Paine had a voice and made it heard in his writings that were
disseminated in one of the mass media instruments of that era that
consisted largely of pamphlets like his and colonial-era newspapers
beginning with the first ever published called the Boston News-Letter
debuting in April, 1704 before Paine was born and Ben Franklin's
Pennsylvania Gazette first published in 1728 that grew to have the
largest circulation of the time and was considered the best newspaper
in the colonies. Paine got mass exposure in a way that would be
impossible today for his kind of writing - to promote his radically
progressive views that would make a neocon cringe enough to see to it
those kinds of ideas never saw the light of day in today's world run by
the institutions of power Paine and the founders abhorred.
Think about it. This was a man who was an anti-neocon, anti-militarist,
and anti-neoliberal predatory corporatist progressive thinker
supporting the rights and needs of ordinary people. He developed a
seminal compendium of liberal thinking against those notions of
governance in his book The Rights of Man. He believed neither
governments or corporations should have rights, only people. He thought
inherited wealth would be exploited by those having it and would be
used to corrupt governments and allow their heirs the ability to create
dynasties that would result in a new feudalism. He promoted progressive
taxation believing everyone should pay them acccording to their income.
He supported enlightened anti-poverty social programs to provide food
and housing assistance for the poor and retirement pensions for the
elderly. He felt the best way to build a strong democracy was to
provide financial aid to help young families raise their children. He
was a strong anti-militarist and wanted all nations to reduce their
armaments by 90% to ensure world peace.
He and the founders also wanted the new nation to have a middle class
and understood no democracy can survive without one. These enlightened
thinkers knew a viable middle class depends on a public that's
educated, secure and well-informed and that the greatest danger to its
survival is an empowered economic aristocracy that would polarize
society and destroy the very democracy they were trying to create,
imperfect as it was.
Imagine if those "radical" ideas were spread in today's mass media that
sees to it the public never hears that kind of thinking. They did in
Paine's day, and it led to a Revolution that freed us from monarchal
rule and inspired the founders to create a great democratic experiment
in America never tried before in the West outside Athens in ancient
Greece that only lasted a few decades. From it we got a Constitution,
Bill of Rights and a system of governance Lincoln said "was conceived
in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created
equal (in a) government of the people, by the people, (and) for the
people."
That could never happen today with the channels of communication Paine
used to electrify and inspire a nation closed off to prevent their use
against the kind of oppressive authority Paine opposed. It caused the
founders' great democratic experiment to be lost because people no
longer know how much the dominant political class is harming them by
serving the interests of wealth and power and getting plenty of it for
themselves in the process.
If Paine were here now, he'd lead the struggle against that kind of
system the way he did in his day, but he'd get little space in the
mainstream to help and would have to settle for smaller audiences
available through the alternative ways to reach the public now. The
free press of Paine's day is now open only to the interests of capital
who can afford to own one. And those espousing "radical" views like
Paine's are barred from being a part of it.
What the Founders Created, the Dominant Corporate-Controlled Mass Media Thought-Control Police Destroyed
In his seminal work Taking the Risk Out of Democracy, Alex Carey wrote
"The twentieth century has been characterized by three developments of
great political importance: the growth of democracy, the growth of
corporate power, and the growth of corporate propaganda as a means of
protecting corporate power against democracy." Doing it was what 1920s
intellectual writer and dean of his day's journalists Walter Lippmann
referred to as the "manufacture of (public) consent" in a democratic
system where it can't be done by force. Manufacturing Consent was the
title used by Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman for their landmark 1988
book that was dedicated to the memory, spirit and work of Alex Carey.
It explained how the dominant major media use a "propaganda model" to
program the public mind to go along with whatever agenda serves the
interests of wealth and power even when it's against the welfare of
ordinary people which it nearly always is.
Today in the US, the major media are nothing short of a national
thought-control police. They're owned or controlled by dominant large
corporations (the kind Noam Chomsky calls "private tyrannies") grown
increasingly concentrated over time and having a stranglehold over the
kinds of information reaching the public. It's given them and the
interests they represent the power to destroy the free marketplace of
ideas essential to a healthy democracy now on life support in large
measure because of how effective they are.
Ben Bagdikian documented their progression in the various editions of
his important book, The Media Monopoly, most recently updated in 2004
called The New Media Monopoly. He showed since 1983, the number of
corporations controlling most newspapers, magazines, book publishers,
movie studios, and electronic media have shrunk from 50 to five
"global-dimension firms, operating with many of the characteristics of
a cartel" - Time-Warner, Disney, News Corporation, Viacom and
Germany-based Bertelsmann. Maybe it should now be a big six after
Comcast Corporation acquired AT&T Broadband in 2001, expanded its
cable and other holdings further since, and is now the nation's largest
cable operator reaching over 23 million US households.
These giants have a stranglehold over the dominant medium most people
rely on mainly for what passes for news, information and entertainment:
the national communication drug of choice - television, that according
to Nielson Media Research the average person in the US watches about
4.5 hours daily in the 99% of American households television reaches
according to US Census data and the 82% of households with cable or
satellite TV access according to government and JD Power and Associates
figures.
They don't get much in return for the time spent even back when
innovative early television comedian Ernie Kovacs commented on the
quality of offerings in his day. He said he knew why it's called a
medium - "because it's neither rare nor well done," and noted media
critic George Gerbner harshly critized the dangers of media
concentration in the hands of corporate giants and the adverse effects
of its programming. He once said they have "nothing to tell and
everything to sell," and they subordinate their mandate to communicate
responsibly to their core function of profit-making.
And reflecting broadly on the corrupting and dumbing-down power of the
US corporate media, noted British journalist Robert Fisk once remarked
"you really have a problem in this country." Uruguayan author and
historian Eduardo Galeano cites a large part of the problem saying: "I
am astonished....by the ignorance of the (US) population, which knows
almost nothing about....the world. It's quite blind and deaf to
anything....outside the frontiers of the US." They know little inside
it as well, and of course, that's the whole idea to maintaining
control. Misinform, distract, and control all ideas and thoughts
reaching the public - it's the key to "keeping the rabble in line." If
done well, it works better than all the might of the most powerful
nation on earth.
The Ugly Record of "The Newspaper of Record"
Nowhere is the problem of the dominant media more apparent and acute
than in what passes for news, information and punditry on broadcast and
cable television where the programming presented is poor enough to give
pulp fiction a worse name than it already has. But special condemnation
is reserved for the so-called "newspaper of record" reporting "All the
News That's Fit to Print," at least by its standards that are
disturbing when understood in the terms of what this publication's
primary mission is - to serve as the lead instrument of state
propaganda making it the closest thing we have in the country to an
official ministry of information and propaganda.
The "Gray Lady," as it's called ("Shady Lady" would be more apt), has
been around since it was founded in 1851 as a "conservative"
counterpart to Horace Greeley's liberal New York Tribune by Republican
Speaker of the New York State Assembly, Henry J. Raymond and former
banker George Jones. It was then taken over by Adolph Ochs in 1896 who
became its publisher until Arthur Sulzberger assumed the reigns in
1935. His heirs have maintained it since with Arthur, Jr. now the
publisher as well as chairman of the whole company that's publicly
traded on the New York Stock Exchange and that over the years became a
media empire of nearly two dozen other newspapers, nine local TV
stations, a piece of the Boston Red Sox and other enterprises and 2005
revenue of $3.4 billion - a long way from its humble beginning when its
debut simply said: "....we intend to (publish) every morning (except
Sundays) for an indefinite number of years to come."
The NYT is a pillar of the corporate media and a member of the
"corporate America" community whose tenets it finds no fault with when
they harm the common good, as it nearly always does. Nor is it bothered
by its own hypocrisy claiming to be a voice of moderation or liberal
thought when, in fact, it's just the opposite on issues that matter
most - like war and peace and the highest crimes of elected officials
it ignores, especially when committed by Republicans (once publishing
the Pentagon Papers notwithstanding).
The Times plays a crucial role as a loyal servant of empire and its
business establishment. No other member of the corporate media has such
influence or reach as its message goes out to the world and is picked
up throughout it in its highest places. Its front page is what media
critic Norman Solomon calls "the most valuable square inches of media
real estate in the USA" - more accurately, in the world. Bluntly put,
the New York Times has unmatched media clout, and it uses it
shamelessly in service to the interests and ideology of its
advertisers. It also plays the lead role as an agent of disseminating
state propaganda and is able to have it resonate throughout the
corporate media, including on television where it counts most, that
generally jump on key stories featured on its front pages and in the
columns of its leading journalists of which it has many and who show up
often in on-air interviews to echo what they write.
The Times also has a bad habit of being disingenuous and allowed to get
away with it. While claiming to maintain a firewall between its
business and journalism sides and between its news reporting and
editorial functions, it does nothing of the sort. In that respect, it's
no different than most all other members of the corporate media club.
All professionals who work there march in lock step with the ideology
of management with barely any more than a little wiggle room allowed on
the major issues affecting business or state policy.
There's a clear line of authority coming down from the top of the Times
hierarchy dictating everything, especially what's printed on its pages.
Any Times writer diverging from this with the temerity to tell a
version of the truth the paper wants suppressed will end up in the
Siberia of obit writing or such if they're still even allowed to draw a
pay check. There's an unposted sign on the front of the Times building
(and throughout the corporate media) all who work there understand and
obey - All those entering here give up the right to think and write
freely and will henceforth follow management's unwritten and unspoken
directives or go find another line of work.
Serving as chief empire-propagandist is an old Times tradition going
back decades and best remembered during the prime years of James
"Scotty" Reston - its best and most famous journalist who walked easily
in the halls of power and was consulted by its denizens. That, of
course, is the problem as cavorting with those in power throws any
objectivity about them out the window and makes it easy for those
having it to get away with almost anything and not have to worry about
the dominant media holding them to account.
The Judith Miller saga is a prime example but just the latest
incarnation at least up to the time her antics got her in trouble, and
she ended up being canned. Judith had lots of predecessors whose names
people forget (Claire Sterling being one during the Reagan years), but
they served most prominently throughout the cold war years especially
when the Times was, and still is, a devout advocate of the home
country's notion of "free market" capitalism (of the predatory kind), a
flag-waving supporter of its imperial wars of conquest, and a committed
enemy of the "evil empire" until it ended and any other country not
willing to play by US-imposed rules - Iran under Mossadegh, Guatemala
under Arbenz, Cuba under Castro, Chile under Allende, Nicaragua under
the Sandinistas and Ortega (now reincarnated), Venezuela under Hugo
Chavez, and Bolivia under Morales among others soon to include Ecuador
under Rafael Correa when he takes office as the country's populist
president in January. The paper also works closely with the CIA going
back to when Allen Dulles ran it under Eisenhower with some of its
supposedly independent foreign correspondents in the agency's employ or
engaged with it.
The Times, of course, played the lead media role in taking the nation
to war after the 9/11 tragedy that got Judith Miller sacked once her
lying for the state was exposed. For many months leading to the March,
2003 Iraq assault and invasion, the NYT's front pages screamed with
daily disingenuous reports about the so-called WMDs "the newspaper of
record" knew didn't exist because years earlier it reported the story.
In August, 1995, Hussein Kamel, Saddam's trusted son-in-law and head of
Iraq's weapons industries, defected to the West and took with him
crates of secret documents on the country's weapons programs including
its so-called WMDs that included no nuclear ones. He was debriefed by
US intelligence agencies and the UN, told all, and made headlines
around the world including on the front pages of the NYT. It all went
down the "memory hole" in the run-up to March, 2003 with the false and
misleading reporting in the Times led by Judith Miller's reports who
was practically deified for her writing that all turned out to be lies.
Now Judith is gone, but her style of reporting remains the way things
are done on the NYT's pages, especially the front one. After playing
the lead cheerleading role taking the nation to war based on falsely
reported threats, the Times is at it again. Back in 2003 and earlier,
the primary reason for war was the claim Saddam had developed WMDs and
was a threat to use them. The paper then trumpeted top administration
(unproved) charges that US intelligence had evidence Saddam stockpiled
chemical and biological weapons, was concealing them, and was seeking
nuclear ones - all untrue.
Now with the ruse exposed, the Times is trying to rewrite history
claiming in September "the possibility that Saddam Hussein might
develop 'weapons of mass destruction' and pass them to terrorists was
the prime reason Mr. Bush gave in 2003 for ordering the invasion of
Iraq." Clear evidence he had them pre-war is now only a "possibility"
according to Times-think. This kind of revisionism is standard practice
at the NYT and a prime example of the "the newspaper of record's"
disservice to its readers wanting the truth. That's impossible to get
on the pages of the New York Times.
The Times is also a loyal supporter of all things business and the
elitist community whose interests nearly always conflict with the
public welfare the paper falsely wants its readers to think it
supports. It doesn't, and it shows up on its pages all the time. It was
clear from its contempt for working people with its staunch support for
NAFTA that's caused the loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs in the
three countries signed on to it including so many higher paying ones in
the US.
Earlier it was late or tepid on major stories like the Savings and Loan
scandal in the 1980s caused by excess banking deregulation and
concessions to Wall Street, the Bank of Credit and Commerce
International (BCCI) "$20 billion-plus heist" it pulled off unnoticed
until it messed up and got caught, and since March, 2003 its failure to
report on the misuse of many billions of taxpayer dollars companies
like Halliburton and Bechtel profited hugely from in Iraq and
Afghanistan improperly and still do despite Bechtel having gone off to
new predatory ventures. And that's besides the many billions more in
the grand theft pulled off by the defense establishment in its
collusion with the Pentagon in the business of waging war that's so
profitable for the legions of weapons makers and their suppliers for
the blood money they get from it - from us through our misspent or
stolen tax dollars.
The Preeminent Newspaper Dedicated to the Interests of Business and Industry - The Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Journal began publishing in 1889 seven years after its
parent Dow Jones & Company was founded in 1882 by Charles Dow,
Edward Jones and Charles Bergstresser whose name never became prominent
maybe because it wasn't as catchy as the other two. For many years, the
Journal had the largest newspaper circulation in the country until the
forgettable USA Today overtook it. What USA Today didn't overtake was
this paper's influence that reaches virtually all those holding
positions of power and prominence in business and government and many
beyond. It's news pages also put out the kind of information its
high-powered readers need to know and is usually out in front breaking
stories regarding happenings in business and industry providing enough
context to explain it well.
It's quite another story on the Journal's editorial page where hard
right opinion ideology nearly always trumps any attempt to stick to the
facts, but it's red meat for its adherents. The paper states its
editorial philosophy up front as favoring "free markets" and "free
people" that comes down to supporting all things good for the corporate
community and all state policy doing the same, including waging wars of
aggression when they're good for business as they always are as long as
they go as planned, and even if they don't up to the point where policy
followed looks to have more of a future profit downside than the bottom
line benefits of the moment.
Journal editorial writers also take a particularly belligerent stance
against foreign leaders following an independent course, forgetting
"who's boss," and being unwilling to serve our interests ahead of those
of their own people. Case in point, and any of several stand out
prominently - Iran, Syria, North Korea and Venezuela under Hugo Chavez
who on December 3 won a landslide reelection victory (greater than any
in US history after 1820 when elections here became partisan contests
regularly) under a model democratic process lauded by hundreds of
independent observers from around the world (including the Carter
Center in the US) and shaming the way elections are run in this country
that reek with taint and fraud.
But here's what editorial writer Mary Anastasia O'Grady (whom this
writer has clashed with before) had to say about it in her
post-election December 8 article titled "The Best Election Money Could
Buy," a clear example of yellow journalism and disinformation dripping
with the kind of vitriol and venom O'Grady excels in. She claims
"Chavez supporters had more than once shot and killed unarmed civilians
with impunity," but doesn't mention a shred of evidence to prove it
because there is none and it never happened. She speaks of Chavez's
"feared National Guard pour(ing) out of a military vehicle....and
armies of informal government enforcers known as chavistas (this writer
is proudly one as it means someone supporting Hugo Chavez and his
enlightened democratic and social policies)" on another side of a
street. She refers to their presence as "lawlessness" ignoring the fact
that the military was there in case of disorder, (there was none) and
the chavistas were massed on the streets in a post-election joyous
celebration unlike anything ever seen in the US. O'Grady likely
couldn't understand the people of Venezuela love their president and
went to the streets to show it.
O'Grady continued saying she "never believed Fidel Castro's 'mini-me'
would be defeated....even though there is scant evidence that a
majority of Venezuelans back his socialist revolution." Did this woman
just arrive from another planet? The independent pre-election polls
gave Chavez an insurmountable 30 point edge, and the final results
independently judged free, fair and open gave him a smashing nearly two
to one victory over his only serious opponent representing the
interests of wealth and power the great majority of people in the
country rejects that shows a clear endorsement of Chavez's Revolution.
Nonetheless, O'Grady wasn't deterred claiming (with no evidence, of
course) "a Chavez victory could (only) be had 'legally' through a
combination of coercion, manipulation and the liberal use of state
funds" - again editorial bombast that's totally unfounded. O'Grady says
nothing about opposition candidate Manuel Rosales, chosen in
Washington, getting millions of US-funded covert dollar support,
something that never would be tolerated here by a foreign government in
a US election or a foreign corporation. She cites the "independent
electoral watchdog group known as Sumate" for another phony complaint,
again failing to disclose this organization was formed in 2002, is
funded by the Bush administration to subvert the democratic process in
Venezuela, and was involved in the signature collection process in the
run-up to the failed recall election in 2004 trying to unseat Hugo
Chavez.
The rest of O'Grady's piece drips with the same kind of agitprop
disinformation only a hard right ideologue, like this woman whose
background is from Wall Street, would love. The fact that what she
writes has no bearing on the truth is of no consequence to her or the
other writers on the Journal's editorial page. Their job isn't to tell
it. It's to serve the interests of wealth and power, and the only way
to do that well is to make sure readers never know how harmful those
interests are to the great majority of people everywhere including a
fair number of them who read the Wall Street Journal, but for their own
sake should stay away from its editorial page and its shameless
servants of empire like O'Grady.
The Tainted Record in Public "Non-Commercial" Spaces
Today in the mainstream there are no safe havens. All major print
publications are corporate owned or controlled as are the on-air media
including the two main supposed "non-commercial" alternatives
established as independent, non-governmental, commercial-free public
spaces now as much under the control of the interests of wealth and
power as the media giants. Today so-called National Public Radio (NPR)
and Public Broadcasting (PBS) are beholden to the interests of capital
because that's where so much of their funding comes from.
The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) was founded by the Public
Broadcasting Act of 1967 to provide a programming diversity alternative
to the commercial broadcasters, began operating in October, 1970 and
was required to follow a "strict adherence to objectivity and balance
in all programs or series of programs of a controversial nature." At
the time, it was stipulated the federal government was prohibited from
influencing its programming content, but that was controversial from
the start as PBS operated with federal funding making it a target
whenever it took on an issue critical of the mouth that was feeding it.
Today corporate donors make up a substantial proportion of PBS funding
and with it claim and get the right to decide what programming is run
and what it may contain along with Republican allies in the
administration and Congress who have plenty to say and put their man,
Kenneth Tomlinson, in charge of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
to see they got it when George Bush appointed him as chairman of the
CPB for a two-year term beginning in September, 2003 after he was
earlier appointed to its board by Bill Clinton and confirmed in
September, 2000.
This was a clear case of putting the fox in charge of the hen house
forcing even the administration-friendly New York Times to report a
front-page story in May, 2005 that evidence was mounting that Tomlinson
pressured PBS officials to produce more conservative programming and
purge shows considered more liberal. It prompted an unnamed senior FCC
official to tell the Washington Post the CPB chairman "is engaged in a
systematic effort not just to sanitize the truth, but to impose a right
wing agenda on PBS....almost like a right wing coup." In other words,
to make sure the ideology in PBS programming was no different than the
way the commercial giants see things.
This should have come as no surprise with someone like Tomlinson in
charge. He had a conflict of interest based on his prior employment
where he was director of US propaganda for Voice of America (VOA) from
1982 - 84, was then appointed to the Broadcasting Board of Governors
(BBG), served as its chairman and in that capacity oversaw most
government propaganda broadcasts to foreign countries including by VOA,
Radio Free Europe, the Arab language Alhurra and Radio Marti beamed
into Cuba that combined reaches 100 million people worldwide.
He was also ethically tainted at the time according to a State
Department inspector general report for having "used his office to run
a horse-racing operation and had improperly put a friend on the
payroll" and without board approval signed off on $245,000 of invoices
for questionable purposes. He never should have been put on the CPB
board or gotten the top job there and now no longer does after being
forced to resign in November, 2005 for trying to politicize the agency
with his hard line tactics and unethical practices - something that's
become standard practice on Capitol Hill under Republican control.
Sadly, things haven't improved as one Republican ideologue replaced
another with the Bush appointment of Cheryl Halpern to be CPB
chairperson. And on November 14, 2006, the Tomlinson record was no
obstacle preventing George Bush from renominating him as chairman of
the BBG for a term to run until August 13, 2007 despite his nomination
having been stalled in the Senate because of allegations of misconduct.
So far, no charges have been brought against Mr. Tomlinson, and it's
doubtful they will be when the 110th Democrat-controlled Congress takes
over in January. On Capitol Hill, the climate and culture of corruption
is bipartisan, long-standing, and it doesn't take long for the new
party in power to engage in the same kinds of unethical practices that
drove out the former one. It just takes a while for them to get caught
at it.
The situation is no better at National Public Radio (NPR) that long ago
abandoned the public trust it was sworn to uphold when it was founded
in 1970 as in independent, private, non-profit member organization of
public radio stations in the country. It's as tainted and corrupted as
its television counterpart and now also gets a substantial proportion
of its funding from corporate donors demanding influence, like the kind
a $225 million behest can buy. That's the amount gotten from the estate
of the late Joan Kroc, widow of Ray Kroc, the founder of McDonald's
Corporation that never needs to worry about an unfriendly report on
NPR's airwaves no matter how egregious its behavior, and there's plenty
of it to reveal that stays suppressed in all the major media including
on NPR, the "peoples' radio."
Despite its mandate to be unbiased and serve the public interest, NPR
steers clear of that in its one-sided kind of "journalism." It's
careful to shy away from all controversial topics that may be sensitive
to corporate interests that include those providing it funding support
or might wish to like Archer Daniels Midland, Monsanto and Walmart that
already do. It's also "respectful" of whichever party is in power with
Republican administrations getting special deference as they were from
1994 until the Democrats took control of the Congress in the November,
2006 mid-term elections. Even George Bush's most extreme transgressions
can't get NPR's ire up enough to report accurately on them.
That's made even clearer when it's known what kind of man it has in
charge - current president and CEO Kevin Klose. Like the CPB during the
Tomlinson tenure, so too is NPR run by a man who used to be the
director of all major worldwide US government propaganda dissemination
broadcast media including VOA, Radio Liberty, Radio Free Europe, Radio
Free Asia, Worldnet Television and the anti-Castro Radio/TV Marti. And
like Tomlinson, it made him an ideal choice for a comparable job at
NPR, the "peoples' radio," that like the "peoples' television" and its
flagship Lehrer News Hour, never met a US-instigated war it didn't
love, support and report endless supportive propaganda about while
suppressing all news unfriendly to the US empire and its business
interests.
So far as its known, however, Mr. Klose hasn't been accused of the
kinds of activities attributed to his former CPB counterpart, staying
free from the taint that forced Mr. Tomlinson to resign. That aside,
it's had no positive impact on NPR's programming that's just as
committed as PBS to serving the interests of wealth and power feeding
it while ignoring the public trust despite the considerable funding it
gets from that source from frequent on-air fund-raising efforts it has
no right or justification asking for.
The Passing of Two Noted War Criminals - A Brief Study in Contrasts
The passing of two noted figures now making daily headlines is one
illustration of how corrupted the dominant US media is in their
reporting of news and information only exceeded by the crimes of state
and predations of corporate giants they conceal and distort because
they're one of the serial offenders and must portray the illusion of a
free society guaranteeing liberty and justice for all when, in fact,
only those of privilege get those rights.
So on December 31 the New York Times reported "Thousands Honor (former
president Gerald) Ford (who died on December 26 at age 93 lying in
state) Under (the) Capitol Dome." We can read effusive eulogies
extolling the common man who "didn't ask to be president....he didn't
have an agenda....He was a good man, an honorable man....(and) We owe
him a debt of gratitude....He was....a decent man....called on at the
right time to serve the country when we needed it most."
Baloney, and so much for illusions. Now a dose of hard reality about a
man who rightfully should be condemned and not praised for his time in
office and only less than others preceding and following him because
his short two and one-half year tenure caused less harm that was still
a considerable amount.
In one sense, Gerald Ford was an interregnum president given the job to
calm the public's collective ire and angst from years of abuse of the
public trust under Richard Nixon including the horrors of aggressive
war in Vietnam he allowed to go on and secretly expanded for a time
while falsely committing to end it honorably. No war begun dishonorably
can ever end with honor, and Gerald Ford never even tried doing it. All
he could do was accept defeat and cut and run leaving behind a legacy
of Southeast Asia poisoned by illegal toxic chemicals and turned to
wasteland with several million dead he never even apologized for.
Imperial powers never confess sorrow. It might be taken for a sign of
weakness or upset future plans to do it again as Iraqis and Afghans can
testify to.
Ford was also falsely portrayed in the media as "Mr. Nice Guy" hiding
the fact he was just another privileged white American male elected to
Congress, spent a quarter century there and ended up as the nation's
first unelected president (although legally, unlike the current
incumbent) replacing the man forced to exit the job in disgrace to
avoid being thrown out of it in even greater humiliation.
Little or nothing good can be said about Gerald Ford whose assignment
was to calm the nation's collective nerves with lots of disingenuous
corporate PR and media makeover help. His tenure was marked by a
distinct lack of vision or any courage and conviction to move in a new
direction and away from a tainted past he was part of that was never
acknowledged in the media to conceal his time in the Congress
supportive of two major Southeast Asian wars of aggression causing
massive death and destruction unreported and all the other crimes of
state committed during his years in public office he might have stood
against but never did.
Consider further who served under Gerald Ford that explains much about
what his administration stood for: his Secretary of State was Henry
Kissinger, George HW Bush was CIA Director, Donald Rumsfeld the
Secretary of Defense, his White House Chief of Staff was Richard
Cheney, and his council of economic advisors chairman was Alan
Greenspan in training to move to the banking cartel owned and
controlled Federal Reserve where he continued for 18 years betraying
the public trust to enrich the financial community he served. With that
kind of team surrounding him, what possible good could have come from
Ford's tenure. None did, but you'd never know it hearing the kind of
undeserved effusive praise pouring out of the mouths of everyone
allowed air time on the major media while suppressing all the negatives
deserving condemnation unaired and unspoken in the flow of disingenuous
legacy-building of the man, his life and presidency. In the land of
media-created illusion, could anyone have expected otherwise.
Gerald Ford revealed was a man who as appointed vice-president let
himself fall under the spell of general and future Reagan Secretary of
State Alexander Haig who cut him a deal to become president in return
for committing the unforgivable act (some rightfully call a crime) of
pardoning Richard Nixon saving him from having to be held to account
for his crimes in office. He also gave Henry Kissinger authority to
allow Indonesia's president Suharto the right to commit genocide
against the defenseless people of East Timor killing hundreds of
thousands of innocent people only wanting their freedom from imperial
aggression and their right to live peacefully in their own land.
Earlier he was an important figure as one of the seven Warren
Commission members chosen to conceal the real cause of John Kennedy's
death in 1963 unrevealed, of course, to this day. Save your praise and
tears for this man now departed. He deserves none of either.
Neither does the other fallen leader whose fate was the hangman's rope
that may have been warranted but not by the process that got it to his
neck or the illegal authority claiming power to put it there to have
him hang from it until dead. Few will mourn Saddam Hussein but even
despots deserve a better fate, as do all people, but won't ever get it
when the law judging them is what the US hegemon says it is - nearly
always violating international statutes and norms that was clearly true
in how justice was denied Saddam.
But that wasn't the way the Wall Street Journal's January 2 editorial
page portrayed it with their lead opinion commentary titled: Justice
for a Tyrant. It ended contemptibly claiming "3,000 Americans (gave)
their lives in (a) noble mission (ridding) the world of a man who might
have killed hundreds of thousands more." The only truth in the
editorial was the statement that "Too few of the world's mass killers
face such a reckoning," but the Journal writer failed to mention where
the worst of the lot are now domiciled.
The fallen Iraqi leader had the misfortune not to have been from that
favored home country of the WSJ and thus was subjected to its victor's
justice that guarantees none at all to its victims. He was captured and
brought to trial by the US occupier's illegally constituted court
(giving kangaroos a bad name), called the Supreme Iraqi Criminal
(Hanging Court) Tribunal (SICT) that had no authority under
international law to conduct the proceeding. The whole process was a
funded and scripted in Washington sham with a known guilty as charged
verdict in advance, no due process allowed, and a videotaped trip to
the gallows disgracefully played out round the world on national
television stopping only short of viewing the trap door sprung but
leaving little to the imagination.
Not a word was heard in the dominant US media about top Bush
administration officials and earlier ones who not only conspired,
supported and funded Saddam at his worst, but their crimes overall,
then and now, far exceed anything the Iraqi leader was forced to pay
for in a disgraceful drawn out public spectacle trial and execution
played out for full political advantage amounting to none at all and
likely was botched by the stupidity and audaciousness of doing it
during the time of the Hajj, or sacred pilgrimage, to Mecca and on Eid
al-Adha, or feast of the sacrifice - the holiest day of the Muslim
year. In a final irony at this deplorable moment, awaiting his imminent
inglorious death amid disgraceful taunts by his hangmen, the world saw
an image of this brutish man, reciting verses from the Koran, as the
most dignified man at his own execution.
Saddam killed many thousands of his countrymen and women and deserved
to be held to full account for them lawfully. But the only law afforded
him was that of victor's justice also guaranteeing crimes far greater
than his went down the "memory hole" as though they never happened
allowing those guilty to be shamelessly lauded as heros played off in
sort of point-counterpoint fashion in the case of the two most recent
fallen war criminals neither of whom got the justice they deserved.
Video News Releases (VNRs) - Fake News Masquerading
As the Real Thing
VNRs are fake news reports allowing corporate-sponsored pre-packaged
propaganda to be aired on television masquerading as real news without
the public knowing it's being deceived. They're produced by corporate
PR firms for their clients and are widely distributed and accepted by
TV stations that get to fill air time without the cost involved to
produce their own material. It's a win-win-win situation for VNR
producer, the corporations getting free airing of their messages and
the media outlets getting free material with the cost saving going
right to their bottom line. The only loser is the public getting conned
and not knowing it. VNRs also have their ANR (audio news releases)
counterpart distributed to radio stations making them part of the
scheme to defraud the public as well and pocketing profits from doing
it.
Also in on the con is our own government producing its own pre-packaged
fake news getting widespread airing on TV and radio to go along with
all the media-produced material out in front in their shameless
cheerleading for whatever agenda the administration in power is
pursuing and needs to lull the public into believing it's for the
common good which it never is. The Bush administration has been
aggressive in the use of phony "ready-to-serve" news reports at times
blanketing the airwaves with them from 20 or more federal agencies
selling everything from war by the Department of Defense, supposed
"benefits" of big media by the FCC, and the Healthy Forests Initiative
(HFI) by the Interior Department hiding the destructive corporate
clear-cutting agenda endorsed by George Bush.
In addition, the Bush White House put journalists on the federal
payroll to write positive news stories on a range of issues like
portraying the administration as "vigilant" and "compassionate" and
promoting government programs like the sham Medicare Part D
prescription drug plan that's a consumer rip-off for most seniors and a
bonanza for the big drug companies that can charge any price they want
under it. Also fraudulently promoted has been the benefits of Bush's No
Child Left Behind program for the Department of Education that's one
more government-sponsored plan to wreck public education and hand it
over to private corporations for profit starting with forcing school
districts wanting to qualify for federal funding to use
corporate-subsidized and mandated tests that are worthless and harmful
to learning as they prevent schools from concentrating on teaching.
Again, it's a win situation for all the parties involved as the federal
government promotes its corporate-friendly programs, the industries
wanting them get the benefits, the PR firms and journalists
"on-the-take" are well-compensated, and the media outlets get free
material to fill their time slots. Only the public loses including
having to pay to be deceived with our own federal tax dollars and now
gets to be subjected to thousands of fake corporate and
government-sponsored news reports annually comprising an alarming
percentage of what media outlets air pretending the material is real
news and information.
The sham persists and grows, and the FCC, in charge of the public
airwaves, is part of the scheme as it's doing virtually nothing to stop
it although it's mandated to do it under the Communications Act. In its
April, 2005 Public Notice, the agency stated "whenever broadcast
stations and cable operators air VNRs, licensees and operators
generally must clearly disclose to members of their audiences the
nature, source and sponsorship of the material." It doesn't happen, the
FCC doesn't step up to do it, and the Bush administration disagrees
with its agency's stated but not followed mandate regarding its own
pre-packaged propaganda claiming these VNRs are permissible as long as
they're "informational." Left unsaid is whether or not the
"information" serves the public or some other interest or is fact or
fiction. From the well-documented record of the Bush White House, it
would take a giant leap of faith to believe whatever it puts out is
anything but the latter.
Political Propaganda to Program the Public Mind
Australian-born Alex Carey, cited above, produced innovative work
documenting how political and corporate propaganda began and grew more
sophisticated through the years. It was first used in the US
effectively during WW I and the administration of Woodrow Wilson who
was reelected in 1916 on a platform promise of: "He Kept US Out of
War." No less disingenuous than most other politicians, Wilson began
planning to enter it in 1917 and did it by establishing the Committee
on Public Information under George Creel to orchestrate a public
campaign that was able to turn a pacifist nation into raging
German-haters resulting in the Congress overwhelmingly declaring war on
Germany in April, 1917.
The campaign so impressed the business community it recruited Edward
Bernays, who worked with Wilson and was a nephew of Sigmund Freud, to
develop its propaganda messages to shape public opinion. Bernays and
Ivy Lee pioneered the modern public relations industry and along with
political scientist Harold Lasswell and others helped develop the
propaganda techniques used so effectively today by government, the
corporate media and their PR allies.
They helped develop the ways business and government program the public
mind (the ones Walter Lippmann called "the bewildered herd") by
manipulating mainstream journalism and discourse to convince people to
support their agenda even at the expense of their own well-being. It's
done the way Lasswell explained saying "More can be won by illusion
than by coercion (and) Democracy has proclaimed the dictatorship of
(debate), and the technique of dictating is named propaganda."
Bernays added: "It is impossible to overestimate the importance of
engineering consent....(it's) the very essence of the democratic
process." He explained further in revealing detail the way things are
done now by today's master mind-manipulators: "The conscious and
intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the
masses is an important element in a democratic society. Those who
manipulate this unseen mechanism of society constitute an invisible
government which is the true ruling power of the country. We are
governed, our minds are molded, our tastes formed, our ideas suggested,
largely by men we have never heard of. This is a logical result of the
way in which our democratic society is organized."
Thought Control by the Corporate Media in A Democracy
Engineering consent is also the essence of its corruption as today
giant corporations control our lives, how we're governed and the
information we receive that influences how we think and act. It's the
realization of Lincoln's fear when he wrote: "I see in the near future
a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the
safety of my country....corporations have been enthroned and an era of
corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the
country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the
prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands
and the Republic is destroyed." He left out the part about future
governments colluding with the country's "money power" making it easier
for them to benefit at the public's expense and be able to destroy the
republic in the process as Lincoln feared.
Lincoln wrote those words before the collusion began post-Civil war in
the first gilded age of the "robber barons" who were pikers compared to
the current crop in an era of "globalization" and
"the-anything-goes-under-the-administration-of-George Bush." It was
long before technology made mass communication possible and the
privately-owned media could gain the kind of reach and influence it now
enjoys. It was also before the Supreme Court in 1886 gave corporations
the right of personhood granting them their long sought after same
constitutional rights as people without the responsibilities, enhancing
their power greatly, and allowing them to become the dominant
institution of our time with the help of the major channels of
communication they own, control and use to their advantage.
With them, they control the free flow of information assuring it's
compatible with the interests of wealth and power but that ends up
being harmful to the public welfare that gets more marginalized as
corporate dominance and influence grow. It's left democracy on life
support and allowed giant corporations, including the huge media ones,
to co-opt government at all levels and do it by keeping the public
uninformed on the most vital matters it needs to know about to keep
democracy healthy and vibrant. The media gatekeepers make sure that
doesn't happen by suppressing all the ugliness it wants concealed,
falsely portraying a picture of society in glowing terms and failing to
let on its mission is to serve the interests of capital, something
these corporate giants are rich in and want a lot more of.
It's long past the time needed to jump-start a process to fight back -
to rebuild democracy allowed to wither and is now somewhere between
life support and the crematorium. It should start with a national
debate on the most pressing issue of our time that must be resolved
before anything else can be - real media reform, reclaiming our space
and giving the public more control of the airwaves it owns, breaking up
the giants, creating more competition and diversity in the commercial
spaces, allowing the free flow of information now denied in the
mainstream, and creating more open and expanded
non-profit/non-commercial alternatives including online where the free
interchange of ideas flourishes but is endangered as discussed below.
Without all this, no democracy is possible.
It means stanching the corroding effect of a culture of out-of-control
commercialism and the glorification of wars against threats that don't
exist and waged for conquest and profit. It means reigning in the media
giants allowed to go unchecked and helped by friendly legislation that
must be halted and reversed. It's up to those on the left and the
public en masse to get on this issue - to understand how central it is
to all others including war and peace and the health of the state, and
to realize how endangered we are by the predations of giant
corporations, including the media ones, in league with a rogue
government that must be contained to have any chance to save a republic
on life support, if that.
The challenge ahead is to halt this assault on the public welfare and
sensibility, free society and mainstream journalism from the control of
capital and a government serving it, reclaim the public airwaves and
mass communication systems and give it back to the citizenry and honest
journalists who'll work for all the people and not just those holding
the "commanding heights" of business and government. There's nothing
sacrosanct about the current media structure that's the result of
decades of big media-friendly laws, regulations and huge government
subsidies all crafted secretly by the industry without public
knowledge, participation or consent and gotten under administrations of
both parties. Changing this is a tall order, and one needing a great
vision to drive it, especially in the face of the powerful forces
working against it in business and government. They're the enemy, and
only mass people-action can and must stop them.
The Battle to Save the Last Frontier of Press Freedom
Today another major threat looms that will move things in the wrong
direction if it succeeds. It's the battle to maintain internet
neutrality that's being debated in Congress, and will resume in the new
one in January, as part of several vital pieces of legislation that
will decide how it turns out. Included is S 2360, the Internet
Nondiscrimination Act of 2006 that prohibits blocking or modifying data
in transit other than spam and illegal content. In June, the House
rejected HR 5273, the Network Neutrality Act of 2006, that would have
denied phone and cable companies the right to price at their discretion
to sell favored treatment for content in their spaces at higher rates.
It also passed HR 5252, the Communications Opportunity, Promotion, and
Enhancement (COPE) Act, that will give these companies the freedom to
choose wealthier customers by eliminating the current requirement to
serve low income ones as well.
The COPE Act is now in the Senate, and internet neutrality advocates
are fighting to defeat it saying its passage will compromise the
internet space irrevocably by giving the cable and phone giants a
monopoly on high-speed cable internet. This will effectively deny
low-income households broadband access and allow these companies the
ability to monitor and filter content as they choose. Also under
consideration is S 2917, the Internet Freedom Preservation Act of 2006,
that amends the Communications, Consumer's Choice and Broadband
Deployment Act of 2006 introducing more rigid net-neutral standards
including a ban on the blocking of lawful content and on
quality-of-service deals between network and content providers.
The stakes on how all this turns out are enormous to the freedom of the
one remaining open public space (along with the few remaining small
independent publishers) it's crucially important to preserve before
anything more can be done to reclaim more of what rightfully belongs to
us all. Supporters of net neutrality want legislation and regulation
mandating digital democracy to keep the internet free from the
corrupting influence of corporate control working against the public
interest in pursuit of profit. They want it to mandate that phone and
cable companies allow internet service providers free access to the
public space of their cable and phone lines and to prevent these
companies from being able to screen or interrupt internet content
consistent with current law. Otherwise, these giants will become
self-regulating, able to charge whatever prices they wish and at their
discretion block out whatever content they won't allow in our public
space they control for their own private interest.
In the past 10 years, the telecom, broadcast and cable giants have
spent a fortune getting legislation passed favorable to its interests
and getting back far greater riches and media and telecommunication
concentration and control in return. They've profited hugely at the
public's expense through massive tax breaks, relaxed ownership rules
and unrestricted control of the public airwaves and broadband markets
the big five giants plus cable giant Comcast now dominate and exploit
with few checks and balances put up against them.
The battle lines are now drawn as public advocates face down the cable
and telecom companies to preserve the last media frontier of a free and
open internet that's become a symbol and best hope to revive a
democratic society, structure and culture now in big trouble. Against
us are the corporate media predators who covet what they have no right
to have and want to deny the public what's now available to them at
reasonable and nondiscriminatory cost. If they prevail, they intend to
establish internet toll roads or premium lanes so that users wanting
speed and access have to pay extra for it. Those who won't or can't
will get slower service and be unable to access some formerly free
sites without paying for them. The idea is to give the industry another
lucrative revenue stream and do it at the public's expense. It's also
another effort to control thought, suppressing altogether what's
unfriendly to state and corporate interests and do it in a venue never
intended to be exploited for commercial gain or be restricted in its
ability to remain free and open.
This is a battle the public can't afford to lose, and the telecom
cartel will pull out all the stops to win. It'll be up to the new 110th
Congress to decide, and the outcome at this stage is very much up for
grabs. The commercial giants have outspent public interest advocates
500 - 1, but concerned citizens fought back flooding the 109th Congress
with over one million letters demanding they allow a free and open
internet information commons to remain in place. 2007 will likely be
the year of decision, and how it turns out will be a crucial marker for
potential future media reform and whether there's any chance for a
democratic resurgence and national rebirth desperately needed.
In the spirit of Tom Paine, here's what it comes down to:
Step one: save the internet as a free and open space. Keep it out of
the hands of corporate media predators wanting to profit from it at our
expense and control its content.
Step two: address the greater issue of media reform and change to open
the major channels of communications to more competition and public
participation.
Step three: achieve steps one and two and then take on the biggest
issue of all - saving the republic the way our Forefathers did in
creating one that over time we allowed to founder because we lost
control of our public media spaces and allowed the forces controlling
them to program our minds and thinking to accept what's best for them
but against our own self-interest and survival.
It's never to late to act, but it's high time we realized we'd better
do it and quickly. Freedoms don't protect themselves and are easily
lost the way Edmund Burke explained saying: "The only thing necessary
for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing." Abolitionist
Wendell Phillips added "Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty."
It all starts with public awareness through knowledge that's what
Thomas Jefferson meant when he said "If a nation expects to be ignorant
and free....it expects what never was and never will be....Educate and
inform the whole mass of people....They are the only sure reliance for
the preservation of our liberty....Enlighten the people....and tyranny
and oppressions....will vanish like evil spirits....Every generation
needs a new (regenerating) revolution."
The revolution we need now begins with regaining control of the means
of mass communication to achieve an enlightened public Jefferson spoke
of. Achieving that means all else is possible.
Dedicated to the Spirit of Tom Paine's Corner and Its Editor Jason Miller
This essay is dedicated to the man whose web site inspired it. Jason
Miller operates Tom Paine's Corner and states its purpose proudly at
the top of its front page - ...."a site dedicated to advancing
universal human rights, fostering social and economic justice, and
supporting the cause of all oppressed, exploited and impoverished human
beings on our earth." Visit his blog site and see how well he does it.
And remember the way to achieve Jason's noble goal, and all others who
share it with him, is to have an informed and aware electorate that's
only possible when the means of communication operate to serve the
public interest unlike the way they now do. It's hoped this article
will inspire and arouse its readers to work to make that possible.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at
sjlendman.blogspot.com.