Between the Lies

Rise of the media-military-industrial complex

2nd (Revised edition)
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Last edited anonymously
November 22, 2010 | History

Between the Lies

Rise of the media-military-industrial complex

2nd (Revised edition)
  • 1 Want to read

This book analyses the symbiosis between armaments manufacturers and the mass communication industries. It uncovers the dynamics that exist between media, ideology and military power in the conditioning of core public attitudes and beliefs. The work explains how public consent and political legitimacy has been achieved for the conduct of large-scale military operations, from the Anglo-Boer war of more than 100 years ago to the present-day "war on terror". This continuum of conflict is underpinned by deliberate distortions of reality through the manipulation and compliance of news and information media. Specific sections of the book relate to World Wars I and II; the Cold War; Korean war; Vietnam; Gulf Wars I and II; war in former Yugoslavia; various undeclared or "low-intensity" wars in Africa and Latin America; and the continuing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Fully annotated with Index.

Sample chapters available for free download at website www.truth-hertz.net

Publish Date
Pages
284

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Edition Availability
Cover of: Between the Lies
Between the Lies: Rise of the media-military-industrial complex
October 2007, Southern Universities Press
Paperback - 2nd (Revised edition)
Cover of: Between the Lies
Between the Lies
October 2004, Southern Universities Press
Hardcover

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Book Details


First Sentence

"Many people revel in what they assume is the romance of war, as an escape from a humdrum daily existence, and their sponsors in the mass media have contributed to popular feeble-mindedness in this regard."

Edition Notes

Published in
London
Genre
War

The Physical Object

Format
Paperback
Number of pages
284
Dimensions
8.3 x 5.4 x 0.6 inches
Weight
12 ounces

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL11622429M
ISBN 10
0954580567
ISBN 13
9780954580568
Library Thing
6347380

Work Description

Between the Lies by Stan Winer gives a devastating analysis of some key military and intelligence operations of modern times. On the basis of convincing research and first-hand observation, Winer identifies the replication in "peacetime" of wartime methods of news and information management. With unnerving clarity, the book unravels the story of how the management of public perceptions has served to transport many people into a safe moral universe of Good v Evil, uncomplicated by the moral dilemmas of the real world. Between the Lies shows that this real world is actually a morally questionable world. Various axes of evil straddle this morally questionable world, the exact centres of which depend entirely on where you are standing at any given time. And where you are standing is largely determined by the symbiotic relationship that exists between the media and the military-industrial complex. Between the Lies is concerned with the remarkable historical and institutional continuity of that relationship, and the way it feeds off prevailing heroic myths about war. If more British and American people knew about that relationship, they might not have supported their countries' infamous rush to invade Iraq. The book forces a reassessment of where humanity has been, where it is heading, and the role of media in allowing history to unfold in the certain way it has. To that end, Between the Lies shows how the British and American secret services went in for "news" management in a big way during World War II and the Cold War, and continues to do so in the "war against terrorism". Disinformation is a large part of their strategic capability, while official information agencies, functioning with almost limitless funds, are left to do as they please, against friend and foe alike - just so long as their leaders are free to deny it. If there are dark secrets to be kept or dirty deeds to be done, most lawmakers do not even want to know about them. Parliamentary and congressional oversight are essentially non-existent, and many reporters are more willing to collaborate with the secret services than expose their secrets.

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Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
November 22, 2010 Edited by 196.210.159.7 expanded description
August 17, 2010 Edited by IdentifierBot added LibraryThing ID
April 13, 2010 Edited by Open Library Bot Linked existing covers to the edition.
January 29, 2010 Edited by 41.31.69.6 edition substituted
April 30, 2008 Created by an anonymous user Imported from amazon.com record