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France still on fire, media chooses not to cover

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by Svpernaut, Nov 18, 2005.

  1. Svpernaut

    Svpernaut Member

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    Why does this fail to get media coverage?

    http://www.washtimes.com/op-ed/20051116-100222-2526r.htm
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    France still on fire
    TODAY'S EDITORIAL
    November 17, 2005

    Civil unrest continues in France even though media coverage in the United States suggests the riots are finished, the violence subsided and peace restored. Although the situation has improved considerably from its peak -- Nov. 5-7, when more than 3,600 cars were destroyed -- the dangerous situation still exists in the Paris suburbs, despite increased police authority, curfews and other restrictions. The number of cars destroyed Monday night, 215 according to French police, is, in fact, more cars than were destroyed during the first week of rioting. The unrest has by no means been quelled.

    A week before the riots started, Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy explained to the newspaper Le Monde the culture of violence that pervades the Parisian suburbs, claiming that each night 20 to 40 cars were torched. If 20 to 40 cars a night is the baseline, much more progress needs to be made before the unrest is fully under control. Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin noted there was work left to do, telling parliament, "the situation remains serious in a great number of districts. We cannot accept that more than 200 cars burn each night."

    Focus in the press was quick to shift from the challenge of restoring order in the destitute suburbs around Paris to speculation of the underlying causes. The American media consistently overlooked or disregarded, however, the potential Islamist threat, even during the height of the riots. Many of the rioters are second- or third-generation Muslims whose ancestors immigrated from North Africa.

    Not until nearly two weeks after the rioting started was the state of emergency declared. Only this Monday did President Jacques Chirac finally hold his first national address -- after 18 consecutive nights of rioting had reportedly destroyed 8,500 vehicles and 100 public buildings. Is this tepid response indicative of how the French authorities regard the balance of power between France and its Muslim communities?

    Mr. Chirac requested an extension of the belatedly declared national state of emergency, moving its expiration date from Nov. 21 to the middle of February. Parliament passed the bill yesterday. Neither ABC, CBS nor NBC covered the president's address (although CBS found three minutes to air the segment "Cross Country Trip Sheds Light On U.S. Obesity Crisis"), and the speech was buried by the New York Times. Until order has truly been restored, this disregard is unacceptable.

    Because the problem has moved out of the Paris city-center and back into the suburbs, the lackadaisical attitude seems to have returned. But it was this complacency on the part of the French government with regard to the problems stewing in the outer rings of Paris that allowed, if not encouraged, the violent outburst of the past three weeks. This is an ongoing crisis that requires ongoing international media attention.
     
  2. FranchiseBlade

    Supporting Member

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    My guess is because most people here aren't really interested in France. Recent events such as the cherry picking of intel controversey knocked it out of the news cycle.
     
  3. Sishir Chang

    Sishir Chang Member

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    The US population and media tends to have a very short attention span particularly in regard to issues where America and Americans aren't very involved. For instance how much news has there been on the Pakistan Earthquake recently even though there are still people dying from it along with ongoing hardship.
     
  4. insane man

    insane man Member

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    people are still dying in pakistan, the media chooses not to cover, and the joke of the a newspapers called washington times doesn't rant about it.

    the media basically never covered the landslides in guatemala, yet i dont see a lament in the washington times about it.
     
  5. MadMax

    MadMax Member

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    recent fighting in afghanistan is as bad as it's been since we invaded in 2001, i understand.
     
  6. Saint Louis

    Saint Louis Member

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    Reminds me of the episdoe of the X-Files where cigarette smoking man is being asked his opinion on certain subjects in a meeting. (I'm going on memory here so don't jump all over me if it isn't perfectly word for word).

    Aide " What about the Balkan conflict."

    Cig-man "America doesn't care."

    Aide "What aboue the Oscars?"

    Cig-man "I don't care."

    Aide "What about the Super Bowl?"

    Cig-man "Anyone but Buffalo."

    Aide "Buffalo really wants it this year."

    Cig-Man "As long as I'm alive, Buffalo never wins the Super Bowl".

    So is the Cig-man Dick Cheney or Karl Rove?
     
  7. Invisible Fan

    Invisible Fan Member

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    The Invention of the remote control has been great for people who don't give a crap about things more than 5 thousand miles away.

    But it has been great for pretty women and children, preferably Caucasian, who turn up missing.
     
  8. tigermission1

    tigermission1 Member

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    As I have said many, many times before: in order to get the real news and stay informed, you need to go beyond the crap we call MSM in America.
     

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