Why does American journalist Abby Martin do propaganda for socialist murderers?
You've heard about Russian propaganda. Martin once worked for RT, Russia's state-run news network.
Now she's got a similar gig at teleSUR, an anti-capitalist, pro-socialist news network funded by Latin American leftists.
I'd never heard of teleSUR before researching this week's YouTube video. But teleSUR matters because its videos get millions of views. Latin America stays poor because people believe socialist propaganda.
One teleSUR video lists countries where "capitalism failed": Canada, Mexico, England, Peru, Panama, Switzerland, the United States...
Another says that "Trump is killing our brains with Nazi-era chemicals."
Few viewers know that teleSUR is funded by the tyrants who control Cuba and Venezuela.
Venezuela, once rich, has been bankrupted by its socialist rulers. More than a million Venezuelans have fled to neighboring Colombia and Brazil.
Those who don't flee go hungry. One study found Venezuelans have lost, on average, more than 20 pounds. Hundreds of children have died of starvation. But when other countries and philanthropists offer help, Venezuela's rulers refuse it.
Instead, they spend their dwindling funds on teleSUR propaganda videos.
One shows a picture of Warren Buffet's son while telling viewers, "Philanthropy is a scam that allows the super rich to influence global affairs ... as if capitalism were the solution, not the cause of world problems."
Excuse me? Capitalism is a solution. In the last few decades, capitalism has lifted billions of people out of miserable poverty.
By contrast, in Venezuela, many store shelves are empty.
How can teleSUR put a positive spin on that? They hire "useful idiots," as Communists once called naive leftists who spread tyrants' propaganda. Today, one person they pay is former Californian Abby Martin.
Martin produced a teleSUR video that shows Venezuelan store shelves filled with goods. Martin narrates, "We just went to about five different supermarkets and the shelves were fully stocked ... (W)hile it is true there are shortages, it seems like you are very able to find things for everyday life, no problem."
I wanted to interview Martin, but she didn't respond to my interview requests.
Back when Martin worked for RT, at least she criticized Russia for invading Ukraine. But she also used her RT airtime to praise tyrants like Hugo Chavez.
"It is undeniable that under his leadership the poorest in the country were empowered," Martin said on RT.
Empowered? By starving? Shortages? Rampant inflation? Government troops suppressing protestors?
I wish Martin were as principled as her former RT colleague Liz Wahl. On RT, Wahl said:
"I face many ethical and moral challenges ... I cannot be a part of a network funded by the Russian government." Then she quit, on-air. She got a job with a legitimate news network.
But Martin stayed at RT for another year, and now she does government-funded propaganda for teleSUR.
Her videos describe "U.S. death squads" and claim that NATO and the U.S. lead "constant wars of aggression." In the U.S., racism is "entrenched ... political opposition quashed" while the U.S. "empire ... runs on death and destruction and kills thousands of our brothers and sisters every day."
Fergus Hodgson, who reports on Latin America, says teleSUR is winning hearts and minds.
"Even well-meaning people here in the United States, I see them sharing teleSUR material all the time," he told me.
"They should know that this is a media outlet that is funded by ... dictatorial communist or tyrannical rulers. (If you) share the material, you're sharing the lies of these brutal people. You're also sharing a media outlet that is funded by taking from the very poorest of the poor."
He's right.
Governments, especially socialist governments, like to present themselves as thinking only of "the people," but they have agendas just like private-sector con artists trying to sell you goods.
Government sales pitches are harder to detect because they don't sell products like cars or shampoos. But they still sell their bad ideas by showing only the worst aspects of the alternative, the private sector.
I'd love to hear Abby Martin's explanation for why she chooses to help push that socialist propaganda. Ms. Martin, my invitation for a Stossel TV interview stands.
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Award-winning news correspondent John Stossel is currently with Fox Business Network and Fox News. Before making the change to Fox News, Stossel was the co-anchor of ABC News's "20/20." Eight to 10 million people watched his program weekly. Often, he ended "20/20" with a TV column called "Give Me a Break," which challenged conventional wisdom.