Sulome Profile picture
Sep 19, 2020 5 tweets 1 min read Read on X
Good morning to the journalists and pundits who spent three and a half years pooh-poohing any suggestion we might be heading down a road to authoritarianism and doing backflips to contort everything that led us here into some semblance of normality
The ultimate tragedy of what’s happening isn’t that it came out of nowhere. It’s that it was so blatantly obvious every step of the way, and could perhaps have been prevented, had every headline from mid-2015 onwards fulfilled the basic role of journalism to warn the public.
“What did you do as your democracy crumbled in front of the world, Daddy/Mommy?”

“I RePoRtEd BoTh SiDeZ EqUaLlY, JoHnNy.”
I went to a great journalism school, and I can tell you part of the problem is that we are programmed from day one of class that balance is the goal of good reporting. Journalism is not a scale. You have to manipulate scales into not tipping. Journalism should be a mirror.
Sorry, I’m a little bitter today. I wish the field I was born into and believe in with all my being had fulfilled its true role. There has been some excellent reporting, to be sure, but there was also a lot of ratings/click-obsessed, obtuse, elitist nonsense. And here we are.

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More from @SulomeAnderson

Jun 30, 2021
To everyone reaching out to me with concern: I’m fine. I stand by my journalism and I will never be ashamed of writing about my struggles with mental illness and drug abuse. To anyone facing similar demons: you are not alone. I am proof that healing is possible. Stick with it.
To the people who have spent so much energy trying to bring me down: I am still standing. I am still learning, and growing, and healing from a long history of trauma more each day. I wish them only more peace of mind than they seem to have, in their current state of existence.
I won’t be on here much, as I continue to follow my path of healing and recovery, wherever it leads me. I just want to say that I am by no means perfect, but after much work, I’m not ashamed of who I am anymore. I’m not sure the people trying so hard to hurt me can say the same.
Read 4 tweets
Mar 20, 2021
So I don’t know how all your Friday nights are going, but my phone, while plugged into our car’s navigation system, just spontaneously pulled up the route from Israel into Lebanon, which stayed on the screen for a few minutes, and then disappeared 😱
(I have never been to Israel...and had not been searching for those terms in Google maps previously)
Oh, also. I’m in Canada? Should have mentioned that 😳
Read 5 tweets
Mar 16, 2021
Whatever I’ve written about #Syria seems so meaningless, in the face of such tragedy. Most of you won’t read this and who can blame you? Impotent grief is hard to feel. But if I had to choose 1 story from 10 years of watching a country burn, it’s this one. foreignpolicy.com/2016/06/29/syr…
Many other heartrending moments never made it into print, like the little boy I met in 2012 at a camp in Aley. He couldn’t have been more than 8 or 9. This was just after Obama walked back his red line. This child saw his father and uncle killed in front of him. His sister later.
I was doing other interviews in his little makeshift school when he came up to me. He looked at me with the deadest eyes I’ve ever seen in a human face. “Where is America?” he whispered to me. “Tell Obama we need help.”
Read 6 tweets
Mar 14, 2021
My IPhone just reminded me of the weirdest thing I've ever seen while reporting. I was staying with a tribe in the KRG. This tribe had been on that land for many centuries, and digging up ancient artifacts the whole time. Their patriarch showed me this, in their makeshift museum. Image
I'm very curious to know more about this artifact, because it's very interesting-looking, but that's not the weird part. This is the weird part. The tribal leader told me the stump had been there for three years. The museum had no windows, so no light. It had been given no water. Image
I welcome any science types who can explain this, as it's something I've been curious about for a long time. How can a tree stump grow leaves without light or water for three years? Seemed quite strange, especially with the weird artifact, but I'm sure there's an explanation.
Read 4 tweets
Mar 1, 2021
This is my great-grandmother, Bahiyeh, who grew up in Damascus. When her husband’s family wanted to marry her 8-year-old daughter, my teta, to a cousin in his 20s, she took her child and escaped to Lebanon, where they lived in hiding for years, so their family wouldn’t kill them.
This is Souad, my teta, who grew up poor, in a country notorious for its xenophobia and sectarianism. She was married and divorced twice; the second time to my jido, Adib Bassil. Adib came from a wealthy Maronite Catholic family (yes, the same as Gebran, to our endless shame).
Adib was an high-ranking officer in the Phalange, a right-wing Christian militia, when he met my teta. This is Adib as a young man with his family, standing in the back, far right. He died when I was a toddler, but I’m told he was always very stern and serious, from a young age.
Read 9 tweets
Feb 10, 2021
We need a more moral foreign policy, particularly in MENA; not just because it's right, but because exploitation, invasion, turning local populations against us, and selling weapons to dictators who serve our interests while preaching about democracy hasn't worked out so well.
I was on a panel in which I argued for this, and several men kind of smirked, like I was naive. One brought up the idea that weapons sales to dictators gives us some measure of control over them. I just thought, somewhere in hell, Saddam Hussein is having a good laugh at that one
It's not naive to point out that blowing things up and consistently serving our immediate interests, usually at the expense of local populations in the places where we meddle, is just not working, and has repeatedly damaged our long-term interests. So why not try something else?
Read 8 tweets

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