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		<title>Eugene Doyle: Mark Carney’s moment – a new non-aligned movement?</title>
		<link>https://eveningreport.nz/2026/01/22/eugene-doyle-mark-carneys-moment-a-new-non-aligned-movement/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Jan 2026 06:19:52 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[COMMENTARY: By Eugene Doyle Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney gave a speech at Davos this week that signals there may still be a leader in the West worth following. “Middle powers must act together because if we’re not at the table, we’re on the menu,” he warned. The Canadian PM was brutally honest about Western ]]></description>
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<p><strong>COMMENTARY:</strong> <em>By Eugene Doyle</em></p>
<p>Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney gave a speech at Davos this week that signals there may still be a leader in the West worth following.</p>
<p>“Middle powers must act together because if we’re not at the table, we’re on the menu,” he warned.</p>
<p>The Canadian PM was brutally honest about Western conduct in the world but shone a bright light on a better path forward.</p>
<p>At a time when the US has pivoted to a smash-and-grab deployment of hard power that now extends to its closest allies, <a href="https://www.weforum.org/stories/2026/01/davos-2026-special-address-by-mark-carney-prime-minister-of-canada/" rel="nofollow">Carney stepped up</a>.</p>
<p>The speech wasn’t a rhetorical tour de force; it was better than that: it was a declaration by the leader of a major, middle ranked Western power that the snivelling compliance, the fawning and the keep-your-head-down approach that has typified the collective West’s response to Trumpism is at a strategic dead end.</p>
<p>We are at a moment which <a href="https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/1/21/the-end-of-the-world-as-we-know-it-is-the-rules-based-order-finished" rel="nofollow">Carney defines as “a rupture in the world order”</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Nostalgia is not a strategy<br /></strong> “We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy,” Carney said.</p>
<p>At a time when the US is led by a criminal toddler who can’t stop whining about not getting the Nobel Peace Prize even as he attacks country after country, it is refreshing to encounter a leader who thinks and speaks like a statesman of the first rank.</p>
<p>“We are in the midst of a rupture, not a transition. Over the past two decades, a series of crises in finance, health, energy and geopolitics have laid bare the risks of extreme global integration.</p>
<p>“But more recently, great powers have begun using economic integration as weapons, tariffs as leverage, financial infrastructure as coercion, supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited,” Carney said.</p>
<p><strong>A modern non-aligned movement<br /></strong> Carney did not reference the Non-Aligned Movement formed at the Belgrade Conference in September 1961 but it leapt to my mind when I heard him say:</p>
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<p>“In a world of great power rivalry, the countries in between have a choice: compete with each other for favour or to combine to create a third path with impact.”</p>
<p>Carney also reaffirms the importance of the institutions that the West itself, including Canada, has severely weakened in recent years — WTO, UN and COP to name three. Russia, with its invasion of Ukraine, comes in a distant second in this regard.</p>
<p>With an assertive, aggressive US hell-bent on getting whatever it wants, Carney looks on the times we have entered with much-needed clarity. His call is for an alliance of middle powers.</p>
<p>In a word: collectivism.</p>
<p>The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) and what Carney is proposing have similarities, particularly structurally, but also significant differences, particularly ideologically.</p>
<p>Not least Carney is a reformer and not at heart an anti-imperialist. He is the former head of both the Bank of England and the Bank of Canada and will not be seen in a Che Guevara t-shirt any time soon.</p>
<p>As with the NAM, however, Carney advocates collective leverage, resistance to client-state dependency and using internationalism to resist divide-and-rule by great powers.</p>
<p>“When we only negotiate bilaterally with a hegemon, we negotiate from weakness. We accept what is offered. We compete with each other to be the most accommodating. This is not sovereignty. It’s the ‘performance’ of sovereignty while accepting subordination.”</p>
<p>The giants who formed the Non-Aligned movement were Josip Broz Tito (Yugoslavia), Gamal Abdel Nasser (Egypt), Jawaharlal Nehru (India), Kwame Nkrumah (Ghana), and Sukarno (Indonesia). They gathered nations around  the “Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence”: mutual respect for territorial integrity and sovereignty, non-aggression, non-interference, equality and mutual benefit, peaceful coexistence.</p>
<p>In a nutshell: the polar opposite of the Western Rules-Based Order. Carney’s speech echoed many of the same sentiments.</p>
<p>“The powerful have their power. But we have something too — the capacity to stop pretending, to name reality, to build our strength at home and to act together.</p>
<p>“And it is a path wide open to any country willing to take it with us.”</p>
<p>Brilliant. But converting a speech into a movement that mobilises countries in an effective way requires commitment and resources we need to see emerge at pace.</p>
<p>In the 1960s and 70s, it was about small and middle powers navigating a course between two superpower blocs — a passage between Scylla (Soviet Union) and Charybdis (United States). Today we all must navigate the rough and rowdy world of the US, China and a resurgent Russia.</p>
<p><strong>Canada’s astonishing resistance to the Empire<br /></strong> What is astonishing is that this time around, the impulse to rally together comes not from a socialist country like the former Yugoslavia or a “black Third World country” (in 1960s parlance) like Tanzania, but from the beating heart of the white-dominated Western world – from Canada, one of the capitals of the Western empire.  My, how times have suddenly changed.</p>
<p>This should act as shock therapy to somnolent countries like Australia and New Zealand who cleave to a past that no longer exists. Carney has shown the power of looking at the world through untinted lenses (though Macron did look pretty cool in Davos in his blue sunnies).</p>
<p><strong>A rare moment of honesty about Western conduct<br /></strong> I don’t recall a Western leader being so open about the ear-splitting hypocrisy and double-dealing of the West.  Most impressively, Carney gives a clear signal of what needs to be done to survive in this world of jostling hegemons.</p>
<p>More submissive leaders like Christopher Luxon of New Zealand and Australia’s Anthony Albanese should take careful note because, as Carney says, we are at a turning point in the world.</p>
<p>Carney, who previously mumbled his way through issues like Venezuela and Gaza, made a valuable contribution to confronting the desolation of reality:</p>
<p>“First it means naming reality. Stop invoking ‘rules-based international order’ as though it still functions as advertised. Call it what it is: a system of intensifying great power rivalry where the most powerful pursue their interests using economic integration as a weapon of coercion.”</p>
<p>In time, this may open the door to Truth and Reconciliation.  The genocide in Gaza is an example par excellence of the falsity of the rules-based order; Venezuela’s recent rape by the Americans, greeted with shuffling indifference by the West, traduced international law. The lawless bombing of Iran, the starvation of hundreds of thousands of Yemeni civilians in a blockade imposed by Saudi Arabia and armed by the US and UK are just a few of many such examples.</p>
<p>“We knew the story of the international rules-based order was partially false. That the strongest would exempt themselves when convenient. That trade rules were enforced asymmetrically. And we knew that international law applied with varying rigour depending on the identity of the accused or the victim,” Carney said.</p>
<p>Noting the standing ovation Carney received, the threat to Greenland has clearly acted on the Western countries as a shock therapy that the Gaza genocide, the bombing of Iran and the attack on Venezuela failed to deliver.</p>
<p><strong>Carney stands on the shoulders of giants<br /></strong> I would point out that former leaders like prime minister Helen Clark of New Zealand have been arguing along these lines for years, advocating, for example, for a nuclear free Pacific and recommending “that we always pursue dialogue and engagement over confrontation.”</p>
<p>Warning that <a href="https://lawnews.nz/politics/trumps-us-too-unstable-to-be-relied-upon-says-former-pm-helen-clark/" rel="nofollow">Trump was too unstable to be relied on</a>, she told a  conference in 2025 that New Zealand “should join forces with other countries across regions who want to be coalitions for action around these issues, not just little Western clubs.”</p>
<p>I’ll give the last word to the late <a href="https://www.juliusnyerere.org/uploads/non_alignment_in_the_1970s.pdf" rel="nofollow">Julius Nyerere, first President of Tanzania</a>, from a 1970 speech to the Non-Aligned Movement. It expresses a worldview in accord with Carney’s speech but which is the polar opposite of 500 years of Western conduct from Christopher Columbus to Donald Trump:</p>
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<p>“By non-alignment we are saying to the Big Powers that we also belong to this planet. We are asserting the right of small, or militarily weaker, nations to determine their own policies in their own interests, and to have an influence on world affairs which accords with the right of all peoples to live on earth as human beings equal with other human beings.</p>
<p>“And we are asserting the right of all peoples to freedom and self-determination; therefore expressing an outright opposition to colonialism and international domination of one people by another.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p><em><a href="https://www.solidarity.co.nz/about" rel="nofollow">Eugene Doyle</a> is a writer based in Wellington. He has written extensively on the Middle East, as well as peace and security issues in the Asia Pacific region, and he contributes to Asia Pacific Report. He hosts the public policy platform <a href="https://www.solidarity.co.nz/" rel="nofollow">solidarity.co.nz</a></em></p>
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<p>Article by <a href="https://www.asiapacificreport.nz/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">AsiaPacificReport.nz</a></p>
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		<title>Caitlin Johnstone: It’s a genocide, but it’s also so much more than that</title>
		<link>https://eveningreport.nz/2025/07/25/caitlin-johnstone-its-a-genocide-but-its-also-so-much-more-than-that/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[David Robie]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 25 Jul 2025 10:19:39 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Report by Dr David Robie &#8211; Café Pacific. &#8211; COMMENTARY: By Caitlin Johnstone The mass atrocity in Gaza is a genocide, obviously, and is an undisguised ethnic cleansing operation. But it’s also a lot more than that. It’s an experiment  —  to see what kinds of abuses the public will accept without causing significant disruption ]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Report by Dr David Robie &#8211; Café Pacific.</strong> &#8211; <img decoding="async" class="wpe_imgrss" src="https://davidrobie.nz/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/Gaza-journalist-CJ-4000-wde.png"></p>
<p><strong>COMMENTARY: By Caitlin Johnstone</strong></p>
<p>The mass atrocity in Gaza <a href="https://caitlinjohnstone.substack.com/p/the-new-york-times-finally-stops" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" rel="nofollow">is a genocide</a>, obviously, and is <a href="https://www.caitlinjohnst.one/p/its-a-complete-lie-to-say-gaza-can" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" rel="nofollow">an undisguised ethnic cleansing operation</a>.</p>
<p>But it’s also a lot more than that.</p>
<p><strong>It’s an experiment </strong> —  to see what kinds of abuses the public will accept without causing significant disruption to the imperial status quo.</p>
<p><strong>It’s a psychological operation</strong>  –  to push out the boundaries of what’s normal and acceptable in our minds so that we will consent to even more horrific abuses in the future.</p>
<p><strong>It’s a symptom</strong>  —  of Zionism, of colonialism, of militarism, of capitalism, of Western supremacism, of empire-building, of propaganda, of ignorance, of apathy, of delusion, of ego.</p>
<p><strong>It’s a manifestation</strong>  —  of violent racist, supremacist and xenophobic belief systems that have always been there but were previously restrained, meeting with the unwholesome nature of alliances that have long been in place but have been aggressively normalised.</p>
<p><strong>It’s a mirror </strong> —– showing us accurately and impartially who we currently are as a civilisation.</p>
<p><iframe title="YouTube video player" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/77JnyN3lo3c?si=NYNgaKB5s-rpYRCO" width="560" height="315" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen">[embedded content]</iframe><br /><em>It’s a genocide …                                                Video: Caitlin Johnstone</em></p>
<p><strong>It’s a disclosure</strong>  —  showing us what the Western empire we live under really is underneath its fake plastic mask of liberal democracy and righteous humanitarianism.</p>
<p><strong>It’s a revelation</strong>  –  showing us who among us really stands for truth and justice and who has been deceiving us about themselves and their motives this entire time.</p>
<p><strong>It’s a catalyst</strong>  –  a galvanising force and a rallying cry for all who realise that the murderous power structures we live under can no longer be allowed to stand, and a blaring alarm clock opening more and more snoozing eyes to the need for revolutionary change.</p>
<p><strong>It’s a test</strong>  –  of who we are as a species and what we are made of, and of whether we can transcend the destructive patterning that is driving humanity to its doom.</p>
<p><strong>It’s a question</strong>  — asking us what kind of world we want to live in going forward, and what kind of people we want to be.</p>
<p><strong>It’s an invitation</strong>  —  to become something better than what we are now.</p>
<p><a href="https://caitlinjohnstone.com/" rel="nofollow"><em>Caitlin Johnstone</em></a> <em>is an Australian independent journalist and poet. Her articles include <a href="https://caityjohnstone.medium.com/the-un-torture-report-on-assange-is-an-indictment-of-our-entire-society-bc7b0a7130a6" rel="nofollow">The UN Torture Report On Assange Is An Indictment Of Our Entire Society</a>. She publishes a website and <a href="https://www.caitlinjohnst.one/" rel="nofollow">Caitlin’s Newsletter</a>. This article is republished with permission.</em></p>
<p>This article was first published on <a href="https://davidrobie.nz" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Café Pacific</a>.</p>
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		<title>Why manufacturing consent for war with Iran failed this time</title>
		<link>https://eveningreport.nz/2025/06/29/why-manufacturing-consent-for-war-with-iran-failed-this-time/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Asia Pacific Report]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 29 Jun 2025 04:20:48 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[COMMENTARY: By Ahmad Ibsais On June 22, American warplanes crossed into Iranian airspace and dropped 14 massive bombs. The attack was not in response to a provocation; it came on the heels of illegal Israeli aggression that took the lives of more than 600 Iranians. This was a return to something familiar and well-practised: an ]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>COMMENTARY:</strong> <em>By Ahmad Ibsais</em></p>
<p>On June 22, American warplanes crossed into Iranian airspace and dropped 14 massive bombs.</p>
<p>The attack was not in response to a provocation; it came on the heels of illegal Israeli aggression that took the lives of more than 600 Iranians.</p>
<p>This was a return to something familiar and well-practised: an empire bombing innocents across the orientalist abstraction called “the Middle East”.</p>
<p>That night, US President Donald Trump, flanked by his vice-president and two state secretaries, told the world: “Iran, the bully of the Middle East, must now make peace”.</p>
<p>There is something chilling about how bombs are baptised with the language of diplomacy and how destruction is dressed in the garments of stability. To call that peace is not merely a misnomer; it is a criminal distortion.</p>
<p>But what is peace in this world, if not submission to the West? And what is diplomacy, if not the insistence that the attacked plead with their attackers?</p>
<p>In the 12 days that Israel’s illegal assault on Iran lasted, images of Iranian children pulled from the wreckage remained absent from the front pages of Western media. In their place were lengthy features about Israelis hiding in fortified bunkers.</p>
<p><strong>Victimhood serving narrative</strong><br />Western media, fluent in the language of erasure, broadcasts only the victimhood that serves the war narrative.</p>
<p>And that is not just in its coverage of Iran. For 20 months now, the people of Gaza have been starved and incinerated. By the official count, more than 55,000 lives have been taken; realistic estimates put the number at hundreds of thousands.</p>
<p>Every hospital in Gaza has been bombed. Most schools have been attacked and destroyed.</p>
<p>Leading human rights groups like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have already declared that Israel is committing genocide, and yet, most Western media would not utter that word and would add elaborate caveats when someone does dare say it live on TV.</p>
<p>Presenters and editors would do anything but recognise Israel’s unending violence in an active voice.</p>
<p>Despite detailed evidence of war crimes, the Israeli military has faced no media censure, no criticism or scrutiny. Its generals hold war meetings near civilian buildings, and yet, there are no media cries of Israelis being used as “human shields”.</p>
<p>Israeli army and government officials are regularly caught lying or making genocidal statements, and yet, their words are still reported as “the truth”.</p>
<p><strong>Bias over Palestinian deaths</strong><br />A recent study found that on the BBC, Israeli deaths received 33 times more coverage per fatality than Palestinian deaths, despite Palestinians dying at a rate of 34 to 1 compared with Israelis. Such bias is no exception, it is the rule for Western media.</p>
<p>Like Palestine, Iran is described in carefully chosen language. Iran is never framed as a nation, only as a regime. Iran is not a government, but a threat — not a people, but a problem.</p>
<p>The word “Islamic” is affixed to it like a slur in every report. This is instrumental in quietly signalling that Muslim resistance to Western domination must be extinguished.</p>
<p>Iran does not possess nuclear weapons; Israel and the United States do. And yet only Iran is cast as an existential threat to world order.</p>
<p>Because the problem is not what Iran holds, but what it refuses to surrender. It has survived coups, sanctions, assassinations, and sabotage. It has outlived every attempt to starve, coerce, or isolate it into submission.</p>
<p>It is a state that, despite the violence hurled at it, has not yet been broken.</p>
<p>And so the myth of the threat of weapons of mass destruction becomes indispensable. It is the same myth that was used to justify the illegal invasion of Iraq. For three decades, American headlines have whispered that Iran is just “weeks away” from the bomb, three decades of deadlines that never arrive, of predictions that never materialise.</p>
<p><strong>Fear over false ‘nuclear threat’</strong><br />But fear, even when unfounded, is useful. If you can keep people afraid, you can keep them quiet. Say “nuclear threat” often enough, and no one will think to ask about the children killed in the name of “keeping the world safe”.</p>
<p>This is the modus operandi of Western media: a media architecture not built to illuminate truth, but to manufacture permission for violence, to dress state aggression in technical language and animated graphics, to anaesthetise the public with euphemisms.</p>
<p><em>Time Magazine</em> does not write about the crushed bones of innocents under the rubble in Tehran or Rafah, it writes about “The New Middle East” with a cover strikingly similar to the one it used to propagandise regime change in Iraq 22 years ago.</p>
<p>But this is not 2003. After decades of war, and livestreamed genocide, most Americans no longer buy into the old slogans and distortions. When Israel attacked Iran, a poll showed that only 16 percent of US respondents supported the US joining the war.</p>
<p>After Trump ordered the air strikes, another poll confirmed this resistance to manufactured consent: only 36 percent of respondents supported the move, and only 32 percent supported continuing the bombardment</p>
<p>The failure to manufacture consent for war with Iran reveals a profound shift in the American consciousness. Americans remember the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq that left hundreds of thousands of Afghans and Iraqis dead and an entire region in flames. They remember the lies about weapons of mass destruction and democracy and the result: the thousands of American soldiers dead and the tens of thousands maimed.</p>
<p>They remember the humiliating retreat from Afghanistan after 20 years of war and the never-ending bloody entanglement in Iraq.</p>
<p><strong>Low social justice spending</strong><br />At home, Americans are told there is no money for housing, healthcare, or education, but there is always money for bombs, for foreign occupations, for further militarisation. More than 700,000 Americans are homeless, more than 40 million live under the official poverty line and more than 27 million have no health insurance.</p>
<p>And yet, the US government maintains by far the highest defence budget in the world.</p>
<p>Americans know the precarity they face at home, but they are also increasingly aware of the impact US imperial adventurism has abroad. For 20 months now, they have watched a US-sponsored genocide broadcast live.</p>
<p>They have seen countless times on their phones bloodied Palestinian children pulled from rubble while mainstream media insists, this is Israeli “self-defence”.</p>
<p>The old alchemy of dehumanising victims to excuse their murder has lost its power. The digital age has shattered the monopoly on narrative that once made distant wars feel abstract and necessary. Americans are now increasingly refusing to be moved by the familiar war drumbeat.</p>
<p>The growing fractures in public consent have not gone unnoticed in Washington. Trump, ever the opportunist, understands that the American public has no appetite for another war.</p>
<p><strong>‘Don’t drop bombs’</strong><br />And so, on June 24, he took to social media to announce, “the ceasefire is in effect”, telling Israel to “DO NOT DROP THOSE BOMBS,” after the Israeli army continued to attack Iran.</p>
<p>Trump, like so many in the US and Israeli political elites, wants to call himself a peacemaker while waging war. To leaders like him, peace has come to mean something altogether different: the unimpeded freedom to commit genocide and other atrocities while the world watches on.</p>
<p>But they have failed to manufacture our consent. We know what peace is, and it does not come dressed in war. It is not dropped from the sky.</p>
<p>Peace can only be achieved where there is freedom. And no matter how many times they strike, the people remain, from Palestine to Iran — unbroken, unbought, and unwilling to kneel to terror.</p>
<p><a href="https://www.aljazeera.com/author/ahmad_ibsais_190919183810495" rel="nofollow"><em>Ahmad Ibsais</em></a> <em>is a first-generation Palestinian American and law student who writes the newsletter State of Siege.</em></p>
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<p>Article by <a href="https://www.asiapacificreport.nz/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">AsiaPacificReport.nz</a></p>
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		<title>Caitlin Johnstone: The fictional mental illness that only affects enemies of the Western empire</title>
		<link>https://eveningreport.nz/2025/06/27/caitlin-johnstone-the-fictional-mental-illness-that-only-affects-enemies-of-the-western-empire/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[David Robie]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Jun 2025 04:19:45 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Report by Dr David Robie &#8211; Café Pacific. &#8211; COMMENTARY: By Caitlin Johnstone Within the storytelling of Western politics and punditry there exists a fictional type of mental illness which only affects people the US empire doesn’t like. If Iran gets a nuclear weapon, its crazy lunatic government will flip out and nuke us all. ]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Report by Dr David Robie &#8211; Café Pacific.</strong> &#8211; <img decoding="async" class="wpe_imgrss" src="https://davidrobie.nz/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/Ali-Khamenei-CJ-1300wide.png"></p>
<p><strong>COMMENTARY:</strong> <strong>By Caitlin Johnstone</strong></p>
<p>Within the storytelling of Western politics and punditry there exists a fictional type of mental illness which only affects people the US empire doesn’t like.</p>
<p>If Iran gets a nuclear weapon, its crazy lunatic government will flip out and nuke us all.</p>
<p>Watch out for Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis, those guys are a bunch of maniacal antisemites who want to attack Israelis just because they’re Jewish.</p>
<p>“The stories of the Western empire ask us to believe that everyone who finds themselves in the imperial crosshairs is an irrational actor whose loony behavior can only be attributed to some uncontrollable defect within their own minds, or who will soon snap and do something nutty if they are not contained by force.”</p>
<p>Oh no, Putin is invading Ukraine completely unprovoked because he’s a madman who hates freedom and won’t stop until he’s conquered all of Europe.</p>
<p>China is building up its military because the megalomaniacal Xi Jinping wants to take over the world; all those US military bases surrounding China are just a defensive measure to contain Beijing’s insanity.</p>
<p>Assad just went nuts one day and started slaughtering his own people out of nowhere.</p>
<p>Gaddafi is a sexual sadist who’s giving Viagra to his troops to help them commit mass rapes in Libya.</p>
<p><iframe title="YouTube video player" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/GE-zgfYOmFE?si=f5OXfc93-0ZApcyG" width="560" height="315" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen">[embedded content]</iframe><br /><em>The fictional mental illness that only affects enemies of the Western empire    Video: Caitlin Johnstone</em></p>
<p><strong>So crazy</strong><br />Saddam Hussein is so crazy and evil he’s trying to obtain weapons of mass destruction to give Americans another 9/11.</p>
<p>The North Koreans used to be far too insane to be allowed to have nuclear weapons because they’d nuke San Francisco immediately, but after they obtained nuclear weapons they were miraculously cured of this rare psychological disorder.</p>
<p>The stories of the Western empire ask us to believe that everyone who finds themselves in the imperial crosshairs is an irrational actor whose loony behavior can only be attributed to some uncontrollable defect within their own minds, or who will soon snap and do something nutty if they are not contained by force.</p>
<p>One antagonist who never appears in these fairy tales of the Western empire is the Western empire itself. In the storytelling of the empire, there is no globe-spanning power structure which is constantly inflicting violence and destruction upon populations around the world while seeking to crush any nation who disobeys its dictates.</p>
<p>It’s just a bunch of irrational psychos, seeking nuclear weapons and becoming aggressively militaristic for no other reason than because they are crazy, while the totally normal alliance led by a totally normal country in North America innocently responds to their crazy behavior.</p>
<p>That’s the story. In real life, the most aggressive and unreasonable actor on the world stage by far is the empire-like power structure that is loosely centralised around Washington DC. Nobody else is constantly waging wars of aggression around the world. Nobody else is circling the planet with hundreds of military bases for the purpose of global domination. Nobody else has spent the 21st century killing millions of people and deliberately targeting civilians with starvation sanctions in countries on the other side of the planet.</p>
<p>Only the US-centralised empire has been doing these things.</p>
<p><strong>Vicious imperial power</strong><br />But we are asked to believe that this vicious imperial power structure is the only rational actor on earth, and that those who resist its aggressions are the crazy ones.</p>
<p>And you are told that if you can’t see this, then you’re crazy too. You’re a crackpot. A conspiracy theorist. A paranoid nutball whose voice should be marginalised and whose ideas should be dismissed with a scoff.</p>
<p>You are crazy if you don’t believe what the world’s craziest power structure says about its enemies being crazy.</p>
<p>It is gaslighting on a global scale. It is madness, and that is why this civilisation has gone mad.</p>
<p>Let’s hope someone finds a way to protect the world from the insanity of the Western empire.</p>
<p><a href="https://caitlinjohnstone.com/" rel="nofollow"><em>Caitlin Johnstone</em></a> <em>is an Australian independent journalist and poet. Her articles include <a href="https://caityjohnstone.medium.com/the-un-torture-report-on-assange-is-an-indictment-of-our-entire-society-bc7b0a7130a6" rel="nofollow">The UN Torture Report On Assange Is An Indictment Of Our Entire Society</a>. She publishes a website and <a href="https://www.caitlinjohnst.one/" rel="nofollow">Caitlin’s Newsletter</a>. This article is republished with permission.</em></p>
<p>This article was first published on <a href="https://davidrobie.nz" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Café Pacific</a>.</p>
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		<title>Caitlin Johnstone: On human rights, ‘friendly’ war crimes and Western hypocrisy</title>
		<link>https://eveningreport.nz/2024/09/19/caitlin-johnstone-on-human-rights-friendly-war-crimes-and-western-hypocrisy/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[David Robie]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Sep 2024 07:19:34 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Report by Dr David Robie &#8211; Café Pacific. &#8211; COMMENTARY: By Caitlin Johnstone The death toll has risen to 12 from Israel’s terror attack in Lebanon on Tuesday which detonated explosive materials hidden in thousands of pagers. Another 20 people were then killed in another attack the following day with a second wave of explosions, ]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Report by Dr David Robie &#8211; Café Pacific.</strong> &#8211; <img decoding="async" class="wpe_imgrss" src="https://davidrobie.nz/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/Screen-Shot-2024-09-19-at-5.42.39-PM.png"></p>
<p><strong>COMMENTARY: By Caitlin Johnstone</strong></p>
<p>The death toll <a href="https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2kn10xxldo" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">has risen to 12</a> from Israel’s <a href="https://www.caitlinjohnst.one/p/turning-people-into-involuntary-suicide" rel="nofollow">terror attack in Lebanon</a> on Tuesday which detonated explosive materials hidden in thousands of pagers.</p>
<p>Another 20 people were then killed in <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/sep/18/explosions-linked-to-walkie-talkies-deaths-lebanon" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">another attack the following day</a> with a second wave of explosions, this time using walkie talkies and <a href="https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/lebanons-official-news-agency-reports-home-solar-energy-113809042" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">home solar energy systems</a>.</p>
<p>The total death toll <a href="https://www.aa.com.tr/en/middle-east/death-toll-in-lebanon-from-explosions-of-wireless-communication-devices-rises-to-20/3333957" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">now sits at 32</a>. Two children and four healthcare workers are among the dead. Thousands have been wounded.</p>
<p><iframe title="YouTube video player" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/tRzudLsf5TY?si=7AIYagsttsYJ7xEa" width="560" height="315" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen">[embedded content]</iframe></p>
<p>As you would expect, Western empire managers are getting really squirmy about this.</p>
<p>White House spokesman John Kirby adamantly <a href="https://x.com/AssalRad/status/1836493297587753035" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">refused to answer</a> any questions involving Israel’s responsibility for the attacks during a press conference on Wednesday, despite Israel being widely reported as the responsible party, with outlets like <em>The New York Times</em> <a href="https://archive.is/YNREZ" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">citing US officials</a> as their source.</p>
<p>“I’m not gonna speak to the details of these incidents,” Kirby <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FxIFrK0IEVw" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">said repeatedly</a> when questioned about Israel’s role and what the US response will be.</p>
<p>It goes without saying that if a government like Russia, China or Iran were even <em>suspected</em> of being responsible for similar attacks, Kirby and his fellow podium people would be not just naming the suspected aggressor but fervently denouncing the attack as an act of terrorism.</p>
<p><strong>Leaked memo</strong><br />And it is here worth reminding readers that in 2017, a <a href="https://www.politico.com/story/2017/12/19/tillerson-state-human-rights-304118" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">leaked State Department memo</a> explained in plain language that it is standing US policy to overlook the abuses of US allies while denouncing the abuses of US enemies in order to undermine enemies and show other countries the perks of being aligned with the United States.</p>
<p>The memo showed neoconservative empire manager Brian Hook teaching a previously uninitiated Secretary of State Rex Tillerson that for the US government, “human rights” are only a weapon to be used for keeping other nations in line.</p>
<p>In a remarkable look into the cynical nature of imperial narrative management, Hook told Tillerson that it is US policy to overlook human rights abuses committed by nations aligned with US interests while exploiting and weaponising them against nations who aren’t.</p>
<p>“In the case of US allies such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the Philippines, the Administration is fully justified in emphasising good relations for a variety of important reasons, including counter-terrorism, and in honestly facing up to the difficult tradeoffs with regard to human rights,” Hook explained in the memo.</p>
<p>“One useful guideline for a realistic and successful foreign policy is that allies should be treated differently — and better — than adversaries,” Hook wrote.</p>
<p>“We do not look to bolster America’s adversaries overseas; we look to pressure, compete with, and outmaneuver them. For this reason, we should consider human rights as an important issue in regard to US relations with China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran.</p>
<p>“And this is not only because of moral concern for practices inside those countries. It is also because pressing those regimes on human rights is one way to impose costs, apply counter-pressure, and regain the initiative from them strategically.”</p>
<p><strong>Highlight the discrepancies</strong><br />“It’s tedious going “If Group X did this Western politicians and pundits would condemn it but because Group Y did it they’re fine with it” over and over again, but it’s important to highlight these discrepancies because they show how we’re being deceived.</p>
<p>Westerners are <a href="https://consortiumnews.com/2023/06/05/caitlin-johnstone-15-reasons-why-media-dont-do-journalism/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">indoctrinated from birth</a> into believing they live in a society that is basically good with governments that, while imperfect, are still far superior to the tyrants and corrupt autocrats of the global south.</p>
<p>In reality the Western power structure centralised around the United States is <a href="https://caitlinjohnstone.com/2021/08/14/you-need-to-understand-that-the-us-is-the-most-tyrannical-regime-on-earth/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">the single most murderous and tyrannical force on earth</a> by an extremely massive margin, but that obvious fact is always omitted from the indoctrination curriculum.</p>
<p>By pointing out the glaring discrepancies between the way the Western political-media class responds to things like Israel turning electronic devices into thousands of bombs placed throughout civilian populations and the way they respond when other groups detonate explosives among civilians, you’re helping to punch holes in the veil of indoctrination they have cast over our collective understanding of the world.</p>
<p>The more you recognise that you only see your society as good and others as bad because of the way world events are framed by Western news media and politicians, the closer you get to having your “<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ToKcmnrE5oY" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Are we the baddies?</a>” epiphany.</p>
<p>Hypocrisy and contradiction are not great moral evils in and of themselves, but they often run cover for great moral evils. The fact that we are trained to think about the world by people who facilitate great evils perpetrated by their own side when they’d condemn identical evils committed by their enemies shows that they do not stand against evil, and are deeply evil themselves.</p>
<p>Recognising the problems in our world is the first step to solving them. That’s what the propagandists and empire managers work to prevent us from doing, and that’s what we try to do by pointing out the glaring plot holes and inconsistencies in their narratives over and over again.</p>
<p><strong>Mock their denunciations</strong><br />The correct thing to do when Western leaders talk about human rights or denounce abuses by enemy governments is to mock them and dismiss them. They’re not saying anything true about their actual values and beliefs; if they were there wouldn’t be so much hypocrisy in the way they denounce governments they don’t like for offences they ignore and make excuses for in governments they do like.</p>
<p>They’re never saying what they’re saying to stop human rights abuses or make the world a better place, they’re only saying what they’re saying to undermine their enemies so that the Western empire can rule the world and be the only one administering abuse.</p>
<p>And the same is true of the mainstream Western press. You’ll see them completely ignore the abuses of US-aligned governments while showing immense interest in alleged abuses by empire-targeted groups, often on very flimsy evidence.</p>
<p>Mock them and dismiss them when they act like they care about human rights abuses. They don’t care. They just want to make sure the abusive power structure they conduct propaganda for is the one in charge.</p>
<p><a href="https://caitlinjohnstone.com/" rel="nofollow"><em>Caitlin Johnstone</em></a> <em>is an Australian independent journalist and poet. Her articles include <a href="https://caityjohnstone.medium.com/the-un-torture-report-on-assange-is-an-indictment-of-our-entire-society-bc7b0a7130a6" rel="nofollow">The UN Torture Report On Assange Is An Indictment Of Our Entire Society</a>. She publishes a website and <a href="https://www.caitlinjohnst.one/" rel="nofollow">Caitlin’s Newsletter</a>. This article is republished with permission.</em></p>
<p>This article was first published on <a href="https://davidrobie.nz" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">Café Pacific</a>.</p>
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