US Media Interests
Champions of Profit, Propaganda
and Puffery
By John Stanton
and Wayne Madsen
29 April 2002
A crisis without precedent is underway in the
United States. And its consequences will be far graver than
those wrought
by the U.S. presidential election of 2000 and the terrorist
attacks of September 11, 2001. The collapse of the Jeffersonian "free
and uncensored press" in America endangers the liberties
of all Americans and, arguably, citizens from all walks of
life around the globe. As the U.S. prepares to invade Iraq
and preemptively strike anywhere in the world it feels threatened,
the only remaining barrier to monstrous U.S. totalitarianism
is a sickly and crippled U.S. media, an aggressive foreign
media, and the hope that the heretofore somnambulant American
public will awaken from its stupor.
U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Louis Brandeis once wrote, "Fear
of serious injury cannot alone justify suppression of free
speech and assembly. Men feared witches and burned women.
It is the function of speech to free men from the bondage
of irrational fears." Not so in 2002, because irrationality
and indoctrination sell. ABC's Diane Sawyer's interview with
a para-psychologist who talks to the "dead" gets
big billing. U.S. media interests regularly report unsubstantiated
government claims about terrorist capabilities and threats
to the populace. They ignore and, indeed, mock the message
of peaceful anti-establishment protests around the world
and here in the U.S. They editorialize on issues that please
advertisers and the profit margin. They plagiarize day's
and week's old news stories from the foreign and trade press
and claim them as their own. They pound home the message
of "just get over it," whether "it" is
election malfeasance, intelligence and defense failures or
corporate theft. In these environs, can it be long until
a daring American author mimics Czeslaw Milosz and pens the
American version of The Captive Mind?
With precious few exceptions
most notably the nation's "City
Papers," independent Internet sites - like the Indy
Media Center -- and grass roots broadcasters such as Pacifica,
U.S. print and broadcast organs from the New York Times to
the Los Angeles Times, from NBC to Fox, and from AM radio
bands to FM bands, spew out a vile and banal concoction of
information that numbs the mind and homogenizes the thought
processes of a U.S. citizenry scurrying about to support
the "war effort." So-called "news programs" seek
to pacify and assure during the commute, the thunderstorm,
the shopping spree, the murder. Weather, roads, guns, cars,
food are all endowed by newsreaders with character as if
those "things" are conscious entities. As Herbert
Marcuse so adroitly pointed out, in this environment people
don't "see" themselves, they project themselves
into "things". Viewers are commodities to the U.S.
media interests. "Thought" need not apply here.
Fantasy
is Fact
Instead of reporting on how many people are
killed in various grass roots insurgencies against U.S. backed
tin
horn dictators
around the world, networks now report how well movies do
at the box office. Little wonder, considering how the news
networks are so tightly welded into Hollywood's infotainment
empires. Even PBS is not immune from such corporate infiltration,
even though it would have you believe differently during
its long and painful fund drives. Consider the recent ignoble
treatment of Wall Street Week host and founder Louis Rukeyser.
Because AOL Time Warner could not find a time slice on CNN
to plug its Fortune magazine, it simply gobbled up Rukeyser's
show for the magazine. Even PBS's famed documentaries are
not immune to such corporate power moves. The highly-acclaimed
wildlife show Nature has been forced to drop its long time
narrators in favor of personalities like Julia Roberts and
Meg Ryan, whose major contributions to environmental studies
were their respective complaints that life in Mongolia and
the hills of Thailand was just not as cozy as that in Beverly
Hills, California.
So it's no surprise that U.S. media interests
enthusiastically embrace all the activities that move money
from one hand
to another, but none that move a contrary, novel or critical
idea from one mind to another. U.S. media interests certainly
have their counterparts: the retroviruses whose ingenious
method is the ability to deceive the host cell into operating
on a routine basis as if the retrovirus is a trusted ally
-- a supporter.
"
We work for you!", exclaims General Electric's affiliate,
NBC News Channel 4 located in the Washington DC viewing market. "You
and Channel 4, Working Together" is the slogan. "Start
your day at 5:00 AM with us," says NBC, and they solicit
viewers to end that day with them at 1:00 AM the following
morning. It's the same refrain at CBS, NBC and ABC affiliates.
Ending a day with the networks means submitting to the musings
of late night talk show hosts Jay Leno and Dave Lettermen
fawning over smarmy politicians like Dick Cheney and John
Ashcroft. If the hangover from that weren't painful enough,
the stupefying advertisements and "news" inserts
that come with viewing or listening to any broadcast programming
from U.S. media interests leaves the viewer punch-drunk.
The nauseating blend of politics, sound-bites, comedy, murder, "reality", "Hollywood", "news", "graphic
footage" ---- intermixed with the viscous commercialism
that plays on procreation, death, and productivity---put
forth by owners and news readers of infotainment interests
stands as one of the most mercenary acts in capitalist history.
And, more the pity, this charade of news reporting is performed
by those whose intelligence quotient is far below the highest
paid athletes in America.
In the midst of this wretched stew,
comes the truncated seventeen-minute network newscast consisting
of 750-word propaganda diatribes
masquerading as editorials. And out there on the AM and
FM radio bands, the fare is three-to-four hour invective
radio
commentaries, interspersed with yuk-yuk blather with publicity-seeking
politicians. A prime example is Viacom's syndicated morning
radio show - simulcast by MSNBC -- hosted by the desiccated
Don Imus, who creeks and groans like an old wooden galleon.
Not only does he offer a radio and TV platform to people
like former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to
advocate the assassination of Yasser Arafat but he entices
professional journalists to aid and abet in such obvious
politically-inspired polemics.
This same script is played
out on CBS, ABC, Fox, MSNBC, PBS and a hundred other channels,
newspapers and AM and FM bands
across the land. And so it has become with U.S. media interests
who, in the wake of 911 (itself a worn-out and pedantic
term like Al Qaeda) and in conjunction with propagandists
in the
current U.S. government, seek to transform the U.S. populace
into a nation of Chauncey Gardners. But then again, can
a parasite be blamed for thriving on the docility of its
host,
its supporter, in this instance the American public?
Who Tells
You What to Think?
Columbia Journalism Review and
Media Channel track the owners and minions of U.S. media
interests at http://www.cjr.org/owners/
and www.mediachannel.org, and a visit there is most enlightening.
NBC, General Electric's marionette, owns an array of properties
from financial institutions in France to long distance telephone
services in Hungary. General Electric is a partner with Starbucks
Coffee in Talk City. Under the Walt Disney Group entity resides
ABC, which recently featured an investigative piece on World
News Tonight on whether time travel is possible. This was
not a news story but a movie advertisement: Disney was preparing
to release its remake of the movie, "The Time Machine." It
must have been tough for the quintessential Peter Jennings
to turn into an Entertainment Tonight host for a Hollywood
gossip and gabfest show masquerading as a nightly news broadcast.
Disney also owns interests in petroleum and natural gas production
facilities.
The New York Times owns the Boston Globe and
has a partial interest in a sports franchise, the Boston
Red
Sox. Viacom
is the holder of CBS and runs everything from Star Trek properties
to Spelling Television. The Washington Post co-owns the International
Herald Tribune with the New York Times and, along with the
LA Times, runs a news service. Gannett, publisher of USA
Today, owns "insider" publications U.S. Army, Air
Force and Navy-Marine Corps Times, as well as Defense News
and Military Market. They also partner with defense contractor
General Electric on web ventures.
And then there's The Unification
Church's Washington Times Newspaper listed as a "project" on
Rev. Sun Myung Moon's website. The Washington Times, along
with the Dow
Jones' Wall Street Journal (Jones also owns 20 newspapers
around the U.S.), cater to a powerful constituency: God,
Money, Corporations and Republicans, although not always
in that order. Rev. Moon claims that Jesus
Christ visited
him in 1935 and, according to The Unification Church website, "Jesus
asked him to complete the task of establishing God's kingdom
on earth and bringing His peace
to humankind." Apparently Bush the First and Bush the
Second agree with Moon. The elder was on the Moon payroll
as a speechmaker and the younger claimed in a presidential
debate that Jesus Christ was the greatest philosopher of
all time. Finally, no mention of media would be complete
without Fox News Corporation. As reported by MediaChannel,
Rupert Murdoch's empire is so vast that he claims, "Our
reach is unmatched around the world. We are reaching people
from the moment they wake up until they fall asleep."
Pay
No Attention to What the Media is Doing Behind That Curtain
With incest in the U.S. media as flagrant as it is-combined
with its subservience to the current U.S administration
and military--is it any surprise that events are scripted
to
suit the outcome of the U.S. economic and national policies?
The recent U.S.-backed Venezuelan coup exposed the U.S.
media interests as complicit partners in deceiving the American
public. FAIR at www.fair.org documented the print media's
bovine coverage:
"
When elements of the Venezuelan military forced president
Hugo Chavez from office last week, the editorial boards of
several major U.S. newspapers followed the U.S. government's
lead and greeted the news with enthusiasm. In an April 13
editorial, the New York Times triumphantly declared that
Chavez's "resignation" meant that "Venezuelan
democracy is no longer threatened by a would-be dictator." Conspicuously
avoiding the word "coup," the Times explained that
Chavez "stepped down after the military intervened and
handed power to a respected business leader.... Three days
later, Chavez had returned to power and the Times ran a second
editorial (4/16/02) half-apologizing for having gotten carried
away."
When the corporate megaliths took over the
news networks, the first casualties were the foreign bureaus.
No longer
would network journalists be able to build up a base of sources
and contacts within various capital cities and financial
centers. The result is that the networks increasingly rely
on government spokespeople for "news" that is really
nothing more than propaganda. Take Afghanistan, for example.
Network and newspaper reporters are confined to Kabul because
U.S. military planners have convinced them the countryside
is unsafe. Not knowing any better and lacking any in-country
contacts, they remain in Kabul and dutifully file as news
copy every statement regurgitated by a suspicious military
public affairs officer. As Robert Young Pelton indicated
in an interview with www.salon.com
"
Well, the military hates the media. The conundrum is that
we live and die for the Constitution and one of the elements
of the Constitution is freedom of the press -- the right
of the democratic public to make decisions based on a free
flow of information, without censorship, without people rewriting
history. And basically since the Vietnam War, the military
realizes that the press is the enemy, because the press is
actually faster and more intelligent than the military is.
They can assess a military situation long before the military
figures it out".
This story has been replayed in cities
and countries around the world. Last June, the world media
bought the story issued
by the government of Nepal that a love sick, drunk, and
deranged Crown Prince executed his entire family, including
his mother
and father -- the King and Queen. Not reported was that
incoming King and new Crown Prince were brutal thugs bent
on turning
the country into a virtual province of neighboring India.
The Hollywood-inspired news media liked the O.J. Simpson
and Robert Blake angle of the story instead and, without
even a cursory independent investigation, decided the official
government explanation would suffice. It's the same story-line
in Washington, DC.
Rewriting the Record
The recent pro-Palestinian and anti-globalization
march in Washington was ignominiously ignored by the U.S.
media interests.
Only C-SPAN covered it live. However, when the ranks of
the protestors swelled to over 75,000, C-SPAN cut away its
coverage
to air a taped three-day old speech by the head of the
International Monetary Fund. Undoubtedly, C-SPAN, like many
other networks
that have offered unbiased coverage of Middle East news,
felt the wrath of a powerful lobby group called CAMERA
- the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in
America
- a virtual propaganda arm of the Israeli government known
for berating any reporter who criticizes Israel. It effectively
uses is financial clout to get wayward media elements to
fall in line with Israel's party line.
Another dangerous trend
is cable news addiction to Bush. The Three Stooges of cable
news broadcasting - CNN, FoxCable,
and MSNBC -- all break away for live coverage whether Bush
is hamming it up in the mountains of New York State or disembarking
from his helicopter. Gone underreported is the doctoring
of White House transcripts by staffers who excise Bush's
intellectual blunders at press conferences and speeches who,
in effect, are rewriting the record. And U.S. military movements
in support of the failed coup in Venezuela received scant
attention. History is replete with examples of authoritarian
leaders surrounding themselves with cameras and one-sided
news coverage. Consider Leni Riefenstahl's constant filming
of Hitler and how the coverage extended to every German movie
house. Or Soviet TV's ad minutiae coverage of Brezhnev, Andropov,
and Chernenko. Every time they visited a tractor factory
in Minsk or a poultry plant in Kiev, the story was prominently
featured on the nightly "Vremya" news.
As U.S. military
planners, politicians and corporations continue their global
pacification campaign against a now trumped
up Al Qaeda, they have already planned for the invasion of
Iraq and, perhaps, other members of the Axis of Evil. To
garner public support for boundless U.S. military operations--from
which new exploitable markets magically appear--the war machine
has received the enthusiastic support of U.S. media interests
whose task, it seems, is to keep the public busy and acquiescent.
In reality, most American's are extraordinarily averse to
war, yet the U.S. media interests upon which they rely for "thought" are
the integral operatives for U.S. war propaganda and concomitant
public indoctrination. Nazi celebrity Hermann Goering would
be right at home in the U.S. in 2002, working with U.S. media
interests to suppress dissent and bring home a glorious victory
for the Homeland.
"
Why of course the people don't want war! Why should some
poor slob on a farm want to risk his life in a war when the
best he can get out of it is to come back to his farm in
one piece? Naturally, the common people don't want war: neither
in Russia, nor in England, nor for that matter in Germany.
That is understood. But after all it is the leaders of the
country who determine the policy, and it is always a simple
matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy,
or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist
dictatorship ... Voice or no voice, the people can always
be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All
you have to do is to tell them they are being attacked, and
denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing
the country to danger."
Copyright © 2002 by the
News Insider, John Stanton and Wayne Madsen
John Stanton is a Virginia-based writer on
national security affairs and Wayne Madsen is a Washington,
DC-based
investigative
journalist who writes and comments frequently on civil
liberties and human rights issues.
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