ROTATION:

Ice Cube
Mars Volta
Rachel's
Space Team Electra

Rob Swift
Apples in Stereo

Jurassic 5

Sleater-Kinney
Nirvana
Sonic Youth

Amon Tobin
Dirty Three
Cat Power

Pixies
Fugazi
Frank Black
Breeders
Three Mile Pilot
Mogwai
DJ Shadow
Chuck D
Shipping News
Black Heart Procession
White Stripes

Built To Spill
Los Straitjackets
Jon Spencer Blues Explosion


AND MUCH MORE!







"Bush's lame response to North Korea has made it quite clear that all he wants is to invade Iraq again. North Korea may be more dangerous in fact, but there's no oil there, and it simply doesn't figure in the grand eschatological design of Bush's theocratic circle. Pyongyang isn't even in the Bible!"

"Well, well, well. President George was in one hell of bind when it turned that that Saudi Arabia funded Al Qaeda, not Iraq. Realizing we'd invaded the wrong country, Bush did the honorable thing: he's come out against gay marriages."
"There's some thing in our psyche, this kind of right or privilege to resolve our conflicts with violence. There's an arrogance to that concept. To actually have to sit down and talk, to listen, to compromise, that's hard work. To go for the gun, that's the cowardly act."

"Word comes that brother Cat Stevens refuses to lend his support to our virtuous jihad. May this turncoat's Peace Train be laden with explosives and rammed into the Mountain of Mohammed, peace be upon him."
"You need gas money and a car that works. Of course, my preference is to do it in the middle of the night! Leave them little presents, you know what I'm saying? Like the Easter bunny."
Clap, monkeys, clap! "Rather than being toppled for his adversarial relationship to both the most important truths and the most basic facts, Bush is actively remaking America in the image of his own ignorance and duplicity." (Photo: AFP/Joyce Naltchayan)
Year of the Fake

by Naomi Klein

Don't think and drive.

That was the message sent out by the FBI to roughly 18,000 law enforcement agencies on Christmas Eve. The alert urged police pulling over drivers for traffic violations, and conducting other routine investigations, to keep their eyes open for people carrying almanacs. Why almanacs? Because they are filled with facts -- population figures, weather predictions, diagrams of buildings and landmarks. And according to the FBI Intelligence Bulletin, facts are dangerous weapons in the hands of terrorists, who can use them to "to assist with target selection and pre-operational planning."

But in a world filled with potentially lethal facts and figures, it seems unfair to single out almanac-readers for police harassment. As the editor of The World Almanac and Book of Facts rightly points out, "The government is our biggest single supplier of information." Not to mention the local library: A cache of potentially dangerous information weaponry is housed at the center of almost every American town. The FBI, of course, is all over the library threat, seizing library records at will under the Patriot Act.

The blacklisting of the almanac was a fitting end for 2003, a year that waged open war on truth and facts and celebrated fakes and forgeries of all kinds. This was the year when fakeness ruled: fake rationales for war, a fake President dressed as a fake soldier declaring a fake end to combat and then holding up a fake turkey. An action movie star became governor and the government started making its own action movies, casting real soldiers like Jessica Lynch as fake combat heroes and dressing up embedded journalists as fake soldiers.

Casualties of war. "The highest price was paid by David Kelly, the British government weapons expert who killed himself after he was outed as the source of a BBC story on 'sexed up' security documents." (Photo: AFP)

Saddam Hussein even got a part in the big show: He played himself being captured by American troops. This is the fake of the year, if you believe the Sunday Herald in Scotland, as well as several other news agencies, which reported that he was actually captured by a Kurdish special forces unit.

It was Britain, however, that pushed the taste for fake to new levels. "Her main aim is to meet as many Nigerians as she can," the Queen's press secretary, Penny Russell, said of the monarch's December trip to Nigeria. But just as Bush never made it out of the airport bunker in Baghdad, the Queen's people decided it was too dangerous for her to mingle with actual Nigerians. So instead of the planned visit to an African village, the Queen toured the set of a BBC soap opera in New Karu, constructed to look like an authentic African market. During the "fake walkabout," as the Sunday Telegraph called it, the Queen chatted with paid actors playing regular villagers, while actual villagers watched the event on a large-screen TV outside the security perimeter.

But 2003 was about more than embracing fakery and forgery -- it was also about punishing truth-telling. The highest price was paid by David Kelly, the British government weapons expert who killed himself after he was outed as the source of a BBC story on "sexed up" security documents. Katharine Gun, a British intelligence employee, faces up to two years in prison for revealing US plans to spy on UN diplomats in order to influence the Security Council vote on Iraq. And in the United States, Joseph Wilson, who told the truth about finding no evidence of Saddam's alleged uranium shopping trip in Africa, was punished by proxy: His wife, Valerie Plame, was illegally outed as a CIA operative.

While truth did not pay in 2003, lying certainly did. Just ask Rupert Murdoch. According to an October study conducted by the Program on International Policy Attitudes, when it comes to the war in Iraq, regular watchers of Murdoch's Fox News are the most misinformed people in America. Eighty percent of Fox News watchers believed either that weapons of mass destruction have been found in Iraq, that there is evidence of an Iraq-Al Qaeda link, or that world opinion supported the war -or they believed all three of these untruths.

Premature ejaculation. "We tell ourselves that if only Americans knew that they were being lied to, they would surely revolt. But I'm no longer convinced that America can be set free by the truth alone." (Photo: Reuters/Larry Downing)

On December 19 the Federal Communications Commission gave Murdoch the right to purchase the top US satellite broadcaster, DirecTV. The FCC vote took place just five days before the FBI's almanac bulletin, and they can best be understood in tandem: If books that fill your brain with facts make you a potential terrorist, then media moguls who fill your brain with mush must be heroes, deserving of the richest rewards.

When Bush came to office, many believed his ignorance would be his downfall. Eventually Americans would realize that a President who referred to Africa as "a nation" was unfit to lead. Now we tell ourselves that if only Americans knew that they were being lied to, they would surely revolt. But with the greatest of respect for the liar books (Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them, Big Lies, The Lies of George W. Bush, The Five Biggest Lies Bush Told Us About Iraq et al.), I'm no longer convinced that America can be set free by the truth alone.

In many cases, fake versions of events have prevailed even when the truth is readily available. The real Jessica Lynch - who told Diane Sawyer that "no one beat me, no one slapped me, no one, nothing"- has proven no match for her media-military created doppelgänger, shown being slapped around by her cruel captors in NBC's movie, Saving Jessica Lynch.

READ UP ON: NAOMI KLEIN

Rather than being toppled for his adversarial relationship to both the most important truths and the most basic facts, Bush is actively remaking America in the image of his own ignorance and duplicity. Not only is it OK to be misinformed, but as the almanac warning shows, knowing stuff is fast becoming a crime.

It brings to mind the story about why Castilian Spaniards pronounce gracias as "grathiath." In the seventeenth century, the country was ruled by a monarch with a severe speech impediment and a fragile ego. To flatter the ruler, it was decreed that everyone should imitate the king's lisp and mispronounce their Cs and Ss.

According to all reputable linguists, the legend is a complete fake. But in Bush's America that should hardly matter.

13 January 03


Naomi Klein is an award-winning journalist and author of the international best-seller, No Logo: Taking Aim at the Brand Bullies. Her articles have appeared in The Nation, The New York Times, The Village Voice, The Guardian and more. A version of this article first appeared in The Nation.
GET MORE MORPHIZM
Where Art Thou?
Memories are short, so we'll make this as clear as we possibly can -- the only reason anyone signed off on Iraq is because they thought that Saddam had nukes. So where the hell are they? Well, we have some ideas and we're glad to share them with Rummy and Co. . . . . MORE
Some "Fundamentals" of American Society
Forget for a second that we are talking about a religious statue; let's just say we're talking about religion in government . There was a reason that the Founders decided to separate the two. Whether you believe or not, believe this: they simply don't work together . . . MORE
Hail the Comatorium Sensorium
We're saying it loud and we're saying it proud -- with De-loused in the Comatorium, Mars Volta have made the album of the year. Bottom line? No one has invested as much blood, sweat and poetry into any other release so far in 2003. We don't care what the wimpy Radiohead fans say, the prog-punks rule the earth . . . MORE
Directions, Anyone?
Every few years. the Israelis and the Palestinians decide that they've killed each other enough, and sit back down at the table like mature adults. But guess who's coming to dinner? The Bush administration, fresh off of two wars in the Hot Zone, and flaunting a draconian civil liberties record. We smell a three-car pileup on that storied road to peace . . . MORE
Will Joseph McCarthy Rise Again?
What is terrorism? How is it defined? Those same questions were once asked about communism, which was used to justify the imprisonment and execution of innocents almost as recently as half a century ago. But the bigger question is this: in that time, have we learned nothing about justice, freedom and -- especially -- hypocrisy? . . . MORE

"A Policy Poisoned By Money"
You call yourself a journalist? Then we've got a man we'd like you to meet. See, while you've been busy interviewing porn stars on the O'Reilly Factor and kissing corporate ass on Lou Dobbs Moneyline, the BBC's Greg Palast has been writing books about how Katharine Harris stole your election and how Enron unplugged your lights. . . . MORE


You and Your Favorite Music Equals Live365

Search

CONTACT US Contributors MISSION STATEMENT
Copyright 2001-2003, Morphizm.com. All Rights Reserved.