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The Campaign to Take Back Pacifica
Published on Tuesday, June 12, 2001
The Campaign to Take Back Pacifica
by Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
 
Denis Moynihan is an organizer with the campaign to take back Pacifica radio network from the forces of corporatism -- those who would sell off one or more of the five Pacifica stations for millions, or who would transform the stations so that they would be indistinguishable from the rest of the noise makers on the FM dial.

We met Moynihan last week in the hallway outside our offices.

Moynihan was on his way to the offices of Epstein, Becker and Green, a corporate law firm in downtown Washington, D.C. that boasts of its union-busting prowess.

John Murdock, a partner with Epstein, Becker joined the Pacifica national board last year. Epstein, Becker now represents the Pacifica Board in a wide array of legal actions.

How corporatists like Murdock ended up hijacking a radio network started fifty years ago by activist Lew Hill to be a listener-supported, community radio network that would provide a forum for free expression and dissenting voices is not easily answered, but was addressed most recently by Matthew Lasar in his compelling history, Pacifica Radio: The Rise of an Alternative Network (Temple University Press, 2000).

It has something to do with the failure to pay attention to the things we care about.

However it happened, people are out to right the wrong, the campaign is on to take back Pacifica, and Moynihan is on the front lines.

In addition to boasting about helping its clients "maintain a union-free workplace," Epstein, Becker also has this thing for hospital mergers, and on the afternoon that we dropped by, the firm was hosting a seminar so that its health care lawyers could boast about how they beat back a Federal Trade Commission (FTC) challenge to the merger of two large hospitals in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

When we walked into the meeting at the Epstein, Becker offices, about 40 lawyers were sitting around a conference table listening to partner Bill Kopit wax eloquent on the wonders of hospital mergers.

When question time arose, we made the point that yes, Epstein, Becker has the right to represent big hospital chains as it wishes, and extol the virtues of mergers, but millions of Americans are demanding the same level of coverage of Europeans and Canadians -- a single-payer universal health insurance that would put many of Epstein, Becker's health care clients out of business.

And one of the few places we can hear an open and robust discussion about universal health insurance is on Democracy Now, the award-winning one-hour news show hosted by Amy Goodman on the Pacifica network -- that is, on those days that the corporatists who have hijacked the network allow the show to air without interruption.

So, we suggested that Epstein, Becker stick to its big business clients, get its hands off the only national radio voice that addresses the issue of national health insurance, and return the network to the listeners who fund it, support it, listen to it and defend it against the corporatists.

Moynihan then rose and handed out flyers to everyone in the room. The flyer has the picture of a vulture hovering over Pacifica's five stations -- KPFA (San Francisco), WBAI (New York City), KPFT (Houston), KPFK (Los Angeles), and WPFW (Washington, D.C.)

Moynihan made his patented five minute speech, outlining the hijacking of Pacifica, Murdock's role as both board member and lawyer to Pacifica, and the campaign's intent on informing Epstein, Becker lawyers in public meetings until justice is done.

The lawyers listened quietly, and we left.

These type of actions are happening throughout the country.

Last month, Michael Palmer, another corporatist Pacifica board member faced the heat and resigned.

Palmer is a vice president of CB Richard Ellis, the nation's largest commercial real estate services company. The company's web site claims to possess "unequalled knowledge of Mexico" and encourages clients to "co-locate near worker housing areas that will enjoy lower turnover and less competition for their workforce than other maquiladoras."

Palmer's claim to fame among Pacifica listeners came in 1999, when he wrote an e-mail urging the sale of WBAI and KPFA. Unfortunately for him, the e-mail was made public and outraged Pacifica listeners, who confronted Palmer and CB Richard Ellis executives relentlessly. Last month, Palmer resigned from the Pacifica board.

Next on the Pacifica campaign list is Ken Ford, who works for the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) in Washington, D.C. The NAHB takes the lead in public policy attacks on the Clean Water Act, the Endangered Species Act and other mechanisms of law and order that might get in the way of sprawl-until-we-die growth.

On Sunday, about 15 Pacifica campaigners attended the board of directors meetings of NAHB. How they got into the meeting at the Washington Hilton Hotel again can be left to historians.

But once in, they mingled with the 1,000 "builders" on the floor of the Hilton's International Ballroom. One of the them bounded to the front of the ballroom, and began addressing the crowd about Ken Ford's participation in the "attempted destruction" of the Pacifica Foundation. The young campaigner was tossed from the Hotel, told never to return.

The great thing about the Pacifica Campaign is its in-your-face activism.

At its root, it is about human beings showing up and confronting the forces of corporatism.

It beats phones, faxes and e-mails.

Meet the enemy. Look them in the eye. Speak your mind. Demand resignation.

Take back Pacifica from the corporatists. (www.pacificacampaign.org).

Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Multinational Monitor. They are co-authors of Corporate Predators: The Hunt for MegaProfits and the Attack on Democracy (Monroe, Maine: Common Courage Press, 1999).

(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman

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