Media miss story behind Iraq protest.Byline: GUEST VIEWPOINT By Jack Dresser For The Register-Guard As author of the `statement of our demonstration's purpose' at the Nov. 18 anti-war demonstrations in Eugene, I am disappointed that The Register-Guard reported only its title and none of its substance. I am disappointed that the newspaper's Nov. 19 article focused on the orderly mechanics of the demonstration rather than its spirit, as if riots would have made a better story than thoughtful, deliberate and sober public expressions. I am disappointed with the pull quote from Peter Chabarek. Rather than a statement relevant to the violence, destruction and death we abhor, The Register-Guard chose a throwaway throwaway See for your information (FYI). remark about police notification. I am disappointed with the photograph. We displayed many searing sear 1 v. seared, sear·ing, sears v.tr. 1. To char, scorch, or burn the surface of with or as if with a hot instrument. See Synonyms at burn1. 2. images of the terrible casualties of this war. But The Register-Guard chose an unimportant and undisturbing image - an ordinary American woman politely subjected to the minor indignity in·dig·ni·ty n. pl. in·dig·ni·ties 1. Humiliating, degrading, or abusive treatment. 2. A source of offense, as to a person's pride or sense of dignity; an affront. 3. of a misdemeanor arrest. I am disappointed at the characterization of our images as `props.' These are not stage contrivances. They are photographs of the dead, gravely injured in·jure tr.v. in·jured, in·jur·ing, in·jures 1. To cause physical harm to; hurt. 2. To cause damage to; impair. 3. and grieving grieving Mourning, see there survivors of the violence our country has unleashed, both American and Iraqi. They are images from the European, Asian and Arab press, seen throughout the world but not in America. These photographs aren't propaganda, spin, hype or peace slogans. They are undeniable truth, and they aren't easy to look at. But if we permit it, pay for it and send our uniformed citizens into it, we must be willing to at least look at it. Ordinary Iraqis and Americans dying daily without justification are the story, not 11 people arrested for trespassing. Why must we do this? Because the American press doesn't. We shouldn't have to. We have other jobs. It is a pathetic reflection on our media that citizens must commit civil disobedience civil disobedience, refusal to obey a law or follow a policy believed to be unjust. Practitioners of civil disobediance basing their actions on moral right and usually employ the nonviolent technique of passive resistance in order to bring wider attention to the to draw attention to what should be fully and accurately reported by a professional, independent, competent, searching, uncompromising and - above all - relevant press. We demonstrators are not the story. The story is a peer-reviewed study published last year in the British medical journal The British Medical Journal, or BMJ, is one of the most popular and widely-read peer-reviewed general medical journals in the world.[2] It is published by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd (owned by the British Medical Association), whose other , The Lancet, finding that some 100,000 Iraqis had perished by August 2004 from our invasion and occupation, most killed by coalition bombing, most women and children. We provided photographs of a few such victims and their grieving survivors. They are the story. These pictures need public exposure to awaken the American conscience, a dose of reality the American media has thus far failed in its duty to provide. The story is a 90 percent risk of attack or ambush (language) AMBUSH - A language for linear programming problems in a materials processing and transportation network. ["AMBUSH - An Advanced Model Builder for Linear Programming", T.R. White et al, National Petroleum Refiners Assoc Comp Conf (Nov 1971)]. faced by our troops when deployed to Iraq. We showed the coffins - both American and Iraqi, the missing limbs, the hideous burns and information on post-traumatic stress syndrome and other psychological damage that commonly result from such exposure. These are the realities of war into which our troops are sent and the realities imposed upon a nation innocent of any harm to us, where 80 percent of the citizens want us gone. Eleven people arrested for misdemeanor trespassing is a trivial story. The important story is profound and tragic. But we need the press to tell it. The media have vast public access, and we common citizens do not. That is why the U.S. Constitution provides the press - alone among secular institutions - a privileged status. Because `a popular government, without popular information or the means of acquiring it, is but a prologue pro·logue also pro·log n. 1. An introduction or preface, especially a poem recited to introduce a play. 2. An introduction or introductory chapter, as to a novel. 3. An introductory act, event, or period. to a farce or a tragedy,' wrote James Madison, principal author of our Bill of Rights. Washington today is a sad farce and Iraq is an unmitigated un·mit·i·gat·ed adj. 1. Not diminished or moderated in intensity or severity; unrelieved: unmitigated suffering. 2. tragedy. That is the story, and the press has a responsibility to tell it. Jack Dresser, a behavioral scientist, was an Army psychologist during the Vietnam War Vietnam War, conflict in Southeast Asia, primarily fought in South Vietnam between government forces aided by the United States and guerrilla forces aided by North Vietnam. . |
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