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So U2 singer Bono is doing illustrations for the imperialist propaganda rag The Atlantic now, because that’s the sort of thing that happens in a dystopian civilization during the death throes of a globe-spanning empire. A Washington Post article, “Bono likes to sketch Atlantic covers, so the magazine hired him,” reports that “Bono is into Atlantic cover fanfic — so much so that he was invited to illustrate the magazine’s June cover featuring Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.”
BY Caitlin Johnstone
Bono’s latest contribution to the mountain of cringe-inducing Zelensky moments we’ve been seeing for the past year provides a cover image for an article by lifelong war propagandists Anne Applebaumand Jeffrey Goldberg. The article endorses a Ukrainian offensive to recapture Crimea, which experts largely agree would be the move most likely to trigger a nuclear war in this conflict. Here’s a paragraph from Applebaum and Goldberg’s article, just to give you a taste of the infantile “Good Guys vs Bad Guys” framing that Western liberals are being fed by mass media war propagandists these days: “Sometimes, the war is described as a battle between autocracy and democracy, or between dictatorship and freedom. In truth, the differences between the two opponents are not merely ideological, but also sociological. Ukraine’s struggle against Russia pits a heterarchy against a hierarchy. An open, networked, flexible society — one that is both stronger at the grassroots level and more deeply integrated with Washington, Brussels, and Silicon Valley than anyone realized — is fighting a very large, very corrupt, top-down state. On one side, farmers defend their land and 20?something engineers build eyes in the sky, using tools that would be familiar to 20?something engineers anywhere else. On the other side, commanders send waves of poorly armed conscripts to be slaughtered — just as Stalin once sent shtrafbats, penal battalions, against the Nazis — under the leadership of a dictator obsessed with ancient bones. ‘The choice,’ Zelensky told us, ‘is between freedom and fear.’” Many Westerners felt their first stirrings of youthful rebellious passions while listening to U2 songs like “Sunday Bloody Sunday” and “Pride (In the Name of Love),” but nowadays Bono’s voice is heard saying that he has “grown very fond” of war criminal George W. Bush, praising capitalism at the World Economic Forum, teaming up with warmonger Lindsey Graham to promote U.S. empire narratives about Syria and singing “Stand by Ukraine” in support of U.S. empire narratives in a Kyiv subway. And just when it looks like he can’t become any more of a tool of the empire, he gets hired by one of the world’s worst militarist smut rags to draw a cover image of Zelensky. Because that’s just how things go in a highly controlled society where mainstream culture is designed to serve the powerful. A society where the minds of the public are continually being shaped by mass-scale psychological manipulation to ensure that they keep thinking, speaking, working, consuming and voting in ways which serve the rich and powerful. Everything that gets elevated to the top of mainstream attention facilitates this agenda (or is at least harmless to it), and as soon as it becomes potentially threatening to this agenda it is either corrected or marginalized. This dynamic can cause some truly jaw-dropping flotsam and jetsam to surface in the roilings of our cultural waters, like Simpsons characters waving Ukrainian flags, or an opera about a drone operator sponsored by General Dynamics. Here’s Responsible Statecraft’s Connor Echols on that last one: “This fall, DC denizens will be treated to the world premiere of ‘Grounded,’ an opera following an Air Force ace named Jess whose unexpected pregnancy forces her to leave behind her beloved F-16 and join the ‘chair force.’ Throughout the show, the ‘hot shot’ pilot wrestles with the mental impact of firing rockets from a drone in Afghanistan from a trailer in Las Vegas. ‘As Jess tracks terrorists by day and rocks her daughter to sleep by night, the boundary between her worlds becomes dangerously permeable,’ an ad tells us. The production is brought to you by presenting sponsor General Dynamics, one of the world’s largest weapons companies (and, wouldn’t you know it, the maker of Jess’s favorite plane). Playwright George Brant wrote the libretto, which will be brought to life by mezzo-soprano Emily D’Angelo and Tony-winning composer Jeanine Tesori.” You’ll also see things like “humanitarian intervention” champion Samantha Power enthusiastically tweeting about the collaboration between the Sesame Street franchise and the C.I.A. cutout USAID in Iraq: Samantha Power @PowerUSAID·Follow Great to hear from Basma & Jad about the new friends they’re making in Iraq through Ahlan Simsim—a @USAID & @SesameWorkshop early learning activity that promotes inclusion, respect, and understanding by showing children from all different backgrounds coming together.
You see things like this all the time under the shadow of the U.S. empire, and individually they don’t look like much, but once you start noticing them you come to recognize them as symptoms of the profoundly diseased civilization that we are living in. One where our heart strings are pulled in the most obnoxious ways imaginable to get us to support capitalism, empire and oligarchy, where we are manipulated into espousing values systems which benefit powerful sociopaths under the cover of noble-sounding causes. Where we are trained like rats to support systems that are driving our species toward extinction because our rulers gave lip service to humanitarianism and waved a rainbow flag. This is what dystopia looks like. Like a bunch of thought-controlled automatons mindlessly marching toward ecocide and omnicide to a beat played out by screens who tell them every day and in every way that there is no higher purpose than this. Like military industrial complex-funded feminist rock operas about drone operators and Cookie Monster helping Samantha Power psychologically colonize Iraqi children. Like Bono coming home from singing a heartfelt number about the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr to illustrate a cover for a war propaganda piece in The Atlantic. It’s like they’re pouring concrete over our hearts. Sewing blindfolds over our souls. Numbing us, distracting us, sedating us, so that the local riff raff won’t interfere in the workings of the imperial machine. They’re killing off something beautiful and sacred in humanity, and they’re doing it to roll out some of the ugliest visions this planet has ever seen. Caitlin Johnstone’s work is entirely reader-supported, so if you enjoyed this piece please consider sharing it around, following her on Facebook, Twitter, Soundcloud, YouTube, or throwing some money into her tip jar on Ko-fi, Patreon or Paypal. If you want to read more you can buy her books. The best way to make sure you see the stuff she publishes is to subscribe to the mailing list at her website or on Substack, which will get you an email notification for everything she publishes. For more info on who she is, where she stands and what she’s trying to do with her platform, click here. All works are co-authored with her American husband Tim Foley. This article is from CaitlinJohnstone.com
READ MORE: https://consortiumnews.com/2023/05/06/caitlin-johnstone-this-is-what-dystopia-looks-like/
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terrifying.......
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zEkgEjFDq8k
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z-V_QM8PNC0
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qui-bono?.....
In the Soviet-era film of Leo Tolstoy’s epic novel “War and Peace” there is a haunting scene, brought to mind by recent events in Russia.
In this scene, Russian elite member and rather philosophically minded Pierre has been captured by the invading Napoleonic Army of 1812. A soldier reminds Pierre that he is under their control. Pierre looks into the night sky and begins to laugh. He sees the canopy of stars in the vastness of a universe of astonishing beauty.
His laughter rolls on. Tears form. The French soldier is perplexed.
Pierre’s laughter is as regards humankind’s folly, we imagine. Here we are on this tiny planet in a vast universe thinking we are in control of things. We are gifted with life for a time. We are a species who know our life here will end in death and yet, knowing this, we still persist in war when there could be peace!
Tolstoy’s epic blends with peace writings and songs of many eras, including the recent song-plea of Bono and friends who are ‘playing for change’.
HERE WE NEED TO PAUSE.... BONO MAY SING FOR PEACE BUT BONO SUPPORTS DICTATORS LIKE G W BUSH, ZELENSKYY AND THE ABSENT WARMONGER JOE BIDEN.
Great art blends with the deep yearnings of our prayers for peace as families universally seek the safety of loved ones.
Ideally, as soon as possible, the United Nations Secretary-General should convene a meeting of world leaders to focus on how we move from war to peace.
It is for such purposes that the UN exists. So many are dying in war after war. The UNHCR can’t adequately deal with the 100 million already displaced and seeking refuge. The opportunity cost of the arms races is causing more people to starve.
A parallel time of crisis led to the UN Special Sessions on Disarmament, amidst a heightened threat of deterioration into nuclear war. The second of these was in 1982, followed by a 1986 International Year for Peace; then another Special Session on Disarmament in 1988. There have been plans for a next UN Special Session but a date has not yet been finalised. Now is the time for it to happen, asap.
I remember watching at the UN in 1982 as the USSR and US leaders arrived. At that time it was Leonid Brezhnev and Ronald Reagan. Neither appeared to have much common ground but, somehow, there was progress.
Essentially this was a response to a movement of ordinary people around the world articulating to political leadership that nuclear war needed to be prevented.
It was bottom-up until the political process responded.
We are at a parallel moment now.
The current UN Secretary General is coming to the end of his term. He has done his best with an impossible job.
Convening a UN Special Session of world leaders on “Peace, not War” could be ahead of the UN General Assembly, scheduled to open on 13 September.
Such a crucial gathering will need to be promoted urgently by member states.
Now is the time and opportunity for Australia to offer this quality of international leadership. We are home to many people who have suffered the consequences of war, not peace. Most recently, people seeking refuge from Ukraine, Afghanistan, Myanmar, Sudan and South Sudan.
Our Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs have both the character and competency to carry this possibility to other nation state leaders and to build the quality of partnerships that would give the UN Secretary General the necessary support.
We have to keep creating the spaces where dialogue about peace building becomes possible. The resolution of conflict is always relational, at every level. People have to meet and listen. There has to be time to patiently deal with mistakes and misunderstandings.
Everything else, including the crucial tasks facing the next UN COP28 to prevent catastrophic climate change, is contingent on cultivating better relations between international leaders.
There are no short cuts. These people must meet and lead us away from further tragedy.
Blending with these yearnings, a friend in Peace building asked a relative in Sweden to visit the Uppsala Peace Chapel last week. This is where the great UN Secretary General, Dag Hammarskjold, is remembered.
Such inspirational leaders are the need of our hour.
ANOTHER PAUSE: WHO KILLED HAMMARSKJOLD? THE CIA......
https://johnmenadue.com/from-war-to-peace/
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