There has been much fretting over the rights of women, minorities and other vulnerable people in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan. But what about those who’ve lost rights in the US, unjustly imprisoned and punished in the course of the US “war on terror?” Mentally deficient, marginalized or otherwise vulnerable targets were snared by anti-terrorism sting operations after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, and punished unjustly. Tyrel Ventura (in for Rick Sanchez) explains. Then RT’s Murad Gazdiev reports from Kabul as the Taliban fights to conquer the last pocket of resistance to their authority over the country. Then RT America’s John Huddy reports on the activism of women for inclusive government in Afghanistan under the famously proscriptive Taliban.
Then columnist Mila Ghorayeb joins to discuss what stability, dignity and security means under the Taliban and whether they will liberalize in order to avoid further international isolation. RT America’s John Huddy reports on the activism of women for inclusive government in Afghanistan under the famously proscriptive Taliban. Then columnist Mila Ghorayeb joins to discuss what stability, dignity and security means under the Taliban and whether they will liberalize in order to avoid further international isolation. In today’s media landscape we are well-aware of bias in news bias analysis. But what about the bias that a journalist or researcher brings to the same? Lionel of Lionel Media joins to discuss the bias upon bias in the difficult art of news bias analysis. He says bias saturates journalism and that audiences benefit from a particular framework or “bias,” which he likens to “flavor or style.”
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