Norman Solomon

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Norman Solomon

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  • The Urbanity of Evil: 20 Years After the Invasion of Iraq
  • Israel’s Liberal Supporters Are Taking Their Denial to a New Level
  • Showdown in Nevada as Democratic Establishment Targets Party Chair
  • War in Ukraine and ICBMs: The Untold Story of How They Could Blow Up the World
  • With Feinstein on Her Way Out, Can a Progressive Win Her Senate Seat?
  • Biden Wielding DNC to Guard Against Progressive Challenge
  • Biden 2024 Decision Pits the Party’s Elites Against Most Democrats
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  • The Myth of the “Moderate Republican” -- and Why It’s So Dangerous

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The Next Phase of Healthcare Apartheid

In Washington, "healthcare reform" has degenerated into a sick joke.

At this point, only spinners who've succumbed to their own vertigo could use the word "robust" to describe the public option in the healthcare bill that the House Democratic leadership has sent to the floor...

Read the full column

November 07, 2009 in Media Beat column | Permalink

Uncle Sam in Afghanistan: Good Help Is Hard to Find

Almost eight years after choosing Hamid Karzai to head the Afghan government, Uncle Sam would like to give him a pink slip. But it's not easy. And the grim fiasco of Afghanistan's last election is shadowing the next.

Another display of electioneering and voting has been ordered up from Washington. But after a chemical mix has blown a hole through the roof - with all the elements for massive fraud still in place - what's the point of throwing together the same ingredients?

This time, the spinners in Washington hope to be better prepared...

Read the full column

October 23, 2009 in Afghanistan, Media Beat column | Permalink

Starting Another Year of War in Afghanistan

October 2009 has begun with The New York Times reporting that "the president, vice president and an array of cabinet secretaries, intelligence chiefs, generals, diplomats and advisers gathered in a windowless basement room of the White House for three hours on Wednesday to chart a new course in Afghanistan."

As this month begins the ninth year of the US war effort in Afghanistan, "windowless" seems to be an apt metaphor. The structure of thought and the range of options being debated in Washington's high places are notably insular. The "new course" will be a permutation of the present course...

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October 05, 2009 in Afghanistan, Media Beat column | Permalink

Tags: Afghanistan, Obama, war

Men Toting Guns, In Kabul and Washington

For those who believe in making war, Kabul is a notable work product. After 30 years, the results are in: a devastated city.

A stale witticism calls Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai “the mayor of Kabul.” Now, not even. On block after block in the Afghan capital, AK-47s are conspicuous in the hands of men on guard against a near future. Widely seen as corrupt, inept and – with massive election fraud -- now illegitimate, Karzai’s government is losing its grip along with its credibility...

Read the full column.

September 11, 2009 in Afghanistan, Media Beat column | Permalink

A Little Girl in Kabul

Yesterday, I met a little girl named Guljumma. She's seven years old, and she lives in Kabul at a place called Helmand Refugee Camp District 5.

Guljumma talked about what happened one morning last year when she was sleeping at home in southern Afghanistan's Helmand Valley. At about 5 a.m., bombs exploded. Some people in her family died. She lost an arm.

With a soft matter-of-fact voice, Guljumma described those events...

Read the full column (which includes a photo)

Readers who wish to assist residents of refugee camps in Kabul can make a tax-deductible donation to PARSA, a nongovernmental organization that provides vocational training and employment placement for displaced Afghans.

The contributions can be made via the website afghanistan-parsa.org or by check to: PARSA, P.O. Box 31292, Seattle, WA 98103

Robert Koehler wrote September 10th, 2009 in the Chicago Tribune:

OK, let's jump now to a refugee camp in Kabul, where journalist Norman Solomon introduces us to a 7-year-old girl named Guljumma Khan, who lost her arm in a U.S. bombing raid, and whose father has gotten nowhere trying to get redress or the least support fromthe United States, the United Nations or the Afghan government to obtain medical assistance for her or take care of his family. 

Furthermore, Solomon writes, "Basics like food arrive at the camp only sporadically." The girl's father "pointed to a plastic bag containing a few pounds of rice. It was his responsibility to divide the rice for the 100 families" in the refugee camp.

"Is the U.S. government willing to really help Guljumma, who now lives each day and night in the squalor of a refugee camp?" asks Solomon. "Is the government willing to spend the equivalent of the cost of a single warhead to assist her?"

September 02, 2009 in Afghanistan, Media Beat column | Permalink

The Afghanistan Gap: Press vs. Public

This month, a lot of media stories have compared President Johnson's war in Vietnam and President Obama's war in Afghanistan. The comparisons are often valid, but a key parallel rarely gets mentioned -- the media's insistent support for the war even after most of the public has turned against it.

This omission relies on the mythology that the U.S. news media functioned as tough critics of the Vietnam War in real time, a fairy tale so widespread that it routinely masquerades as truth. In fact, overall, the default position of the corporate media is to bond with war policymakers in Washington -- insisting for the longest time that the war must go on...

Read the full column

September 02, 2009 in Afghanistan, Media Beat column | Permalink

A Progressive Challenge to Jane Harman

There are many reasons progressives will mobilize behind the campaign of Marcy Winograd, who announced on Monday that she'll challenge incumbent Congresswoman Jane Harman in the 2010 Democratic primary.   


Some will speak of Harman's pro-war record. Some will recall her support for warrantless wiretapping, followed by her irony-free indignation when it turned out that NSA snoops had taped her own phone conversations. Some will recount Harman's long public silence after being briefed on torture by the US government...

Read the full column.

May 13, 2009 in Media Beat column | Permalink

We Need a Green New Deal

In the Arctic, sea ice is melting. In the United States, houses are foreclosing.

And in Washington, the Senate is becoming a real-life Bermuda Triangle for progressive agendas.

Proposals for major limits on carbon emissions aren't getting far in the Senate, where the corporate war on the environment has an abundance of powerful allies...

Read the full column.

May 12, 2009 in Media Beat column | Permalink

Obama: Beyond Savior or Trickster

As President Obama enters his fourth month in office, two tendencies among progressive-minded Americans seem most hazardous to the political health of the country. The gist of one approach is that Obama can't do anything seriously wrong; the other is that he can't do anything seriously right.

Among the tendencies, the first is more widespread and more dangerous. All kinds of atrocious policies -- from Lyndon Johnson's war on Vietnam to Jimmy Carter's midterm swerve rightward to Bill Clinton's neoliberal measures such as NAFTA, "welfare reform" and Wall Street deregulation -- were calamities facilitated by acquiescence or mild dissent from many left-leaning Democrats...

 Read the full column.

April 23, 2009 in Media Beat column | Permalink

Tags: Obama

Getting a Death Grip on Memory

A headline in The New York Times announced a few days ago: "Brain Researchers Open Door to Editing Memory." This news ran above the fold on the front page.

"Suppose scientists could erase certain memories by tinkering with a single substance in the brain," the article began...

Read the full column.

April 10, 2009 in Media Beat column | Permalink

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