Wednesday, October 18, 2017

The Media’s Smallest Genocide in Puerto Rico: The fake news genocide falls apart.

Via Billy

 
........that is just how the media works. Disaster + Trump = Story. That’s the formula for everything.
The Mayor of San Juan recently took a break from her tour of every cable news network on the planet to text an accusation of genocide aimed at President Trump.

"WE WILL NOT BE LEFT TO DIE,” Mayor Carmen Yulin Cruz texted. “I ask the United Nations, UNICEF and the world to stand with the people of Puerto Rico and stop the genocide.”

The death toll in Puerto Rico currently stands at 48.

Hurricane Maria made landfall in Puerto Rico on September 20. As we approach October 20, the death toll from the hurricane is a lot less than the death toll from the deadliest month in Chicago.

Despite media arm waving, with only 117 people not accounted for, the actual death toll in Puerto Rico isn’t likely to rise very much. And even a death toll of 48 was only achieved by listing people who died of heart attacks and other medical problems that could not be treated because of hurricane damage. It’s unknown whether some of them might have lived without the hurricane. It’s guesswork.

The previous, incomplete death toll showed that the actual hurricane seemed to have only killed 19 people. 2 suicides were also attributed to the hurricane. As were respiratory failures “indirectly linked” to the hurricane.

But the media has been working hard to inflate the death toll.

More @ Front Page

2 comments:

  1. Poor elderly people living on a bankrupt island that doesn't maintain infrastructure. What could go wrong?

    Puerto Ricans claim the US discourages investment in Puerto Rico via unfair trade practices. Or, at least one blogger had made that claim, looked legitimate. Anyway, they should just secede then.

    I'm a believer that a society could attract investment capital without selling out to the wealthy. It should be possible to give investors a secure return on investment without allowing them to abuse the citizenry. At least in theory...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Poor elderly people living on a bankrupt island that doesn't maintain infrastructure. What could go wrong?

      :)

      Delete