FROM PHOENIX, ARIZONA

The Special Truth in Media Global Watch Bulletins on NATO's war on Serbia,
such as the one enclosed below, can also be accessed at our Web site:
www.truthinmedia.org which is being updated throughout the day.  

Issue S99-102, Day 75
----------------------------
June 6, 1999; 10:30PM EDT

HEADLINES 

Washington                  1. Photos from the March on the Pentagon

Phoenix                        2. Communist Media - Then and Now (an OpEd
                                         column by Bob Djurdjevic)

--------------------

1. Photos from the March on Pentagon

WASHINGTON, June 5 - As promised, we've now posted the photos from the June
5 March on the Pentagon at our Web site:

http://www.truthinmedia.org/Kosovo/photos-rallies.html

2. Communist Media - Then and Now (an OpEd column by Bob Djurdjevic)

PHOENIX, June 6 - Enclosed is an OpEd column which we have just sent to the
major media in the U.S. and abroad.  Thought you may be also interested...

                   ---------------------------------------------------------
                   A Political Quiz: Where Are the "Reds" Today?

                       COMMUNIST MEDIA - THEN AND NOW
                                    By Bob Djurdjevic
                   ---------------------------------------------------------

The following are two real life stories.  Everything you're about to read
happened.  Just as written.  Please read them carefully.  At the end, you
will be asked to answer some multiple-choice questions intended to cleanse
your mind of some communist-style info-pollution:

(A) There was a scent of linden tree blossoms in the air when tens of
thousands of demonstrators marched through the streets of the nation's
capital on a hot June day, stopping the traffic and shouting
anti-government slogans.  Appreciative passers showed their support for the
protesters' cause with thumbs up signs.  Tourists stopped to take pictures;
cab drivers and passing cars honked their horns; street cars saluted the
dissenters by ringing their bells.  The police mostly kept their distance
from the marchers, but were highly visible.  And sometimes violent (see a
photo in the TiM Web version of this column).

One foreign tourist on the Boulevard of the Revolution asked this writer
what the demonstration was about.  I pointed to a huge banner, written in
Serb Cyrillic, which was hanging from the top floor of the College of
Engineering building.  It read: "Down with Red Bourgeoisie!"  Upon hearing
the translation, the tourist became very frightened, and sped away toward
his hotel.

The stunning show of mass dissent was the first public demonstration
against the government since the end of the last war.  As this writer
addressed his fellow-protesters later on, he said in his speech: "We will
not be cowed by police billy-sticks, nor guns! Our cause is just, and we
shall persevere until the government yields to our demands."

The date was June 5.  The year was 1968.  The nation's capital was
Belgrade.  The country was Yugoslavia.  The system of government was a
communist dictatorship.  The "last war" referenced above was World War II.
The demonstrators were outraged Belgrade University students.  The speaker
and one of the leaders of this spontaneous student anti-government uprising
was your TiM editor.

History was being made on that Wednesday, June 5, yet the Belgrade media
remained mum about this event.  Neither the local television, nor the
radio, carried any reports about it (that we saw or heard).  The following
day, the capital city's establishment newspapers did not have even a single
story about the event which had already buzzed the whole country - through
the grapevine.  Instead, as a diversion, the Belgrade media carried reports
about anti-American demonstrations in Paris in which the students protested
the Vietnam war. 

Other major national establishment media also spiked this news story.  So
the students had no choice but to start publishing their own "samizdat" -
daily newsletters, run off overnight on old klunker-"Gestettners" at the
College of Architecture. Distribution of which in the daytime turned out to
be one of the most dangerous jobs back then.  The largest number of arrests
occurred as student-messengers of freedom and truth, which the
establishment media were trying to withhold, spread the newsletters
hand-to-hand in the Belgrade streets.  

By contrast, the American media, including the Washington Post, New York
Times and others ran major stories about the Belgrade students' protest
against Marshall Tito's communist government.
---

(B) There was a scent of linden tree blossoms in the air when tens of
thousands of demonstrators marched through the streets of the nation's
capital on a hot June day, stopping the traffic and shouting
anti-government slogans.  Appreciative passers showed their support for the
protesters' cause with thumbs up signs.  Tourists stopped to take pictures;
cab drivers and passing cars honked their horns...  The police kept their
distance from the marchers, but were highly visible.  

The stunning show of mass dissent was the first public demonstration
against the government since the end of the last war.  As this writer
addressed his fellow-protesters, he said in his speech: "I came to join you
in your righteous protest against an American government which has become
so un-American... This is a government... run by corrupt politicians, like
Bill Clinton.  And it is a government run against the interests of the
American people."

One tourist on the Memorial Bridge was offered a pamphlet explaining what
the demonstration was about.  He refused it, became very frightened, and
sped away toward his hotel.  And he wasn't even a foreign tourist.

The date was June 5.  The year was 1999.  The nation's capital was
Washington, DC.  The country was United States of America.  The system of
government was supposedly a free Republic.  The "last war" referenced above
was Vietnam.  The demonstrators were outraged American citizens.  The
speaker was the same as in the Belgrade story.

History was made on that Saturday, June 5, yet the Washington media
remained mum about this event.  Neither the local television, nor the radio
stations, carried any reports about it (that we saw or heard).  The
following day, the capital city's establishment newspapers did not have
even a single story about the event which had already buzzed the whole
country - via the (Internet) grapevine.  Instead, as a diversion, the
Washington media carried reports about a charity jog of women against
breast cancer. 

Other major national establishment media, such as the New York Times, for
example, also spiked the March on the Pentagon news story.  So the Truth in
Media and others friends of truth and liberty had no choice but to start
publishing it in their own newsletters - via the Internet.

By contrast, Serb media ran major stories about the Washington protest
against the Clinton government's war on Yugoslavia. 
----

And now, here are some important questions about the caveats from the above
two nearly identical stories:  

1.      Name the capital of the free world:

(a)     Washington
(b)     Belgrade
(c)     Neither
(d)     What's the free world? Does one need a visa to go there? Which New
World Order Comrade is responsible for issuing it - Clinton or Milosevic
or... ? (I'd really like to get off this planet and go to the free world
ASAP, please.  So, a postage-paid, self-addressed envelope is enclosed to
expedite your reply)

2. What are some significant differences between the story (A) and story (B)?

(a)     Beats me
(b)     Two demonstrations took place on two different continents
(c)     Protest in story (A) was held on a Wednesday; in story (B) on a Saturday
(d)     Speech in story (A) was delivered in Serbian; speech in story (B) was
in English
(e)     Speaker in story (B) was 31 years older than that in story (A)
(f)     Yugoslavia is a communist dictatorship with state-controlled media;
United States is a democracy which practices freedom of the speech and of
the press

The TiM readers who have chosen the (f) above are being given an "F" in
PoliSci, and removed from our list forthwith.  They will be required to
show a grade "B" or higher in a remedial PoliSci 101 class, before being
able re-subscribe to TiM.  As for their U.S. citizenship, we understand
that may be also being suspended, and could be revoked if they do not
attain the said grade after three tries.

As for all those who had chosen (a) through (e), you may now proceed to
some mind cleansing questions:

3. What are some significant differences between the Yugoslav communist
media 31 years ago, and the free and independent media in the U.S. today?

(a)     None that I can see
(b)     They lie and cheat in different languages
(c)     U.S. media brainwash more people
(d)     There was no Communist Network News (CNN) in 1968, thus Belgrade's
Politika and Moscow's Pravda had to do all heavy lifting of spreading
communist propaganda
(e)     What is the "free and independent media?"

4. What are some significant differences between the Yugoslav communist
president 31 years ago, and the U.S. president today?

(a)     Marshall Tito did inhale, and commanded an army he created; Komrade
Klinton didn't inhale (much), and dodged the draft; until he was handed an
army to command 
(b)     Marshall Tito is a dead "red" thug; Komrade Klinton is still working
on his thuggery 
(c)     Marshall Tito killed out of passion and conviction; Komrade Klinton
kills because it's good for business
(d)     Marshall Tito was a womanizer in spite of Jovanka; Komrade Klinton is
a womanizer because of Hillary
(e)     Marshall Tito acceded to Belgrade students' demands in June 1968 after
12 days of protests; Komrade Klinton is ignoring the dissenters after six
years of protests

5. What are some significant differences between the Yugoslav citizens 31
years ago, and the Americans citizens today?

(a)     Most Yugoslavs were NOT brain dead back then, despite 23 years of
communist brainwashing; the only people buying the establishment media lies
and distortions back then were either Communists, the brain dead citizens,
or those paid to "believe" it; altogether less than 12% of the population
(b)     Most Americans ARE brain dead today because of 86 years of communist
(in disguise) brainwashing (which started with establishment of the Federal
Reserve and the income tax in 1913); altogether more than 70% of the
population who support Komrade Klinton, according to the CNN
(c)     Belgrade students were willing to risk their lives for their cause;
most Americans are not even willing to risk their weekends, let alone
wallets, for their rights

6. Based on your answers to questions 3. through 5. above, name the richest
communist country in the world with the most powerful AgitProp aparatus
(AgitProp - Communist Ministry of Agitation and Propaganda) - the new Evil
Empire:

(a)     United States of America (USA)
(b)     Sjedinjene Americke Drzave (SAD)
(c)     Los Estados Unidos (EE.UU)
(d)     Soyedinyoniye Shtati Ameriki (SShA)
(e)     Vereinigte Staaten
(f)     Les �tats-Unis (EU - which is why it may be about time the European
Union should now realize what its initials really stands for)
(g)     Etc.

Now, wipe off the tears from your George Washington's family portrait.  And
yours, too, if you think we still lived in a free Republic which our
Founding Fathers had passed on to us.  

This writer just done the same. For being an anti-communist dissident in
his youth; having emigrated to a country which he thought had guaranteed
its citizens life, liberty and pursuit of happiness.  Only to find myself
having to live under communism - again.

And have to fight it -again.  And march - again. And speak out against it -
again.

The game is getting old.  The speaker is getting old.  But the fire of
truth and liberty burns in his heart as brightly as ever.  And it will,
forever... Until its very flame, even from the grave, scorches the enemies
of truth and liberty.

It was in the service of God and country that this writer spoke out on
Wednesday, June 5, 1968.  It was in his service of God and country that he
spoke out on Saturday, June 5, 1999.

Different countries.  Different continents.  Different languages.
Different protesters.  

Same enemy.  Same speaker.  Same God.  Same eternal flame.
---
ATTRIBUTION: Bob Djurdjevic is a Phoenix-based writer and founder of the
Truth in Media (www.truthinmedia.org).
----------------
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----
Bob Djurdjevic
TRUTH IN MEDIA
Phoenix, Arizona
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Visit the Truth in Media Web site http://www.truthinmedia.org/ for more
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