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While the screens broadcast live the attacks by the armed forces of the Russian Federation in kyiv, opinionologists and opportunists of various kinds expose their partial points of view regarding the conflict. In the agenda of the large media corporations, Vladimir Putin's hostility occupies a prominent place that transcends the international politics sections, sneaking in wherever the viewer pays attention to him. The yardstick by which the Russian invasion is measured is not the same by which each of the invasions carried out by the United States throughout its history was measured.
The justification of the attacks perpetrated by the country that perceives itself as free and democratic, has always found ways of acceptance through followers willing to transcribe Gambia Email List history in the most convenient way for the interests of the capitalist country par excellence. So much so, that even the weapons of mass destruction - and the smoking guns straight out of Colin Powell's imagination - were seen by viewers who were inoculated with the idea of “the need” to bomb Iraq; invasion “in the name of Freedom” that left hundreds of thousands of civilians massacred, and a country shattered.
But what concerns us today is not Russia or Ukraine; Not at least in this article that attempts to make a space for itself amidst the bombardment of war news that has permeated the front pages since last Thursday, burying among the ruins those other “bad news” that – unjustifiably – have been discarded, minimized or made invisible. Nestlé's slave children Shortly before the war escalation took on apocalyptic dimensions, the American newspaper The Washington Post published information that reported on a tragedy resulting from the inequality and brutality generated by savage capitalism. “The number of children in the United States living in poverty increased dramatically after just one month without payment of the expanded child tax credit.
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