Recent ZBloggers
- Ian Sinclair
- Don Fitz
- Michael McGehee
- Michael Albert
- Paul Street
- Peter Bohmer
- Jerry Fresia
- Kim Scipes
- Carl Davidson
- Gar Lipow
Recent Sustainer Blogs
Something about George Monbiot
By David Peterson at May 25, 2012
About George Monbiot’s “My fight may be hopeless, but it is as necessary as ever” (The Guardian, May 22), here is one important rejoinder which I’ve been meaning to take-up since the commentary first appeared, but am just getting around to now.... (More) Comments (0)
S&P Downgrades the United States?
By David Peterson at Aug 08, 2011
"creditworthiness" really means the political commitment of Congress and the Administration to cater to elites... (More) Comments (0)
Srebrenica-Related Graves Through 2002
By David Peterson at Jul 22, 2011
Somewhere between 1,919 and 1,985 is a reasonable range of estimates for the number of individual persons recovered from the Srebrenica-related mass graves through 2002.... (More) Comments (0)
By David Peterson at Jun 17, 2011
When the U.S.-based researchers Christian Davenport and Allan Stam had concluded their last assessment of mortality rates in Rwanda during the period of extreme violence from April through July, 1994, ... (More) Comments (0)
By David Peterson at Apr 08, 2011
A friend of mine just sent me a Fox News Poll that was conducted immediately before the March 19 start of the U.S. war on Libya. ... (More) Comments (2)
More Elementary Thoughts on Libya
By David Peterson at Mar 24, 2011
Michael: I believe that your " Very Elementary Thoughts on Thinking about Now" (March 22) had already been overtaken by events before you ever posted the piece. ... (More) Comments (5)
By David Peterson at Dec 16, 2010
When citizens of foreign countries are denied their democratic rights, when they become the victims of human rights abuses by their own states, and when their actions to secure their rights are met with even greater abuse, the likelihood that the establishment U.S. media will inform us about their fate is much greater when the state causing them harm ranks among the "enemies" of the United States, than when it is an ally of the United States, or a client doing its bidding. ... (More) Comments (0)
By David Peterson at Dec 16, 2010
"'[B]randing' technology is a tool of psychological manipulation," one Kazakhstani analyst observes, where the discrediting of elections via allegations of fraud, combined with the "losers' ability to mobilize the discontented voters" and the feedback transmitted to targeted countries from Western leaders and media helped to bring about the rapid "transformation of political regimes in some of the Soviet successor states...."... (More) Comments (0)
By David Peterson at Dec 16, 2010
While the causes of human rights and democracy in Iran caught the liberal U.S. media's attention in 2009-2010, human rights and democracy in Honduras did not. But when we push our inquiry even further out into allegedly left opinion, beyond the New York Times and MSNBC, we find that the same pattern predominates.... (More) Comments (2)
By David Peterson at Dec 16, 2010
It might seem counter-intuitive that a State Department-needs model could predict not only how the New York Times responds to political upheavals in foreign countries, but also how the Western left responded to a pair of upheavals such as those which transpired in Iran and Honduras 2009-2010—but it does.... (More) Comments (0)
By David Peterson at Oct 24, 2010
When a young Iranian woman was shot dead by the security forces of her own government (allegedly -- she was shot by a sniper, after all), and digital images of her death were loaded onto the Internet and then YouTube, they "rocketed around the world," ... (More) Comments (0)
The Politics of Genocide - Two
By David Peterson at Aug 14, 2010
In his 2006 textbook, Genocide: A Critical Introduction, the Canadian academic Adam Jones admits to having been "severely shaken by the holocaust in Rwanda in 1994;" he even titled one of this textbook's chapters "Holocaust in Rwanda." ... (More) Comments (0)
By David Peterson at Jul 04, 2010
Edward Herman and David Peterson have written a very short book that's not nearly short enough. It should never have seen the light of day.... (More) Comments (2)
By David Peterson at May 10, 2010
Elsewhere we have written that the breakup of Yugoslavia “may have been the most misrepresented series of major events over the past twenty years.”[1] But the far bloodier and more destructive invasions, insurgencies, and civil wars that have ravaged several countries in the Great Lakes region of Central Africa over the same years may have been subjected to even greater misrepresentation.... (More) Comments (2)
By David Peterson at Feb 25, 2010
In the establishment U.S. media, perhaps the least reported (as in most heavily "censored") foreign story of 2009 turned on the question: What do Iran's 70 million citizens really want? ... (More) Comments (0)


