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Top 5 Stories You Missed in 2016 While Everyone Mourned Dead Celebrities

by Jake Anderson at the Anti-Media.

First of all, let me confess that I shed some tears when David Bowie died. I know all 20+ of his albums by heart, and it felt like a piece of my childhood had disappeared. A few years ago, when Philip Seymour Hoffman died, I also cried. It’s a strange emotional symbiosis that occurs when you mourn for a deceased celebrity, and the point of this article is not to cast aspersions. However, 2016 has basically become known as the year a bunch of celebrities died, so there’s no better time to assess the phenomenon (and make sure it doesn’t distract us from other issues).

Over Christmas weekend, millions of people mourned the loss of George Michael and Carrie Fisher. They were advocates for gay rights and mental illness, respectively, and the nation reeled from the passing of two beloved iconic figures. Earlier this year, music legend Prince passed away, devastating tens of millions of fans for whom the musician represented everything from their adolescence in the 1980s to political statements of gender-bending. The list of celebrities who died in 2016 is extensive and, for some, unnerving.

The deaths of celebrities are usually followed by a cathartic release of collective emotion, a shared sense of loss. This kind of ritualistic public funeral pyre has become more heated with the rise of social media. It’s not necessarily unhealthy or shallow. However, when the topic of celebrity deaths becomes one of the biggest news stories of the year, we reach a dangerous impasse of cognitive dissonance.

The past year’s fascination with celebrity deaths may speak to displaced and deep-seated feelings of loss, helplessness, and anger. Frustrated by our inability to control global affairs — or even the nuances of our own supposed representative democracy — we seem to need to grasp hold of instances of collective loss in the realm of popular culture. Consumer culture and news media disenfranchisement have done such a comprehensive job of dehumanizing and alienating us from community and selfhood that celebrity deaths are the closest we get to embracing our own mortality and the precariousness of the human race. It’s much easier to post a meme about the death of a pop culture icon than to have a nuanced discussion on climatic genocide or the Syrian refugee crisis.

The point of this article is not to suggest there’s something psychologically wrong with mourning the loss of a beloved celebrity. However, it’s important to remember that when we allow a single person’s death to dominate multiple news cycles, major world events continue to affect thousands — or even millions — of people. We should be at least equally upset, if not more so, by the following issues that evaded the pop culture radar beam:

Obama Quietly Signs The “Countering Disinformation And Propaganda Act” Into Law

This may be one of the most important news stories of the year, and its passage flew completely under the radar. Why? Because the government squeezed it into an NDAA omnibus bill over Christmas weekend. The resulting Countering Disinformation and Propaganda Act is Orwellian to the point that it would be hilarious if it weren’t terrifying. The government simply changed the name ‘The Ministry of Truth’ to Global Engagement Center, which will be an international hub for disseminating “fact-based narratives” and suppressing alternative mediaZerohedge explains:

•   “The first priority is developing a whole-of-government strategy for countering THE foreign propaganda and disinformation being waged against us and our allies by our enemies. The bill would increase the authority, resources, and mandate of the Global Engagement Center to include state actors like Russia and China, as well as non-state actors. The Center will be led by the State Department, but with the active senior level participation of the Department of Defense, USAID, the Broadcasting Board of Governors, the Intelligence Community, and other relevant agencies. The Center will develop, integrate, and synchronize whole-of-government initiatives to expose and counter foreign disinformation operations by our enemies and proactively advance fact-based narratives that support U.S. allies and interests.

•   “Second, the legislation seeks to leverage expertise from outside government to create more adaptive and responsive U.S. strategy options. The legislation establishes a fund to help train local journalists and provide grants and contracts to NGOs, civil society organizations, think tanks, private sector companies, media organizations, and other experts outside the U.S. government with experience in identifying and analyzing the latest trends in foreign government disinformation techniques. This fund will complement and support the Center’s role by integrating capabilities and expertise available outside the U.S. government into the strategy-making process. It will also empower a decentralized network of private sector experts and integrate their expertise into the strategy-making process.”

In non-Newspeak language, the Act will allow the government to exert influence over any media outlet it labels “propaganda.” While it’s impossible this early on to say whether or not this will severely damage the 1st Amendment, given their preoccupation with “fake news,” it’s hard to imagine the government won’t use the legislation for draconian purposes. The law calls for substantial spending to facilitate counter-propaganda in order to ensure the government’s approved “fact-based narratives” (whatever that means) dominate news cycles and overwhelm counter-narratives proffered by alternative media outlets. This almost ensures that journalists who question the status quo and aren’t beholden to paychecks from multinational corporations will face an uphill battle in covering government corruption and disseminating leaks and reports online.

The United States Has Declared War on the Homeless

Let’s be clear, the war on the homeless began a long time ago when neoliberal trade agreements and bipartisan economic legislation dumped millions of people into the streets without any recourse or path to recovery. They have since doubled down and further criminalized homelessness, embedding spikes under overpasses, removing blankets from people sleeping on the street, breaking down and destroying tents encamped on public property, and even engaging in physical violence against homeless people.

To read more about how our country is punishing the most vulnerable among us, both locally and at the federal level, read more here.

Drug overdose deaths have surpassed gun deaths and car accidents

Earlier this month, the Center for Disease Control (CDC) reported that drug overdose deaths soared in 2015. Over 55,000 Americans died from drug overdoses, and the primary cause of the surge was prescription painkillers. According to CBS News, drug overdose deaths exceeded both gun deaths and car accident fatalities.

As reported by Anti-Media:

“The staggering figure comes even as the federal government has stepped up its efforts to combat opiate addiction, which have apparently failed to curb the health crisis brought on largely by pharmaceutical companies, the FDA, and overzealous doctors.”

The surge also coincides with efforts by the DEA to crack down on a medicinal plant called kratom, which is used by patients trying to ween themselves off of painkillers. It is also used by people who seek to alleviate physical pain and by people suffering from depression, anxiety, and variety of other mental illnesses. With the medicinal benefits of marijuana already in the crosshairs of both federal and state government in a decades-long War on Drugs that has incarcerated hundreds of thousands of people — ruining lives and tearing families apart in the process — merely for using and selling an innocuous herb that has countless medicinal benefits, it appears nothing short of fascistic. Meanwhile, as the government continues to crackdown on healthy alternatives to opioid painkillers, patients continue to overdose and die while Big Pharma lines its pockets.

The United States Has Played A Critical Role in the Syrian Humanitarian Crisis

Amid the multitude of celebrity deaths and other pop culture distractions that are given disproportionate attention, this year also saw more horrifying military strikes by the United States and U.S.-led coalitions in Syria. In November, ten civilians were killed when U.S. warplanes bombed a cotton mill in northeastern Syria. Twenty more civilians were killed by an aerial strike on Raqqa during the U.S. presidential elections. In July of 2016 alone, 1,289 civilians, including 263 children and 191 women, died from military attacks. Overall, during the nation’s five-year civil war, an estimated 400,000 people have perished.

Meanwhile, the United States, maneuvering in its proxy war with Russia, continues to dump money and weapons into the hands of rebel groups who seed chaos and sectarian violence. Read more about the confluence of factors causing the historic humanitarian crisis in Syria.

Media Blackout on the Dakota Access Pipeline Blockade

One of the most important stories of the year — possibly of the decade — received virtually no attention from the mainstream media for the duration of its development. The efforts by the government to dismantle a peaceful blockade by the Lakota Sioux — who along with a coalition of other indigenous tribes and activist groups are opposed to the $3.8 billion Dakota Access Pipeline — resulted in terrible injuries. Our government showed its true colors in siding with the Dakota Access LLC over indigenous people who sought only to protect their ancestral lands. Militarized police converged to expose who our government truly answers to: corporations. Noticeably missing was the mainstream media. Read more here….


Read more http://theantimedia.org/5-stories-missed-2016-celebrities/

Last modified on Wednesday, 04 January 2017 17:12

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