Robert Parry’s Legacy and the Future of Consortiumnews
28
January, 2018
Robert
Parry, editor and publisher of Consortiumnews.com, died peacefully
Saturday evening. In this tribute, his son Nat Parry describes
Robert’s unwavering commitment to independent journalism.
By
Nat Parry
It
is with a heavy heart that we inform Consortiumnews readers that
Editor Robert Parry has passed away. As regular readers know, Robert
(or Bob, as he was known to friends and family) suffered a stroke in
December, which – despite his own speculation that it may have been
brought on by the stress of covering Washington politics – was the
result of undiagnosed pancreatic cancer that he had been unknowingly
living with for the past 4-5 years.
He
unfortunately suffered two more debilitating strokes in recent weeks
and after the last one, was moved to hospice care on Tuesday. He
passed away peacefully Saturday evening. He was 68.
Those
of us close to him wish to sincerely thank readers for the kind
comments and words of support posted on recent articles regarding
Bob’s health issues. We read aloud many of these comments to him
during his final days to let him know how much his work has meant to
so many people and how much concern there was for his well-being.
I
am sure that these kindnesses meant a lot to him. They also mean a
lot to us as family members, as we all know how devoted he was to the
mission of independent journalism and this website which has been
publishing articles since the earliest days of the internet,
launching all the way back in 1995.
With
my dad, professional work has always been deeply personal, and his
career as a journalist was thoroughly intertwined with his family
life. I can recall kitchen table conversations in my early childhood
that focused on the U.S.-backed wars in Central America and
complaints about how his editors at The Associated Press were too
timid to run articles of his that – no matter how well-documented –
cast the Reagan administration in a bad light.
One
of my earliest memories in fact was of my dad about to leave on
assignment in the early 1980s to the war zones of El Salvador,
Nicaragua and Guatemala, and the heartfelt good-bye that he wished to
me and my siblings. He warned us that he was going to a very
dangerous place and that there was a possibility that he might not
come back.
I
remember asking him why he had to go, why he couldn’t just stay at
home with us. He replied that it was important to go to these places
and tell the truth about what was happening there. He mentioned that
children my age were being killed in these wars and that somebody had
to tell their stories. I remember asking, “Kids like me?” He
replied, “Yes, kids just like you.”
Bob
was deeply impacted by the dirty wars of Central America in the 1980s
and in many ways these conflicts – and the U.S. involvement in them
– came to define the rest of his life and career. With grisly
stories emerging from Nicaragua (thanks partly to journalists like
him), Congress passed the Boland Amendments from 1982 to 1984, which
placed limits on U.S. military assistance to the contras who were
attempting to overthrow the Sandinista government through a variety
of terrorist tactics.
The
Reagan administration immediately began exploring ways to circumvent
those legal restrictions, which led to a scheme to send secret arms
shipments to the revolutionary and vehemently anti-American
government of Iran and divert the profits to the contras. In 1985,
Bob wrote the first stories describing this operation, which later
became known as the Iran-Contra Affair.
Contra-Cocaine
and October Surprise
Parallel
to the illegal arms shipments to Iran during those days was a cocaine
trafficking operation by the Nicaraguan contras and a willingness by
the Reagan administration and the CIA to turn a blind eye to these
activities. This, despite the fact that cocaine was flooding into the
United States while Ronald Reagan was proclaiming a “war on drugs,”
and a crack cocaine epidemic was devastating communities across the
country.
Bob
and his colleague Brian Barger were the first journalists to report
on this story in late 1985, which became known as the contra-cocaine
scandal and became the subject of a congressional investigation led
by then-Senator John Kerry (D-Mass.) in 1986.
Continuing
to pursue leads relating to Iran-Contra during a period in the late
80s when most of Washington was moving on from the scandal, Bob
discovered that there was more to the story than commonly understood.
He learned that the roots of the illegal arm shipments to Iran
stretched back further than previously known – all the way back to
the 1980 presidential campaign.
That
electoral contest between incumbent Jimmy Carter and challenger
Ronald Reagan had come to be largely dominated by the hostage crisis
in Iran, with 52 Americans being held at the U.S. embassy in Tehran
since the 1979 Iranian Revolution. The Iranian hostage crisis, along
with the ailing economy, came to define a perception of an America in
decline, with former Hollywood actor Ronald Reagan promising a new
start for the country, a restoration of its status as a “shining
city on a hill.”
The
hostages were released in Tehran moments after Reagan was sworn in as
president in Washington on January 20, 1981. Despite suspicions for
years that there had been some sort of quid pro quo between the
Reagan campaign and the Iranians, it wasn’t until Bob uncovered a
trove of documents in a House office building basement in 1994 that
the evidence became overwhelming that the Reagan campaign had
interfered with the Carter administration’s efforts to free the
hostages prior to the 1980 election. Their release sooner – what
Carter hoped would be his “October Surprise” – could have given
him the boost needed to win.
Examining
these documents and being already well-versed on this story –
having previously travelled three continents pursuing the
investigation for a PBS Frontline documentary – Bob became
increasingly convinced that the Reagan campaign had in fact sabotaged
Carter’s hostage negotiations, possibly committing an act of
treason in an effort to make sure that 52 American citizens continued
to be held in a harrowing hostage situation until after Reagan
secured the election.
Needless
to say, this was an inconvenient story at a time – in the mid-1990s
– when the national media had long since moved on from the Reagan
scandals and were obsessing over new scandals, mostly related to
President Bill Clinton’s sex life and failed real estate deals.
Washington also wasn’t particularly interested in challenging the
Reagan legacy, which at that time was beginning to solidify into a
kind of mythology, with campaigns underway to name buildings and
airports after the former president.
At
times, Bob had doubts about his career decisions and the stories he
was pursuing. As he wrote in Trick or Treason, a book outlining his
investigation into the October Surprise Mystery, this search for
historical truth can be painful and seemingly thankless.
“Many
times,” he wrote, “I had regretted accepting Frontline’s
assignment in 1990. I faulted myself for risking my future in
mainstream journalism. After all, that is where the decent-paying
jobs are. I had jeopardized my ability to support my four children
out of an old-fashioned sense of duty, a regard for an unwritten code
that expects reporters to take almost any assignment.”
Nevertheless,
Bob continued his efforts to tell the full story behind both the
Iran-Contra scandal and the origins of the Reagan-Bush era,
ultimately leading to two things: him being pushed out of the
mainstream media, and the launching of Consortiumnews.com.
I
remember when he started the website, together with my older brother
Sam, back in 1995. At the time, in spite of talk we were all hearing
about something called “the information superhighway” and
“electronic mail,” I had never visited a website and didn’t
even know how to get “on line.” My dad called me in Richmond,
where I was a sophomore at Virginia Commonwealth University, and told
me I should check out this new “Internet site” he and Sam had
just launched.
He
explained over the phone how to open a browser and instructed me how
to type in the URL, starting, he said, with “http,” then a colon
and two forward slashes, then “www,” then “dot,” then this
long address with one or two more forward slashes if I recall. (It
wasn’t until years later that the website got its own domain and a
simpler address.)
I
went to the computer lab at the university and asked for some
assistance on how to get online, dutifully typed in the URL, and
opened this website – the first one I had ever visited. It was
interesting, but a bit hard to read on the computer screen, so I
printed out some articles to read back in my dorm room.
I
quickly became a fan of “The Consortium,” as it was called back
then, and continued reading articles on the October Surprise Mystery
as Bob and Sam posted them on this new and exciting tool called “the
Internet.” Sam had to learn HTML coding from scratch to launch this
online news service, billed as “the Internet’s First
Investigative ‘Zine.” For his efforts, Sam was honored with the
Consortium for Independent Journalism’s first Gary Webb Freedom of
the Press Award in 2015.
X-Files
and Contra-Crack
At
some point along the way, Bob decided that in addition to the
website, where he was not only posting original articles but also
providing the source documents that he had uncovered in the House
office building basement, he would also take a stab at traditional
publishing. He compiled the “October Surprise X-Files” into a
booklet and self-published it in January 1996.
Original
Consortium merchandise from 1996.
He
was also publishing a newsletter to complement the website, knowing
that at that time, there were still plenty of people who didn’t
know how to turn a computer on, much less navigate the World Wide
Web. I transferred from Virginia Commonwealth University to George
Mason University in the DC suburbs and started working part-time with
my dad and Sam on the newsletter and website.
We
worked together on the content, editing and laying it out with
graphics often culled from books at our local library. We built a
subscriber base through networking and purchasing mailing lists from
progressive magazines. Every two weeks we would get a thousand copies
printed from Sir Speedy and would spend Friday evening collating
these newsletters and sending them out to our subscribers.
The
launching of the website and newsletter, and later an even-more
ambitious project called I.F. Magazine, happened to coincide with the
publication in 1996 of Gary Webb’s “Dark Alliance” series at
the San Jose Mercury-News. Webb’s series reopened the
contra-cocaine controversy with a detailed examination of the drug
trafficking networks in Nicaragua and Los Angeles that had helped to
spread highly addictive crack cocaine across the United States.
The
African-American community, in particular, was rightly outraged over
this story, which offered confirmation of many long-standing
suspicions that the government was complicit in the drug trade
devastating their communities. African Americans had been deeply and
disproportionately affected by the crack epidemic, both in terms of
the direct impact of the drug and the draconian drug laws and
mandatory minimum sentences that came to define the government’s
approach to “the war on drugs.”
For
a moment in the summer of 1996, it appeared that the renewed interest
in the contra-cocaine story might offer an opportunity to revisit the
crimes and misdeeds of the Reagan-Bush era, but those hopes were
dashed when the “the Big Media” decided to double down on its
earlier failures to cover this story properly.
Big
Papers Pile On
The
Los Angeles Times launched the attack on Gary Webb and his reporting
at the San Jose Mercury-News, followed by equally dismissive stories
at the Washington Post and New York Times. The piling on from these
newspapers eventually led Mercury-News editor Jerry Ceppos to
denounce Webb’s reporting and offer a mea culpa for publishing the
articles.
The
onslaught of hostile reporting from the big papers failed to address
the basic premises of Webb’s series and did not debunk the
underlying allegations of contra-cocaine smuggling or the fact that
much of this cocaine ended up on American streets in the form of
crack. Instead, it raised doubts by poking holes in certain details
and casting the story as a “conspiracy theory.” Some of the
reporting attempted to debunk claims that Webb never actually made –
such as the idea that the contra-cocaine trafficking was part of a
government plot to intentionally decimate the African-American
community.
Gary
Webb and Bob were in close contact during those days. Bob offered him
professional and personal support, having spent his time also on the
receiving end of attacks by journalistic colleagues and editors who
rejected certain stories – no matter how factual – as fanciful
conspiracy theories. Articles at The Consortium website and
newsletter, as well as I.F. Magazine, offered details on the
historical context for the “Dark Alliance” series and pushed back
against the mainstream media’s onslaught of hostile and
disingenuous reporting.
Bob
also published the book Lost History which provided extensive details
on the background for the “Dark Alliance” series, explaining that
far from a baseless “conspiracy theory,” the facts and evidence
strongly supported the conclusion that the Reagan-Bush
administrations had colluded with drug traffickers to fund their
illegal war against Nicaragua.
But
sadly, the damage to Gary Webb was done. With his professional and
personal life in tatters because of his courageous reporting on the
contra-cocaine story, he committed suicide in 2004 at the age of 49.
Speaking about this suicide later on Democracy Now, Bob noted how
painful it is to be ridiculed and unfairly criticized by colleagues,
as his friend had experienced.
“There’s
a special pain when your colleagues in your profession turn on you,
especially when you’ve done something that they should admire and
should understand,” he said. “To do all that work and then have
the New York Times and the Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times
attack you and try to destroy your life, there’s a special pain in
that.”
In
consultation with his family, Bob and the Board of Directors for the
Consortium for Independent Journalism launched the Gary Webb Freedom
of the Press Award in 2015.
The
Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush
The
presidency of George W. Bush was surreal for many of us, and no one
more so than my dad.
In
covering Washington politics for decades, Bob had traced many stories
to “Dubya’s” father, George H.W. Bush, who had been implicated
in a variety of questionable activities, including the October
Surprise Mystery and Iran-Contra. He had also launched a war against
Iraq in 1991 that seemed to be motivated, at least in part, to help
kick “the Vietnam Syndrome,” i.e. the reluctance that the
American people had felt since the Vietnam War to support military
action abroad.
As
Bob noted in his 1992 book Fooling America, after U.S. forces routed
the Iraqi military in 1991, President Bush’s first public comment
about the victory expressed his delight that it would finally put to
rest the American reflex against committing troops to far-off
conflicts. “By God, we’ve kicked the Vietnam Syndrome once and
for all,” he exulted.
The
fact that Bush-41’s son could run for president largely on name
recognition confirmed to Bob the failure of the mainstream media to
cover important stories properly and the need to continue building an
independent media infrastructure. This conviction solidified through
Campaign 2000 and the election’s ultimate outcome, when Bush
assumed the White House as the first popular-vote loser in more than
a century.
Despite
the fact that the U.S. Supreme Court had halted the counting of votes
in Florida, thus preventing an accurate determination of the rightful
winner, most of the national media moved on from the story after Bush
was sworn in on Jan. 20, 2001. Consortiumnews.com continued to
examine the documentary record, however, and ultimately concluded
that Al Gore would have been declared the winner of that election if
all the legally cast ballots were counted.
At
Consortiumnews, there was an unwritten editorial policy that the
title “President” should never precede George W. Bush’s name,
based on our view that he was not legitimately elected. But beyond
those editorial decisions, we also understood the gravity of the fact
that had Election 2000 been allowed to play out with all votes
counted, many of the disasters of the Bush years – notably the 9/11
tragedy and the Iraq War, as well as decisions to withdraw from
international agreements on arms control and climate change – might
have been averted.
As
all of us who lived through the post-9/11 era will recall, it was a
challenging time all around, especially if you were someone critical
of George W. Bush. The atmosphere in that period did not allow for
much dissent. Those who stood up against the juggernaut for war –
such as Phil Donahue at MSNBC, Chris Hedges at the New York Times, or
even the Dixie Chicks – had their careers damaged and found
themselves on the receiving end of death threats and hate mail.
While
Bob’s magazine and newsletter projects had been discontinued, the
website was still publishing articles, providing a home for
dissenting voices that questioned the case for invading Iraq in late
2002 and early 2003. Around this time, former CIA analyst Ray
McGovern and some of his colleagues founded Veteran Intelligence
Professionals for Sanity and a long-running relationship with
Consortiumnews was established. Several former intelligence veterans
began contributing to the website, motivated by the same independent
spirit of truth-telling that compelled Bob to invest so much in this
project.
At
a time when almost the entire mainstream media was going along with
the Bush administration’s dubious case for war, this and a few
other like-minded websites pushed back with well-researched articles
calling into question the rationale. Although at times it might have
felt as though we were just voices in the wilderness, a major
groundswell of opposition to war emerged in the country, with
historic marches of hundreds of thousands taking place to reject
Bush’s push for war.
Neck
Deep was published by the Media Consortium in 2007.
Of
course, these antiwar voices were ultimately vindicated by the
failure to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and the fact that
the war and occupation proved to be a far costlier and deadlier
enterprise than we had been told that it would be. Earlier assurances
that it would be a “cakewalk” proved as false as the WMD claims,
but as had been so often the case in Washington, there was little to
no accountability from the mainstream media, the think tanks or
government officials for being so spectacularly wrong.
In
an effort to document the true history of that era, Bob, Sam and I
co-wrote the book Neck Deep: The Disastrous Presidency of George W.
Bush, which was published in late 2007. The book traced the work of
Consortiumnews, juxtaposing it against the backdrop of mainstream
media coverage during the Bush era, in an effort to not only correct
the record, but also demonstrate that not all of us got things so
wrong.
We
felt it was important to remind readers – as well as future
historians – that some of us knew and reported in real time the
mistakes that were being made on everything from withdrawing from the
Kyoto Protocol to invading Iraq to implementing a policy of torture
to bungling the response to Hurricane Katrina.
Obama
Era
By
the time Barack Obama was elected the 44th president,
Consortiumnews.com had become a home to a growing number of writers
who brought new perspectives to the website’s content. While for
years, the writing staff had been limited primarily to Bob, Sam and
me, suddenly, Consortiumnews was receiving contributions from
journalists, activists and former intelligence analysts who offered a
wide range of expertise – on international law, economics, human
rights, foreign policy, national security, and even religion and
philosophy.
One
recurring theme of articles at the website during the Obama era was
the enduring effect of unchallenged narratives, how they shaped
national politics and dictated government policy. Bob observed that
even a supposedly left-of-center president like Obama seemed beholden
to the false narratives and national mythologies dating back to the
Reagan era. He pointed out that this could be at least partially
attributed to the failure to establish a strong foundation for
independent journalism.
In
a 2010 piece called “Obama’s Fear of the Reagan Narrative,” Bob
noted that Obama had defended his deal with Republicans on tax cuts
for the rich because there was such a strong lingering effect of
Reagan’s messaging from 30 years earlier. “He felt handcuffed by
the Right’s ability to rally Americans on behalf of Reagan’s
‘government-is-the-problem’ message,” Bob wrote.
He
traced Obama’s complaints about his powerlessness in the face of
this dynamic to the reluctance of American progressives to invest
sufficiently in media and think tanks, as conservatives had been
doing for decades in waging their “the war of ideas.” As he had
been arguing since the early 1990s, Robert insisted that the limits
that had been placed on Obama – whether real or perceived –
continued to demonstrate the power of propaganda and the need for
greater investment in alternative media.
He
also observed that much of the nuttiness surrounding the so-called
Tea Party movement resulted from fundamental misunderstandings of
American history and constitutional principles. “Democrats and
progressives should be under no illusion about the new flood of
know-nothingism that is about to inundate the United States in the
guise of a return to ‘first principles’ and a deep respect for
the U.S. Constitution,” Bob warned.
He
pointed out that despite the Tea Partiers’ claimed reverence for
the Constitution, they actually had very little understanding of the
document, as revealed by their ahistorical claims that federal taxes
are unconstitutional. In fact, as Bob observed, the Constitution
represented “a major power grab by the federal government, when
compared to the loosely drawn Articles of Confederation, which lacked
federal taxing authority and other national powers.”
Motivated
by a desire to correct falsified historical narratives spanning more
than two centuries, Bob published his sixth and final book, America’s
Stolen Narrative: From Washington and Madison to Nixon, Reagan and
the Bushes to Obama, in 2012.
Along
with revenues from book sales, growing donations from readers enabled
Bob to not only pay writers but also to hire an assistant, Chelsea
Gilmour, who began working for Consortiumnews in 2014. In addition to
providing invaluable administrative support, Chelsea also performed
duties including research, writing and fact-checking.
Political
Realignment and the New McCarthyism
Although
at the beginning of the Obama era – and indeed since the 1980s –
the name Robert Parry had been closely associated with exposing
wrongdoing by Republicans, and hence had a strong following among
Democratic Party loyalists, by the end of Obama’s presidency there
seemed to be a realignment taking place among some of
Consortiumnews.com’s readership, which reflected more generally the
shifting politics of the country.
In
particular, the U.S. media’s approach to Russia and related issues,
such as the violent ouster in 2014 of Ukrainian President Viktor
Yanukovych, became “virtually 100 percent propaganda,” Bob said.
He
noted that the full story was never told when it came to issues such
as the Sergei Magnitsky case, which led to the first round of U.S.
sanctions against Russia, nor the inconvenient facts related to the
Euromaidan protests that led to Yanukovych’s ouster – including
the reality of strong neo-Nazi influence in those protests – nor
the subsequent conflict in the Donbass region of Ukraine.
Bob’s
stories on Ukraine were widely cited and disseminated, and he became
an important voice in presenting a fuller picture of the conflict
than was possible by reading and watching only mainstream news
outlets. Bob was featured prominently in Oliver Stone’s 2016
documentary “Ukraine on Fire,” where he explained how U.S.-funded
political NGOs and media companies have worked with the CIA and
foreign policy establishment since the 1980s to promote the U.S.
geopolitical agenda.
Bob
regretted that, increasingly, “the American people and the West in
general are carefully shielded from hearing the ‘other side of the
story.’” Indeed, he said that to even suggest that there might be
another side to the story is enough to get someone branded as an
apologist for Vladimir Putin or a “Kremlin stooge.”
The
PropOrNot logo
This
culminated in late 2016 in the blacklisting of Consortiumnews.com on
a dubious website called “PropOrNot,” which was claiming to serve
as a watchdog against undue “Russian influence” in the United
States. The PropOrNot blacklist, including Consortiumnews and about
200 other websites deemed “Russian propaganda,” was elevated by
the Washington Post as a credible source, despite the fact that the
neo-McCarthyites who published the list hid behind a cloak of
anonymity.
“The
Post’s article by Craig Timberg,” Bob wrote on Nov. 27, 2016,
“described PropOrNot simply as ‘a nonpartisan collection of
researchers with foreign policy, military and technology backgrounds
[who] planned to release its own findings Friday showing the
startling reach and effectiveness of Russian propaganda campaigns.’”
As
Bob explained in an article called “Washington Post’s Fake News
Guilt,” the paper granted PropOrNot anonymity “to smear
journalists who don’t march in lockstep with official
pronouncements from the State Department or some other impeccable
fount of never-to-be-questioned truth.”
The
Post even provided an unattributed quote from the head of the shadowy
website. “The way that this propaganda apparatus supported [Donald]
Trump was equivalent to some massive amount of a media buy,” the
anonymous smear merchant said. The Post claimed that the PropOrNot
“executive director” had spoken on the condition of anonymity “to
avoid being targeted by Russia’s legions of skilled hackers.”
To
be clear, neither Consortiumnews nor Robert Parry ever “supported
Trump,” as the above anonymous quote claims. Something interesting,
however, did seem to be happening in terms of Consortiumnews’
readership in the early days of the Trump presidency, as could be
gleaned from some of the comments left on articles and social media
activity.
It
did appear for some time at least that a good number of Trump
supporters were reading Consortiumnews, which could probably be
attributed to the fact that the website was one of the few outlets
pushing back against both the “New Cold War” with Russia and the
related story of “Russiagate,” which Bob didn’t even like
referring to as a “scandal.” (As an editor, he preferred to use
the word “controversy” on the website, because as far as he was
concerned, the allegations against Trump and his supposed “collusion”
with Russia did not rise to the level of actual scandals such as
Watergate or Iran-Contra.)
In
his view, the perhaps understandable hatred of Trump felt by many
Americans – both inside and outside the Beltway – had led to an
abandonment of old-fashioned rules of journalism and standards of
fairness, which should be applied even to someone like Donald Trump.
“On
a personal note, I faced harsh criticism even from friends of many
years for refusing to enlist in the anti-Trump ‘Resistance,’”
Bob wrote in his final article for Consortiumnews.
“The
argument was that Trump was such a unique threat to America and the
world that I should join in finding any justification for his
ouster,” he said. “Some people saw my insistence on the same
journalistic standards that I had always employed somehow a
betrayal.”
He
marveled that even senior editors in the mainstream media treated the
unproven Russiagate allegations as flat fact.
“No
skepticism was tolerated and mentioning the obvious bias among the
never-Trumpers inside the FBI, Justice Department and intelligence
community was decried as an attack on the integrity of the U.S.
government’s institutions,” Bob wrote. “Anti-Trump
‘progressives’ were posturing as the true patriots because of
their now unquestioning acceptance of the evidence-free proclamations
of the U.S. intelligence and law enforcement agencies.”
An
Untimely End and the Future of Consortiumnews
My
dad’s untimely passing has come as a shock to us all, especially
since up until a month ago, there was no indication whatsoever that
he was sick in any way. He took good care of himself, never smoked,
got regular check-ups, exercised, and ate well. The unexpected health
issues starting with a mild stroke Christmas Eve and culminating with
his admission into hospice care several days ago offer a stark
reminder that nothing should be taken for granted.
And
as many Consortiumnews readers have eloquently pointed out in
comments left on recent articles regarding Bob’s health, it also
reminds us that his brand of journalism is needed today more than
ever.
“We
need free will thinkers like you who value the truth based on the
evidence and look past the group think in Washington to report on the
real reasons for our government’s and our media’s actions which
attempt to deceive us all,” wrote, for example, “FreeThinker.”
“Common
sense and integrity are the hallmarks of Robert Parry’s journalism.
May you get better soon for you are needed more now then ever
before,” wrote “T.J.”
“We
need a new generation of reporters, journalists, writers, and someone
always being tenacious to follow up on the story,” added “Tina.”
As
someone who has been involved with this website since its inception –
as a writer, an editor and a reader – I concur with these
sentiments. Readers should rest assured that despite my dad’s
death, every effort will be made to ensure that the website will
continue going strong.
Indeed,
I think that everyone involved with this project wants to uphold the
same commitment to truth-telling without fear or favor that inspired
Bob and his heroes like George Seldes, I.F. Stone, and Thomas Paine.
That
commitment can be seen in my dad’s pursuit of stories such as those
mentioned above, but also so many others – including his
investigations into the financial relationship of the influential
Washington Times with the Unification Church cult of Rev. Sun Myung
Moon, the truth behind the Nixon campaign’s alleged efforts to
sabotage President Lyndon Johnson’s Paris peace talks with
Vietnamese leaders in 1968, the reality of the chemical attack in
Syria in 2013, and even detailed examinations of the evidence behind
the so-called “Deflategate” controversy that he felt unfairly
branded his favorite football team, the New England Patriots, as
cheaters.
Reviewing
these journalistic achievements, it becomes clear that there are few
stories that have slipped under Consortiumnews.com’s radar, and
that the historical record is far more complete thanks to this
website and Bob’s old-fashioned approach to journalism.
But
besides this deeply held commitment to independent journalism, it
should also be recalled that, ultimately, Bob was motivated by a
concern over the future of life on Earth. As someone who grew up at
the height of the Cold War, he understood the dangers of allowing
tensions and hysteria to spiral out of control, especially in a world
such as ours with enough nuclear weapons to wipe out all life on the
planet many times over.
As
the United States continues down the path of a New Cold War, my dad
would be pleased to know that he has such committed contributors who
will enable the site to remain the indispensable home for independent
journalism that it has become, and continue to push back on false
narratives that threaten our very survival.
Thank you all for your support.
Thanks for posting this. I read Robert Parry's work over the years and even re-posted some of his articles on my blog. I did not know the details of his background and how he founded Consortium News and worked with one of my hero's, Gary Webb. I do hope that Consortium News will continue to be a voice for truth and real journalism in this era of "Fake News".
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