It may be meaningless to you, but that is your opinion (a very flawed one with these other comparisons).
It is not.
It is highly presumptuous of you to think that is a flawed opinion.
Bangladesh's media suffers deeply from lack of freedom.
Therefore, the comparisons with the Russian media in Assad regime controlled territory, Chinese media interviewing Kim Jong Un and such remains valid.
You would have to talk to an extended number of Bangladeshi regular people (who had parents and grandparents involved in their war of liberation) and read up on the events (from as neutral fact of the matter as you would like to, incl Western journalists based on the ground at the time)....which I suspect you haven't.
Irrelevant.
As explained above.
The editor/journalist being interviewed is a freedom fighter himself. He knows what he saw on the ground.
Irrelevant.
As explained above.
Again, the same could be said of Russian media interviewing Assad regime members or Chinese media interviewing Kim Jong Un or his assistants.
Personal experience or knowledge of ground realities are meaningless when media freedom is lacking in those territories.
But dismissing any of it out of hand for someone merely being from Bangladesh is not going to be tolerated here...given the level and intensity of atrocities that went on...prompting the refugee crisis into India and the eventual outbreak of war (When the situation causing this refugee exodus was not going to be addressed by the Pakistan govt of the time).
Is that a threat from you? On your role as a moderator or a regular member?
Could admin
@Webslave or moderators
@Test7 @Cabatli_53 @Sinan help me understand this?
Is that a threat from a moderator to
fall in line?
I eagerly await your response.
That is like dismissing the holocaust out of hand (and the consequential formation of countries/borders/polities after it) because the victims and eventual victors are not entirely 100% "both sides of the story" neutral in some impression an individual downstream to it all may have.
Anybody is free to dismiss the holocaust as a figment of somebody's imagination. I do not see any problems. Others might see serious problems. That's just difference in opinions. It's okay.
Again it shows you know very little on Bangladesh politics....given it is the other party (BNP) that shares far friendlier relations with the US. No idea what the "sometime in 2006" even refers to...the current PM in BD came to power in 2009.
I would argue the author of the article
here is more qualified than you on the topic. He presents convincing evidence based on facts that my statement is correct. You are however free to contest it but to do so, you should introduce evidence and facts.
As for "little to no media freedom" in BD (esp. regarding things foundational to their formation that their public carry deeply in their minds and hearts if you just talk to them in any significant number), that can be pointed to pretty much any country. What and who is the basis of consistent neutral measurement? That is off-topic, you can start a new thread for it.
That is not off topic. Media freedom is the foundation upon which any independent enquiry can be carried out and hopefully, justice meted out to the perpetrators of injustice.
When media freedom is lacking in those territories, there is only one version of events that is going to emerge.
In that thread, we can also explore if say the Turks (gathered here for you to enquire with) formation of their nation-state is similarly compromised in some way by their being some perception of "little to no" media freedom within their country by whomever.
You can create that thread if you wish. That is off topic, though.
I guess another alternative again would be for you to go talk to a large gathering of Bangladeshis to get their view of it...past the "media".
You don't know if I have done so. You should have been less presumptuous.
Political and general theory regarding formation of country vs nation is again off-topic. Thank you for recognising its derailing the topic, its something you can create a new thread on and I would be happy to discuss who and what essentially created all the countries of Europe over time (and other parts of the world as the concept then transformed into the nation-state).
Certainly, no non Europeans created England or Scotland.
However, we can not say the same for India. It was essentially created by the Brits. If you are happy to discuss those events, that is also your prerogative.
Like did the Normans create England...or the Romans or Anglo-Saxons or Danes?
They were all Europeans.
Did the Mongols, Manchus and Japanese "essentially" create China in some larger way it carries on today?....or did the Germans and Soviets through Marx, Lenin and Stalin?...all with due difference to what is a country vs nation vs polity etc.
Japanese were probably an offshoot of the Chinese civilization, hence they could not have essentially or otherwise, created China.
Political and general theory regarding formation of country vs nation is again off-topic. Thank you for recognising its derailing the topic, its something you can create a new thread on and I would be happy to discuss who and what essentially created all the countries of Europe over time (and other parts of the world as the concept then transformed into the nation-state).
Like did the Normans create England...or the Romans or Anglo-Saxons or Danes?
Did the Mongols, Manchus and Japanese "essentially" create China in some larger way it carries on today?....or did the Germans and Soviets through Marx, Lenin and Stalin?...all with due difference to what is a country vs nation vs polity etc.
This subject goes well past so called colonial history filter (given what implants into political and national psyche, institutions and culture)...and best be discussed in another thread if you so desire it.
Why blabber so much on a topic if you did recognize its a tangent off the original discussion?
Are you not derailing it incessantly?