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HueyCobra8151 said:If, as I demonstrated, they are going to lend more weight to a few junior enlisted soldiers "embarrasing" prisoners than they will on the mass murder of such an epic proportion, that it is only surpassed in the 20th century by Soviet Russia, the Nazi Holocaust, and Pol Pot's Rwandan Genocide, then I think the "trust" is already a little bit broken.
HueyCobra8151 said:Why do we need to depend on "up-to-the-minute" "pin-point accurate" information on the war? Anything that the American public sees, those who oppose us see. That includes battle plans and troop locations. Further, when the media only shows the downside of everything, those who oppose us see that America will lose hope and withdrawl soon; as was aptly demonstrated to success in Vietnam (as per General Giap's book).
Flash said:Took your quote and another's and unfortunately combined them, sorry. The point was that how the reporters knew where to show up, it was courtesy our employer.
flynsail said:Pol Pot led the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia; wrong continent and wrong country.
It is no secret that the media is quick to produce news of any wrongdoings by a service member. We our held to higher standards, thus we will be the first ones in the spotlight if we do something questionable. Choose your rate, choose your fate.
The mass killings by Saddam's regime is old news. Why go to the presses with old news? Sure the bodies were uncovered, but that was already expected before the start of the war.
OPSEC! Learn it. Our Commanders do an excellent job of making that a priority. Sharing with the media is still censored. If I remember right, a certain reporter was removed from Iraq because of his stupidity. What was his name....Geraldo Rivera?
Flash said:I don't understand what you are trying to say. You said what I said and gave a news article proving my point.
You said bodies were found. the uncoverings of 300,000 dead people in Saddam's mass graves barely makes a ripple. They have found bodies but not 300-400k. You may hav intended it as figurative but I took it literally. Unfortunately, we will probably never know the full extent of Hussein's brutality.
HueyCobra8151 said:Straight from the link I posted earlier from the USAid Website:
"We've already discovered just so far the remains of 400,000 people in mass graves,"
HueyCobra8151 said:Hmm...I wonder why USAid didn't post a retraction on their website.
Good catch.
Greaper007 said:I feel that traditional sources are still pretty reliable especially the NY Times and The Post.
If you or a close friend of family member was involved in a well reviewed court case I'm sure you would also see glaring biases on the basis of the media. However, when taking yourself out of this equation I'm guessing you would see the media as simply reporting the facts.