These days, whenever you check out the news, it seems to be war, war, war — a focus today for TomDispatch regular Nan Levinson, author of a notable antiwar book, War Is Not a Game: The New Antiwar Soldiers and the Movement They Built. I mean, I just randomly looked at the Washington Post homepage and the top headline of that second was: “More than 100 killed in Gaza City, officials say; Israel cites stampede at aid drop.” However tomorrow’s news may explain those grim deaths, before they’re swept away by yet more of the same, they only add to the 30,000 or more Palestinians already slaughtered (a figure that itself is undoubtedly a significant underestimate). Similarly, the 700-odd Gazans reportedly wounded in that incident only add to another nightmarish, if largely unknown total. And within just a few days, that death and destruction will undoubtedly have been shoved aside by whatever comes next, instantly becoming yesterday’s news about Israel’s devastation of Gaza.
Oh, and on that same Post page of headlines, if you skip the ones about the Biden/Trump trips — oops, “dueling visits”! — to our increasingly militarized southern border, the next in line might, in a sense, be far more disheartening: “Putin threatens nuclear response to NATO troops if they go to Ukraine.” I mean, 78 years after those two atomic bombs were dropped on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, imagine that the possibility of nuclear war has now become an everyday matter for the president of Russia, “threatening retaliatory strikes against the West in the event of attacks on Russian territory” and adding that his country’s “strategic nuclear forces are in a state of full readiness.”
Ho-hum, what’s new? Slaughter, nukes, horrors galore, and it doesn’t seem to stop anymore, does it? Ever. And all of this, mind you, is just sweeping into the distant past, the staggering casualties my own country inflicted on this planet in this century with its never-ending “war on terror.” And yes, all of it keeps us in a distinctly human version of hell, but as Levinson suggests today, a kind of reportorial heaven. Tom
Is There a Journalism That Doesn’t Love a War?
Covering Two Too-Long Wars
War, what is it good for? Well, the media for starters.
Shortly after the Biden administration responded to the killing of three American soldiers in a drone attack on a base in Jordan by bombing 85 Iran-connected targets in Iraq and Syria, the Columbia Journalism Review (CJR) asked in a headline: “Is the press dragging America to war again?”
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