Who'll Unplug Big Media? Stay Tuned
On a Thursday in mid-May, the Senate did something that would have been unimaginable a decade ago. Led by Democrat Byron Dorgan, the senators--Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives--gave Rupert Murdoch and his fellow media moguls the sort of slap that masters of the universe don't expect from mere mortals on Capitol Hill. With a voice vote that confirmed the near-unanimous sentiment of senators who had heard from hundreds of thousands of Americans demanding that they act, the legislators moved to nullify an FCC attempt to permit a radical form of media consolidation: a rule change designed to permit one corporation to own daily and weekly newspapers as well as television and radio stations in the same local market. The removal of the historic bar to newspaper-broadcast cross-ownership has long been a top priority of Big Media. They want to dramatically increase revenues by buying up major media properties in American cities, shutting down competing newsrooms and creating a one-size-fits-all local discourse that's great for the bottom line but lousy for the communities they are supposed to serve and a nightmare for democracy.
That's just some of the good news at a time when the media policy debate has been redefined by the emergence of a muscular grassroots reform movement. Bush Administration schemes to use federal dollars to subsidize friendly journalists and illegally push its propaganda as legitimate news have been exposed and halted, with the House approving a defense appropriations amendment that outlaws any "concerted effort to propagandize" by the Pentagon. Public broadcasting, community broadcasting and cable access channels have withstood assault from corporate interlopers, fundamentalist censors and the GOP Congressional allies they share in common. And against a full-frontal attack from two industries, telephone and cable--whose entire business model is based on lobbying Congress and regulators to get monopoly privileges--a grassroots movement has preserved network neutrality, the first amendment of the digital epoch, which holds that Internet service providers shall not censor or discriminate against particular websites or services. So successful has this challenge to the telecom lobbies been that the House may soon endorse the Internet Freedom Preservation Act.
But while the picture has improved, especially compared with just a few years ago, the news is not nearly good enough. The Senate's resolution of disapproval did not reverse the FCC's cross-ownership rule change. It merely began a pushback that still requires a House vote--and even if it passes Congress, it will then encounter a veto by George W. Bush. Likewise, while public and community media have been spared from the executioner, they still face deep-seated funding and competitive disadvantages that require structural reforms, not Band-Aids.
The media reform movement must prepare now to promote a wide range of structural reforms--to talk of changing media for the better rather than merely preventing it from getting worse. "Media reform" has become a catch-all phrase to describe the broad goals of a movement that says consolidated ownership of broadcast and cable media, chain ownership of newspapers, and telephone and cable-company colonization of the Internet pose a threat not just to the culture of the Republic but to democracy itself. The movement that became a force to be reckoned with during the Bush years had to fight defensive actions with the purpose of preventing more consolidation, more homogenization and more manipulation of information by elites. Now, however, we must require corporations that reap immense profits from the people's airwaves to meet high public-service standards, dust off rusty but still functional antitrust laws to break up TV and radio conglomerates, address over-the-top commercialization of our culture and establish a heterogeneous and accountable noncommercial media sector. In sum, we need to establish rules and structures designed to create a cultural environment that will enlighten, empower and energize citizens so they can realize the full promise of an American experiment that has, since its founding, relied on freedom of the press to rest authority in the people.
Despite all the revelations exposing government assaults on a free press, too many media outlets continue to tell the politically and economically powerful, "Lie to me!" Five years into a war made possible by the persistent refusal of the major media to distinguish fact from Bush Administration spin, we learned this spring about the Pentagon's PR machine's multimillion-dollar propaganda campaign that seeded willing broadcast and cable news programs with "expert" generals who parroted the White House line right up to the point at which the fraud was exposed. Even after the New York Times broke the story, the networks still chose to cover their shame rather than expose a war that has gone far worse than most Americans know.
Recently we have seen an acceleration of the collapse of journalistic standards. Veteran reporters like Walter Cronkite are appalled by the mergermania that has swept the industry, diluting standards, dumbing down the news and gutting newsrooms. Rapid consolidation, evidenced most recently by the breakup of the once-venerable Knight-Ridder newspapers, the sale of the Tribune Company and its media properties and the swallowing of the Wall Street Journal by Murdoch's News Corp continues the steady replacement of civic and democratic values by commercial and entertainment priorities. But responsible journalists have less and less to say about newsroom agendas these days. The calls are being made by consultants and bean counters, who increasingly rely on official sources and talking-head pundits rather than newsgathering or serious debate.
The crisis is widespread, and it affects not just our policies but the politics that might improve them. There are two critical issues on which a free press must be skeptical of official statements, challenging to the powerful and rigorous in the search for truth. One of them is war--and in the case of the post-9/11 wars, our media have failed us miserably. (Even former White House press secretary Scott McClellan now acknowledges that the media were "complicit enablers" in the run-up to the Iraq invasion). The other issue is elections, when voters rely on media to provide them with what candidates, parties and interest groups often will not: a serious focus on issues that matter and on the responses of candidates to those issues. Instead, when the Democratic race was reaching its penultimate stage, the dominant story was a ridiculously overplayed discussion about Barack Obama's former minister. Before the critical Pennsylvania primary, studies show, the provocative Rev. Jeremiah Wright got more coverage than Obama's rival for the nomination, Hillary Clinton. And forget about issues--the most covered policy debate of the period, a ginned-up argument about whether to slash gas taxes for the summer, garnered only one-sixth as much attention as Wright.
Viable democracy cannot survive, let alone flourish, with such debased journalistic standards. Despite some remarkable recent victories by grassroots activists, our media still fail the most critical tests of a free press. This is an impasse that cannot last for long, and in all likelihood the outcome of the 2008 presidential election will go a long way toward determining which side, the corporate owners or the public, will win the battle for the media. The stakes could not be higher.
The next President will make two important decisions. The first will be whether to accept media reform legislation or veto it. There is little doubt that Congress has shifted dramatically as a result of popular pressure. Corporate lobbyists who used to worry only about battling one another for the largest slice of the pie know the game has changed. The 2008 elections will almost certainly increase support in both houses and from both parties for media reform.
Second, the next President will appoint a new FCC chair who will command a majority of the commission's five members. This is a critical choice. The right majority would embrace the values and ideals of the thousands of media critics, independent media producers and democracy activists who will gather June 6-8 in Minneapolis for the fourth National Conference for Media Reform. Dissident commissioners Michael Copps and Jonathan Adelstein, who have battled the FCC's pro-Big Media majority on issues ranging from media ownership to net neutrality and corporate manipulation of the news over the past four years, will both address the conference. If Copps, the senior of the two, is named chair, this savvy Washington veteran is prepared to turn the agency into what it was intended to be by Copps's hero, Franklin Roosevelt: a muscular defender of the public interest with the research capacity and the authority to assure that the airwaves and broadband spectrum, which are owned by the people, actually respond to popular demand for diversity, competition and local control. After years of battling to block rule changes pushed by corporate lobbyists, Copps has called for a New American Media Contract, saying, "I'm sick of playing defense." In these pages on April 7, he urged that we "reinvigorate the license-renewal process" by returning to standards set during Roosevelt's presidency, when "renewals were required every three years, and a station's public-interest record was subject to FCC judgment."
Don't look for a President John McCain to hand Copps the chairmanship. There is a clear difference between McCain and Obama when it comes to what the candidates say about media issues, and an even clearer difference in their records. Although many GOP voters, and some back-benchers in Congress, are supportive of media reform, the commanding heights of the party are a wholly owned subsidiary of the media giants. On the surface McCain may appear to be a complex figure who straddles the fence. In the increasingly distant past he occasionally tossed out a soundbite recognizing citizen concerns. But in recent years he has invariably championed the corporate lobbies. McCain's free-market rhetoric about government-created and indirectly subsidized media monopolies is increasingly recognized for what it is: propaganda to advance the policy objectives of massive corporations.
More than a decade ago McCain voted against the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which gave the green light to media consolidation. He also loudly opposed the efforts of commercial broadcasters to quash low-power noncommercial FM broadcasting in 2000. Progressives applauded in both cases. But as chair of the all-important Senate Commerce Committee, which was responsible for implementation of the Telecom Act, the Arizona senator resisted numerous opportunities to mitigate its worst excesses. The hallmarks of McCain's "leadership" have been: (1) a failure to promote the public interest; (2) hypocritical pro-consumer rhetoric that hides pro-business action; (3) a fundamental misunderstanding of technology and economics; and (4) troubling, at times scandalous, loyalty to particular special interests.
While most of the attention to February's New York Times investigation of McCain's relationship with Vicki Iseman focused on speculation about romantic entanglement, shockingly little attention was paid to the revelation that in 1999 McCain had, as Commerce Committee chair, pressured the FCC to issue a critical TV station license to Paxson Communications, for whom Iseman was lobbying. McCain's approach was so aggressive and so out of bounds even for corporate-cozy Washington that then-FCC chair William Kennard complained about the senator's attempted intervention. Paxson's executives and lobbyists contributed more than $20,000 to McCain's 2000 presidential campaign, and its CEO lent McCain the company's jet at least four times for campaign travel. The senator's symbiotic relationship with Paxson and telecom giants like AT&T is rarely mentioned on the Straight Talk Express.
Also unmentioned is the crucial role McCain played in shaping the Bush-era FCC. It was McCain who personally and aggressively promoted Michael Powell to serve as FCC chair, and who defended Powell's attempts in 2003 to rewrite media ownership rules according to a script written by industry lobbyists. While other senators objected to those rule changes after more than 2 million Americans communicated their opposition, McCain sought to preserve them. And he remains joined at the hip with Powell, who unabashedly thinks the job of government is to promote the interests of the largest communication firms. In May Powell represented the McCain campaign on a panel discussion at the annual conference of the National Cable & Telecommunications Association.
It is unlikely that McCain would reappoint the disgraced Powell as chair. But it is reasonably certain he would appoint someone who shares Powell's deafness to the pleadings of public interest. The senator's 2006 vote against maintaining net neutrality suggests that his commitment to the business objectives of AT&T outweigh any commitment to the public interest. Straight-talk soundbites notwithstanding, McCain will be a reactionary force on media issues across the board.
Barack Obama is different. Obama's campaign has produced the most comprehensive, public-interest-oriented media agenda ever advanced by a major presidential candidate. Like Hillary Clinton, the Illinois senator has been an outspoken defender of net neutrality. The Obama camp's position paper on media issues echoes Copps when it says that as President, he "would encourage diversity in the ownership of broadcast media, promote the development of new media outlets for expression of diverse viewpoints, and clarify the public interest obligations of broadcasters who occupy the nation's spectrum." In a recent speech Obama called for strengthened antitrust enforcement, specifically warning against media consolidation. An Obama presidency would, he and his supporters say, use all the tools of government to promote greater coverage of local issues and better responsiveness by broadcasters to the communities they serve. Like Copps, Obama favors investment to connect remote and disenfranchised communities to the Internet and to make public broadcasting a more robust voice in the national discourse.
While a President Obama would almost certainly be different from a President McCain on media issues, the extent of the difference remains open to debate. Would Obama actually make Copps or someone like him FCC chair? Would Obama move immediately and effectively to break the stranglehold of media lobbyists? That is by no means certain. While his stated policies are encouraging, competing forces are struggling to influence the candidate. Industry money is going to Obama in anticipation of his victory. He is a self-styled party centrist, and in recent Democratic Party history, "centrism" has usually meant putting the demands of moneyed interests ahead of those of rank-and-file citizens. The good news is that many of Obama's younger advisers are products of the media reform movement or have been influenced by it. The bad news is that others, like Clinton-era FCC chair Kennard, have records of compromising with the telecom industry. So while some Big Media will be betting on McCain, they won't give up easily on Obama.
What Obama's candidacy offers, then, is an opening and--if we dare employ an overused word from this campaign season--a measure of hope. The proper response to that opening is not celebration but vigilance and determination. Obama's positions, while sometimes vague, do allow us to imagine securing increased funding for public and community broadcasting, a broadband build-out that allows all Americans to realize the promise of the Internet, and a new approach to the licensing and regulation of the people's airwaves that respects the public interest more than Rupert Murdoch's bottom line. We can anticipate the development of creative policies to promote and protect viable independent journalism and local media. The right President will make achieving all these ends easier. The right Congress will make the task easier still. But above all, we will need the right media reform movement--one that is aggressive in its demands regardless of who sits in the White House, savvy in its approach to the FCC and Congressional committees, bipartisan and determined to build broad coalitions, and focused not just on playing defense but on shaping popular media for the twenty-first century.
Robert McChesney is research professor in the Institute of Communications Research and the Graduate School of Library and Information Science at the University of Illinois. He and John Nichols, The Nation's Washington correspondent, are the founders of Free Press, the media reform network, and the authors of Tragedy and Farce: How the American Media Sell Wars, Spin Elections, and Destroy Democracy (New Press).
John Nichols, a pioneering political blogger, has written The Beat since 1999. His posts have been circulated internationally, quoted in numerous books and mentioned in debates on the floor of Congress. Nichols writes about politics for The Nation magazine as its Washington correspondent. He is a contributing writer for The Progressive and In These Times and the associate editor of the Capital Times, the daily newspaper in Madison, Wisconsin. His articles have appeared in the New York Times, Chicago Tribune and dozens of other newspapers.
Copyright © 2008 The Nation
Twitter
StumbleUpon
Facebook
Delicious
Digg
Newsvine
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
61 Comments so far
Show AllEvery one is missing the point, take money out of news.
We own the airwaves, force as part of the license to be on the air that the news dept will be separate with a firewall between the "news" and the corp. The news dept would be funded by a percentage of GROSS SALES. The corp would have no say in who was hired and fired.
Take the money out, yes it can be done. Recently the FCC has reversed itself under pressure. If we don't apply pressure nothing changes.
@Doom n Gloom...LOL if a nation falls it makes a whine.
George Seldes, I.F. Stone, George Orwell, even Drew Pearson and Jack Anderson -- we have very few even close to their stature and integrity these days. If we did, they'd probably be banned from the Big Media, as have been Chomsky, McChesney and others. (Remember when Chomsky actually debated William F. Buckley on Firing Line? When Gore Vidal appeared on the Dick Cavett Show on ABC? Even Johnny Carson had Frank Zappa on many times. No more.) If Copps is made the head of the FCC, and a Dem president and Congress purge PBS of the regressive Bushites, we might return to the days of real debate between more than just dueling Dem and GOP 'strategists.' It's sad that our best mass media political commentators are comedians like Jon Stewart and Bill Maher, as good as they are. Only Keith Olbermann stands out from the rest as a serious news analyst -- and his producers force him to do American Idol bits. Pathetic.
Siouxrose [June 1st, 2008 8:02 pm]: "Do you really think an elephant being observed would be as sensually open as one who really found his mate receptive without any idiot watching through binoculars?"
Very similar to Werner Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle that theorizes something along the same lines, although Heisenberg was concerned with mathmatical measurements in quantum mechanics and not the observable world. This is also known as 'The Observer Effect': "The mere act of observing a phenomenon changes its nature." Mentioned at Wikipedia, referring to the work of physicist John Archibald Wheeler, is this: "Wheeler, who probably worked more deeply on this subject than any physicist thus far, devised a graphic in which the universe was represented by a 'U' with an eye on one end, turned around and viewing itself, to describe his understanding." A mobius strip of comprehension. Any examination of the infinite exterior of the universe always brings us back to the infinite interior of ourselves. Unfortunately, some live only as far as their narrowed eyes can see or their greedy hands can grasp, missing the bigger picture -- so far the main curse of the human race. In the more practical and political application, understanding this concept would lead to a parallel idea that what makes society better is good for the individual, whereas what only helps one individual does not necessarily make for a better society -- usually just the reverse. If we ever get over our addiction to the idea that we have to compete with and exploit others to enrich ourselves, we'd go a long way towards making this world a fit place to live, for everyone.
Siouxrose: Thank you for the compliment, and I agree with your second paragraph above.
Glaxia: Excellent post! I certainly agree.
We've got to wake up and look at what fools we've been when we listen to a speech by a politician. They're words mean nothing. It's their actions that count. They'll promise anything to get your vote then ignore you. LOOK AT THEIR VOTING RECORD. In so doing bear in mind that they can even deceive the public in this way, i.e., if there is an issue on which their vote won't matter, their leadership may allow or even encourage them to vote for the public good. So we must look at the times and issues for which they have voted for the CORPORATE good. Be smart and look beyond the electioneering crap to what counts.
Great conversation among PEACEMAN/IOWA BLACKBIRD & NOT GOING ALONG. (Dear "NOT GOING ALONG," I am not always right! LOL. You guys know far more history than I do, but I am a good student of human nature and as most understand, relate what I see to the larger lasting laws of the great LOGOS: "As above, so below."
IOWA BLACKBIRD noted the lack of profound curiosity in observed populations. I remember reading what researchers in the wild had to say about animal behavior, even mating behavior. Do you really think an elephant being observed would be as sensually open as one who really found his mate receptive without any idiot watching through binoculars? I say this because when I think of the big Catholic Church in Puerto Rico with its eye painted on the ceiling, the years of brainwashing that teach many to internalize this sense that a punitive, patriarchal god is watching... behavior gets rather chomped at the bit.
What would be the levels of our curiosity if we were those "unobserved elephants in the wilds?"
iowablackbird,
I'm elated that Seldes is one of your heros too! You're the only person ever to respond on CD that I'm aware of when I mention his name. Free Speech TV has a two hour documentary on his life. What an inspiration for honest journalism. I have his book that you quote from.
And I'm glad you listen to kpfa. The Morning Show is also good.
And your quote from Baynard Hall... appropriate for Adlai Stevenson, who was brighter than Eisenhower, progressive, and probably would have been a better president. Compared to the reprehensible Republicans since then, IKE was a godsend.
Nice hearing from you again, iowablackbird.
Peace and Harmony
Arvy [May 30th, 2008 12:53 pm], Murdoch, as others here have mentioned, is just trying to butter his bread on both sides. He has also held fundraisers for Hillary Clinton. You might also detail Obama's 'rightward shifts' that you mentioned.
Huck [May 30th, 2008 1:19 pm] wrote: "While I agree with the sentiments of the article repudiating monopolies and corporate hegemony, one need only look at Obama's cozyness with Murdoch and his money to wonder what kind of tracktion this effort will take in the future."
What corporate 'cozyness' does Obama have with Murdoch -- he's never even met the man.
Huck also wrote: "Notwithstanding the corporate news types writing this article arguing against corporations while at the same time, working for them. Nichols is nothing more than a corporatte yes man marching to his handlers instructions offering a watered down version of what he considers progressivism, while supporting the forces of our demise. How sad, and comical it all is!"
John Nichols works for The Nation and he's working for a large corporation that's selling out America? Have you ever read The Nation, Huck? And Robert McChesney's in the tank for Big Corpo, too? Read his books on the Big Media lately? What's sad and comical is that you aren't receiving treatment for your raging case of ridiculousness.
curmudgeon99 [May 30th, 2008 2:02 pm] wrote: "I share your lack of confidence in the 'Obama as savior' conundrum.
"The corporate paymasters own him too. Don't kid yourselves."
Which corporate paymasters own Obama? Since he collects 100 percent of his contributions from individuals and not lobbyists or PACs, according to this summary at OpenSecrets.org**, it's pretty hard to see exactly which paymasters he's serving. Since you and others have made this charge, I think it's incumbent upon you to provide some proof of that accusation.
**OpenSecrets.org Obama Summary:
http://www.opensecrets.org/pres08/summary.php?cycle=2008&cid=N00009638
About fifty percent of the criticisms I read about Obama are either mischaracterizations or gross distortions; 20 percent are plain silly; 20 percent are outrageous lies; and only 10 percent are true. The anti-Obama comments on this thread, so far, fit into that first 90 percent.
Jacob Freeze [May 30th, 2008 2:53 pm], for once, I agree with you -- Copps should be head of the FCC and pressure should be brought to bear to make that happen.
Samson [May 30th, 2008 4:41 pm], it isn't enough for the people reading CD to turn off the tube -- most of them can already filter the Mass Media BS -- it's the millions of Americans who are distracted by daily life and use the TV as an after-dinner soporific, picking up their news here and there through soundbites, that you have to reach to change things. Unless, of course, you want a democracy in which only the votes of a selected class count -- a condition we've had the last two presidential elections. You forget that a majority of Americans elected Al Gore in 2000 and John Kerry in 2004 -- the Bush Boy was so unpopular that Rove had to rig both elections to squeeze him in.
formernadervoter [May 31st, 2008 12:00 am] wrote: "Go Nader!"
And end up with McCain.
Thomas More [May 31st, 2008 7:34 pm] wrote: "I'm not sure Obama is electable. Many more racist exibitions like the Priest at Trinity and it may be McCain."
I heard what Pfleger said and I didn't consider it racist -- he was just ridiculing Hillary Clinton. Aside from that, how is Obama in any way responsible for the comments of a guest-speaker Catholic priest in his Protestant UCC church? Of course, I realize it is now academic since Obama has quit Trinity UCC, understanding that his political opponents and the Big Media would eventually try to make him responsible for any errant comment made by anyone who ever attended his former church in the past 20 years. This is the Obama who is so beloved by the MSM and the corporate paymasters? They have a strange way of showing it.
Good stuff, Iowablackbird, thanks! And a tip o' the hat to Siouxrose, too.
notgoingalong, good points (including the reference to adam's pub).
about referendums, i know they've worked in switzerland and elsewhere. referendums are pure democracy (no intermediaries in between) and w/ the inet, the technological infrastructure, the possibilities of using referendums to implement policy becomes more 'realistic'.
but even referendums require increased public consciousness. 1 in 4 people in this country is functionally illiterate and a huge percentage of the others scorn intellectual debate b/c they refuse to read or look at the issues from multiple perspectives (again it comes back to information).
example prop 13 in california...the rich have an uncanny ability to deceive the others.
so even if we extend power to the masses - ultimately it's up to the masses to make the right decisions. i hate to sound like an elitist (i am poor and an advocate of referendums) but considering the judgment (2000/2004) the masses made w/ their vote, do you honestly believe they would make the right decisions ? i'm skeptical...
we are a product of over 200 years of exploitation, it's in our blood (the food we eat, the oil we consume). i'm not suggesting that a massive 'national' blood transfusion isn't possible, but still -as nichols and mcchesney point out- people have to see the other possibilities based on access to info/ideas.
then there's the question of time constraints. how long would it take to implement direct democracy in the US? we're facing serious crises (environment/economy/war) that require attention now. even if referendums are a solution, it doesn't negate the need to address these issues asap.
mccain or obama will be the next president (barring an assassination). i believe that was the jest of nichols'/mcchesney's piece. will obama come through for us? FDR did in the sense that he did help the people - to a degree (although i agree w/ other's that in many way's FDR was the bulwark to prevent a socialist revolution).
ultimately we need a mechanism to arrive at referendums/meaningful reform. (i believe peaceman and others who've advocated for a generalstryke may be pointing us in the right direction to achieve this goal - yet even a GS requires enough participants to influence the others who don't participate)
also - excellent point on the chertoff vote (the dorgan legislation is hardly a retort).
honestly reid and pelosi have been way too cautious in their tactics, perhaps we'll see new leadership after '08 results (strange things do happen).
i respect your thoughts especially, "What is missing is a vision, not at lack of issues and conditions that demand our protest and attention."
what's holding us up?
http://chronicle.com/free/v47/i15/15b00701.htm
"Probing for historical roots of a mood that was sweeping (if somewhat exaggerated by intellectuals), Hofstadter found that "our anti-intellectualism is, in fact, older than our national identity." He cited, among others, the Puritan John Cotton, who wrote in 1642, "The more learned and witty you bee, the more fit to act for Satan will you bee"; and Baynard R. Hall, who wrote in 1843 of frontier Indiana: "We always preferred an ignorant bad man to a talented one, and hence attempts were usually made to ruin the moral character of a smart candidate; since unhappily smartness and wickedness were supposed to be generally coupled, and incompetence and goodness."
also another article that examines this question (why is there anti-intellectualism?)
http://www.uwgb.edu/DutchS/PSEUDOSC/WhyAntiInt.htm
{* Humans are innately curious, but it is mostly a low order curiosity concerned with immediate gratification of a particular desire to know, and mostly oriented toward immediate practical results.
* There is no persuasive evidence that any societies have ever had a high proportion of people who were deeply curious in a systematic, disciplined way.
* The curiosity and creativity of children is very superficial.
* Our own culture supports systematic and disciplined inquiry better than just about any other in history, but even so there is a great deal of hostility toward it by people who feel their values threatened, see it as a waste of time that could be better devoted to more immediate goals, or resent the status and power it carries.}
the author (above) addresses this subject from a more cynical perspective (few of us have the capacity - repugnant? maybe - but is it true? maybe/maybe not - chomsky claims he can teach a 9 yr old geopolitics in 10 minutes)
all i'm suggesting is the barriers for institutional change are real.
just a few thoughts...
...peace...
IowaBlackBird
This would be better said in a bar. It was the pubs, always, cafes' were counter-culture and played an important role, but the if we look at revolutions, they came from unknown common people uprisings lead by women for food for their children during wars. Sam Adams owned a bar in Boston, that was the fountain of the American Revolution.
Sioux is always right, and there is always something to add, no matter the issue or the the person. I welcome coffee houses, I even had one in Venice some years ago.
What is missing is a vision, not at lack of issues and conditions that demand our protest and attention.
And how about revolutionary reform? A revolution in changing the system, and I do not see the need for taking armed self-defense to do it. With a sudden change in consciousness, the usurping domestic enemies and the foreign assets will flee to escape arrest and trail for high treason and war crimes.
All solutions are for our resolution by popular vote. In lieu of all those worthless candidates, vote on in making law ourselves on the national level immediately, not leaving it to congress, the court, or any assortment of miscreants that seep into the infamious white house.
Chertoff was confirmed in a senate vote of 97-0
That is all the proof that is necessary to abolish the senate. The Supreme Court role in the 2000 election, impeached itself forever. Bush saying, "the constitution is just a god-dam piece of paper" is clearly treason, and the six Members of Congress who did not act on the spot to kick his ass or arrest him and call for impeachment, must hate themselves. For they took an oath to 'protect and defend it against all enemies domestic and foreign. And none of them are doing it! So, the republic is good for nothing, is an enemy structure vis-a-vis democracy, representative government, constitutional rule. That is all rhetoric and Bush make it clear how things are run and who is in control.
I am opposed to pretending election are credible or necessary. National Referendums are another story, the solution, and the November 4th General Election is a fraud and you know it! That is, we all know it!
Huck May 30th, 2008 1:19 pm,
"the corporate news types writing this article"
right, the types of people who who found organizations like free press and who devote their lives to media criticism. check out nichols' book 'the genius of impeachment - the founders cure for royalism' (new press 06). or mcchesney's interviews @ media matters. obviously these guys are corporate guys b/c they envision different tactics than you, right?
Mark Abram May 30th, 2008 1:54 pm,
"real change will require more than his winning the presidency" - exactly..
Jacob Freeze May 30th, 2008 2:53 pm,
"One letter or call or email to Obama or your local Congress-person urging the appointment of Michael Copps as Chairman of the FCC will do more to preserve the Constitution than a million words of the same old chatter on the blogs."
i'm on it today (after i finish this post), good suggestion..
ChrisHorton May 30th, 2008 4:18 pm,
thank you for the constructive advice.....
Samson May 30th, 2008 4:41 pm,
"I know these guys want to lead a movement, but we don't need leaders and meetings and endorsing corporate-backed candidates to do this."
these guys are leading a movement (it's not a wish), vote for progressive candidates that can win local elections - build the consciousness (political clout) to elect that progressive candidates in the future.
a progressive has never been elected president in this country outside the parameters of the 2 party system. whether we feel that's right or wrong is moot w/out the ability to actually obtain the office. that requires victories in local and state races - a 'real' coalition. vote your conscience.
FrederickJohnson May 30th, 2008 4:55 pm,
did that 21 years ago (no tv since 1987 - it is a liberating feeling, being tv free).
notgoingalong May 30th, 2008 7:37 pm, 11:31 pm, 10:28 pm
i tend to agree w/ your analysis. 911 probably was staged for the reasons you've elucidated (project for new american century's agenda). why didn't the critics follow through? it's a good question but a few of them did (theres a copy of 'debunking 9/11 debunking - an answer to popular mechanics and other defenders of the official conspiracy theory' by david ray griffin on my table), there are others as well...
of course corporate/america (especially MIC and big oil) doesn't have a problem w/ murdering people to achieve their objectives.
reform or revolution, i'll participate either way. yet both reform and revolution require consciousness raising - ultimately the point of this essay, w/out a plethora of opinions how can consciousness be raised ? - and revolution seems logistically impossible in the police state we're living in. i'm open to suggestions.
your laundry list of US atrocities is poignantly accurate.
Alembic May 30th, 2008 9:07 pm,
"In any case, and whatever the reform options for this and other issues may be, none of us should ever passively lay down and give up in the face of tyranny." - well stated.
Siouxrose May 31st, 2008 11:43 am,
good observation about the coffee houses, from what i understand the american and french revolutions were discussed and planned in coffee houses in paris (1770's-1780's). caffeine is an amazing stimulant for political/social change.
peaceman May 30th, 2008 9:15 pm,
2 points of appreciation - first i've been visiting kpfa and listening to 'the living room' b/c of your lead (longshoreman's interview) and i want to thank you for invoking the name of george seldes (another one of my heros) - a quote from his book 'the great thoughts' that addresses your question about 911.
"i shall give a propagandist cause for starting this war. never mind whether it is plausible or not. the victor will not be asked, later on, whether he told the truth or not. in starting and waging war, it is not the right that matters but victory. have no pity, adopt a brutal attitude... right is on the side of the strongest."
adolf hitler - speech 8/22/39 (from george seldes,'the great thoughts' pg 186)
...peace...
thank you mcchesney and nichols for the insightful essay.
a few quotes i appreciated...
"There is a clear difference between McCain and Obama when it comes to what the candidates say about media issues, and an even clearer difference in their records."
"McCain who personally and aggressively promoted Michael Powell to serve as FCC chair"
"we will need the right media reform movement–one that is aggressive in its demands regardless of who sits in the White House"
look we're not going to get everything we want, but there are differences b/w mccain and obama. 'progressives' only constitute a fraction of the general public. mcchesney/nichols demonstrate, w/ the byron dorgan example, that if we work at it we can at least achieve a few victories, w/ public pressure. as we build networks and raise consciousness we can ask for more (take the offensive).
i love reading, but i also find audio clips very useful to help me understand who these folks are.
i'd encourage folks to take a few moments to listen.
http://www.will.uiuc.edu/am/mediamatters/default.htm
Sept 9, 2007 - mcchesney interviewing FCC Commissioner Michael Copps
December 30, 2007 - mcchesney and nichols discussing the election.
...peace...
notgoingalong: 10:28pm post, Excellent commentary!
Very few have ever heard of Fort Dietrick, Md. and the experiments and the biological who knows what kind of "weaponry" developed there over the years. When I was in the Army, we had chemical, biological, and radiological classes several times a year, but biological warfare was brushed aside. The consequences in the use of these agents is so frightening, it was left out of the training agenda. It goes without saying chemical and nuclear weapons are just as frightening and for that matter, so is a 22 caliber bullet or penetration from a bayonnet.
All we can do at this point is EDUCATE the people on the facts and convince them to become involved. Willful ignorance is a sin and gives tyrants the green light to proceed.
Siouxrose May 31st, 2008 11:43 am
NOT GOING ALONG: Good post and quite impassioned. I don't think we can hold ALL the parties you mention to account for a 911 cover-up because many otherwise rational people stop when it comes to accepting that their own government could MURDER Americans....
Well then they have to be disillusioned, but catered to, placated, humored, protected, or lied to!
In fact, they do not the US Federal Government are mass murderers and that the war in Iraq is illegal and unjust, and that Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11, and wish it had never happened. So because some people, even if they were the majority, and they are not; is no moral or legal excuse to by the Big Lie and support the war machine, than remind or educate as it might be, the terrible truth, that the US Government murders Americans.
And you are right, people will suspect your motives, your view perhaps unfounded, not in the public narrative, or their sources, many of which have credibility in the critical community of US foreign policy, and otherwise. And with them put forward as the last word, the first thing, using their esteemed standing to support the perpetrators thesis or cover-story of a False Flag conspiracy that with little analysis is a transparent lie as was all the lies that following on the road of empire.
Americans killed Americans during the American War of Independence, aka, the American Revolution, within the revolution, a counter-revolution within the revolution by George Washington having American revolutionaries assassinated for there anti-slavery and egalitarianism, as a threat after the revolution.
The US Civil War took the lives of over 600,000 troops, and uncounted civilians, perhaps in the millions.
American workers were gunned down by US military forces, and otherwise murdered, that was class warfare, where the rich killed the poor here as everywhere a profit is to be had.
WWI Veternams marched on Washington, D.C. to demand their promised war bonuses, and where bayoneted and driven out by the US military. And we must count the native population as Americans, and if so, they were murdered by the millions
We know about Operation Northwoods, a False Flag covert action to murder Americans on the street, in the air, to blame Fidel Castro and attack Cuba. That is absolute proof to such plans made by the top generals at the pentagon at presidential direction, Eisenhower in this instance.
Kent State was graphic and just discussed on CD as you might recall. I think it was Scott Ritter article, to which I commented.
And if you understand the reality of the assassinations of JFK, MLK, RFK, and many activist as is documented in the COINTELPRO FBI criminal conspiracy to assassinate or otherwise destroy people they did not like.
There is no contrary evidence of principled conduct and upholding the constitution by the thugs in control of what is a rogue government, that is to say, an invalid imposture, a fraud, a usurping public enemy and the US Constitution, and that is High Treason!
I further believe that have "depopulation plans" by lethal forced inoculations with ethnic specific genocidal batches from Fort Detrick, injected at gunpoint by a Blackwater kind of group. This is operational and possible.
The sailors on those ships hit at Pearl Harbor was not warned deliberately by President Roosevelt. That was tantamount to Americans killing Americans. In the desire for a 'New Pearl Harbor' there was no one capable or willing to have attacked the US. So, they made it up, a total psychological warfare false flay conspiracy that required the killing of Americans to make it credible and to whip up public anger to press for wars as always.
So, it is the innocence of history that would justify ignorance in not being open to shocking information about a government that has no credibility and is illegitimate.
This takes unbridled discussion, people risking being misjudged and rejected by someone who was a friend.
So the case has to be made in every instance the opportunity arises. It need not be a speech, a subtle question can be sobering and provocative. Better, remembered and worked on silently in peoples minds.
We have a greater responsibility to be faithful to the truth in vital facts impacting the public consciousness and the consequences that has on the launching of more US wars of aggression, always a war crime.
Further, what if 20 percent would never be convinced and wanted to bomb all these countries and were totally brainwashed. Would that be a veto on the will of the people, that 80 percent? I think not. So, it is in the organization of that 80 percent that the work has to be done.
Arvy May 30th, 2008 1:54 pm
curmudgeon99 May 30th, 2008 2:02 pm
You guys said it for me. Thanks.
aliensoup May 30th, 2008 3:44 pm
I'm not sure Obama is electable. Many more racist exibitions like the Priest at Trinity and it may be McCain.
Perhaps its better to consider Senate and House races to get change?
Nathaniel, 12:27 pm:
Thanks for your encouragement! Yes it is a great idea, but it will take work and publicity to make it fly, and only experience will tell whether the time for it is right. Talk it up and post your feedback in CD!
We sent out a News Chain Alert today on the story in The Nation about Ron Paul winning 26% of the Idaho Republican vote. Even the New York Times didn't comment on this event, but we did find a story in the Boston Globe, which we referenced despite our view that the Nation article is much better, for the very reason you cite: making this as much as possible a mainstream phenomenon. The alert, shortened and simplified in response to Samson's criticism, is below. ALL SUGGESTIONS ARE WELCOME! Do you like the mushroom quote?
Please snip and forward it to your own lists.
*****************
"They must think we're mushrooms..."
NEWS CHAIN ALERT: The following important news item received little or no coverage in the "Major Media". If you received this from someone you trust, open and read it and then, if you agree that it should have been "on the news" and you didn't see it there, please forward it to your list.
**This news article doesn't necessarily reflect the opinions of the sender.**
........................................................
"Paul has best showing yet, in Idaho"
http://www.boston.com/news/politics/politicalintelligence/2008/05/paul_has_best_s.html
........................................................
ABOUT NEWS CHAIN ALERTS:
"News Chain Alerts" are a response to the problem of important news stories not being covered by the "Major Media". If on average half the people who get this "News Chain Alert" forward it to 20 people on their list who haven't yet received it, it will take only 8 steps to reach 100 million people!
SUGGESTED RULES FOR NEWS CHAIN ALERTS:
1. Anyone can start a News Chain Alert, and each person who receives one gets to decide whether to keep it going.
2. The article should be a NEWS story - not opinion or analysis - from a credible source, of general interest, and not being covered by the Major Media. The ultimate test is your answer to the question "Should this story have been on the national news?"
3. The content of a News Chain Alert is just a headline, a link to a recent news article, and an explanation of "News Chain Alerts". Nothing else. That way nobody's trying to push their opinions on anybody, and no one is starting an argument.
4. Before starting a new News Chain Alert, check whether it really is being given the "silent treatment". Go to Google News, and search on key words from the story, followed by "carrier name" (e.g.: "key words ABC", "key words CNN", etc.)
"... because they feed us manure and keep us in the dark!"
notgoingalong,
he! he! i think you missed the objective
my statement was to illustrate the point that power and truth are incompatible bed fellows..and as it is impossible to run a country without power...well you know the rest
simply looking for truth in the smaller media outlets and sources is almost pointless (except as an intellectual pastime)..if those sources of information ever became large enough to possess the power to bring about genuine change then themsleves would fall victim to the same catch 22
as long as peoples desire for position wealth power even respect and opportunity out weighs their desire for truth
the situation remains nothing more than whistling in the wind..something to keep folks happy whilst the real drama is happenning unchecked
a clever government would set these sources up themselves to provide some consolation for the intelectual masses...
truth without power is ineffectual
once truth comes into contact with power
the one will consume the other..but you cannot genuinely have both at the same time..we hope our leaders and media will behave "responsibly" towards the truth..but that just serves to illustrate the dilema...once the desire/need for power has become the mechanics of the political/socail systems under which we live..the truth will never be anything more than a tool to be bent to the service of power..either in opposition to the current status quo or to reinforce it...the only healthy answer is to abandon completely the current systems in favour of a society that views power postion wealth as mere hindrences to the persuit of truth in what ever form that may take
over wise might is right...
as with most things with the modern media it is all illusion anyway..
Frederick may sound a little too foul-mouthed but I'm afraid he's correct on the money. See, all that money you pay to your cable/satellite companies doesn't go towards improving squat but instead lobbying and paying the lying liars on the radio, tv, newspapers, and even a great deal of the Internet. Rupert Murdoch would be dead poor if we weren't paying for tv channels that aren't worth a crap. When our ancestors could do very well without the TV, so the hell can we. PEACE !
jim_murray you've got it! I've written letters-to-the-editor until my fingers went numb pointing out the subtle difference between a war and an occupation. Otherwise sensible Americans refuse to see the difference. They speak of "the battlefield", "insurgents", winning "the war", etc. Jesus Christ: What f*** battlefield? How can there be insurgents when there is no government (an occupation-installed puppet government isn't quite the same thing as a real one). Those people are rebels, rebelling against the illegal, monstrous foreign invaders. They can't stand up because we've killed over a million of them and driven millions others from their homes if not also their country. You see the truth. Why is it so difficult for most to see it?
if you can't TRUST the media..then who can you trust
i'm guessing as a basic rule of thumb...that the larger and more powerfull the media or the source of the information represented by the media ..the less likey it is that the truth will be what you get...as mind numbingly..the bigger the source the more that source has to lose from telling the truth (one would be reasonably safe to assume)
after all the most powerfull in our society and those who would seek to become the most powerfull in our society have an enormous investment in their own positions and nothing is going to seem more important to them than their position in our society...least of all the truth..
catch 22
I WOULD not be surpriseed is a mer
ica
does not make it after this nesxt electoioion.
i a
m
waiting for the draft
then people will really start 'paying'
attention.
NO ONE IS SAFE FROM THE FACISTS
NO ONE IS SAFE FROM THE PIGS
NO ONE WILL ESCAPE THE HORRORS TO COME
unless people unite to say
"what ever happened to mr rogers"
what ever happened to public television?
IF THEY REALLY KNEW.
Please, look at these websites
wanttoknow.info
wanttoknow.info
great info there, explanes EVERYTHING,
being hidden from the PEOPLE
have a nice WAR
DD (doubly duplicitous?) if Dims are so great how come they aren't filibustering as we speak to stop the war and reign in the oil companies? A shit popsicle with a Donkey stamped on it tastes just as rotten IMO.
On the subject of the article give what you can to CD, Democracy Now, counterpunch.org, antiwar.com, etc. And even more important tell your friends and family to kill their TEE VEES and starting reading some non corporate news!
Well, I've unplugged it. I don't watch the network news (except for Countdown with Keith Olbermann). My news is internet sourced. I DVR a lot of programming of choice, and skip all the commercials. I am skeptical of any US-based news, and don't swallow it unless I see that it's reported from other sources. You can sell the news, but you can't make everyone buy it.
Obama allows you to imagine. That is all you can do.
After he's elected and your image turns bad, then what will you do?
Go Nader!
Peaceman,
In the 'Project For A New American Century' why would they wish for a new 'Pearl Harbor' on American soil?
Answer: It was the plan, in the first place, and Rumsfeld called for another to keep critics cowed again.
You see, Benyamin Netanyahu recently in a self-congratulatory display of untouchable arrogance, public proclaimed that 9/11 was good for Israel, therefore, it was just, in that is serves the greater glory of Grater Israel.
Did the loathsome Nation report that? Haartz did, that is where I read it.
The article is garbage, leaves out Micheal Powell, Colin's fascist kid who given the position of the FCC, on what basis, you might ask, and know the answer, he like his father before him, would just follow orders and lie and fain indignation if questioned about his intregity.
The article was a campaign piece, maybe published to close a gap, of another article that is coming out, and this was a coup to block it my the CIA tainted Nation newspaper weekly.
Cut the election crap. shills for the democrats are not objective on issues, any of them discuss the coming military draft, DU maybe? Calling for war crimes tribunals?
So, they in their way are the polluters of the press, the ariways, and try to contain the level or depth of debate and discussion, moderating status quo agents of containment, in a country and situation where confrontation on policy and the truth of the pretext for there rational is imparative, and they are all Nancy Palosi' pretending one thing, and maintaining order in the name of pragmatic progression, with in the end with include nuclear war, if we listen to the liberal establishment that are not to repress us on take heat of themselves for pretending to be with or of us.
The answer to the question posed in the headline of this article is: Each and every one of us on a continuing daily basis. Imagine a country where everybody listened to each other talk instead of vegging in front of a TV or radio waiting to be told what they were to think.
When there is no money to be made advertising through the controlling commercial broadcast media then their patrons will go elsewhere to seek to make money. Vote with your dollars that's what the opposition does and it works.
exeflyer; Very good! I'm in total agreement with you!
notgoingalong: Powerful comments! I for believe the reactionaries controlling this country admired the tactics of the Third Reich and how effective the Nazi government was in controlling the German people with fear and intimidation. The infamous "enabling laws" legitimizing Hitler's agend have been re-enacted in the United States with barely a yawn among the Democrats. They have come up with more excuses than Carter (not Jimmy) had little liver pills.
Yep! There are more Judith Millers than Thomas Paines or I.F. Stones, and I might add, Geroge Seldes in America, on all the networks and newspapers. But not posting here.
In the 'Project For A New American Century' why would they wish for a new 'Pearl Harbor' on American soil?
Anti-monopoly democratization of newsmedia ownership is arguably now THE crucial issue.
The only argument I have with the authors' trenchant article above is their marginalization of the public's proven concern and common sense pro-activity against FCC-fascistic decisions, heretofore.
Multiple and diversely-sourced public opinion polls, plus broad-based public protest against the FCC's recent and previous media-consolidating regulatory allowances, have shown again and again that citizen opposition to centralized media ownership decisively cuts across progressive/conservative lines.
Average persons in America, no matter how seemingly brain-dead, or politically burned-out, or ill-informed, or generally apathetic. or alternatively, rabidly-partisanly engaged, provably come together in majority numbers on this issue:
They [we] don't want a narrowly owned, propagandizend news media.
If it's true that the major party 'structural reform' candidate, Obama, is taking campaign contributions from an anti-democratic, power mongering solopsistic filthpot like media mogul Murdoch, then, for me, it would disbelieving Obama's reformist claims in a blink.
Bhatever Obama's (or any candidate's0 election rhetoric says or doesn't day, or whatever his/her true or phoney post-election intentions on media reform may be, we citizens can and should still overwhelm the FCC with all requisite protest energy to demand media ownership/functional reform, right now.
In any case, and whatever the reform options for this and other issues may be, none of us shoud ever passively lay down and give up in the face of tryanny.
Most of us humans, with sometimes needed corrective prodding, remain decent, rational beings. It is up to us to make sure that a pathological minority of indecent, irrational fellow humans don't keep ruling us and fu--ing us over.
check back into this consolidation crusade and you will come upon Billy Clinton Inc.
There were purges throughout Pacifica Radio to keep their Corporation for Public Broadcosting (CPB) stings-attached , largest signal source of on one check, coming in.
The CPB is named by the President of the United States, it is funded by the US Congress, and is a big foot in the door leveraging censorship and resident limited-hangout operatives, and making sure radicals who are gaining a popular ear are removed, and or, it is a matter of business, having the CPB money to keep all the other feel good groovy shows humming along daring out os sign out of chorus! I am speaking as a former Pacifica Station KPFK board member and a producer of a morning call-in program.
The sponsor of the dreadful legislation for the corportate media and war machines interest, then was Senator Carol Mosley Braun (D-Ill).
More importantly, I take issue with this line in the article.:
'... challenging to the powerful and rigorous in the search for truth. One of them is war–and in the case of the post-9/11 wars, our media have failed us miserably....'
NO one is 'rigorous in search for the truth'unless they are totally forthright in investigating and reporting without compromise the TRUTH of what had to have happened in the years, months, days, and hours BEFORE 9/11. That is the bedrock foundation of all the criminal wars of aggression and the millions of people murdered because of the likes of the "respectable press was nothing but carvenly complicit mercenaries with bylines, lacking conscience, dignity, scruples, or any right to command respect or be taken seriously by anyone. And that allies to all naysayers on 9/11 without reservation from by perspective.
The authors, journalist, publishers, politicians, activist, critics, and host of radio and TV shows; are not entitled to cover-up for 9/11 and then acted as if they were against the carnage what was built upon the Big Lie and rubble and unsolved murders of those thousands of American that day, and all those killed in Afghanistan and Iraq since.
For that my friends is being an accessory after the fact. That is Chomsky, Zinn, Amy Goodman, and really sad to say, James Petras, too. But, there are thousands upon thousands more, in classrooms as well as news rooms. sitting on bar stools, and throughout the land, who know not only in their hearts, but in their minds - beyond a reasonable doubt, that is was not than letting it happen to exploit it for war, but 9/11 was fully an Inside Job in the planning for years, and covered-up- by the media, congress, academics, legal groups, and basically the antiwar movement, which was not, because if too, ran from the truth, and everyone stopped listening to the censored refrains and futility that is instilled with not, "saying it like it is!" Those who have failed to, have violated the First Amendment. Freedom of Speech, is also a constitutional responsibility, greater than voting or paying taxes. If 10% of the readers and posters on Common Dreams believes the official impossible story, then I would be shocked. But, I am already, with what little attention it gets on this site.
There are more Judith Millers than Thomas Paines or I.F. Stones in America, on all the networks and newpapers. But not posting here.
9/11 is the greatest radicalizing issue of our time. The elections are of no consequence, or there would be rigged primaries and conventions, and general elections, failing that, assassinations. The policy, the program, the agenda; of the empire is set, and all have signed on, and any deviation is courting danger, one way or another. Ask Jack Kennedy or Dick Nixon, they had different ideas, and look what happened to them!
Okay, progressives, which ISP is politically correct?
Don't know about the Nihil Obstat but I use Peoplepc.com (dialup) - it's slow but cheap with my AARP discount.
Okay, progressives, which ISP is politically correct? Certainly not my present MSN with it aggressive software and its barring of Kucinich from the Nevada debate. I've been meaning to fire MSN, 6 months free with the new computer, for a time now, but is there any ISP out there that does not use depleted uranium on its geraniums?
The same friendly Merchants of Death who brought us two oil wars now are making another 'killing' with political ads on their propaganda stations. Egad.
"Hillary considers General Zod as running mate"
...as opposed to McCain with General Mayhem?
Stand by with kryptonite for one and coprolite for the other.
Samson,
I know what you're saying, but I've tried that and it just doesn't go very far. We're not reaching the millions, and the Moguls are still controlling the national conversation. People know they are being "kept in the dark", but they naturally feel inhibited about forwarding anything with a strong opinion in it to anyone with whom they have a valued relationship and who will disagree with it. Heck, I feel inhibited about forwarding articles!
My idea is to create a recognizable, non-threatening, opinion-free class of message that people won't feel inhibited about forwarding, and to get the idea out there that this is a way to get the straight poop.
Why don't all you people just SHUT THE FUCK UP and SHUT YOUR FUCKING TELEVISION OFF and STOP PAYING YOUR FUCKING CABLE AND SATELLITE COs if you really want to BEAT THE SHIT OUT OF BIG MEDIA AND THRASH THEIR GODDAMN MOTHERFUCKING ASS ?!?!? My wife and I have enjoyed life without the telly for nearly 10 years especially before the Clinton impeachment BOMB took hold and we ain't fuckin' regretting it !
As opposed to that complicated News Chain Alert stuff, we could just talk and email with each other and share what we know.
Sorry, but as I get older I'm getting a growing dislike to overcomplicated solutions. If you see something you think others should see, send it to them.
Off topic, but my favorite quote of the last 24 hours.
"Remember, Noah's Ark was built by amateurs. The Titanic was built by professionals."
For comparison, remember the Titanic. What caused its demise?
If real change requires the people's participation, why don't we just skip the whole 'elect the rock star' step?
To me, when I hear him say that, I think he's only setting up the next con. The first con is that electing Obama is the way to create change. But he already knows he can't deliver that change without upsetting his corporate paymasters. So, he's already setting up the second con which is 'Its your fault you didn't get change. You didn't do enough."
I say skip the whole 'elect the rock star' step. Vote for a candidate who isn't bought and owned by the corporations, and proceed directly to the step of public participation to create change. Which is what Ralph Nader's been saying for a decade if anyone's been listening.
Remember the Titanic. What caused it to sink?
Wow, all these words and they completely miss the point.
The whole answer to the question title could be answered like this ...
"We will! Just turn them off!"
I know these guys want to lead a movement, but we don't need leaders and meetings and endorsing corporate-backed candidates to do this.
Just pick up the remote control and turn them off. Or, use the parental blocking features that most TV systems have these days to block the 24 hour news channels. Cancel your subscription and don't buy the local corporate-owned newspaper.
They'll feel the pain quickly as their advertiser revenues drop even faster than they've been dropping.
THIS story - the Senate vote - wasn't covered by the media!
Our struggle to loosen the media stranglehold on the news is severely crippled by a media blackout on the story! A Google News search on the Senate vote on cross-ownership returned a story by Reuters and a story on Yahoo News, but no evidence that it was carried by the Associated Press, ABC,NBC, CBS, CNN, FOX, the New York Times or NPR!
This kind of blackout on essential news is happening daily. Readers of alternative sources, losing sight of just how much the millions are being kept in the dark, can grow cynical about their inappropriate responses to public issues, but the greatest problem is their lack of good information! We need to be looking urgently at how we can dramatically increase our reach, now. We need to be doing this on many fronts; but one approach I am working on is the use of forwarding of links to news stories to get them flowing freely across the Internet.
My suggestion: Cut and save the attached News Chain Alert. Then the next time you see an important news story that could obviously pose a problem for the Corporate Rich and the Media Moguls, ask yourself: is this story getting covered by the networks? Then do a Google News search on the article headline, in the form "headline ABC", "headline New York Times", etc., and see if the big news outlets are carrying it. If not, paste the News Chain Alert form to an email, paste the article headline and its url to the indicated spot in the release, and send it to everyone in your address book.
Once this sort of thing catches on, news will start flowing beyond the control of the moguls.
******************************** Cut here ******************************************
"THEY MUST THINK WE'RE MUSHROOMS ..."
NEWS CHAIN ALERT: The following important news item received little or no coverage in the "Major Media". If you received this from someone you trust, please open and read it and then, if you agree that it should have been "on the news", forward it to your list. **This news article and opinions quoted in it don't necessarily reflect the views of the person forwarding it.**
........................................................
(Paste Headline here)
(Paste url here)
........................................................
ABOUT NEWS CHAIN ALERTS:
"News Chain Alerts" are a response to a serious and growing problem: important news stories are not being reported by the "Major Media" - the networks, dailies, wire services and ISPs through which most people get their news. The idea is to spot the stories that are being given the "silent treatment", and spread them by forwarding. If on average half the people who get this "News Chain Alert" forward it to 20 people on their list who haven't yet received it, it would take only 8 steps to reach 100 million people!
Suggested rules for "News Chain Alerts":
1. The content of a News Chain Alert is just a headline, a link to a recent news article, and a copy of this write-up about "News Chain Alerts". Nothing else. That way nobody's trying to push their opinions on anybody, and nobody's starting an argument.
2. The article pointed to should be a news story - not opinion or analysis - from a credible source, of general interest, that is not being adequately carried by the Major Media.
3. When you get a News Chain Alert, ask yourself: "Would any reasonable person agree that this story should have been on the national news?" If so, forward it to your list, and include "News Chain Alert, please forward" in the subject heading. If not, don't.
SUGGESTIONS:
# If you want to talk about this story, or want to forward an opinion piece, do it separately, but please don't use the name "News Chain Alert". Let's reserve that name for this special kind of message.
# Anyone can start a News Chain Alert. Search the article headline on "Google News" first to see if it really is being given the silent treatment, and then ask yourself: Do I trust the source? Is this important for people to know? Is it a news article, not just somebody's opinions or a rehash or rumor? Is it fresh?
# Include this write-up when you start a new News Chain Alert.
"... because they feed us manure and keep us in the dark!"
Doom and Gloom: I think in the case of this nation, it could very well be and extremely loud noise considering the amount of nukes that would probably go off if serious people with red buttons believed we were actually in danger of falling. Brings to mind that phrase "will go down kicking and screaming..."
Mark Abram: Right on post. That is what's required. Any thinking human will know that one man, American Emperor or no, cannot effect much positive change except through leadership - either stepping up to "lead" when needed or stepping out of the way. It is and always has been the "people" who will bring about the change, either peacefully or through violence. All they need is a leader that at least talks to them about a better way and finding common goals again or that there is hope and everything is not all doom and gloom and a terrorist under every bed and Oh God, we're all going to die! Look at how easy the current crop of maniacs in just 7 or 8 years, changed the world, obviously not for the better of the many, but nonetheless, massive changes. As to how the people can ever really come together to effect the changes that most want will only come about when there are many more open minds and we learn how to trust each other instead of the fear, mistrust and suspicion that we are brainwashed into seeing is the norm of our fellow humans instead of the exception. Probably generations if there was even a majority will to accomplish it. Let's hope that Obama can excite enough people to make changes and help us move forward and out of this corporate nightmare that is currently eating us alive.
Here is one specific point where the feeble influence of the liberal blogosphere might actually make a difference:
Get Michael Copps appointed Chairman of the FCC!
It isn't sexy, but Robert W. McChesney and John Nichols are exactly right about the profound importance of the FCC for the preservation of democracy in the United States.
One letter or call or email to Obama or your local Congress-person urging the appointment of Michael Copps as Chairman of the FCC will do more to preserve the Constitution than a million words of the same old chatter on the blogs.
The ONLY recent and meager progress on any of this is from your Democratic-agenda Congress. And if you have to ask whether Obama or McCain is better for citizens with respect to media issues, all you have to do is look at the variance of personal priorities between Michelle and Cindy. (Duh!)
Murdoch doesn't "like" Obama. He is merely betting on a horse at the track. If you want to stop losing the media voice of the left, get Obama (or Clinton) and the Dem Congress all at once. Then you legislate, without all this speculation crap about vetoes.
I Laughed till i cried when I heard all the news anchormen/women squawking about how they did not "drop the ball" on the build up to the "war"; ( it is NOT a war.. it IS an ILLEGAL Invasion and OCCUPATION of a nation"), as they can't even bring themselves to admit.)
So now we have a few of the talking heads mildly admitting they did not ask the hard questions leading up to the Bush invasion, but the vast majority of these "Media Whores" insist they asked all the hard questions...like "will Brittany Speer's Family intervene in her personal problems?".. , or , "Who is going to win American idol", oh, and my favorite "HARD QUESTION" was asked of Chaney , after his famous "SO?" answer.
The Talking heads with salaries of millions a year , are so out of touch with reality , they actually believe their own crap..and are so tied to the "corporate Master" they have turned into stenographers, obediently coping word for word the crap coming out of Washington, instead of reporting the facts and investigating the issues. the best evidence of this is the failure to call out George Bush on his blatant lies about his actions and movements on the day of 9/11. He has publicly told at least 4 different versions of the events of that day, and not 1 of the "Media Whores" will dare to show all 4 renditions of Georges "truth" side by side, because it would expose the fact they never called him out on the different story he told to the public in each clip.
I can only hope the pressure on the Press will continue and that the "monopolizing" of the "news" will be exposed as the crime it is.
jim
jim_murray@jdz.ca
Thank you Arvy.
I share your lack of confidence in the 'Obama as savior' conundrum.
The corporate paymasters own him too. Don't kid yourselves.
Bill from Saginaw: I certainly agree with your assessment of Murdoch's strategy and I'd like to share your optimism about Barack Obama and his support team, but neither historical precedent nor Obama's record and recent rightward shifts give me any great confidence. As for Faux News, I stongly suspect that they'll be at least equally shifty as time, opportunity and "profit center" interests make it appropriate.
Obama has said many times that real change will require more than his winning the presidency; it will require a movement, it will require the people's participation and demands for meaningful change. I think McChesney and Nichols understand that, too.
Nothing is more important to the future of democracy than resetting basic rules for the mass media, and particularly for the internet, and "cable TV" (which has now become precisely the corporate controlled broadband internet of the dystopian future). But the media moguls have become so powerful that faced with a challenge from a President Obama, they will easily be able to destroy him unless a strong popular movement is behind that challenge. Or better yet, out in front of it.
Arvy -
Thanks for the link to the article and video of the Rupert Murdoch interview. Very valuable.
Rather than despairing, I see Murdoch's acknowledged approval of the Post's endorsement of Obama in the New York primary, and his glowing characterization of Barack as a "rock star" and "phenomenon" that Murdoch "would like to meet" is little more than just another big time capitalist covering his bets. Remember, this is the guy who threw a big fundraiser for Hillary, and who also calls John McCain his longtime "friend".
Sure, from Rupert's standpoint he's now covered his interests, whichever candidate of the Big Three finally does prevail. I just don't believe Barack Obama or his support team do, will, or should consider themselves somehow to be "beholden" to Murdoch for his comments, and/or therefore unwilling to ever "double cross" an openly hostile, reactionary media outlet as up front in their biases as Faux News.
Bill from Saginaw
"That's it folks. You've had an actor with Alzheimers. You've had a clueless moron with a puppet master VP. Now you're going to get a rock star. And that's the way it is in the "greatest democracy on earth". Good night and good luck."
That's right Arvy...lol. The pressing question of the day is, if a nation falls does it make a sound?
While I agree with the sentiments of the article repudiating monopolies and corporate hegemony, one need only look at Obama's cozyness with Murdoch and his money to wonder what kind of tracktion this effort will take in the future. Notwithstanding the corporate news types writing this article arguing against corporations while at the same time, working for them. Nichols is nothing more than a corporatte yes man marching to his handlers instructions offering a watered down version of what he considers progressivism, while supporting the forces of our demise. How sad, and comical it all is!
"And US politicians have long ago learned that it's much safer to doublecross the voters than it is to doublecross their paid sponsors."
Right Arvy. The voters are a demanding mob with no money to give, whereas Murdoch and company can be very generous. And who would dare refuse his offer?
We need a French Revolution. But we might miss American Idol...
What Obama's candidacy offers, then, is an opening and–if we dare employ an overused word from this campaign season–a measure of hope.
I wouldn't count on it. Murdoch has now thrown his weight behind "rock star" Barack Obama's presidential campaign. And US politicians have long ago learned that it's much safer to doublecross the voters than it is to doublecross their paid sponsors.
That's it folks. You've had an actor with Alzheimers. You've had a clueless moron with a puppet master VP. Now you're going to get a rock star. And that's the way it is in the "greatest democracy on earth". Good night and good luck.
notgoingalong,
You highlighted many good points for people to think about and investigate for themselves. I remember Netanyahu's statement about 9/11 and how it was not covered by MSM. I quit watching MSM news shows years ago and it bothers me to no end how even liberal/progressive talk show hosts quote the miscreants posing as journalists whether in print or broadcast news. About three years ago, I attended a packed auditorium when the FCC traveled to a few cities to hear the "citizens" complaints about ownership rules and regulations. Edleman and Koops, the good ones, were there, but that nefarious (like father like son) Michael Powell was absent. The audience was prepared and well-informed and had solid questions. The biggest round of applause was when 'Davey D', a radio talk-show host from KPFA presented his case. You know what's transpired since.
Chris B: "If you can't TRUST the media...then who can you trust?" Good question, Chris. You can trust what is called "indymedia" or independent medial, alternative media, news, what have you. The information is out there for all seeking the information. In fact, scroll down on Common Dreams and look at the links both on the left and right columns. Radio programs, television shows, and excellent websites abound! Click on a few and you'll be surprised at what's NOT BEING REPORTED by the corporate monopolists.
Gail: Excellent points! Enough with words , debates about this way and that way, etc. It's time for concerted unity by the citizens and put into action the Magic Seven Formula.
"....we need to establish rules and structures designed to create a cultural environment that will enlighten, empower and energize citizens.."
How true! But while the "cattle breeders" on Captiol Hill contine to line their pockets with "corporate" campaign contributions and enable the thieves-of-democracy to write legislation of, by and for the corporations, the majority in this country will never become enlightened and empowered citizens.
If progressive organizations around the country don't get together and group their resources to end this treacherous behavior on Captiol Hill, U.S. citizens will remain cattle and embrace their status through ignorance.
THIS IS THE GREATEST IDEA I HAVE EVER READ ON THE COMMENTS SECTION, AND USUALLY I FIND THE COMMENTS MUCH MORE ON TARGET THAN THE ARTICLES!!! great Idea Chris Horton
May I just add one suggestion. That the posting we do on these stories NOT be only on "left-progressive" whatever that means in todays gatekeeping environment-- sites BUT ALSO ON BIG MAINSTREAM NEWSPAPER SITES LIKE STL TODAY. That way it can BECOME THE MAINSTREAM rather than be forever marginalized as ALternative, when if given a listen it could well be the majority viewpoint.
--------------
ABOUT NEWS CHAIN ALERTS:
"News Chain Alerts" are a response to a serious and growing problem: important news stories are not being reported by the "Major Media" - the networks, dailies, wire services and ISPs through which most people get their news. The idea is to spot the stories that are being given the "silent treatment", and spread them by forwarding. If on average half the people who get this "News Chain Alert" forward it to 20 people on their list who haven't yet received it, it would take only 8 steps to reach 100 million people!
Suggested rules for "News Chain Alerts":
1. The content of a News Chain Alert is just a headline, a link to a recent news article, and a copy of this write-up about "News Chain Alerts". Nothing else. That way nobody's trying to push their opinions on anybody, and nobody's starting an argument.
2. The article pointed to should be a news story - not opinion or analysis - from a credible source, of general interest, that is not being adequately carried by the Major Media.
3. When you get a News Chain Alert, ask yourself: "Would any reasonable person agree that this story should have been on the national news?" If so, forward it to your list, and include "News Chain Alert, please forward" in the subject heading. If not, don't.
SUGGESTIONS:
# If you want to talk about this story, or want to forward an opinion piece, do it separately, but please don't use the name "News Chain Alert". Let's reserve that name for this special kind of message.
# Anyone can start a News Chain Alert. Search the article headline on "Google News" first to see if it really is being given the silent treatment, and then ask yourself: Do I trust the source? Is this important for people to know? Is it a news article, not just somebody's opinions or a rehash or rumor? Is it fresh?
# Include this write-up when you start a new News Chain Alert.
___________
Samson, you're right, thanks.
I've cut News Chain Alert words (May 30, 4:18 pm) by about 30%.
NOT GOING ALONG: Good post and quite impassioned. I don't think we can hold ALL the parties you mention to account for a 911 cover-up because many otherwise rational people stop when it comes to accepting that their own government could MURDER Americans. There is no similar disconnect when a war of convenience is launched against an arranged enemy for a resource in compromised supply. The "us" versus "them" imaginary line in space is uncrossable to a great many otherwise clear minds.
CHRIS HORTON: Excellent posts. I may try that idea of "news alerts." I had another idea, too. Remember that a lot of anti-war activism may have begun in coffee shops... we see the popularity of a chain like Starbucks. A lot of awakened or awakening souls cannot do the "bar scene" (I speak for myself here)... thus an alternative is needed to spark THE CONVERSATION. A network of coffee shops that invited a live mike night, opened THE CONVERSATION as opposed to people ensconced in their self-absorbed Internet cocoon worlds. This might LIGHT some sparks!
WILLIAM STREET: Excellent reasoning as per Rupert and hedging his bets. I like that! Makes Obama cleaner in my eyes.