelan government announced yesterday that it is studying the possibility of a future energy partnership with Iran with the creation of new electric companies:
The Minister of Basic Industries and Mines [of Venezuela], José Khan, told the ABN news agency yesterday that both governments are considering the possibility of creating electric companies in Venezuelan territory, according to AP.“The [Iranian] businessmen that are here have manifested their interest in creating a mixed business which will allow Venezuela and Iran to produce the tools necessary for the electric company and for Petróleos de Venezuela,” said Khan.
The possible partnership is just one more for Venezuela and Iran, who, according to Venezuela’s El Universal, have already signed 162 agreements.
Via / El Universal
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