Get News & Views Updates
Most Popular This Week
- This Is What Happens When You Rip a Hole in the Safety Net
- So Your Groundwater's Poison and Your Tap Water's On Fire. Not to Worry: Fracking Chemicals Are Trade Secrets You Don't Need To Know About
- Exxon Tar Sands Spill Continues to Devastate Arkansas Community
- An Outpouring of Love and Support for Bradley Manning to Receive the Nobel Peace Prize
- More 'Corporate Welfare': Obama Signs 'Monsanto Protection Act' Into Law
Popular content
Today's Top News
GE's Silencing of Olbermann and MSNBC's Sleazy Use of Richard Wolffe
The New York Times this morning has a remarkable story, and incredibly, the article's author, Brian Stelter, doesn't even acknowledge, let alone examine, what makes the story so significant. In essence, the chairman of General Electric (which owns MSNBC), Jeffrey Immelt, and the chairman of News Corporation (which owns Fox News), Rupert Murdoch, were brought into a room at a "summit meeting" for CEOs in May, where Charlie Rose tried to engineer an end to the "feud" between MSNBC's Keith Olbermann and Fox's Bill O'Reilly. According to the NYT, both CEOs agreed that the dispute was bad for the interests of the corporate parents, and thus agreed to order their news employees to cease attacking each other's news organizations and employees.
Most notably, the deal wasn't engineered because of a perception that it was hurting either Olbermann or O'Reilly's show, or even that it was hurting MSNBC. To the contrary, as Olbermann himself has acknowledged, his battles with O'Reilly have substantially boosted his ratings. The agreement of the corporate CEOs to cease criticizing each other was motivated by the belief that such criticism was hurting the unrelated corporate interests of GE and News Corp:
The reconciliation -- not acknowledged by the parties until now -- showcased how a personal and commercial battle between two men could create real consequences for their parent corporations. A G.E. shareholders' meeting, for instance, was overrun by critics of MSNBC (and one of Mr. O’Reilly's producers) last April. . . .
In late 2007, Mr. O’Reilly had a young producer, Jesse Watters, ambush Mr. Immelt and ask about G.E.'s business in Iran, which is legal, and which includes sales of energy and medical technology. G.E. says it no longer does business in Iran.
Mr. O’Reilly continued to pour pressure on its corporate leaders, even saying on one program last year that "If my child were killed in Iraq, I would blame the likes of Jeffrey Immelt." The resulting e-mail to G.E. from Mr. O’Reilly's viewers was scathing. . .
Over time, G.E. and the News Corporation concluded that the fighting "wasn’t good for either parent," said an NBC employee with direct knowledge of the situation. But the session hosted by Mr. Rose provided an opportunity for a reconciliation, sealed with a handshake between Mr. Immelt and Mr. Murdoch.
Though Olbermann denies he was part of any deal, the NYT says that there has been virtually no criticism of Fox by Olbermman, or MSNBC by O'Reilly, since June 1 when the deal took effect. That's mostly but not entirely true. On June 17, after President Obama accused Fox News of fomenting hostility towards his agenda, and Fox responded by saying that the "other networks" were pure pro-Obama outlets, Olbermann did voice fairly stinging criticisms of Fox as "more of a political entity than is the Republican National Committee right now, only it's fraudulently disguised as some sort of news organization."
But a review of all of Olbermann's post-June 1 shows does reveal that he has not ever criticized (or even mentioned) Bill O'Reilly since then and barely ever mentions Fox News any longer. And on June 1 -- the last time Olbermann mentioned O'Reilly -- Olbermann claimed at the end of his broadcast that he would cease referring to O'Reilly in the future because ignoring him (and "quarantining" Fox) would supposedly help get O'Reilly off the air ("So as of this show‘s end, I will retire the name, the photograph, and the caricature").
So here we have yet another example -- perhaps the most glaring yet -- of the corporations that own our largest media outlets controlling and censoring the content of their news organizations based on the unrelated interests of the parent corporation. In light of that, just marvel at what the supreme establishment-power-worshiper Charlie Rose said dismissively in March, 2003, when he had Amy Goodman on his show as a condescending example of someone who opposed the Iraq War, after Goodman touted the vital importance of "independent media" in America:
ROSE: I don't know what "independent" means -- "independent" in contrast to what?
GOODMAN: It means not being sponsored by the corporations, the networks -- like NBC, CBS, ABC: NBC owned by General Electric, CBS owned by Viacom, or ABC owned by Disney --
ROSE: My point in response to that would be that we do need you . . . . Having said that, I promise you, CBS News and ABC News and NBC News are not influenced by the corporations that may own those companies. Since I know one of them very well and worked for one of them.
That's the very same Charlie Rose who sat there with the CEO of GE and the CEO of News Corp. as an agreement was reached to order their news employees to stop criticizing the activities of Fox and GE in order to protect the corporate interests of those parents.
It makes no difference what one thinks of O'Reilly's attacks on the corporate activities of GE or Olbermann's criticisms of O'Reilly and Fox News. Whatever one's views on that are -- and I watch neither show very often -- those are perfectly legitimate subjects for news reporting and commentary, and the corporate decree to stop commenting on those topics is nothing less than corporate censorship. A reader last night put it this way by email:
It's interesting and somewhat shocking to me that a NYT article wouldn't even mention the effect on the hosts' journalistic freedom. . . . I assume that both Olbermann and O'Reilly would not have agreed to the truce, as the battle is ratings gold for both of them, and I'm sure they frankly hate each other and enjoy it.
The sad truth is that what Olbermann and O'Reilly were doing in this particular instance was one of the rare examples of good journalism on these types of shows. Olbermann was holding O'Reilly's feet to the fire about his repeated falsehoods and embarrassing positions. In turn, O'Reilly was giving the public accurate and disturbing information about General Electric, including extensive technology dealings with Iran. In my personal opinion, this was one of the rare useful pieces of information O'Reilly ever presented to his audience, and Olbermann was there to show how lousy the rest of O'Reilly's information was. Though it was in the context of a bitter feud, the two men were actually engaging in real journalism, at least in this case.
So now GE is using its control of NBC and MSNBC to ensure that there is no more reporting by Fox of its business activities in Iran or other embarrassing corporate activities, while News Corp. is ensuring that the lies spewed regularly by its top-rated commodity on Fox News are no longer reported by MSNBC. You don't have to agree with the reader's view of the value of this reporting to be highly disturbed that it is being censored.
This is hardly the first time evidence of corporate control over the content of NBC and MSNBC has surfaced. Last May, CNN's Jessica Yellin said that when she was at MSNBC, "the press corps was under enormous pressure from corporate executives, frankly, to make sure that this [the Iraq War] was a war that was presented in a way that was consistent with the patriotic fever in the nation"; "the higher the president's approval ratings, the more pressure I had from news executives ... to put on positive stories about the president"; and "they would turn down stories that were more critical and try to put on pieces that were more positive." Katie Couric said that when she was at NBC, "there was a lot of undercurrent of pressure not to rock the boat for a variety of reasons, where it was corporate reasons or other considerations" not to be too critical of the Bush administration. MSNBC's rising star, Ashleigh Banfield, was demoted and then fired after she criticized news media organizations generally, and Fox News specifically, for distorting their war coverage to appear more pro-government. And, of course, when MSNBC canceled Phil Donahue's show in the run-up to the Iraq war despite its being that network's highest-rated program, a corporate memo surfaced indicating that the company had fears of being associated with an anti-war and anti-government message.
And now we have an example of GE's forcibly silencing the top-rated commentator on MSNBC -- ordering him not to hold Fox News accountable any longer -- because, in return, News Corp. has agreed to silence its own commentators from criticizing GE. The corporations that own our largest news organizations have extensive relationships with the federal government. Anyone (like Charlie Rose) who denies that those relationships influence how these news organizations "report" on the government -- driven by the desire which corporate executives have to avoid alienating the government officials on whom their corporate interests depend, or avoid alienating potential customer bases for their products -- is completely delusional. GE's forcing Keith Olbermann to cease his criticism of Fox News and Bill O'Reilly is a clear and vivid example of how that works.
* * * * *
On a very related note: this week, former Newsweek reporter Richard Wolffe was a guest-host on MSNBC's Countdown while Keith Olbermann is on vacation. When Olbermann is there, Wolffe is a very frequent guest on Countdown, where he is called an "MSNBC political analyst" and comments on political news. All of this, despite the fact that Wolffe left Newsweek last March in order to join "Public Strategies, Inc.," the corporate communications firm run by former Bush White House Communications Director Dan Bartlett, its President and CEO. According to the Press Release they issued to announce Wolffe's joining the company:
Wolffe, most recently Newsweek's senior White House correspondent, officially assumes his new position as a senior strategist on April 13, 2009. He will be based in the firm's Washington office, where he will advise several of its top clients. . . .
Public Strategies, Inc. is a business advisory firm that serves a diverse clientele including some of the world's largest and best-known corporations, nonprofit organizations, associations and professional firms. Public Strategies helps forward-thinking organizations assess public opinion and risk, and develops strategies for managing corporate reputation and uncertainty. Much of its practice involves managing high-stakes campaigns for corporate clients, anticipating and responding to crises.
Having Richard Wolffe host an MSNBC program -- or serving as an almost daily "political analyst" -- is exactly tantamount to MSNBC's just turning over an hour every night to a corporate lobbyist. Wolffe's role in life is to advance the P.R. interests of the corporations that pay him, including corporations with substantial interests in virtually every political issue that MSNBC and Countdown cover. Yet MSNBC is putting him on as a guest-host and "political analyst" on one of its prime-time political shows. What makes that even more appalling is that, as Ana Marie Cox first noted, neither MSNBC nor Wolffe even disclose any of this.
This is a conflict so severe that it's incurable by disclosure: who
wouldn't realize that you can't present paid corporate hacks as
objective political commentators? But the fact that they don't even
bother to disclose that just serves to illustrate how non-existent is
the line between corporate interests and "news reporting" in the United
States. Then again, Wolffe himself -- when it was previously revealed
that he was exploiting his position as a Newsweek reporter covering the Obama campaign to leverage access to Obama in order to write a glowing book about him -- said this:
And [Wolffe] suggested he’s not that different from other reporters in an era in which the business and the profession of journalism have gotten closer and closer.
"The idea that journalists are somehow not engaged in corporate activities is not really in touch with what's going on. Every conversation with journalists is about business models and advertisers," he said, recalling that, on the day after the 2008 election, Newsweek sent him to Detroit to deliver a speech to advertisers.
"You tell me where the line is between business and journalism," he said.
That's who MSNBC is presenting as a host and "political analyst" on one of its news commentary programs: someone who is paid by large corporations to propagandize the public and who explicitly says that "journalists are engaged in corporate activities." Then again, MSNBC itself is censored by its corporate executives to ensure that the parent company's corporate interests are advanced by its "news reporting," so in many ways, Wolffe's sleaze and corporate whoredom are the perfect face for this network.
These dual stories of GE/Olbermann and Wolffe reveal what NBC and MSNBC really are about as vividly as anything since the "military analyst" scandal. Remember that indescribably informative NBC News/MSNBC scandal: when it was revealed that both news outlets (along with most other major television outlets) were presenting as "independent military analysts" a whole slew of former Generals with substantial, undisclosed corporate interests in the policies they were promoting and doing so in coordination with a secret Pentagon propaganda program? Despite front-page NYT promotion, Congressional investigations, and even a Pulitzer Prize awarded to the NYT's David Barstow for uncovering all of that, NBC's Brian Williams (like virtually every other news outlet) to this day has never so much as informed his viewers of this story, and they continue to use some of those very same former generals as "analysts."
There are many reasons why our establishment press exists to do little other than serve the interests of the political and financial establishment and to mindlessly amplify government claims. The virtual disapparance of the line between large corporate interests and journalism (as Richard Wolffe himself noted) is certainly one of the leading factors.
UPDATE: On Richard Wolffe's bio page at Public Strategies, Inc., the role he plays on MSNBC and NBC News is actually touted to the firm's corporate clients and potential clients:
In addition, Wolffe is an NBC political analyst. He provides political commentary on several MSNBC programs, Meet The Press, and TODAY.
They're basically telling their clients and prospective clients: if you hire us to control and disseminate your political messaging, you'll have someone working for you -- Richard Wolffe -- who has a regular platform on MSNBC and NBC News, where he's presented as an independent "political analyst." And this is how they describe what he does for the firm: "Wolffe provides high-level counsel and insight to our clients on how to manage their reputations in a complex public environment." How much more blatantly sleazy could that be?
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


103 Comments so far
Show AllA point which seems to have eluded Chomsky was to ask a basic question and that was-who was in a better position to make the events of 9/11/01 happen- a very tall, bearded man living in a cave thousands of miles away in Afghanistan or certain factions of the Bush administration and the U.S. military? But apparently to inquire who had the motive, means, method and opportunity to orchestrate those attacks is to be labeled "utterly insane" by the man who has never before failed to criticize the actions of the United States government.
I appreciate the informed discussion.
While I have yet to read an entire book on the subject, I think the most startling aspect is that the towers collapsed in free fall (rather than in pancake fashion) into their own footprints. Experts say that can only be accomplished by carefully coordinated demolition charges.
On, the other hand, I don't have any difficulty believing that trained men with box cutters, who cut the throats of flight attendants and let them bleed to death, would be able to take control of three of four airplanes.
Naturally
I think it is very important to point out that if even one aspect of what the Bush administration claims is wrong then the rest of their suppositions fall apart. To take just one example, as I mentioned previously, the BBC had reported that at least six [alleged] hijackers have been reported alive and well in the Middle East. The U.S., as expected, claims that the BBC was wrong in their story although they do not go so far as to say in what way the BBC was incorrect in their reporting. As I also stated, many, many people have said that they heard explosions going off in the two towers both before and after the planes hit the buildings. Yet the 9/11 Commission Report failed to mention what should have been crucial testimony by those people. In all likelihood the commissioners may have been quite fearful that to consider the possibility of controlled demolitions in the WTC would then seriously impair the Bush administration's theory that the planes and fire somehow caused those two buildings to come down in free fall speed, i.e. in 10 seconds, which simply defies the laws of physics.
You sound like you have an open mind on this topic. I would like to, if I may, recommend the books by David Ray Griffin [such as Debunking 9/11 Debunking] as well as Barrie Zwicker's Towers of Deception, 9/11 Synthetic Terror by Webster Tarpley, The Terror Conspiracy by Jim Marrs and 9.11: The New Evidence by British writer Ian Henshall. Any of these books are worthwhile reading and all of them do an excellent job of laying out the reasons why it is quite probable that what happened on 9/11/01 was either a cover up or an inside job [or both].
As the playwright George Bernard Shaw once observed:
"All Great Truths begin as blasphemies."
Thank god for C-SPAN.
And that's another thing, our MSM doesn't seem to believe what occurs in our Congress is worth reporting. Even though there can be a great deal of "entertaining" drama there.
But, hey, it's only the Congress. So what? Who cares? It only relates to the future of our country.....
Are you aware that two of your five sources are JOKE programs?
And that beyond the jokes, they are formatted like "talk" shows, where a whole segment is given over each day to someone promoting a book or film?
Are you also a where that four of your five sources are really just TWO sources : GE and Viacom?
I'd suggest you drop the Corporatists and restrict your "news" enjoyment to C-SPAN.
Clockwork determinism?
Chaos or collective belief more often rule. At least that's the way I see it.
You're just seeing the result, you're failing to see the process.
RichM (and Chomsky and Marx) are merely attempting to decribe the means and motives of the agents who often act behind the "collective belief".
A "collective belief?" There are so many factors that go into a collective belief that a form of centralized "brainwashing" could only come about in a thoroughly authoritarian society, such as North Korea. Or the world (Stalinist?) Orwell imagined. Or some other distopia where social behavior is seen as entirely uniform. But the US is far from any of that, as we can see by quickly exploring the web. Or this site where you and I disagree.
As for chaos, well..... the unforeseen, the accidental, the unplanned, chance, a change of weather, someone falling asleep at the wheel or dropping dead, fantasy, illusion, human error, fierce ambition, egoism, even a "collective belief" all lead to folly, failure, unintended consequences, serious ramifications, jolts, setbacks, stopages, etc. Why, it's a wonder we get anything accomplished at all? (Just kidding.)
GE (MSNBC) / Fox deal in a nutshell:
MSNBC promises not to expose Fox as a propaganda network.
Fox promises not to attack GE (MSNBC) for its attempts to expose Fox.
Special Note: Olbermann will have to stay silent this coming Christmas season as Bill O'Reilly wages another manufactured War on Christmas.
Oh, that's a laugh.
And sad too.
No.
NewsCorp and GE agree to rein in BOTH of their propaganda networks because they have gone too far and have begun to hurt the parent companies true interests, which are shared, not antagonistic.
This is a deal amongst the Factors of two Princes who may be rivals for the Imperial Scepter, but do not wish this rivalry to bring down the Empire itself.
Edward R. Murrow is spinning in his grave.
Many of the best journalists during the thirties and forties were on the margins, too.
William Shirer, Jay Allen, Dorothy Thompson, Herbert Matthews, Vincent Sheean, Martha Gellhorn, to name a few. And let's not forget I. F. Stone. There probably never has been a "golden age" in journalism. A minority has always struggled against editors and the owners. What has truly changed is that the owners today are corporate behemoths which put profit first, entirely. Like the rest of society journalism has become more corporate. Thus, an appealing product, entertainment, something to grab the eye and sell.... oh my god... Cialis, etc.
So much money poured into such tasteless glitz. And we, the consumer, don't even get what we buy. Ie, the news.
They don't call it the "boob tube" or "idiot box" for nothing.
There is a very simple solution for silencing these propaganda outlets. Turn off the TV.
And don't just turn off your TV. Turn off the TVs blaring their propaganda in the bar, the airport, the hotel lobby, etc. Buy one of these, and next time you can make Bill O disappear.
http://www.tvbgone.com/cfe_tvbg_main.php
Its generally understood that editors don't decide what gets published, publishers do. And publishers respond to the owners more than the 'news'. Media can represent a diversity of views only if money represents a diversity of views. As with everything else wrong in our society, the underlying fix is a return to the progressive taxation rates we enjoyed in the 1950s-1960s.
It's all crazy; watching supposedly serious news has become comedy, while comedy shows, like the Daily Show and Colbert, have become serious news.
I agree with your first assertion, but the second one baffles me.
Just because the Daily Show and Colbert are the programs that people who would like to think they want "serious news" tune in to when they fail to find it does NOT make these programs "serious news" themselves!
They have a segment everyday for book or film promotion for eff's sake!
You're taking my remark too seriously. I think you know what I was getting at.
richard Wolffe wrote a book called, The Bible & the Middle East I believe.....wanna bet that is an attack on Christianity? To go along with the attacks on Arabs and pro-war message?
It is getting glaringly "in your face".
Now who is happy to undermine, malign and attack Arabs & Christianity? Pervert their truths? hhhmmmmm....lemme try and figure it???? tough one here????
We gotta pipe light in down here it is so dark in the hollows, but I can see this clear as heck ya'all.
Just watch anything outa Hollywood, the only heroes ain't wearing crosses or worshipping Allah. Unless they are "fundamentalists," shooting Arabs, yee ha!! ride 'em cowboy!!1
Speaking of GE, GE is the same corporation that produces GE Koolaid for all those Obamabots in this country. The GE Koolaid that those Obamabots guzzle every day results in so much sludge buildup in their main engines that they can't even compute let alone think. No wonder GE is "free" to silence Olbermann. Olbermann may not be perfect but when he's silenced like that, something's seriously wrong.
Who expects to obtain information from the corporate world?
I do, information required by Sarbanes-Oxley and other legal filings. Regarding the news, it's hopeless. I believe we need a law to require that bandwidth licensees be fully independent - meaning they can't be owned by other corporations. I would also limit bandwidth licensees' coverage to no more than say 10 % of the national audience. This would really fragment and localize the industry.
fdoleza August 2nd, 2009 2:38 pm.......As with the brave folks that presented 70,000 signatures for a re-investigation of 9/11 to be on the November ballot as a referendum to a clerk in NYC who rejected them outright, how do you intend to fight a system in which the very corporations you are fighting own the executive, legislative and judicial branches of the government?
And please refer to my other post at 2:25 PM.
Here's to the law and the effort.
Meanwhile, if I can find the mouse, hang the TV - though I've thought it might be cool to convert it to an aquarium.
Propangandist Charlie Bilderberg Rose appointed messenger to the boys. How perfect.
Charlie Rose is another unwatchable propaganda program. He's arrogant, he constantly interrupts, and if his guests say something that goes off message, he does his best to "correct" them.
You are so right about Charlie Rose. It is an insult to one's intelligence for
PBS to broadcast his intellectually undemanding show on the same stations that broadcast Bill Moyers' Journal. A few years ago Rose had a guest who expressed his opinion that Tom Brokaw was a corporate hack (maybe his words were a bit more genteel than mine, but you get the idea) and you would have thought--from Rose's incredulous, defensive reaction-- that the guest was out of touch with reality.
Nice piece by GG. I stopped getting my information from the major networks, but do watch them to see how they are spinning a story. Instead I look at different sources on the Internet and then make up my own mind as to where the truth might lie.
However, I do like Olbermann and feel that if really given the freedom, Olbermann would do much better.
People have already been dumbed down, so they probably couldn't get any dumber/misinformed/uninformed...
Worse though is their becoming apathetic and detached from their responsibilities toward what used to be OUR democracy.
And that base of people, that get their information, be it disinformation, no information or fluff, razzle dazzle and bull sh*t, are who will keep electing the wrong people to congress and the white house.
The Fourth Estate is dead...and it looks like it's time to bury it. Unfortunately, a REAL Democracy cannot exist without a free press and an educated, informed citizenry.
Most of what passes for journalism these days is just the rantings, fairy tales and out right garbage/propaganda spewing from the mouths and pens of a bunch of prevaricators. And, our education system is a joke and gets funnier by the day
(kinda like the healthcare system).
I would say we're screwed....but folks who come to Common Dreams already know that.
It is now official: We live in the "C.S.A"
The CORPORATE STATES of AMERICA.
Has anyone noticed the absence of Keith Olbermann on Countdown the last two (or is it three?) weeks? Each night the replacement host says that, "Keith has the night off." If he were really on vacation, as one report indicated, wouldn't they say so? And for two+ weeks? I don't recall any vacations taken by hosts that ever lasts that long. Methinks there's a lot more going on behind the scenes than we will ever be allowed to know.
This censorship deal between GE and News Corp makes it clear that only the "new media" of internet news sources is valid. News, like medical care, ought to be not-for-profit.
Don't trust the Internets too blindly though.
Much of what is on even decent sites like CD is just the Corporatist Media's message filtered through several layers of opinion. That or the wire services, which are as suspect as the TV News.
A critical eye should always be open.
Olberman has complained that he doesn't get enough time off.
Olbermann lost me when the made a Worst Persons an atheist who wanted to remain anonymous.
Olbermann lost me when the made a Worst Persons an atheist who wanted to remain anonymous.
Olbermann continued to give a great deal of time to Dana Milbank when it was all but apparent that Milbank was a sniveling snake.
Now Richard Wolffe turns into the big bad Wolf.
Howard Feinman is human Ambien.
Where the 'A Team' Keith?
O'Reilly is TRIPLING your ratings on any given night.
Where's Jeremy Scahill, Glenn Greenwald, Greg Palast, Chris Hedges, Brad Friedman etc.?
Where are the Special Comments on Obama who has already committed the War Crime of authorizing bombing missions into Pakistan? In helping coverup the Bush War Crime of torture?
You excoriate Rupert Murdoch nightly but are silent when Brian Williams of your own network puts Pentagon prepped Generals on the nightly news without revealing to the audience that they were on the board of defense companies. The Pentagon Propagandizing an American audience is FELONY. Why the silence?
Why is the focus of your show so g-damn narrow?
Where's the news on the environment, single-payer healthcare, voting irregularities, genetically modified food, fairness doctrine, media consolidation, big pharma, industrial agriculture. These are core progressive issues and they're nowhere to be found on your show.
You haven't proven to be worthy of watching, Keith, since Obama was sworn in. And I was an everyday viewer for years.
You make several valid points, but a couple of points bother me. If Olbermann does harbor a desire to move to FSTV, then criticizing Brian Williams is just the ticket. Not all progressives think your list of concerns are the most important issues at this time.
I haven't been watching Countdown as much as I used to. In the beginning of the Obama administration Keith's Special Comments were very powerful on the issue of torture and he also did a special comment regarding health care and it was clear he was advocating single-payer. He talked very forcefully about the employer-based health care system choking innovation and freedom in this country -- people staying at jobs they were miserable at or ill-suited for just to keep an insurance policy. This was all obviously many months ago. I have been so frustrated by the not hearing anything about the issue of health care. Bill Moyers and Amy Goodman seem to be the main two taking up the mantle on these issues and covering them very well.
One of the messages I seem to be getting from this article is that it doesn't matter who is in the White House -- if you're part of corporate news -- unless you're Fox -- you bow down in large part to whoever is the occupant in the WH at the time, or you back the lead horse in the race. NPR does the same thing. I have to admit, though, until the coverage of health care reform, I never realized how bad it was. And from the comments of NPR individual supporters, they are livid about this.
Last week, I was told by a patriot that I was lucky to live in America, a free country, where my controversial views are published in the "letters to the editor" section of the newspaper, without government interference and censoring. However, I let him know that the boss I had, who disagreed with my views, made my life miserable. It is difficult to prove, that as an employee, you are being harassed because of your political views.( I appreciate all the people who support a workers right to be a member of a Union.)
I guess I will have to get my news from Jon Stewart on the Daily Show.
bobo6 Why are you villifying people such as Chomsky,Pilger,Palast and Zinn when they have been some of the only persons of note that have been telling the truth on a consistent basis.Perfection is a wonderful goal but just because they do not agree with all of your positions does not call for an immediate dismissal of the great work they have done.Let's leave that for smaller minds.
bobo6 August 2nd, 2009 10:20 pm .....Please learn how to use this forum so we understand to whom your comment is directed. Thank you.
Well, isn't it just the capitalist system? For the last 30 years, we've been saying money rules everything and the whole world should be run by business people and by business rules, unfettered by supervision or regulation by the unmonied classes. Life was an Ayn Rand novel. We shouldn't be shocked when these suborned institutions start destroying everything they touch. That's what capitalism does.
It is a 'single narrative'(global in its reach), like the globe trotting victimizing financial system where the means justify the end. Keith was cool w/ me, but now I got to ask, whats next? Or is the capitalistic system a parasitic/plunderous one? Of course if works because not many are able to say that it is entirely singular, one in its clarity.
To be fair Richard does add authenticity and class by his vaguely British accent which seems so much important to American audiences.
Like the guy on the magic bullet infomercial. :)
Anyone watch Olbermann tonight? (Monday, August 3)
He denies the accuracy of the Times story, and says there was no deal.
And, HE WENT AFTER BILL 'O!!!!!
And his "special commentary" was terrific. No, he hasn't become a corporate mouthpiece.
Mispost.
Wow, after a conspicuous absence lately, Keith Olbermann came out tonight and denied being censored and attacked both O'Reilly and Murdoch, and claimed that he made the rules for his "half-baked" news program.
He then went on a scathing attack of Republicans and the so-called Blue Dog democrats blocking the health care bill, naming names and their corporate health care money, and calling them out in the most disrespectful manner. I only wish he did this every night.
their letting keith off the leach on mondays. ratings are lower on mondays. just kidding well if if keith hasn't been
something had to have happened.ge must have let off when
this story broke just to front like it never happened.
lets watch for a few weeks and see what happens. oh and
don't bash glenn you wish you had his balls and accomp
lished what he has! oh and one more thing remember
those big headed little beings in the orginal star
trek" that's richard's ancestors. h has big brains
too
but unfortunely is a real weasel.