In truth, it was great to SEE Jena's streets filled to
capacity for civil rights. And great to SEE the media converge to
report it. Unfortunately, the reporting was more for "photo-ops" than
to advance the marchers' cause. This was corporate media's opportunity
to transmit exportable democracy to every corner of the globe. After
all, one can't export democracy if one can't show the world it exists.
It will be interesting to see how long corporate media broadcasts the
Jena story. Likely just as long as the focus stays off Bush, Cheney and
Washington, DC.
Regardless of the media's questionable motives for covering the events
in Jena, I'm ecstatic that they did. The injustice served upon the
young Jena Six, upon young Genarlow Wilson and Troy Davis in Georgia,
and upon THOUSANDS of young black men trapped in America's prison
industrial complex, is reprehensible. IT MUST STOP!! My great hope is
that this is the beginning of a new civil rights movement that I become
part of. In all my years in the social justice movement, my biggest
regret was never marching with Dr. King. But I couldn't. In 1963 I was
fourteen years old and not permitted to go. Now forty-four years later
I had to pass on Jena, too, having just returned from Washington where
I'd marched against the war.
Of course the media was barely there.
On September 15th, I, along with 100,000 kindred activists, marched
through the nation's capitol where we were pretty much ignored. The
minimal media we did get was distorted and untrue. When a small,
sadistic band of war-hawks showed up to oppose us, the press slanted
their numbers as if they equalled our own. The truth is, their numbers
were ONE-HUNDRETH the size of ours, although one would never know that
from this deceptive headline in The Washington Post:
"Dueling Demonstrations."
It's a travesty that mainstream journalists ignore the anti-war
movement and serve their corporate masters to the detriment of our
nation. Of course, there are no photo-ops at peace marches to support
the export of Bush's democracy. There is only the truth which
apparently isn't enough. It's sad.
During the extensive coverage of Jena on Thursday, CNN's Kyra Phillips
was so bubbled over by her freedom to report that she blurted out on
camera, "this is what we went to journalism school for - to do stories
like this."
On that point Ms. Phillips is correct. She did learn in journalism
school that there is honor in her profession. She also learned in
journalism school that the only master she serves is THE TRUTH. Not her
corporate bosses.
If Ms. Phillips and her colleagues choose to report on the truth, the
anti-war movement is an excellent source. In fact, here's a small
sampling of some stories she could have told from the peace march on
September 15th:
* On the eve of the September 15th PEACE march, several members of the
Rolling Thunder and Gathering of Eagles Pro-War/Pro-Violence motorcycle
gangs showed up at the CODEPINK House in Washington, DC to harass the
peace loving WOMEN in pink. It was an unconscionable bullying act.
CODEPINK diffused the encounter and engaged them in peaceful
conversation. I was staying at the House at the time.
* During Saturday's PEACE march, a six-foot-tall pro-war/pro-violence
male agitator slapped CODEPINK's 23-year-old staffer, Alexandra, across
HER face when she tried to intercede in an argument. Fortunately, the
cowardly attacker was hauled off and arrested by the Capitol Police. I
saw the bruise on Ally''s left cheek. I hope the attacker is
appropriately punished.
* One of the cowardly members of the Rolling Thunder and Gathering of
Eagles Pro-War/Pro-Violence motorcycle gangs approached CODEPINK women
during the march with a knife and slashed the giant PEACE banners they
were holding.
AND THE STORY THAT REALLY MUST BE TOLD:
* Several cowardly members of the Rolling Thunder and Gathering of
Eagles Pro-War/Pro-Violence motorcycle gangs BEAT AND KICKED GoldStar
father Carlos Arredondo during the peace march. They beat Carlos so
badly that he had deep cuts and bruises all over his body. For those
who may not know Carlos Arredondo, he is the grieving father who set
fire to himself when told his Marine son Alex was killed in Iraq. (
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20060508/richards) I saw Carlos' wounds. They were deep, bloody and painful, but no where near as painful as the pain from losing his child!
SHAME ON A GATHERING OF EAGLES AND ROLLING THUNDER!!
SHAME ON THE CORPORATE MEDIA!
SHAME ON GEORGE W. BUSH!
Final note: The corporate media's exploitation of the "Jena Six" has
given the story the renown it deserves. It's the dawning of a renewed
and needed movement. As one who protested the Vietnam war, I remember
what it was like to link arms in a multi-cultural rainbow and march in
lockstep toward peace. I've long wished for greater diversity in the
current peace movement. But with the economic hard times Americans are
facing, coupled with legitimate fear of imprisonment, it's not
surprising the representation of Black Americans has been small.
Nonetheless, in the United States Congress, the strongest anti-Iraq war
voice belongs to Congresswoman Maxine Waters who marched in Jena this
week. As Congresswoman Waters clearly knows, at the core of America's
economic problems is the ever-growing cost of war. It is my hope that
millions more Americans will join this revitalized civil rights
movement AND the peace movement. It is my further hope or DREAM that
the two will merge into one powerful force to take on illegal war,
American imperialism, racial injustice, the prison industrial complex,
poverty, health-care and the multitude of ills that plague our nation
and our world. When we are that powerful, the corporate media and the
administration can't afford to turn away.