the moral mob and human rights industrial complex

1,788 Views | 16 Replies | Last: 7 days ago by Law-Apt_3G
sts7049
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AG
https://www.newsweek.com/the-moral-mob-and-the-human-rights-industrial-complex-opinion-11882578

really interesting article here discussing why many americans are sympathetic to iran or other authoritarian regimes

Quote:

Two institutional forces are producing this outcome.

The first operates through international institutions and advocacy organizations that have accumulated enormous authority over the language of human rights. That authority was hard won and, at its best, has protected vulnerable people across the world. At their worst, they have learned that accusations generate attentioncorrections do not. When the United Nations declares famine, governments mobilize and courts take notice. When that declaration later turns out to rest on bad data and buried evidence, no correction follows. The damage is done. The funding has already moved.
The second force operates at the street level, where organized protest ecosystems amplify the accusations that institutional bodies generate. Documented research has traced how the Singham network, a global infrastructure with documented financial ties to Chinese Communist Party (CCP)-affiliated entities, directed funds and narratives into American activist organizations. The protest activity that followed was, in significant part, engineered.

The institution names the violation. The protest ecosystem amplifies it. The accused defends itself. And the regime actually responsible recedes from scrutiny.
Alice Wairimu Nderitu, the former U.N. under-secretary-general for genocide prevention and a contributor to this research, watched this from inside. Genocide circulated through CCP-linked protest networks aimed at American allies and policy, while the Chinese government detained more than one million people in Xinjiang on the basis of ethnicity. Nderitu declined to apply the term without meeting its legal threshold. Her appointment was not renewed.

Johnnie Moore, chairman of the U.S. State Department-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation and a contributor to this research, encountered the same sequence. In August 2025, the U.N. famine authority declared a famine despite Moore's operation actively delivering food. A forensic audit by NCRI found the declaration rested on a trend derived from six data points while a dataset of 15,000 children showed malnutrition below the declaration's own threshold. Subsequent assessments found the declaration had significantly overstated conditions. No correction followed. The damage was done.

The human cost became visible three months before that declaration. In May 2025, a gunman killed two embassy staffers outside a Washington museum. He told police he acted for Gaza. His manifesto cited genocide and famine. He had a prior association with organizations closely linked to convenors of the protest network traced to the Singham infrastructure. The famine narrative that radicalized him was later found to have been significantly overstated. The two people killed by his radicalization remained dead. In North Korea and Sudan, hunger functions as an instrument of state control on a far greater scale. Declarations and protests have not followed with comparable urgency.

OPAG
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AG
Truth
Waffledynamics
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To absolutely nobody's surprise
Pooh-ah95_ESL
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More correct answer, stupid people, China and the Democratic party...
techno-ag
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sts7049 said:

https://www.newsweek.com/the-moral-mob-and-the-human-rights-industrial-complex-opinion-11882578

really interesting article here discussing why many americans are sympathetic to iran or other authoritarian regimes

Quote:

Two institutional forces are producing this outcome.

The first operates through international institutions and advocacy organizations that have accumulated enormous authority over the language of human rights. That authority was hard won and, at its best, has protected vulnerable people across the world. At their worst, they have learned that accusations generate attentioncorrections do not. When the United Nations declares famine, governments mobilize and courts take notice. When that declaration later turns out to rest on bad data and buried evidence, no correction follows. The damage is done. The funding has already moved.
The second force operates at the street level, where organized protest ecosystems amplify the accusations that institutional bodies generate. Documented research has traced how the Singham network, a global infrastructure with documented financial ties to Chinese Communist Party (CCP)-affiliated entities, directed funds and narratives into American activist organizations. The protest activity that followed was, in significant part, engineered.



Protests are always engineered. People are too busy living their lives to spontaneously burst into protest.
The left cannot kill the Spirit of Charlie Kirk.
YouBet
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AG
Great summary of it:

Quote:

The institution names the violation. The protest ecosystem amplifies it. The accused defends itself. And the regime actually responsible recedes from scrutiny.
sts7049
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AG
not always. there are still some genuine ones but probably not many.
Bazooka Joe
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I believe the genuine ones fizzle quickly while these false narratives show up with news cameras.

If it's on the news, put your money on it being contrived.
doubledog
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sts7049 said:


really interesting article here discussing why many americans are sympathetic to iran or other authoritarian regimes



Or, hear me out, TDS.
ts5641
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techno-ag said:

sts7049 said:

https://www.newsweek.com/the-moral-mob-and-the-human-rights-industrial-complex-opinion-11882578

really interesting article here discussing why many americans are sympathetic to iran or other authoritarian regimes

Quote:

Two institutional forces are producing this outcome.

The first operates through international institutions and advocacy organizations that have accumulated enormous authority over the language of human rights. That authority was hard won and, at its best, has protected vulnerable people across the world. At their worst, they have learned that accusations generate attentioncorrections do not. When the United Nations declares famine, governments mobilize and courts take notice. When that declaration later turns out to rest on bad data and buried evidence, no correction follows. The damage is done. The funding has already moved.
The second force operates at the street level, where organized protest ecosystems amplify the accusations that institutional bodies generate. Documented research has traced how the Singham network, a global infrastructure with documented financial ties to Chinese Communist Party (CCP)-affiliated entities, directed funds and narratives into American activist organizations. The protest activity that followed was, in significant part, engineered.




Protests are always engineered. People are too busy living their lives to spontaneously burst into protest.

Conservative people are too busy living their lives. Dems, not so much.
MarvZindler
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Modern partisan politics has become a sport with no limit to participation. There is a total lack of concern for the US taxpayer balance sheet, and war collateral deaths....its not even an after thought. Everything has been reduced to blue vs red, and scoring points in the anonymous internet game.
flown-the-coop
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MarvZindler said:

Modern partisan politics has become a sport with no limit to participation. There is a total lack of concern for the US taxpayer balance sheet, and war collateral deaths....its not even an after thought. Everything has been reduced to blue vs red, and scoring points in the anonymous internet game.


Horse***** I think a great many folks vote based on their balance sheet. Heck, we have nonstop bloviating by both sides that gas prices alone determines elections.

And you would have to be a sick, depraved ******* to not consider "war collateral deaths" when voting. In fact, a great many Trump supporters voted for Trump understanding that "no new forever wars" did not preclude him from potentially needing to use forces, but that if he did it would be well reasoned and that our troops would be properly supported by leadership in both mission and support of mission.

But don't gaslight with the red v blue and no one cares about money and lives just rhetoric. That's just indicating it's all you care about.
IIIHorn
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techno-ag said:

sts7049 said:

https://www.newsweek.com/the-moral-mob-and-the-human-rights-industrial-complex-opinion-11882578

really interesting article here discussing why many americans are sympathetic to iran or other authoritarian regimes

Quote:

Two institutional forces are producing this outcome.

The first operates through international institutions and advocacy organizations that have accumulated enormous authority over the language of human rights. That authority was hard won and, at its best, has protected vulnerable people across the world. At their worst, they have learned that accusations generate attentioncorrections do not. When the United Nations declares famine, governments mobilize and courts take notice. When that declaration later turns out to rest on bad data and buried evidence, no correction follows. The damage is done. The funding has already moved.
The second force operates at the street level, where organized protest ecosystems amplify the accusations that institutional bodies generate. Documented research has traced how the Singham network, a global infrastructure with documented financial ties to Chinese Communist Party (CCP)-affiliated entities, directed funds and narratives into American activist organizations. The protest activity that followed was, in significant part, engineered.



Protests are always engineered. People are too busy living their lives to spontaneously burst into protest.


Blaming engineers.


( ...voice punctuated with a clap of distant thunder... )
BigRobSA
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IIIHorn said:

techno-ag said:


Protests are always engineered. People are too busy living their lives to spontaneously burst into protest.


Blaming engineers.

Blame Engineers use to go by another name : "women".
IIIHorn
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BigRobSA said:

IIIHorn said:

techno-ag said:


Protests are always engineered. People are too busy living their lives to spontaneously burst into protest.


Blaming engineers.

Blame Engineers use to go by another name : "women".


Can't live with them, can't live without them?


( ...voice punctuated with a clap of distant thunder... )
BusterAg
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Institutions are not people. Institutions do not make decisions. People inside of institutions make decisions that are in their own self interest. Raising money is in the self interest of certain people inside of these institutions that have a lot of power. None of this is surprising.
Law-Apt_3G
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Demonic mob gets paid
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