honduras protests
© REUTERS/Jorge Cabrera; Ricardo Moraes 8
Americans are bombarded with non-stop news on Hong Kong and Moscow rallies, but how come mass protests in Honduras and Brazil aren't high on the agenda? Lee Camp looks at why the US corporate media are keeping mum on the subject.

Honduras, a Latin American nation of nine million people, has been hit by massive unrest, with people venting anger at pro-US President Orlando Hernandez. The wave of violent demonstrations saw the US diplomatic mission attacked by protesters - but the American mainstream media didn't say a word about it, Camp pointed out, speaking on Redacted Tonight.

"Protesters are literally burning the US embassy because we installed a f******d [Hernandez] rule over them, how is that non-news?" he wondered.


Hondurans are rightfully furious about "the neoliberal austerity measures supported by our country and the IMF." It caused massive layoffs, increased costs of basic goods and essentially made their lives suck down there, Camp reminded viewers.
But as long as their government is pillaging the people appropriately, our government is cool with it.
All in all, Honduras isn't the only unrest-hit country overlooked by the US corporate media. Brazil, "the largest of countries Americans don't care about," has been rocked by a massive strike led by trade unions. Over 45 million people there - "can you imagine 45 million Americans agreeing on everything?" - are protesting against the right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro and his controversial pension reform.

But this is "not a story your corporate media will cover," and for obvious reasons, Camp offered. On the one hand, it may not look good for the White House administration, including a particular president. On the other hand...
The American workers might think, 'what if WE have a general strike?'