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Mar 3rd, 2006 10:50 AM
Geggy The propaganda recruiting spending also includes fucking with the soldiers head over in Iraq...

US censors websites
If you are not for us you are against us
By Nick Farrell: Thursday 02 March 2006, 15:46
http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=30023

US MARINES stationed in Iraq are complaining that the US government is restricting access their access to websites too much.
Along with porn sites, on the Army’s list of banned sites include mail sites such as Yahoo, AT&T, Hotmail. The censors are also blocking blogs and sites that do not agree with the current administration.

One marine wrote to a site called Wonkette to tell them that it was on the banned list. He said he didn’t mind The Army blocking access to porn sites, because it was a government network but he and the troops were getting miffed that access to email and possibly-not-toeing-the-government-line websites was a bit much.

Apparently the censorship is being done by the USMC Network Operations Center in Quantico, VA.

They don’t like it when troops want read minute-by-minute updates of Anna Nicole Smith's appearance before the Supreme Court or read birthday cards to disgraced lobbyists.

...

Almost 90% think war is retaliation for Saddam’s role in 9/11, most don’t blame Iraqi public for insurgent attacks

US President George Bush has said there is no evidence that Saddam Hussein was involved in the 11 September attacks.

The propaganda in Iraq must be fucking thick...

...

An overwhelming majority of 72% of American troops serving in Iraq think the U.S. should exit the country within the next year, and more than one in four say the troops should leave immediately, a new Le Moyne College/Zogby International survey shows.

72 percent of soldiers wanting to leave Iraq shows they're starting to wake up...
Mar 2nd, 2006 06:57 PM
CrazyBlackDude
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kulturkampf
All right -- call military recruiting videos, meant to inform and recruit youths who protect your freedoms, a bunch of smoke-up-the-ass propaganda (along with all the benefits youths get for joining).

Jerk off.
Like dying, eh?
Feb 28th, 2006 07:28 AM
Kulturkampf (1) Recruiting requires money. How can u inform 300 million people about the military and their opportunities iwthout advertisements?

(2) Much money was given to Arab news because newspapers and television broadcasting services are attacked that support the coalition efforts -- some of my mates currently guard a television studio constantly under mortar fire and attack, where workers literally live there, because they report pro-Coalition news.

Money goes to these companies because if they received no money, they couldn't exist due to the cost of security.
Feb 27th, 2006 03:58 PM
Geggy LOL

facsist

Kulterkampf, do you know the price of telling the truth, excluding advertisment spending? zip. Even if they have spent staggering 1.1 billion on recruiting, they have failed very badly, let alone passing the law to recruit murderers and rapsists recently...

out of 1.6 billion, BushCo has spend twice as much as they did in their first term in the past 30 months, thats 500 million dollars on PR and fake news....Insanity.

If you want to know how much bullshit they've been spewing in the past 5 years, all you got to do is follow the money...
Feb 27th, 2006 11:37 AM
KevinTheOmnivore Hey, thanks, Geggy. Very necessary.
Feb 27th, 2006 05:47 AM
Kulturkampf All right -- call military recruiting videos, meant to inform and recruit youths who protect your freedoms, a bunch of smoke-up-the-ass propaganda (along with all the benefits youths get for joining).

Jerk off.
Feb 26th, 2006 10:24 PM
CrazyBlackDude
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kulturkampf
Hey jerk off, of the 1.6 billion 1.1 billion goes to funding commercials and recruiting effors of the US military to protect our freedoms.

You should really analyze what you are saying.
Regardless of the intent (as if some dusty arabs could ever completely take away our "freedoms" anyways), propaganda is propaganda. Try thinking before speaking, "jerk off."
Feb 26th, 2006 06:20 PM
Kulturkampf Hey jerk off, of the 1.6 billion 1.1 billion goes to funding commercials and recruiting effors of the US military to protect our freedoms.

You should really analyze what you are saying.
Feb 26th, 2006 12:37 AM
CrazyBlackDude Your avatar is awfully frightening.
Feb 24th, 2006 06:21 PM
Geggy
Bush propaganda spending

Published on Wednesday, February 22, 2006 by OneWorld.net

Watchdogs Urge Full Probe of Bush Propaganda Spending

by Niko Kyriakou


SAN FRANCISCO - Media reform groups are calling for a deeper investigation of Bush administration advertising and propaganda efforts following the release of a report that concludes the White House has spun a web of public relations (PR) contracts larger than previously thought.

At issue are agreements to produce everything from advertisements to video news releases--government-vetted spots designed to air alongside and to be indistinguishable from regular televised news reports.

Critics of the state-sponsored content said it constitutes part of a broader government attack on press freedom and that it amounts to a subversion of democracy.

''When elected public servants use taxpayer dollars to manipulate or deceive the very people whose consent they require for their legitimacy, our public servants then become our masters,'' said Sanho Tree, a fellow at the Washington, D.C.-based Institute for Policy Studies.

The official Government Accountability Office (GAO) reported last week that government agencies have spent about $1.6 billion over the past 30 months on PR and advertising contracts. Investigators said they found no breach of the law and added that all spent funds came from the agencies' budgets.

The document overlooked considerable government spending to cast President George W. Bush's policies in a favorable light, media reformists said, because it covered neither all types of PR spending nor all federal agencies.

''We need a full accounting of the Bush administration's spending on advertising, PR, and fake news,'' said Craig Aaron of advocacy group Free Press. ''It's time for Congress to reclaim its constitutional role as a counterweight to the executive branch and permanently cut off funding for covert propaganda. We must ensure that taxpayer money isn't being spent by the White House to secretly manipulate the American public.''

The administration's drive to shore up popular support for its self-styled ''war on terror'' and to keep up armed forces recruitment appears to have fuelled the spending, according to Diane Farsetta of the Center for Media and Democracy, publisher of the quarterly PR Watch.

Of the $1.6 billion total outlined in the GAO report, the Pentagon spent $1.1 billion--much of it on recruitment, Farsetta said.

The U.S. Army has failed to meet recruiting targets despite increasing the proportion of those accepted with problems in their background, the Baltimore Sun newspaper reported last week.

In all, 73,000 men and women joined the Army last year, down from 77,000 in 2004, the daily said, adding that the Army reached its recruiting goal in 2004 but fell about 7,000 recruits short last year.

To be sure, there is nothing new or unique about the Bush administration spending money to recruit warriors, said propaganda expert and author Nancy Snow.

''Historically, propaganda has always merged with recruitment because people must first be conditioned to become soldiers and fight strangers in distant lands,'' Snow said. ''It's not a natural condition but must be manipulated to get people to join unpopular realities.''

That kind of spending likely will remain largely hidden and is unlikely to shrink without public pressure for transparency and budget cuts, she said.

''The activities of these groups [contracted companies] should be out in the open, but unless and until the public clamors for hearings on the subject, we'll have to settle for occasional op-eds and white papers that have a short shelf life.''

For its report last week, the GAO surveyed seven of 15 government agencies and relied on self-reported information from them, critics said. The GAO did not mention task orders on existing contracts, subcontracts, or PR work done by government staffers without the use of outside contractors, and failed to investigate those agencies responsible for scandals that initially sparked the investigation, they added.

But the Interior Department, the only one to respond to the report, said the GAO incorrectly flagged a number of legitimate contracts, for example ones covering the production of brochures and exhibits for National Parks.

Congressional Democrats requested the GAO study last year after two scandals emerged.

The first involved several government departments issuing illegal video news releases produced by outside firms to promote department initiatives. The second involved revelations, followed by an official acknowledgement, that the Bush administration had paid journalists Armstrong Williams and Maggie Gallagher to promote administration proposals.

The GAO did not say whether government spending on PR had risen but earlier studies suggest they have.

The U.S. House of Representatives' Committee on Government Reform Minority Office, in a report last year, said the Bush administration unloaded twice as much on PR in its first term as did the Clinton administration in its second term, with payments jumping from $128 million to $250 million.

Conservative media watchdog Accuracy in Media faulted the report as based on an incomplete accounting of Clinton PR spending. The GAO would never undertake a more thorough study because the three-year statute of limitations governing such reviews has passed, the group said, adding that the democratic legislators had this fact in mind when they commissioned their study.

Copyright © 2006 OneWorld.net

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0222-02.htm

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