Another story of Syria
4/9/13 11:32Jon Stewart returned last night, and the talk of the day was, of course, Syria (and he, of course, tried to inject a little humor into the situation.) However, the interview segment with which he closed out the show was anything but humorous, bringing in Andrew Harper, the head of the United Nations Refugee Agency in Jordan. This is the important story, in my opinion: the story of millions of people displaced from their homes, many of them women and children. It's also the story of nations such as Jordan who are doing what they can to provide a safe haven for some of these people, and the incredible work being done by the UN, an organization that is so often derided by folks here in the U.S., but which does certain things very well; this is one of them.
Any discussion of our response to the situation in Syria should involve the discussion of how we can help these people. While we're talking about what message we should send to the Assad regime, or whether or not we should act militarily, and in which way, here is an obvious human crisis where we could all put our money where our mouths are. I'd prefer to see this story given the lion's share of airtime on our cable news stations, over constant redundant talking heads debating back and forth on questions of chemical weapons and factions and military responses and political calculus.
Here's the interview, in two parts:
If the embedding doesn't work for some reason, here are direct links:
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-september-3-2013/exclusive---andrew-harper-extended-interview-pt--1
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-september-3-2013/exclusive---andrew-harper-extended-interview-pt--2
Any discussion of our response to the situation in Syria should involve the discussion of how we can help these people. While we're talking about what message we should send to the Assad regime, or whether or not we should act militarily, and in which way, here is an obvious human crisis where we could all put our money where our mouths are. I'd prefer to see this story given the lion's share of airtime on our cable news stations, over constant redundant talking heads debating back and forth on questions of chemical weapons and factions and military responses and political calculus.
Here's the interview, in two parts:
If the embedding doesn't work for some reason, here are direct links:
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-september-3-2013/exclusive---andrew-harper-extended-interview-pt--1
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-september-3-2013/exclusive---andrew-harper-extended-interview-pt--2
(no subject)
Date: 5/9/13 18:45 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 5/9/13 19:12 (UTC)It's important to dehumanize the suffering, it keeps the charade going.
(frozen) (no subject)
Date: 5/9/13 20:28 (UTC)I recommend to stop making those AND NEW people suffering.
I admit, it's a hard thing to encompass for an ordinary brain...
(frozen) (no subject)
Date: 5/9/13 20:44 (UTC)(frozen) (no subject)
Date: 5/9/13 20:52 (UTC)> (http://talk-politics.livejournal.com/1762258.html?thread=140457682#t140457682) it's all about learning. It's possibly not one of your favorites.
You were warned (http://talk-politics.livejournal.com/1751791.html?thread=139713519#t139713519) that you were treading very close to the precipice. Several (http://talk-politics.livejournal.com/1741615.html?thread=138822447#t138822447) times. Multiple (http://talk-politics.livejournal.com/1720949.html?thread=137063029#t137063029) times, actually. Unfortunately, you didn't realize how dangerously close you were.
So here we go again.
I think you'll eventually begin to realize that these will be coming at an exponentially frequent rate for you.
Bye for another week, then.