...Slobodan Miloshevich. Having spent 4 years kicking the kangaroo court's ass at every turn, Slobo was found dead in his prison cell last Saturday.
The speculations as to the cause(s) of his death are plenty, but the international media whoredom (or the "established media," if you prefer) has devoted far more time to the re-publishing of the recycled, copy-and-paste-journalism-style articles pertaining to the pre-death Miloshevich.
Full of fiction and outrageously ridiculous concoctions, their context-free reports stand largely unchallenged to this day (hats off to Diana Johnstone, Carl Savich, Serge Trifkovich, Michael Parenti, David Binder, James Bissett, Justin Raimondo, Charlie Reese, John Laughland...) but it is going to take a lot more to counter the onslaught of the multibillion-dollar media juggernaut standing behind the "journalists" of the Gutman caliber.
Gutman? Gutman who? According to the USIP's official bio:
Roy Gutman is diplomatic correspondent for Newsweek and director of American University's Crimes of War Project. He is perhaps best known to American readers for his prize-winning coverage of the 1993 war in Bosnia-Herzegovina, where he provided the first documented reports of concentration camps.
The prize they're talking about is the Pulitzer. The concentration camps they're talking about are non-existent.