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WilliamPitt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 01:19 PM
Original message
Your Media is Killing You
Edited on Mon Sep-20-04 01:35 PM by WilliamPitt
The American mainstream television news media, in whole and in part, has catastrophically failed the American people and is singularly responsible for the untimely deaths of tens of thousands of innocent people.

The trajectory of this plunge is easy to chart. The 1980s saw unprecedented deregulation of the rules pertaining to the ownership of media outlets. Thus began the combination and consolidation of dozens of differing viewpoints under the iron control of a few massive corporations. The many voices became one voice, and a dullard's voice at that.

The opening year of the 1990s saw the push towards our first war in Iraq. Rather than hold to basic standards set by Edward R. Murrow and the other giants of journalism - see it for yourself, do the legwork, because the American people deserve to know what is happening - the mainstream television news media decided their best course was to allow themselves to be hand-fed by the Pentagon. No footage, no reports, no news whatsoever would be released to the public without first passing through Defense Department screeners. The American people learned from this that war looks like a video game, that death is remote, that victory is a simple matter of pushing a button. easy

After surrendering their integrity to governmental and military entities which lie as a matter of course, the mainstream television news media learned with the trial of O.J. Simpson the simple truth espoused by H.L. Mencken: "No one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American people." Day after day, for sixteen months, every television was filled around the clock with soap-opera entertainment passing itself off as news. The American people, deprived of substantive information about the world around them, learned that real news is only about celebrities.

Then came the greatest entertainment-as-news extravaganza of all time: The Monica Lewinski scandal and the impeachment of a President who lied about sex. As an athlete will lose muscle tone if he stays away from the gym or the playing field, so did the intellectual muscles of the media atrophy after years of avoiding the basic efforts required in their field. Why run a scoop down about the war if I can just publish this Pentagon-prepared battle assessment? Why investigate Whitewater and the death of Vince Foster when I can just regurgitate this fax I just got from the Republican National Committee's media headquarters? If I can just get in front of the camera with a salacious bit of gossip, I can become an anchor. For many 'journalists,' the inflated nonsense of the impeachment was their "White Bronco."

Meanwhile, during the period beginning with the O.J. trial and concluding with the impeachment extravaganza, the Taliban was taking control of Afghanistan in the wake left by the completion of our anti-Soviet policies in that nation. A man named Osama bin Laden was preparing to attack anything and everything American he could get close to. UNSCOM weapons inspectors under Scott Ritter were taking Iraq's chemical and biological warfare capabilities apart literally brick by brick, and the sanctions against that nation, which were killing hundreds of thousands of civilians, were also reducing Saddam Hussein's conventional arsenal to a large collection of formidable paperweights.

One threat was on the rise, another was on the wane, but this is boring stuff compared to ill-fitting leather gloves and a stained blue dress. The American people were never provided the full scope of the security issues facing their country, because the television news media they relied upon didn't want to put in the work. Often, when then-President Clinton acted to address these security issues, he was accused of "wagging the dog," i.e. manufacturing unimportant threats to obscure the really important stuff, like whether or not he purchased gifts for Lewinski at the Big Dog store on Nantucket.

Think of these points - media laziness, media complicity with the powers-that-be, media obsession with fantastically unimportant gossip and tabloidism - and then remember those tall buildings in New York collapsing to the ground. Perhaps the 'journalists' involved could have been focusing on other things before that dark day?

Sunday night's episode of the CBS News program '60 Minutes' had a long, detailed and graphic expose on the fighting that recently took place in Najaf and Falluja. All of the commercials for the program, however, focused on the '60 Minutes' interview with New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick. It was a clever bit of sleight-of-hand; by now, Americans have been well-trained to spurn whatever tiny molecules of substantive news that might somehow blunder across their screens, because the truly important stuff has more to do with who is sleeping with J-Lo and how Ben feels about it.

Sports is, of course, the champion distraction. Listen to any sports talk radio show; if the American people could rattle off housing or budget statistics, if they could quote from memory the casualty statistics from Operation Iraqi Freedom, the way they can tell you in half a second how many doubles Manny Ramirez hit in his rookie season, half-bright loafers like George W. Bush would never have a prayer in American politics. Perhaps CBS knew this. Millions of viewers made time to watch Belichick, and were treated to a bloody and terrifying and accurate view of the Iraq occupation that has been thoroughly, completely and utterly absent.

For more than two years now, this column space has been dedicated to describing, with all truth and verified data in hand, the mess an invasion of Iraq would create. This column was among the first to declare that there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, that any alleged connection between Osama bin Laden and the government of Iraq was laughable on its face, that democracy was a pipe dream in Iraq, that we would not be greeted as liberators, and that any military action in Iraq based upon these unfounded claims would result in a destabilized Middle East, a world filled with furious former allies, and an ocean of blood spilled by American soldiers and Iraqi civilians.

All of this has come to pass.

How is it that little truthout.org, with its limited resources and small staff, got it right time and again while ABC, CBS, NBC, MSNBC, CNBC, CNN and Fox - with their massive financial resources and their huge pool of reporters - got it so totally and continuously wrong? The answer comes in two parts.

The first part is the degree to which these nationally broadcast news stations have become compromised by the corporations that own them. The ownership of the media is key to understanding the process. Take the example of General Electric, owners of NBC, MSNBC and CNBC. This company is one of the largest defense contractors in America; they get paid every time we go to war, and yet we somehow believe they will tell us the truth of war, even though it affects their profit margin. Such thinking is folly.

Take the example of AOL/TimeWarner, owner of CNN. This company lives and dies by the 'outsourcing' of American technological jobs overseas, where labor is cheaper. Do you think they will tell a straight story about the economy with so much on the line? Such thinking is folly, and never mind the fact that AOL/TimeWarner's largest investor is a Saudi. So much for the truth about who really supports Osama bin Laden and international terrorism. So much for the truth about what really happened on September 11, and why.

The decision by the mainstream television news media to get into bed with the very entities they are supposed to stand watchdog against has been a mortal one. Once it becomes acceptable to get your reporting from Defense Department and military spin-doctors, without doing any work on your own, the game is over. What started with the Gulf War as a new 'reporting' technique has become an institutionalized process of standing as mouthpiece for those who deserve the strongest scrutiny.

The White House and Defense Department boys know this, and exploited it ruthlessly in the run-up to the Iraq invasion. Immediately after the 9/11 attacks, the Bush administration sought to capitalize on the tragedy by using it as an excuse to invade Iraq, something the power-pitchers in the administration had wanted for more than a decade. A shadowy and little-known media consulting company called The Rendon Group got a $100,000-a-month contract from the Pentagon right after the attacks. The Rendon Group was getting paid to offer media strategy advice. Or, in other words, propaganda.

The Rendon Group has been around a long time, and stands at the center of the media's failure to report accurately on the invasion and occupation of Iraq. The Rendon Group has received close to $200 million from the Pentagon and CIA over the last several years to spread anti-Hussein propaganda far and wide. One of the first steps they took was to create in 1992, out of absolute thin air, the Iraqi National Congress. The Iraqi National Congress, and its most famous spokesperson Ahmad Chalabi, are entirely the creation of a media strategy company doing the bidding of the United States government.

Since 1992, the Iraqi National Congress has become accepted completely by the mainstream news media as a legitimate group. They were embraced by the American Congress under Newt Gingrich and given hundreds of millions of dollars. They were, with the help of the aforementioned Congress, the driving force behind the passage of the Iraq Liberation Act in 1998, an Act which made the removal of Saddam Hussein a matter of American law. All this for a group made out of nothing by what amounts to a media consulting company.

The post-9/11 money paid to the Rendon Group returned handsome dividends for the investment. Rendon creation Ahmad Chalabi, who has since been accused of giving vital national security secrets to Iran, arranged an interview between Judith Miller of the New York Times and an Iraqi defector named Adnan Ishan Saeed al-Haidieri. al-Haidieri claimed to have personal knowledge of the vast and growing stockpiles of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction. Miller, thinking Chalabi and the Iraqi National Congress were worthy sources, believed al-Haidieri and printed an exclusive report on the threat posed by Iraq in the Times.

Time and a little legwork has since exposed al-Haidieri as a total fraud, but Rendon's propaganda got out there; as the New York Times goes, so goes the rest of the mainstream media. Miller's report, released in 2001, created a landslide push towards war, and allowed George W. Bush to sell the American people a frightening and utterly inaccurate portrait of why war was necessary, and necessary now.

Companies like The Rendon Group are a bellweather for exactly how depraved our journalistic institutions have become. Millions of dollars in government contracts are there for the taking by anyone who wants to scam the media with bogus stories. The media is more than happy to oblige, because it relieves them of having to put the necessary work in. Meanwhile, stories that might negatively affect the parent companies go by the boards, and everyone is happy.

Well, almost everyone is happy. The families of 1,033 American soldiers who have died in Iraq aren't happy. The families of the 17,000 or so American soldiers who have been 'medically evacuated' from Iraq for things like missing legs and faces aren't happy. The families of the 20,000 or so civilians killed in the invasion of Iraq aren't happy, and a lot of them are taking their unhappiness to the streets with grenades and rifles so they can make more American families unhappy by killing American soldiers.

Don't look to the mainstream television news media for an apology or a reversal of course anytime soon. They can't report the truth now. To do so would expose them as the incompetent lapdogs they have become, and as anyone who has ever screwed up at work knows, the hardest person to face after a grievous error is the person you find in the mirror. The only solution is a Congressional revolution, an across-the-board re-regulation of the media so the news isn't in the hands of a powerful few who stand to profit from avoiding the truth.

The second part of the answer to that question - How is it that little truthout.org got it right time and again while the entire mainstream television news media got it wrong? - is simplicity itself.

We put in the work. We did the research in triplicate. We talked to the people who knew the score. We took the time. We cared. We understood that September 11 did not require us to click our heels and say "Yes sir!" to whatever balderdash Mr. Bush and his crew spouted. Quite completely the opposite is true. We understood that September 11 made it more important than ever for us to be very, very good at what we do.

The American mainstream television news media, in whole and in part, has catastrophically failed the American people and is singularly responsible for the untimely deaths of tens of thousands of innocent people. It is not too late for them to reverse course, to take again the simple rules and requirements espoused by Murrow and Mencken and place them at the forefront of their institutional mission. Nothing less than the basic stability of our republic is at stake.
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cthrumatrix Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 01:23 PM
Response to Original message
1. I will never forget their willfull ignorance on the lead up to war
the shameful disregard for "people with facts" on WMDS...they ignored any story that didn't support this illegal war.
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Carla in Ca Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-21-04 12:56 AM
Response to Reply #1
26. Read it and weep

Who owns CNN? or MSNBC? ABC?


So ya think we have a "free press" eh? Check out who owns who, and who owns what you think.......

GENERAL ELECTRIC --(donated 1.1 million to GW Bush for his 2000 election campaign)

Television Holdings:
* NBC: includes 13 stations, 28% of US households.
* NBC Network News: The Today Show, Nightly News with Tom Brokaw, Meet the Press, Dateline NBC, NBC News at Sunrise.
* CNBC business television; MSNBC 24-hour cable and Internet news service (co-owned by NBC and Microsoft); Court TV (co-owned with Time Warner), Bravo (50%), A&E (25%), History Channel (25%).
The "MS" in MSNBC
means microsoft
The same Microsoft that donated 2.4 million to get GW bush elected.

Other Holdings:
* GE Consumer Electronics.
* GE Power Systems: produces turbines for nuclear reactors and power plants.
* GE Plastics: produces military hardware and nuclear power equipment.
* GE Transportation Systems: runs diesel and electric trains.
==================================================

WESTINGHOUSE / CBS INC.
Westinghouse Electric Company, part of the Nuclear Utilities Business Group of British Nuclear Fuels (BNFL)
whos #1 on the Board of Directors? None other than:
Frank Carlucci (of the Carlyle Group)

Television Holdings:
* CBS: includes 14 stations and over 200 affiliates in the US.
* CBS Network News: 60 minutes, 48 hours, CBS Evening News with Dan Rather, CBS Morning News, Up to the Minute.
* Country Music Television, The Nashville Network, 2 regional sports networks.
* Group W Satellite Communications.
Other Holdings:
* Westinghouse Electric Company: provides services to the nuclear power industry.
* Westinghouse Government Environmental Services Company: disposes of nuclear and hazardous wastes. Also operates 4 government-owned nuclear power plants in the US.
* Energy Systems: provides nuclear power plant design and maintenance.
================================================================
VIACOM INTERNATIONAL INC.
Television Holdings:
* Paramount Television, Spelling Television, MTV, VH-1, Showtime, The Movie Channel, UPN (joint owner), Nickelodeon, Comedy Central, Sundance Channel (joint owner), Flix.
* 20 major market US stations.
Media Holdings:
* Paramount Pictures, Paramount Home Video, Blockbuster Video, Famous Players Theatres, Paramount Parks.
* Simon & Schuster Publishing.
=============================================
DISNEY / ABC / CAP (donated 640 thousand to GW's 2000 campaign)
Television Holdings:
* ABC: includes 10 stations, 24% of US households.
* ABC Network News: Prime Time Live, Nightline, 20/20, Good Morning America.
* ESPN, Lifetime Television (50%), as well as minority holdings in A&E, History Channel and E!
* Disney Channel/Disney Television, Touchtone Television.
Media Holdings:
* Miramax, Touchtone Pictures.
* Magazines: Jane, Los Angeles Magazine, W, Discover.
* 3 music labels, 11 major local newspapers.
* Hyperion book publishers.
* Infoseek Internet search engine (43%).
Other Holdings:
* Sid R. Bass (major shares) crude oil and gas.
* All Disney Theme Parks, Walt Disney Cruise Lines.
======================================================

TIME-WARNER TBS - AOL (donated 1.6 million to GW's 2000 campaign)
America Online (AOL) acquired Time Warner–the largest merger in corporate history.
Television Holdings:
* CNN, HBO, Cinemax, TBS Superstation, Turner Network Television, Turner Classic Movies, Warner Brothers Television, Cartoon Network, Sega Channel, TNT, Comedy Central (50%), E! (49%), Court TV (50%).
* Largest owner of cable systems in the US with an estimated 13 million subscribers.
Media Holdings:
* HBO Independent Productions, Warner Home Video, New Line Cinema, Castle Rock, Looney Tunes, Hanna-Barbera.
* Music: Atlantic, Elektra, Rhino, Sire, Warner Bros. Records, EMI, WEA, Sub Pop (distribution) = the world’s largest music company.
* 33 magazines including Time, Sports Illustrated, People, In Style, Fortune, Book of the Month Club, Entertainment Weekly, Life, DC Comics (50%), and MAD Magazine.
Other Holdings:
* Sports: The Atlanta Braves, The Atlanta Hawks, World Championship Wrestling.
=======================================================
NEWS CORPORATION LTD. / FOX NETWORKS (Rupert Murdoch) (donations see bottom note)
Television Holdings:
* Fox Television: includes 22 stations, 50% of US households.
* Fox International: extensive worldwide cable and satellite networks include British Sky Broadcasting (40%); VOX, Germany (49.9%); Canal Fox, Latin America; FOXTEL, Australia (50%); STAR TV, Asia; IskyB, India; Bahasa Programming Ltd., Indonesia (50%); and News Broadcasting, Japan (80%).
* The Golf Channel (33%).
MEDIA HOLDINGS:
* Twentieth Century Fox, Fox Searchlight.
* 132 newspapers (113 in Australia alone) including the New York Post, the London Times and The Australian.
* 25 magazines including TV Guide and The Weekly Standard.
* HarperCollins books.
OTHER HOLDINGS:
* Sports: LA Dodgers, LA Kings, LA Lakers, National Rugby League.
* Ansett Australia airlines, Ansett New Zealand airlines.
* Rupert Murdoch: Board of Directors, Philip Morris (USA).

*(Phillip Morris donated 2.9 million to George W Bush in 2000)*


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dumpster_baby Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 01:28 PM
Response to Original message
2. Their hands are soaked in decades of blood
Iraq, Nicaragua, Chile, Vietnam, Cambodia, Korea....

I only hope that someday they pay an appropriate price for their crimes.
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Beetwasher Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 01:31 PM
Response to Original message
3. They Don't Care and They Still Persist in Their Treason
and it is treason.

They would much rather attack Rather than report on the collossal failure that is Iraq.

There are American hostages in Iraq being executed and I had to actually dig around to find a story on it. Pathetic.

Thanks Will and Bravo! on another stellar piece.
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cthrumatrix Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 01:59 PM
Response to Reply #3
12. or it's called "corporatism"....corporations call the shots for the world
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AgadorSparticus Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 01:32 PM
Response to Original message
4. this is why i think we are living in very dangerous times--we have
no system of checks and balances. when people have to get lawyers to make government offices give up information that is covered under the freedom of information act, we are in serious trouble.

information is power and when we have the highest offices in the land shrouded in willful secrecy, we are, no doubt, in the midst of absolute corruption.
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annabanana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 01:37 PM
Response to Original message
5. This is brilliant and insightful........
but unlike other efforts, has scant chance of breaking into mass media. Even if every online outlet was screaming it daily for a year, not a whisper would breakthough the protective shield they have forged for themselves. The loudest amplification we can hope for at this point is AAR and the comedians.

Could this be enough?
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nostamj Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 01:37 PM
Response to Original message
6. and, they are killing us here at home too
by completely failing to report about the environmental policies of bushco and their corporate masters.
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JHB Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 01:42 PM
Response to Original message
7. The 80s: it wasn't just deregulation...
Edited on Mon Sep-20-04 01:43 PM by JHB
It was also the start of what has become "standard" White House "press management": the "Line of the day", having private chats with publishers about reporters who were digging in the "wrong" places, the rise of conservative-activist "journalism" outlets which attacked anyone who investigated or criticized the Reaganites, etc.

It's not for nothing William Greider named his 1988 book on the Washington press "On Bended Knee".

Deregualtion just let that all come together in an even bigger way.
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Karenina Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 01:49 PM
Response to Original message
8. YES!!!
YOU GO, GO, GO, boyfriend! :toast:
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Q Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 01:53 PM
Response to Original message
9. The Reagan admin. had an 'office'...
Edited on Mon Sep-20-04 01:56 PM by Q
..of professional propagandists with the job of providing misinformation to the media on Iran/Contra. The free press would gobble this stuff up and publish it as fact...even though few had bothered to do the background research necessary to call it truth.

- This is why the American public still doesn't know much about the facts surrounding Iran/Contra or have objections to many of the same Players joining the current admin. to help coverup yet more facts.

- Some of the corporations tied to the Bush* government are connected to the nuclear industry (Halliburton)...which is why we've seen a resugence and renewed interest in nuclear power plants and weapons.
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K-W Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 01:57 PM
Response to Original message
10. Thank you for spreading the truth.
With so many things going on people are constantly missing this vital change in the structure of our society that has changed everything. The media leaving the hands of the market and falling into the hands of cartels.
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Cleita Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 01:57 PM
Response to Original message
11. Wish you would try to get this published on
a mainstream NP like USA Today (distributed in every state of the union and the editor leans towards the center), LA Times, San Fransisco Chronicle or any left leaning newspaper back east. I am not familiar with the eastern Newspapers other than the New York Times or Washington Post, but this needs to be mainstreamed so that Rupert Murdoch and the other corporatists are exposed for what they are, propaganda machines for the extreme right.
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Raster Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 02:01 PM
Response to Original message
13. Welcome to war as a "for profit" enterprise, and the raw materials....
Edited on Mon Sep-20-04 02:03 PM by jdolsen
...include human bodies, cannon fodder. (bold emphasis mine)

" The first part is the degree to which these nationally broadcast news stations have become compromised by the corporations that own them. The ownership of the media is key to understanding the process. Take the example of General Electric, owners of NBC, MSNBC and CNBC. This company is one of the largest defense contractors in America; they get paid every time we go to war, and yet we somehow believe they will tell us the truth of war, even though it affects their profit margin. Such thinking is folly.

Look at Caryle, of which bush the elder is a director. Their entire business is based on war, death and human suffering. On edit: And I might add the Saudi Royal family is a MAJOR stockholder. And let's not forget John Majors, former PM of the UK, also a board member.


"This conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience. The total influence -- economic, political, even spiritual -- is felt in every city, every State house, every office of the Federal government. We recognize the imperative need for this development. Yet we must not fail to comprehend its grave implications. Our toil, resources and livelihood are all involved; so is the very structure of our society.

In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.

We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together."

-Dwight D. Eisenhower, 34th President of the United States
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gumby Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 02:03 PM
Response to Original message
14. The Dullard's Voice is indeed killing us on every front.
From needless wars to neglect about the environment to the very existance of our democratic republic.

They are indeed unspeakable.
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mmonk Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 02:06 PM
Response to Original message
15. Now that
would make a worthy email to the networks and cable news.
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VelmaD Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 02:16 PM
Response to Original message
16. Here's your standard dose of nitpicks.
:)

Paragraph 3 - should that last word be capitalized "Easy."?

Paragraph 5 - "Why investigate Whitewater and the death of Vince Foster when I can just regurgitate this fax I just got from the Republican National Committee's media headquarters?" The two "just"s are a little bit close to each other in the sentence.

Paragraph 22 - "The media is more than happy to oblige, because it relieves them of having to put the necessary work in." Don't end a sentence with a preposition. ;)

Paragraph 26 - "Quite completely the opposite is true." I know what you're trying to say but this just reads funny.

Ok, with that out of the way...I really like it. Wonderful work honey. :)
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Phillycat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 02:26 PM
Response to Original message
17. The Sudan is a perfect example.
Where the heck has the coverage for the Sudan massacres been? I mean, BEFORE Lying Powell called it genocide?
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Media_Lies_Daily Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 02:30 PM
Response to Original message
18. Operation Mockingbird dates back to the late 1940s....
...why limit this discussion to just the 1980s?

Here's the link:

<http://www.prisonplanet.com/analysis_louise_01_03_03_mockingbird.html>
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WilliamPitt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 02:37 PM
Response to Reply #18
20. Because I'm writing an essay, not a book
Have at it.
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dbt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 02:33 PM
Response to Original message
19. Best media article I've seen in a LONG time!
And you're dead right about the blood on the hands of the TV "News" shows.

:bounce:
dbt
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Jacobin Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 03:18 PM
Response to Original message
21. A Must Read. Big Kick
Thank you for pulling all those threads together in such a convincing way.

Great stuff.

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WilliamPitt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 09:32 PM
Response to Original message
22. Link to final
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Kimber Scott Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-20-04 10:46 PM
Response to Original message
23. Yes, they are killing us, but we've given them the knife.
A free press is - was - what made us who we are as a country, as a people. It's gone along with home-cooking. We live in a fast-food world. No muss. No fuss. Quick and easy, fat and greasy. But, it's not just the supply side of this equation that is at fault. There would be no drug problem were there no addicts. The same goes for the new world of entertainment "news." Were there no buyers, there would be no sellers. Lazy vendors for lazy consumers. It's what we get.

Here's the kicker. The media is going to eat itself. Nobody believes anybody in the media anymore. Facts are not facts. The message is entirely dependent on the messenger. The bias, perceived on both sides of the political spectrum, presented in the media will soon render the whole genre impotent. Nobody believes anybody anymore.

Great piece, Will.
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Gregorian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-21-04 12:32 AM
Response to Original message
24. Will, that is one of the best articles I've read in a very long time.
You address some extremely important issues. You even bring up the massive death count resultant to sanctions imposed upon Iraq.
I am more certain than ever that the existing media will not change. The only hope is to create a new media. And that isn't going to happen. It either is a click away, during dinner time, or it doesn't exist. The internet is not a substitute. Well, it is, but typical Americans don't know that. I'm guessing fifty years from now, in a smouldering heap, a group of Americans will surface, to begin a truthful broadcast of news and critical thinking. The prognosis looks very bad, indeed. I wouldn't say this if we had a system of education that was thundering ahead like a massive snowball. The dumbing down is self-perpetuating, and we haven't hit bottom. Michael Jackson, you're next! Lights, camera, action.
I have to say that I used to listen to UC Berkeley's radio station. They had a journalism professor who put the students on air, to do a daily "newscast". I was appauled by the lack of journalism. It was nothing short of repitition, and copycatism. I even wrote several times, to mention how disturbing I found their broadcast to be. I still find it hard to describe. But you nailed it. And these students were literally being prepared to fit right in to the corporate newscasting world. I had to wonder if hairstyling were a class requirement. If that is UC Berkeley, then I fear to even think of other places of learning.

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autorank Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-21-04 12:36 AM
Response to Original message
25. Whenever I read your stuff all I can think is THANK YOU!!!
YOU ARE OUR EDWARD R. MURROW
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tavalon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-21-04 05:37 AM
Response to Reply #25
28. and our Patrick Henry
I used to write essays similar to this and I used to joke that I was the reincarnation of Patrick Henry. Then I discovered Will Pitt. He writes better than I and has an even more fiery temperament if that's possible.

I still do my research but I've found myself getting lazy of late. It seems recently that my most oft used phrase is "Yeah, what he said..."

And on that note, "Yeah, what he said...."

Kick!
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WilliamPitt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-21-04 08:25 AM
Response to Reply #28
30. jeez
:blush:
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antigone382 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-21-04 01:02 AM
Response to Original message
27. kick
:kick:
Quite an excellent and damning article.

It's so tough to face this stuff some days. Their greed and laziness is killing people, and they either refuse to see it or don't care. But that's what makes what we do here so important, I suppose.
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Swamp Rat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-21-04 06:02 AM
Response to Original message
29. But CNN is so hip and cool!... they really reach out to we young folks.
Now that Anderson Cooper is on CNN, I believe everything they say, because he's so, like, cool-n-stuff! Wasn't it so cool when Anderson went to see hurricane Ivan? It was like, um, a reality show! The dude is awesome cuz he wasn't scared or nuthin' and he and his buddies looked so chic and smart-n-stuff!







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