As Burkina
Faso Keeps Internet Shut UN Guterres
Silent Dictator Supporting Censorship
By
Matthew Russell
Lee, Book
Patreon
- BBC
- Guardian
UK - Honduras
UN GATE / SDNY
Court, Nov 27 – As Burkina
Faso continues its shut down
of the Internet to try to
block protests to the ruler,
the United Nations of equally
censoring Antonio Guterres is
entirely silent. Guterres just
throwns critical Press out,
and bans it from entry,
ordering hapless spokespeople
like Paulina Kubiak to not
answer basic questions about
transparency.
–
What is a novel? How long
should it be? How corrupt is
the United Nations? What is
the line between real world
injustice and fiction, black
comedy?
A just published
novella, "Belt and
Roadkill," raises these
questions.
The corruption of
the UN, its documented
domination by China as
evidenced by two recent
real-world bribery
prosecutions in the U.S.
District Court of the Southern
District of New York, are the
soil or message of the text.
But the meta questions about
what is a novel(la) is raised
by its form and length. (It is
available, first on Kindle, here).
Earlier this
month Parul Sehgal in The New
Yorker bemoaned the
democratization of literature,
or content, by Amazon and
Kindle Direct Publishing. But
who are the gatekeepers? Who
should they be?
The author of
Belt and Roadkill, years ago,
was on the threshold of elite
/ elitist publishing, summoned
to a venerable firm on Union
Square in Manhattan and told
that if only the actual names
of Citigroup's predatory
lenders could be dropped, it
might be possible to move
forward.
But aren't public
figures open to satire,
without danger of libel
lawsuits?
Aren't those
Predatory Benders who
foreclose on thousands of
homes just targets, like those
at the UN who cover up
hundreds of rapes by
peacekeepers, and ten thousand
Haitians killed by cholera, as
only two examples?
Belt and
Roadkill does not mention
Haiti, even once. It does,
however, name-check Cameroon
and Western Sahara, Huawei and
the January 6, 2021
insurrection, breach or
protest, whatever your
politics.
Let a
hundred flowers bloom, as Mao
said before moving to cut them
down. There will be
more.
[Belt and Roadkill: A Story of
Dis-United Nations, by Matthew Russell
Lee, Inner City Press is on Kindle,
and paperback here.]
***
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