https://monthlyreview.org/2019/07/01/mr-071-03-2019-07_0/
The centralization of ownership of the private media in the United States and elsewhere has become increasingly pronounced, at the same time that its reporting has become increasingly one-sided and monolithic. My blog seeks to expose this lack of objectivity and present alternative ideas that point in the direction of much-needed fundamental change.
Wednesday, July 31, 2019
Democratic Party Debate Sidetracks Issues of U.S. Interventionism
In last night’s Democratic Party debate, the hosts of CNN
devoted just minutes to the issue of foreign policy. Just when Elizabeth Warren
was explaining why she would renounce the threat of using nuclear weapons for preemptive
purposes, one of the CNN moderators insisted on moving on to another issue,
leaving her with her words in her mouth. This is part of a well-established
pattern. Open the pages of liberal magazines and you will see very little in
the way of articles on foreign issues, other than human rights and perhaps
issues related to ecology. A few weeks ago, I participated in a discussion in
Vermont of friends of Monthly Review who discussed the latest MR issue on the
topic of imperialism in commemoration of the fiftieth anniversary of the
publication of Harry Magdoff’s “The Age of Imperialism: The Economics of U.S.
Foreign Policy.” Various writers on the left including (surprisingly) David Harvey
has declared imperialism to be a non-issue in the 21st century age
of globalization. Thus writers across the political spectrum play down the
topic of U.S. world-wide domination. As
last night’s Democratic Party debate demonstrated, it is much more kosha to
talk of universal health, free college tuition and the $15 dollar minimum wage,
than to raise issues related to U.S. interventionism and domination and the
military-industrial complex. The reason can be reduced to the following: super-profits,
the bedrock of imperialism, are essential to the maintenance and survival of
the capitalist system.
https://monthlyreview.org/2019/07/01/mr-071-03-2019-07_0/
https://monthlyreview.org/2019/07/01/mr-071-03-2019-07_0/
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