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This pretty much says it all. The entire
purpose of the Algae Awards, aside from having a little fun, is to give a shout
out to those who either demonstrate the traits of a "free and independent
press," call attention to the lack thereof, or promote the re-creation of same.
This post on DU pretty much does all of that. Aside from the message
being painfully spot-on, it is exceptionally well written. Coincidentally, we
just last night added a note to the Ashleigh Banfield award similar to the
final point of this post. This post makes the point in far better fashion.
We wonder, though - what is this person
doing writing on Democratic Underground? She should be FCC Chairman or
something!
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McCamy Taylor
(1000+ posts)
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Sat May-31-08 01:08 AM
Original message |
| “The biggest villain here is not Rumsfeld...It’s
the TV networks." |
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In a recent journal, I suggested that “Edward R. Murrow
was no Edward R. Murrow.” A statement like this is nonsensical in its face. In
an essay it is meant to make the reader 1) object and then 2) try to think of a
case in which the impossible could be possible. If Edward R. Murrow is both an
individual and a platonic ideal then the statement can be true, since people
seldom live up to their legends. We are used to hearing that “So and so is no
Edward R. Murrow” by which we mean that “So and so” does not reveal the truth
about powerful public figures without fear of repercussions to himself or those
around him irregardless of the great disparity of power between “So and so” and
the public figures he criticizes. Edward R. Murrow, the platonic ideal is
always courageous and selfless. Everyone else, including Edward R. Murrow the
man, thinks about his career and consequences before he speaks.
However, the American corporate media wants us to believe that Edward R.
Murrow achieved his own platonic ideal. That is why the mythology of the man
does not include the fact that his nemesis, Sen. Joe McCarthy made the fateful
mistake of going after military men, generals, at a time when the newly elected
president was a former general, Eisenhower. It was one thing to attack
anonymous people who worked as clerks, accountants, scriptwriters---they were
all fair game. The generals at the Pentagon were not. So, CBS turned Edward R.
Murrow loose. And the corporate news media in the United States proclaimed that
he—and the news media which he represented---- had saved the American people.
The Watergate investigation done by Washington Post reporters Woodward
and Bernstein has gone down in history as one of journalism’s finest moments.
WaPo owner, Katharine Graham was personally threatened by Attorney General John
Mitchell who said "Katie Graham's gonna get her tit caught in a big fat wringer
if that's published." However, what made the gamble pay off was John Dean’s
revelation of a list of VIP’s whom the White House planned to “screw”.
Watergate is, indeed, a deviation from past practice, not so much in scale or
in principle as in the choice of targets. The targets now include the rich and
respectable, spokesmen for official ideology, men who are expected to share
power, to design social policy, and to mold popular opinion. Such people are
not fair game for persecution at the hands of the state.
Watergate: A Skeptical View
Noam Chomsky
The New York Review of Books, September 20, 1973
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This made it the best story in town, worthy of daily media coverage and full
Congressional hearings----though police beatings, mass arrests, illegal trials
and even murders of leftists, civil rights activists, war protesters and union
members continued to be ignored or treated as “their fault.” The fact that the
Watergate story broke and was covered in minute detail and was written about
from every different angle meant that the press had saved democracy---for
people like Paul Newman and Charles Dyson and Katharine Graham whom the upstart
Nixon had the temerity to lump in with the traditional enemies of the state.
In 2002, the Pentagon was a willing participant in the invasion of Iraq. It
enlisted the aid of its favorite corporate media partners, NBC and MSNBC, both
owned by General Electric, one of the largest beneficiaries of military
contracts. Under Tom Brokaw, NBC lead the march to war. Here you can find NBC’s
special war theme song (along with war music used by all the other networks)
http://www.slate.com/id/2081608
/
Here you can find the lengths that MSNBC was willing to go to in order to run a
patriotic operation. (Question: Do you know why it is called Countdown?
I didn’t until I read this. )
http://www.theava.com/03/08-13-warpimps.html
Here's a story that sums up how the networks sought to commercialize the Iraq
war and profit from the invasion just like the oil companies. On the eve of the
war, MSNBC fired talk show host Phil Donahue. They replaced the Donahue show
with a running segment called Countdown: Iraq, featuring the usual
nightly coterie of retired generals, security flaks and spin doctors. The
network's executives blamed the cancellation on sagging ratings. In fact,
during its run Donahue's show attracted more viewers than any other program on
the network. The real reason for the pre-emptive strike on Donahue was spelled
out in an internal memo from anxious executives at NBC. Donahue, the memo said,
offered "a difficult face for NBC in a time of war...He seems to delight in
presenting guests who are anti-war, anti-Bush and skeptical of the
administration's motives."
The memo warned that Donahue's show risked tarring MSNBC as an unpatriotic
network, "a home for liberal anti-war agenda at the same time that our
competitors are waving the flag at every opportunity." So, with scarcely a
second thought, the honchos at MSNBC gave Donahue the boot and hoisted the
battle flag.
It's war that sells.
A Confidence Game on IraqWar Pimps
by Jeffrey St. Clair
August 13, 2003
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Here is more on “Countdown: Iraq”:
http://www.cooperativeresearch.org/context.jsp?item=afa...
| “The biggest villain here is not Rumsfeld nor the Pentagon,” Cohen writes. “It’s
the TV networks. In the land of the First Amendment, it was their choice to
shut down debate and journalism. No government agency forced MSNBC to
repeatedly feature the hawkish generals unopposed. Or fire Phil Donahue. Or
smear weapons expert Scott Ritter. Or blacklist former attorney general Ramsey
Clark. It was top NBC/MSNBC execs, not the Feds, who imposed a quota system on
the Donahue staff requiring two pro-war guests if we booked one anti-war
advocate—affirmative action for hawks.…
he major TV networks… were not hoodwinked by a Pentagon propaganda scheme.
They were willingly complicit, and have been for decades.”
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So, if an ex-NBC employee says that the network was in the business of spinning
propaganda for the White House and Pentagon in 2002-2003, I would say she is
telling the truth.
People in the U.S. have been accused of having short memories. It might be
true. Maybe this is why we forget that NBC was gung ho on the invasion of Iraq.
That was five years ago. Three years ago, something happened. The Bush
administration and the Pentagon had a falling out. The NeoCons decided to
proceed to stage two of their plan for world oil dominance, the invasion of
Iran. The Pentagon replied “You and what army?”
Most corporate media empires are dependent upon the political party which
occupies the executive branch, because the FCC controls their fortunes. General
Electric is dependent upon the Pentagon for its livelihood. When the White
House made an enemy of the military, it made an enemy of General Electric and
its media holdings. We saw the results one evening in January, 2005 when MSNBC
assembled a cast including Pat Buchanan to tell the world what a disaster an
invasion of Iran would be. They have been telling us the same thing ever since.
They have also turned Keith Olbermann loose on the Bush administration, since a
weakened White House is in no position to invade any more middle eastern
countries. Chris Matthews has informed the world that everyone knew that there
were no WMDs in much the same way that Big Brother told the world of 1984 “We
have always been at war with Oceana” Progressive journalists who once
would have been relegated to panel discussions on PBS, like Rachel Maddow have
become regular fixtures on the GE network.
General Electric and its media holdings NBC and MSNBC did not have an epiphany.
Keith Olbermann did not make them see the light or teach them the error of
their ways. Bush and Cheney got into a shoving match with the Pentagon and the
Pentagon shoved back. Those who have set MSNBC up on a pedestal, claiming that
the network is somehow more progressive or more “Democratic” or more pacifist
because it is opposed to this endless war for oil in the middle east
miss the point. This is the same MSNBC which fired Donahue because he
would not get behind the Pentagon’s push for the invasion of Iraq. And if the
Pentagon says “We like McCain”, then damn it, NBC likes McCain.
The press loves to celebrate its heroes, but for every David vs. Goliath, there
have been Pontius Pilates. At the request of the FBI under J Edgar Hoover, the
NYTs published oppo about Dr. King that reduced him to tears. Then there was
the ongoing atrocity of Judy Miller, followed by Michael Gordon, the world’s
first voice activated human tape recorder. The Washington Post gave us “The
Good Lie” and “Pelosi Knew” but I am still waiting for national press to admit
that Gore won in Florida. Now that would show some spine. CBS sank the
career of Dan Rather because he dared to produce a true story about W.’s AWOL
before the 2004 election with only one detail in doubt (though it did not
change the substance of the story). Viacom’s news network did this because they
were afraid that they would be forced to divest some of their media holdings.
So much for Murrows’ old employer. ABC gave us the never ending atrocity of
“America Held Hostage” which gave us the Reagan era. And NBC, which people tout
as some kind of liberal mecca, sat on its Ohio exit polls in late 2004 just
like all the other news networks, presumably because they believed the Bush
Administration line that they were going to relax federal media ownership rules
(and Kerry wasn’t).
We can not expect any representative of the corporate media to speak for us or
to free us, because all of them have been bought by the system which oppresses
us. The three cases I describe above in which very powerful people have
been challenged by the press are actually examples of internal feuds among the
rich and powerful. Pentagon and the executive branch versus Congress. Rich
Democrats versus the executive branch. Pentagon versus the executive branch.
Some voices within the system may be more authentic than others, but be
careful. When those voices get too authentic, they are likely to be snuffed out
by the industries for which they work. If we want to give voice to our own
cause, we need to do it ourselves, with our own news that is free from the
corrupting influence of money and sponsors. That it is why we need a free,
fully funded and independent multichannel public broadcasting network that will
have room for a 24 hour news network, a children's network, adult
programming---the equivalent of the BBC. In the meantime, instead of looking
out for more Edward R. Murrows, we should be looking for more Daniel Ellsberg
(the real hero of Watergate), Sy Hersch , Bill Moyer and Thomas Paines.
It is necessary to the happiness of man that he be mentally faithful to
himself. Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it
consists in professing to believe what he does not believe.
Thomas Paine |
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