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by Dave Lindorff
It was good to see reports in the national media, including the New York Times and my own local paper, the Philadelphia Inquirer, on an effort by citizens in Brattleboro, VT, to have the next annual town meeting in March consider a motion to instruct the local district attorney to draw up a war crimes indictment against President George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney.
But the publication of news about this noble effort, which while thoroughly appropriate is unlikely to go anywhere even if the town meeting does pass the resolution, raises the question of why such a story would pass editorial muster, while the much bigger, and more significant, story about a growing national campaign to impeach these two criminals in the White House (on charges including war crimes) continues to be virtually blacked out.
A few weeks ago, three members of the House Judiciary
Committee, Rep. Robert Wexler (D-FL), Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-IL), and
Rep. Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), all senior, respected members of Congress,
wrote an op-ed calling for an immediate start of hearings into possible
impeachable crimes against the Constitution by Cheney. All of the major
publications to which they offered this important article (which
reported on their plans to call on the Judiciary Committee to act),
including the New York Times, LA Times, Washington Post, Miami Herald,
Philadelphia Inquirer and other leading publications—all of them—turned
it down.
Wexler went one further, setting up a website on which
people could sign their names calling for a start to impeachment
hearings. In one week, over 100,000 had signed it (there are 160,000
signatures now).
So far there has been no news report in the
corporate media about this campaign, which cites Rep. Dennis Kucinich's
(D-OH) H Res. 799 charging Cheney with lying about Iraqi nuclear
weapons and ties to Al Qaeda, and lying about Iran, and also adds the
charge of conspiring to expose an undercover CIA operative, and
obstructing the investigation into that conspiracy. Nor does that
broader impeachment movement, which has seen over 100 towns and cities
across the country, as well as the Vermont state senate, pass
resolutions calling for impeachment, rate much or any coverage in print
or in the electronic news media.
In their “wisdom,” the nation’s
editors have apparently decided that impeachment is a non-issue. Never
mind that a majority of the people in the country have repeatedly been
found in mainstream polls to favor impeachment of both Bush and Cheney,
or that there is a bill in the House, filed by Rep. Dennis Kucinich
(D-OH), a presidential candidate, calling for Cheney’s impeachment, and
boasting 24 co-signers. That, apparently, is not news fit for the
reading, listening or viewing public.
Yet editors do clearly
know they are playing dirty games with us. When readers made a
concerted effort to hold editors to a professional standard, as many
did in Miami and Philadelphia, deluging editors with protests over the
rejection of the Wexler/Gutierrez/Baldwin opinion article, the Herald
and the Inquirer both relented and ran it.
Only the Miami
Herald, however, ran a news story about the impeachment drive as well
as the opinion piece (the Miami Herald, which actually is in Wexler’s
congressional district, chopped his column down significantly). The
Inquirer just ran the editorial, with no news report.
How to
explain this seeming dichotomy, in which a small town’s quixotic
attempt to indict a president on war crimes is news, while a serious
national campaign to initiate impeachment proceedings in the House in
accordance with the steps laid out in the Constitution in response to
clear abuses of power by the current administration is not?
I
would guess that editors feel that the Brattleboro town meeting
resolution effort is a kind of “man bites dog” story—offbeat enough to
warrant publication as a curiosity. The impeachment campaign story,
though, which gets at a fundamental crisis in governance that raises
questions about whether our entire political system has been undermined
by powerful forces bent on undoing the Constitution, is simply much too
serious a story to be allowed a public airing.
Several decades
ago, when I still toiled as a producer of surplus value in the
vineyards of the corporate media (as chief of the county government
bureau of the Los Angeles Daily News), I had occasion to write what was
called an “enterprise journalism” piece about how much of the Los
Angeles County workers’ pension fund was invested in companies that
were on the apartheid boycott list—an issue at the time because at that
moment students in the UC system were occupying campus buildings across
the state to protest similar holdings by their colleges’ endowment
funds. My editor spiked the piece. When I asked why, he initially told
me he wanted, instead of an article that led with the facts, a
“reaction” lead, featuring a local county legislator complaining about
the investments. In other words, he was afraid of having the newspaper
appear to be crusading on the issue, and wanted it to appear instead as
if the story had been generated not by an enterprising reporter but by
an irate politician—in this case Kenny Hahn, a white politician who
represented the largely African-American Watts area of the county.
Grudgingly, I went to Hahn’s office, elicited the requisite outraged
quote, and wrote the new lead. The next day, there was still no story
in the paper. Inquiring again to find out what happened, I was told by
the story was “too anti-business.” It simply would not run, regardless
of how it was written. The editors, who worked for a big chain, the
Chicago Tribune Company, had lost the courage to be real journalists.
The
experience convinced me that corporate journalism was a job for whores,
and I left to work as a freelancer, where at least one gets to chose
one’s pimps.
Unfortunately, the demise of the Los Angeles Daily
News as a real newspaper was simply a harbinger of what has happened to
virtually all the mainstream media in the country.
We now see
the results, most recently in the censoring of the impeachment story
(not to mention the shameful parroting of the administration line on
how the “surge” is “working” in Iraq).
It lifts one’s spirits to
see that a concerted campaign to awaken some sense of shame among
editors in those corporate media whorehouses can have an effect, as it
did at the Miami Herald and the Philadelphia Inquirer this month, but
no one should be fooled by such isolated successes. For the most part,
we are being lied to and “protected” from the truth in so many ways
that no media campaign, however robust, short perhaps of a mass
boycott, could force these compromised companies to let the truth out.

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