Precies dezelfde technieken die we inmiddels zo goed kennen uit de coronatijd worden nu weer massaal ingezet: iedereen die ook maar durft vraagtekens te zetten bij het officiële narratief van de westerse overheden wordt hard aangepakt. Vrijheid van meningsuiting lijkt weer dood en iedere afwijkende mening dient grondig te worden neergesabeld. Hieronder een artikel van RT.Com – een website waarvan onze overheid heeft besloten dat wij die niet mogen zien omdat we anders zouden gaan twijfelen over de oneindige propagandastroom die ons via alle mediakanalen iedere dag worden aangereikt. Angst voor het verhaal van de ander. Angst dat mensen niet langer geloven wat de overheid verspreidt via haar mediakanalen.
Het oorspronkelijke artikel is te vinden op: https://www.rt.com/news/552494-scotland-professor-ukraine-theater/
Meer over de mogelijkheid dat de Azovbrigade de ontploffing in het theater in Mariupol zelf heeft georchestreerd kun je lezen op: Azov-militanten bliezen Theater in Mariupol op waar ze …
Probeer verder geval zoveel mogelijk Google te vermijden als je openstaat voor neutralere informatie.
Professor faces government crackdown for questioning Ukraine narrative
A Scottish professor was slammed for sharing an article claiming the Mariupol theater bombing was “staged”

A view of a destroyed theater hall in Mariupol, Ukraine, March 18, 2022 © Getty Images / Ukrainian Interior Ministry
University of Edinburgh professor Tim Hayward is being hammered in the media for sharing an article suggesting the bombing of a theater in the Ukrainian city of Mariupol may have been staged by Ukrainian nationalists. Hayward’s skepticism has already led Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi to promise a “crackdown” on such wrongthink.
Hayward shared an article on Sunday from the Grayzone, a left-wing news outlet. Citing eyewitnesses in the Ukrainian city of Mariupol, the article claims that Ukrainian ‘Azov’ fighters – once described by western outlets and lawmakers as “neo-Nazis” – sheltered behind civilians in a theater in Mariupol, before blowing the building up as Russian forces entered the Ukrainian city.
Azov forces and journalists linked to the extremist unit accused Russia of bombing the building, and used the incident to call for western intervention against Russia. US President Joe Biden declared Russian President Vladimir Putin a “war criminal” in response, and American politicians from both parties and from Europe renewed their calls for military aid – including fighter jets – for Ukraine.
Civilians feared trapped and killed in Mariupol theater explosion
However, no video exists showing the theater being bombed and Russia denies attacking the building, stating that it had “never been considered as a strike target.” Conflicting reports of the weapons supposedly used and the civilian casualties or lack thereof only muddy the picture further.
Yet Hayward was condemned by his colleagues for raising the issue. In a Times article on Tuesday accusing him of “spreading propaganda,” Dr. Aliaksandr Herasimenka, a ‘misinformation’ researcher at Oxford University, said that “we must be very careful” when reading reports critical of the official narrative in Ukraine, and that outlets like the Grayzone “are currently engaged in a massive disinformation campaign.” He did not provide any evidence that would support such allegations against the media outlet.
Hayward has been singled out by the Scottish government too. Having shared articles questioning the alleged bombing of a maternity hospital in Mariupol and claiming that Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad did not gas his own citizens as Western sources insist, the professor was accused in Westminster last week by Tory MP Robert Halfon as being a “useful idiot for President Putin’s atrocities.”
Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi said that academics like Hayward were already being investigated, and that their universities would be contacted.
“Putin and his cronies are a malign influence on anyone in this country buying their false narrative, and I have to repeat it is a false and dangerous narrative, and we will crack down on it hard,” Zahawi said, without elaborating on how.
Speaking to Edinburgh Live, Hayward said that he is concerned about restrictions to free speech, and considers hearing both points of view important in wartime.
“In war, miscalculations can have terrible consequences. We also know that misinformation can sometimes even slip through on our own side, as when the UK went to war in Iraq, mistakenly believing it had weapons of mass destruction,” he said. “As for the people of Ukraine, their need is for peace – not to become the epicenter of World War III,” he added, referring to the widely-held belief that were Western powers to intervene in Ukraine, the consequence would be a third world war.