Over there in
The Wall Street Journal as we travel through the Christmas holiday season, was this very perceptive piece by one David Satter. Mr. Satter is identified as the “author of
At one stage in his earlier life he was the Moscow correspondent for
The Financial Times of London, arriving in the Soviet capital in 1976. He went on to work for
The Wall Street Journal as a special correspondent covering Soviet affairs. Suffice to say, he knows well how a state-run media runs.
Among other things in his WSJ article Satter says this:
“One of the pillars of the Soviet Union was a controlled press in which all coverage was organized to confirm a mendacious ideology.
نمیتوان شکست نظامی شوروی را باور کرد
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صوت العراق | نظرة مكثفة في كتاب تاريخ العنف – نقد المشاعر في الحيز الدائري للباحث الأكاديمي د فالح مهدي
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Itâs hard to un-see something so shocking, but it makes us newly sympathetic to the New Yorker folks on that Zoom call with Jeffrey Toobin. Still, there it was, hanging from a thick, burnt-orange neck ribbon: a gold medallion with a smugly familiar face on it; a medallion encircled by the words, âThe Dan Rather Medal for Excellence in News and Guts.â
Itâs perhaps even harder, though, to imagine why the Moody College of Communication at the University of Texas would debase itself, would beclown itself, by publicly announcing such an award. Far better to play it on the downlow and plead ignorance than to broadcast it for all the world to see.
درآمدی بر چرایی شکست جنبش های معاصر
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