Source: NileBowie
Nile Bowie
Editor's Note: It is worth mentioning the background of "Invisible Children's" CEO, Ben Keesey and that he was formally pursuing a career at JP Morgan before suddenly becoming an advocate for a US AFRICOM invasion of resource rich Africa.
Like other fraudulent NGOs including Avaas.org who's founder is formally of Fortune 500-funded, George Soros and Zbignew Brzezinski's International Crisis Group (page 5) as well as the Soros-affiliated MoveOn.org, they exist within one degree of separation from the most depraved corporate-financier interests on earth, promoting identical agendas of invasion, war, occupation, and foreign meddling.
Nile Bowie
Editor's Note: It is worth mentioning the background of "Invisible Children's" CEO, Ben Keesey and that he was formally pursuing a career at JP Morgan before suddenly becoming an advocate for a US AFRICOM invasion of resource rich Africa.
Like other fraudulent NGOs including Avaas.org who's founder is formally of Fortune 500-funded, George Soros and Zbignew Brzezinski's International Crisis Group (page 5) as well as the Soros-affiliated MoveOn.org, they exist within one degree of separation from the most depraved corporate-financier interests on earth, promoting identical agendas of invasion, war, occupation, and foreign meddling.
Youth Movement Promotes US Military Presence in Central Africa
Edward Bernays believed that society could not be trusted to make
rational and informed decisions on their own, and that guiding public opinion was
essential within a democratic society. Bernays founded the Council on Public
Relations and his 1928 book, Propaganda cites
the methodology used in the application of effective emotional communication. He
discovered that such communication is capable of manipulating the unconscious
in an effort to produce a desired effect – namely, a capacity to manufacture
mass social adherence in support of products, political candidates and social
movements. Nearly a century after his heyday, Bernays’ methodology is apparent
in almost every form of civic and consumer persuasion. The platform of social
media is being used in unprecedented new ways, one such example is a new online
documentary about the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), an extremist rebel group
operating in Central Africa.
The documentary is unprecedented, not for its educational attributes
but for its capacity to use visual branding, merchandising and highly potent
emotional communication to influence the viewer to support US military
operations in resource rich Central Africa under the pretext of capturing the
LRA’s commander, Joseph Kony. The Lord’s Resistance Army was originally formed
in 1987 in northwestern Uganda by members of the Acholi ethnic group, who were
historically exploited as forced laborers by the British colonialists and later
relegated by the nation’s dominant ethic groups following independence.
Together with the Holy Spirit Movement, the LRA represented the armed wing of a
resistance faction aiming to overthrow the government of current Ugandan
President and staunch US military ally, Yoweri Museveni.
The LRA was originally formed to combat ethic marginalization, but
soon became dominated by Joseph Kony, a self-proclaimed spiritual messenger of
the (Christian) Holy Spirit. Kony utilized his messianic persona to lead a
syncretic spiritual movement based on Acholi tribal beliefs’ and extremist
Christian dogma. It is claimed that LRA seeks to establish a theocratic state
based on the Ten Commandments, however its inner ideological mythology is
largely unknown. In an effort to mobilize a large scale armed resistance, the LRA
routinely recruited child soldiers and forced them to commit heinous acts such
as cannibalism and mutilation on others who resisted to join the rebel group
during their extensive twenty-five year campaign.
KONY 2012 is directed by
Jason Russell and runs just thirty minutes; the video has received over twenty million
views on YouTube and Vimeo and it’s national support group on Facebook is said
to gain 4,000 members each hour. The highly produced feature is narrated
from the perspective of Russell and his attempt to explain the Lord’s
Resistance Army to his infant son, Gavin. The video features footage from
Russell’s trip to Uganda (prior to 2006, when the LRA was still operating in
the region) and introduces the viewer to Jacob, a Ugandan boy who was formally
recruited by the LRA as a child soldier. Russell presents various montages of
ethically diverse groups of students raising their fists in the air, sporting
KONY t-shirts, and scenes of mass celebration in response to President Obama
signing the S. 1067: Lord's Resistance Army Disarmament and Northern
Uganda Recovery Act of 2009.
The bill
was passed without congressional approval, and allows the US to deploy military
forces in Uganda, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Central
African Republic and South Sudan (at the consent of those nations) in pursuit
of LRA rebels. The film further
advocates the requirement of public support for US military operations in the
region through forms of street activism, encouraging viewers to purchase Action
Kits ($30.00) and posters ($10.00) featuring images of Joseph Kony. Russell
then targets specific celebrities and US policy makers and pressures them to
endorse the campaign against Kony. Perhaps most absurdly, Russell suggests that
without mass public support from the American public, the US would withdraw its
military presence from the region.
This is the first large-scale
campaign to mobilize social medialites to aggregate public support for what
would otherwise be, controversial pro-intervention US foreign policy. The
production relies on highly charged and often unrelated emotional triggers, which ultimately rely
on the viewers sense of compassion in tandem with a lack of prior information
on the subject to produce a desired result – explicitly, the villainous mythification
of Kony and the mainstream acceptance of US presence in Africa through a
proposed archipelago of AFRICOM military bases in the region.
The production targets
an age group between thirteen and twenty-one, and uses a level of academic
vocabulary appropriate for a young adult audience with a limited attention
span; the narrator at one point even insists the viewer pay attention. The
viewer is encouraged to form an emotional connection to Russell, as we witness
unrelated footage of his child’s birth. The viewer is then subsequently
associated with Russell’s role as a nurturer to his young son, before shifting
to scenes of Russell nurturing the Ugandan child soldier, Jacob. Russell is
shown prophetically pledging to stop the LRA to the traumatized and crying
young boy. The intimate portrayal of emotion in these scenes work to further
incite a reactionary response from the viewer, towards the preordained
conclusion suggested in the narrative - a mass mobilization of support for the
US military in their efforts to stop Jacob’s source of trauma. Bernays’ would
be beside himself.
KONY 2012 is produced like any other sleek marketing campaign – instead of stimulating
elements of self-satisfaction like advertisers would do to promote a product,
US military intervention is justified to end an atrocious humanitarian
catastrophe. The film also plays on an underlying theme of the White Man’s
Burden, a notion that persons of European descent inherit a quality of guilt
for their ancestors’ inclination for slavery and colonialism, requiring an
activist response to finally correct the situation by “saving Africa.” During the Nigerian civil war in 1967, western
media successfully used images of starving children for the first time to
strengthen public support for military aid to the secessionist Republic of
Biafra before rebel forces were defeated. This film attempts to purportedly “change the conversation of our culture,”
however it remains a highly sophisticated refurbishment of pro-military
interventionist foreign policy propaganda, dependent on dangerous subliminal messaging.
Furthermore, the film was produced by an organization called
Invisible Children, Inc., who have been criticized by the Better Business Bureau for refusing
to provide necessary information in the Bureau’s standards assessment. Invisible
Children, Inc. has failed to disclose a list of sponsors (beyond the donations
of American high school students), and has also earned a low rating in
accountability from Charity Navigator because they won’t let their
financials be independently audited. In a 2011 financial statement, the
organization disclosed that only
31% of all the funds they receive are used for charitable purposes, with
the majority allocated toward travel expenses and employee salaries. Invisible
Children has also been
accused of fraud and voter manipulation in a recent charity contest sponsored
by Chase Bank and Facebook. The group’s Co-Founder and President, Laren
Poole addressed the International Criminal Court in 2009 alongside Aryeh Neier, President of George
Soros’ pro-war Open Society Institute.
Invisible Children has partnered
with two other organizations, Resolve and Digitaria, to create the LRA Crisis
Tracker, a digital crisis-mapping platform that broadcasts attacks allegedly
committed by the LRA. On its list
of corporate sponsors, Resolve lists Human Rights Watch and the International
Rescue Committee. Digitaria’s
website boasts commercial clients such as CBS, FOX, MTV, ESPN, Adidas, NFL,
Qualcomm, NBC, National Geographic, Hasbro and Warner Brothers. While KONY 2012 attempts to portray itself as
an indigenous activist movement bent on bringing justice to African children,
its parent organization is affiliated with the upper echelon of the US
corporate media and a
network of foundation-funded pro-war civil society groups with a long
history of fomenting pro-US regime change under the banner of democratic
institution building.
According
to Invisible Children’s own LRA Crisis Tracker, not a single case of LRA
activity has been reported in Uganda since 2006. The website records ninety
eight deaths in the past year, with the vast majority taking place in the
northeastern Bangadi region of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, a
tri-border expanse sharing territory with the Central African republic and
South Sudan. Since December 2009, the eastern Djemah region of CAR has seen
occasional LRA activity; the western Tambura region of South Sudan has
experienced even less. The LRA has been in operation for over two decades, and presently
remains at an extremely weakened state, with approximately 400 soldiers. Due
to the extreme instability in northern DRC after decades of rebel
insurgencies and Rwandan/Ugandan military incursions into the nation, it
remains highly unlikely that cases of violence in the region can be
sufficiently investigated before concluding LRA involvement.
The
whereabouts of Joseph Kony are completely unknown; he was last
seen in crossing between Sudan and CAR in 2010, according to unverified
reports. The US military currently has one hundred military officers
training and overseeing the Ugandan military in anti-LRA operations. Due to the
complete absence of LRA activity in Uganda, it becomes feasible that the US may
be planning further operations in the resource rich DRC. Over
six million Congolese nationals have been killed in war since 1996, largely
with US complicity. The regimes of Paul Kagame in Rwanda and Yoweri Museveni in Uganda have both received millions in military
aid from the United States. Since the abhorrent failure of the 1993 US
intervention in Somalia, the US has relied on the militaries of Rwanda, Uganda
and Ethiopia to carry out US interests in proxy.
Paul Kagame of Rwanda has been given free
reign by the US to conduct military operations inside DRC in the on-going
ethnic conflict in that region following the 1994 Rwandan genocide. For Ugandan
participation in the fight against Somalia’s al Shabaab, Museveni
receives $45 million dollars in military aid. The US has contributed
enormous sums to these nations and now is beginning to consolidate its presence
in the region under Barack Obama and AFRICOM, the United States African
Command. The LRA has contributed to
less than one hundred unverified deaths in the past twelve months.
Considering that the United States completely ignored events in DRC and
Rwanda that collectively resulted in nearly seven million deaths, their
participation against the ailing Lord’s Resistance Army is completely absurd by
comparison.
Through AFRICOM, the United States
is seeking a foothold in the incredibly resource rich central African block in
a further maneuver to aggregate regional hegemony over China. DRC is one
of the world’s largest regions without an effectively functioning government.
It contains
vast deposits of diamonds, cobalt, copper, uranium, magnesium, and tin while
producing over $1 billion in gold each year. It
is entirely feasible that the US can considerably increase its presence in
DRC under the pretext of capturing Joseph Kony. The US may further
mobilize ground forces, in addition to the use of predator drones and targeted missile
strikes, inevitably killing civilians. In a press conference at the House
Armed Services Committee on March 13, 2008, AFRICOM Commander, General William
Ward stated that AFRICOM will further its regional presence by "operating under the principle
theatre-goal of combating terrorism”.
During an AFRICOM Conference held
at Fort McNair on February 18, 2008, Vice Admiral Robert T. Moeller openly
declared AFRICOM’s guiding principle as protecting “the free flow of natural resources from Africa to the global market”,
before citing China’s increasing presence in the region as challenging to
American interests.The
crimes of the Lord’s Resistance Army have been documented in the
past and they are truly despicable actions. Presently, the operations of
the
LRA have nearly dissolved and their presence in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo is difficult to verify. While the pro-war filmmakers
behind KONY 2012 naively call for the
US military to assert its place in the conflict, an independent fact finding
mission would be far more effective in assessing the seriousness of the LRA
threat in the present day.
Editor's Note: Please also read about verified Western atrocities carried out in Uganda on behalf of the same corporate neo-imperial profiteering dressed up as "feel-good" activism.
Editor's Note: Please also read about verified Western atrocities carried out in Uganda on behalf of the same corporate neo-imperial profiteering dressed up as "feel-good" activism.