Opinion The West has invented a magic phrase to hide its geopolitical games

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The West has invented a magic phrase to hide its geopolitical games​

The elites and mainstream media of the West are so addicted to double standards that spotting yet another one is hardly news. These are the people who have just given us genocide re-labeled as self-defense,” who abhor spheres of influence except when they are global and belong to Washington (with a sidekick role for Brussels), and who insist on the rule of law while threatening the International Criminal Court if it so much as dares look their way.

Yet there is something special about the latest case of Western ‘values’ schizophrenia, this time about the concept of ‘civil society’ in conjunction with two political struggles, one in the US and the other in the Caucasus nation of Georgia.

In the US, students, professors, and others are protesting against the ongoing Israeli genocide of the Palestinians and against American participation in that crime. In Georgia, the issue at stake is a proposed law to impose transparency on the sprawling and unusually powerful NGO sector. Its critics denounce this law as a government power grab and as somehow ‘Russian’ (which, spoiler alert, it is not).

The very different reactions to these two cases of intense public contention by the West’s political and mainstream media elites show that, for them, there are really two kinds of civil society: There is the ‘vibrant’ variety, with ‘vibrant’ an almost comically ossified cliche, used by the Washington Post Editorial Board, in EU statements, and by White House spokesman John Kirby, to name only a few. It is almost as if someone had sent around a memo on proper terminology. This vibrant, good kind of civil society is to be celebrated and supported.

And then there is the wrong kind of civil society, which must be shut down. US President Joe Biden has just expressed the essence of this attitude: “We are a civil society, and order must prevail.” This is, of course, a bizarre misreading of the idea of civil society. Ideally, its key features are autonomy from the state and the capacity to establish an effective counterweight, and even, if necessary, to offer resistance to it. Putting the emphasis on “order” instead is ignorant or dishonest. In reality, civil society makes no sense, even as an ideal, if it is not granted a substantial degree of freedom to be disorderly. A civil society that is so orderly as to disturb no one is a fig leaf for enforced conformism and – at least – incipient authoritarianism.

But let’s set aside the mundane fact that Joe Biden says things that display ignorance or duplicity. What is more important is that ‘order,’ in his usage, is a transparent euphemism: According to the New York Times, over the last two weeks, over 2,300 protesters have been arrested on almost 50 American campuses. Often, arrests have been made with demonstrative brutality. Police have used riot gear, stun grenades, and rubber bullets. They have assaulted students as well as some professors with massive aggression.

The most well-known individual case at this moment is that of Annelise Orleck, a professor at Dartmouth College. Orleck is 65 years old and attempted to protect students from police violence. In response, she was slammed into the ground in the worst MMA style, knelt on by beefy policemen, who clearly lack elementary decency, and dragged away with whiplash trauma, as if she had been in a serious car accident. Ironically (if that’s the word), Orleck is Jewish and, at one time, used to be the head of her universities program in Jewish Studies.

In another, extremely disturbing development, at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), a violent police crackdown – including use of rubber bullets – was preceded by a vicious attack by so-called pro-Israeli counter-protesters.” In reality, this was a mob out to inflict maximum harm on the anti-genocide protesters, who, a New York Times investigation has found, maintained an almost entirely defensive stance. University security forces and the police failed to intervene for hours, letting the “counter-protesters” run wild. That is a pattern every historian of the rise of fascism in Weimar Germany will recognize: First the SA mobs of the rising Nazi party had a free hand to assault the Left, then the police would go after the same Left as well.

That is the real face of the “order” that President Biden and all too many in the West’s establishments endorse. But only at home. When it comes to the unrest in Georgia, their tone is entirely different. Make no mistake, there has been substantial violence – and what Biden would denounce as “chaos” if it happened in America – in Georgia. Indeed, while the US anti-genocide protesters have not been violent but disorderly (yes, those are very different things), the protesters in Georgia have used genuine violence, for instance, when they tried to storm the parliament.

Nothing remotely comparable has been done by the US anti-genocide protesters. Regarding the trespassing and causing public inconveniences that so agitate the US president, there has been plenty of that in the Georgian capital, Tbilisi. By Biden’s logic a protest must not even disturb or delay a campus graduation ceremony. What would that imply for blocking a central traffic node in the capital city?

Don’t get me wrong: The Georgian protesters report violent police tactics used against them as well, and, more broadly, the rights or wrongs of their cause, or the draft law they reject are beyond the scope of this article. I do believe they are used by the West for a geopolitical play Color-Revolution-style, but that is not the point.

The pertinent point here is, once again, staggering Western hypocrisy: A West that thinks trying to storm parliament is part of having a “vibrant” civil society in Georgia, cannot mass-arrest and brutalize anti-genocide protesters on its own campuses. That is, of course, also the message of Georgian prime minister Irakli Kobakhidze, who clearly has had enough of the absurdity.

In a resonant post on X, Kobakhidze objected forcefully to American “false statements” about the controversial draft law as well as, more importantly, US interference in Georgian politics in general. The prime minister, in essence and very plausibly for the non-naive, named and shamed Washington’s habit of trying out a “color revolution” at regular intervals. Finally, he reminded his American interlocutors “about a brutal crackdown of the students’ protest rally in New York City.” With that phrase clearly standing for the totality of police repression against young Americans who object to genocide, Kobakhidze turned the tables.

And that is, perhaps, the most intriguing take-away from this fresh but not unprecedented episode of the long-running saga of Western double standards. To find condemnation and suppression of almost entirely peaceful protests against genocide, while more violent protests against a law to regulate NGOs are being celebrated – that is shameful but not new. As before, geopolitics trumps ‘values.’

But ‘civil society’ used to be a key concept for projecting Western soft power by, in essence, subversion and manipulation. It was so useful because its ideological charge was so powerful that its mere invocation stifled resistance. Now, by displaying how it handles its own civil society at home, the West is ruining yet another useful illusion.
 
I could tell before clicking it would be Russian propaganda
It is Russian propaganda, and Russians are generally far better than the West at it.
Also, all great propaganda contains a sizable truth core, in this specific case, basically the whole article is truthful.
The only thing that is missing is global context, i.e. Russia and China also having similarly cynical geopolitical interests.
 
Slavs really need to stop thinking they're all natural born poets and authors. They write like the biggest pseuds on the face of the earth. I can't take any commie or East bloc fetishist whining about police brutality or muh heckin protesterinos seriously.
 
Yeah the US came up with a magic phrase that made war crimes ok more than a decade ago: "Obama says its ok"
Remember folks when Bush starts a war on false premises it's bad, when Obama continues the war and drone strikes innocents, well then that's just peachy. Nixon spying on political opponents? Verboten! Obama? 'Sall good homie. Shit like that made it clear there's only two parties in the US, the deep state and everyone else. TPD.
I was willing to give Bush the benefit of the doubt on Saddam and his WMD program. After all, Saddam had been screwing around with the weapons inspection process and shooting at planes in the No-Fly Zone for a decade, had been funding terror attacks (to the point that he was giving cash to the families of suicide-bombers), and had used chemical weapons against the Iranians and Kurds, so it wasn't real far fetched that he would still be trying to get them. But once it became clear he didn't have them and it had all been the CIA making up the evidence on Cheney and Rumsfeld's orders heads should have rolled in DC, swiftly, mercilessly, and publicly.
 
That trying to shutdown an already violent protest with force is somehow wrong.

No, if you block people from commuting, you're not protesting, you're a nuisance and deserve to be shot.by pellets.
Okay, and the author of the article isn't saying that's wrong. He's pointing out the hypocrisy of the people in power who will say it's ok for the floyd riots but send in the truncheons when it's college students protesting Israel.
 
The other one:
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that does whatever Washington says
Since when? The only nation in Europe that goes along with us is the UK, but they've been buck broken since the end of WW2. The Germans are a bunch of BPD cunts who can't decide between being embarrassed that they tried or seething that they lost ever since 1945 and the relationship between Paris and D.C. has been what one might euphemistically call "strained" ever since the Quasi-War, and that's on top of the French being notoriously two-faced and self-interested. I am thoroughly convinced French only became the language of diplomacy because people needed to know what the French were trying to pull on them.
Okay, and the author of the article isn't saying that's wrong. He's pointing out the hypocrisy of the people in power who will say it's ok for the floyd riots but send in the truncheons when it's college students protesting Israel.
While simultaneously glossing over what Moscow does. Apparently its entirely okay to insist half of Europe belongs to you so long as you mutter the magic words "muh sphere of influence". Never mind that the people in that "historical sphere of influence" have hated and resented Moscow's control over them, no matter what flag was flying there.
 
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While simultaneously glossing over what Moscow does. Apparently its entirely okay to insist half of Europe belongs to you so long as you mutter the magic words "muh sphere of influence". Never mind that the people in that "historical sphere of influence" have hated and resented Moscow's control over them, no matter what flag was flying there.
I get that it's propaganda, but the reason it's effective is that the only defense to what's said in the article by people still bafflingly loyal to the U.S. government is "but you're hypocrites too!", and to be blunt again this author would've done a better job point to the Floyd riots rather than some spook op in Georgia.

Frankly I don't get what drives seemingly reflexive responses like yours to articles or statements like this, why the hell is the U.S. government - or any western power - deserving of rhetorical defense from its populace at this point? The cocksuckers who benefit from responses such as these fucking hate you and have made that abundantly clear, an attack at their character/credibility has fucking nothing to do with you and you have no reason to muster such a defense as if it does.
 
It literally is tho. 34k dead women and children is just the start.
35,000 of 2 million(population of the strip) is 1.75% or .7% of the 5 million population of "Palestine."
That's a shitty attempt at a genocide after 8 months of war, almost like it's just propaganda.
 
I get that it's propaganda, but the reason it's effective is that the only defense to what's said in the article by people still bafflingly loyal to the U.S. government is "but you're hypocrites too!", and to be blunt again this author would've done a better job point to the Floyd riots rather than some spook op in Georgia.

Frankly I don't get what drives seemingly reflexive responses like yours to articles or statements like this, why the hell is the U.S. government - or any western power - deserving of rhetorical defense from its populace at this point? The cocksuckers who benefit from responses such as these fucking hate you and have made that abundantly clear, an attack at their character/credibility has fucking nothing to do with you and you have no reason to muster such a defense as if it does.
Because pointing out the dishonesty possessed by the other side instead of fellating them makes guys like you seethe for whatever reason. Moscow's always gone and deflected criticism with non sequiturs such as the "And you lynch Negroes!" claims during the Cold War whenever the USA would point out their constant human rights abuses. This is yet more of that same smug autofellatio. "But but... feds bad!" does not automatically validate Moscow's claims, especially when said claims are the result of projection designed to make big-brained skeptics like you nod in agreement, blinded purely by your own disgust towards your own nation's leadership. Am I not allowed to hate both? Does my dislike of D.C's various glow ops obligate me to agree with Russia?
 
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Because pointing out the dishonesty possessed by the other side
What "other side"?

This is what I mean.
instead of fellating them
Go ahead and point out to me in my posts where I'm supposedly lauding praise at Russia Today or the country it's named after.
"But but... feds bad!" does not automatically validate Moscow's claims, especially when said claims are the result of projection designed to make big-brained skeptics like you nod in agreement, blinded purely by your own disgust towards your own nation's leadership. Am I not allowed to hate both? Does my dislike of D.C's various glow ops obligate me to agree with Russia?
What part of your brain is broken that you think I love Russia because I don't immediately activate like an MKULTRA victim as you have here when the U.S. government is rightfully criticized by a foreign press outlet? This is two governments that hate you, you have no horse in this race - the criticisms written in this article aren't some personal attack directed at you no matter how much your apparent conditioning has left you with a subconscious itch to rise to the defense of our baleful government.

That you apparently don't see your own projection would be funny if you weren't being a belligerent ass about it.
 
Wait till they learn you can have an entire bioweapons program as long as you label it ‘defence against bioweapons.’
They already have an invasion re-labeled as self-defence, so they're clearly taking notes.
 
Since when? The only nation in Europe that goes along with us is the UK
The part you quoted was directly about the UK!

But as you then raise Germany, I'd say it has certainly been acting against its own citizens interests with the sanctions against Russia demanded by the USA. Soaring energy costs have been terrible for German industry and regular folks. And the fact that Germany hasn't made a peep about the undoubtedly Washington-backed destruction of their pipeline project with Russia is its own form of compliance, too.
 
"No it's not genocide, it's just mass murder" isn't exactly all that convincing.
When nations do it, it's called "war." The point wasn't to convince anyone of anything, the propaganda is too heavy for that.
It's just a shitty attempt at "genocide" when you can't hit 2% of the population in 8 months.
 
What exactly did the guy get wrong in the article?

^Seconded.

If Charles Manson said we should eat plenty of vegetables as part of a balanced diet, some of you retards would boycott salad.

Just because RT gets your panties in a twist by publishing shit that hurts your feelings, doesn't make it incorrect. Don't attack the messenger, spell out what is actually incorrect and source that shit. If western media wasn't such a blatant propaganda arm of the US intel community we wouldn't have to rely on "unsavory sources" to get accurate info.
 
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