9/20/01 1:28:03 PM Pacific Daylight
Time
From: senior-staff@nativenewsonline.org
(Senior Staff)
Reply-to: NatNews-owner@yahoogroups.com
To: NatNews@yahoogroups.com
{The following article which appeared in the Nation may explain why media
is not stating some things and subsequent stories contradict each other.
Remember stories are planted in order to gain whatever psychological advantage
the defense department wishes. Be it national patriotic fervor, targeting
certain people, ethnic groups etc, in order to create the appearance of a
popular ground swell of public sentiment. who can forget the recent
Poll in the Washington Post that asked three different questions as to targeting
the perpetrators, no selection was given as to not targeting anyone.
This poll is very likely one used to show the popular opinion in the US which
may or may not exist in the real world for military action...Ish}
Free The
Media
http://past.thenation.com/issue/960603/0603mill.htm
The chart in our centerfold offers just a partial guide to our contracting
media cosmos. It demonstrates the sway of the four giant corporations that
control the major TV news divisions: NBC, ABC, CBS and -- if the Feds allow
it -- CNN. Two of these four corporations are defense contractors (both involved
in nuclear production), while the other two are mammoth manufacturers of
fun 'n' games. Thus we are the subjects of a national entertainment state,
in which the news and much of our amusement come to us directly from the
two most powerful industries in the United States. Glance up from the bottom
of each quarter of the chart, and see why, say, Tom Brokaw might find it
difficult to introduce stories critical of nuclear power. Or why it is unlikely
ABC News will ever again do an exposé of Disney's practices (as PrimeTime
Live did in 1990); or, indeed, why CNN -- or any of the others -- does not
touch the biggest story of them all, i.e., the media monopoly
itself.
Focused as it is on those colossi that control the TV news, this chart leaves
out other giants: Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation, John Malone's
Tele-Communications Inc. and Sumner Redstone's Viacom, none of which are
(yet) telejournalistic powers. Likewise, the octopus that is S.I. Newhouse
has not one tentacle appearing here, since he mainly glides within the world
of print, darkening magazines and publishing concerns instead of newscasts.
There are also foreign players, like Sony (Columbia, Tri Star), whose holdings
are not charted here.
We therefore need further maps of this contracting universe: more big pictures
-- and also local maps, so that folks everywhere will know who owns their
daily paper, TV and radio stations, cable franchise and city magazine. We
need industry-specific maps, to show who owns each culture industry: the
newspapers, the magazines, the book business and music business, cable, radio
and the movie studios -- as well as the major online services that help us
get around the Internet.
Such maps will point us toward the only possible escape from the impending
blackout. They would suggest the true causes of those enormous ills that
now dismay so many Americans: the universal sleaze and "dumbing down," the
flood-tide of corporate propaganda, the terminal inanity of U.S. politics.
These have arisen not from any grand decline in national character, nor from
the plotting of some Hebrew cabal but from the inevitable toxic influence
of those few corporations that have monopolized our culture. The only way
to solve the problem is to break their hold; and to that end the facts of
media ownership must be made known to all. In short, we the people need a
few good maps, because, as the man said, there must be some kind of way out
of here.
Certainly the domination of our media by corporate profiteers is nothing
new. Decades before Mr. Gingrich went to Washington, there were observers
already decrying the censorious impact of mass advertising. The purveyors
of "patent medicine" -- mostly useless, often lethal -- went unscathed by
reporters through the twenties because that industry spent more than any
other on print advertising (just like the tobacco industry a few years later).
The electrical power industry attacked the concept of public ownership in
an astonishing campaign of lies, half-truths and redbaiting that went on
from 1919 to 1934. That propaganda drive entailed the outright purchase of
newspapers (e.g., the Copley chain) and the establishment of trust-oriented
stations for the NBC radio network.
Although the utilities' program was exposed, the corporate drive to eat the
media was not halted by the New Deal. Indeed, as Robert McChesney tells us,
the Communications Act of 1934 killed the soul of U.S. broadcasting, defining
it forever as commercial. Thereafter, with ever fewer exceptions, radio and
then TV were subject to the market-driven whims of the sponsor, who by the
early sixties had on the whole made pap of both the news and entertainment
sold through the electronic media. Some of the brightest talents spoke out
memorably against the drift: Edward R. Murrow scored the trivialization of
TV news, and Rod Serling, before his exile to The Twilight Zone, publicly
condemned the fatal softening of TV drama by the likes of U.S. Steel and
BBD&O.
Bad as they often were, those earlier manipulations of the media were only
a foretaste of what is happening now. Here no longer is a range of disparate
industries, with only certain of them dangerously prey to corporate pressure,
or to the warlike caprice of some Hearst, Luce or Northcliffe. What we have
now, rather, is a culture gripped in every sector by an ever-tightening
convergence of globe-trotting corporations, whose managers believe in nothing
but "the market" über alles.
This new order started to get obvious in the spring of 1995, when the F.C.C.
summarily let Rupert Murdoch off the hook for having fudged the actual foreign
ownership of his concern (an Australian outfit, which Murdoch had not made
clear to the busy regulators). The summer then saw ABC sucked into Disney,
CBS sucked into Westinghouse, and Ted Turner's mini-empire slated for ingestion
by Time Warner: a grand consolidation that the press, the White House, Congress
and the F.C.C. have failed to question (although the F.T.C. is finally
stirring).
With the mergers came some hints of how the new proprietors would henceforth
use their journalists: Disney's ABC News apologizing to Philip Morris --
a major TV advertiser, through Kraft Foods -- for having told the truth,
on a broadcast of Day One, about P.M.'s manipulation of nicotine levels in
its cigarettes; and CBS's in-house counsel ordering the old newshounds at
60 Minutes to bury an explosive interview with whistleblower Jeffrey Wigand
about the addictive practices of Brown & Williamson.
Such moves portend the death of broadcast journalism, as does the radical
cost-cutting now being dictated by the networks' owners. And yet some good
seems also to have come out of this annus horribilis of big waivers, big
mergers, big layoffs and big lies. Suddenly, the risks of media monopoly
are now apparent not just to the usual uptight minority of activists and
scholars but, more and more, to everyone. People want to know what's going
on, and what to do about it. The time has therefore come to free the media
by creating a new, broad-based movement dedicated to this all-important mission:
antitrust.
Although it will certainly go to court, this movement must start with a civic
project far more arduous than any spate of major lawsuits. In fact, there
can be no such legal recourse yet, because there is no organized mass movement
that would endow such actions with the proper standing. Since the bully days
of Teddy Roosevelt, the drive against monopoly has always been initiated
not by solitary lawyers but by an angry public. "The antitrust laws are enforced
in one period and not enforced in another, and the reason is pure politics,"
notes Charles Mueller, editor of the Antitrust Law & Economics Review.
Such laws can take on the media trust, says Andrew Schwartzman of the Media
Access Project, only when "the general public helps convince the prosecutors
in the federal government that the future of democracy depends on freedom
in the marketplace of ideas."
Thus this movement must start by getting out the word -- and there's the
rub. Our problem has no precedent, for what's monopolized today is no mere
staple such as beef or oil but the very media whereby the problem could be
solved. Indeed, the media trust suppresses information and debate on all
monopolies. "You and I can't get the antitrust laws enforced," says Mueller,
"and the reason we can't is that we don't have access to the media." To fight
the trust directly, then, would be to resume the epic struggle that gave
us our antitrust laws in the first place -- one that the robber barons themselves
soon halted by buying interests in the magazines that had been attacking
them. With reformist monthlies like McClure's thus safely "Morganized," the
muckrakers were quieted by 1912, as their vehicles were pulled into the same
formation that now threatens to contain us all. Today's antitrust campaign
will therefore have to be a thorough grass-roots effort -- one that will
work around the mainstream media so as to free them by and by.
This movement will depend on those idealists who still work within the media:
those who would do a good job if they could, but who've been forced to
compromise, and those working from the margins -- the stalwarts of the
alternative press and of groups like Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting.
All should henceforth pay attention to developments within the different
culture industries. The American Booksellers Association, for instance, filed
an antitrust suit against Random House for illegally providing discounts
to the national bookstore chains and retailers [see André Schiffrin,
page 29]. Those in other industries should likewise make a fuss. With the
help of independents in the film business, the Justice Department ought to
take a look -- again -- at monopolistic practices in Hollywood. Creative
Artists Agency, for instance, yearly packages a number of obscenely pricey
movies for the studios, in each case demanding that the studio either use
the agency's own stars, writer(s) and director -- and pay them the salaries
dictated by the agency -- or take a hike. Since C.A.A. itself grabs the
commissions on those salaries, its way of doing business represents a highly
profitable conflict of interest.
That scam has also helped to jack up ticket prices for the rest of us --
and the movies are a lot worse for the practice, which pairs up talents not
because they might work beautifully together but just because they profit
C.A.A. Likewise, the A.B.A.'s showdown with Random House has far broader
implications, for the extinction of the independent bookstores could insure
as well the disappearance of those titles that are not best sellers, and
whose authors will not be up there trading ironies with David Letterman of
Westinghouse, or grinning, between commercials, through a segment of GE's
Today Show.
That the media trust costs everyone is a fact that this new movement must
explain to everyone. The public, first of all, should be reminded that it
owns the airwaves, and that the trust is therefore ripping everybody off
-- now more than ever, since those triumphant giants don't even pretend to
compensate us with programs "in the public interest." Likewise, we should
start discussing taxes on mass advertising. Such a tax, and the tolls on
usage of the airwaves, would yield enough annual revenues at least to pay
for public broadcasting, whose managers would then no longer have to try
to soothe the breasts of savage Congressmen, or sell out for the dubious
largesse of Mobil, Texaco and other "underwriters." In 1994, according to
Advertising Age, corporations spent a staggering $150 billion on national
advertising. That year, it cost just $1.8 billion to pay the full tab for
PBS and NPR.
And yet, to most Americans, the economic arguments against the trust may
matter less than its offenses against taste. Grossed out by what they see
and hear, a great majority have had their unease exploited by the likes of
Pat Buchanan and Bob Dole, and ignored, or mocked, by many on the left. This
is a mistake. The antitrust movement should acknowledge and explain the cultural
consequences of monopoly. While the right keeps scapegoating "Hollywood"
(a k a "the Jews"), this movement must stick to the facts, and point out
that the media's trashiness is a predictable result of the dominion of those
few huge corporate owners.
Thus our aim is certainly not censorship, which is the tacit goal of rightist
demagogues like Ralph Reed and the Rev. Donald Wildmon. The purpose, rather,
is a solution wholly constitutional -- and, for that matter, sanely capitalistic.
We would reintroduce a pleasurable diversity into the corporate monoculture.
Some crap there always is, and always ought to be: It is the overwhelming
volume of such stuff that is the danger here inside the magic kingdom. Where
just a few huge entities compete, ever more intently, for the same vast blocs
of viewers, and where the smaller players are not allowed to vary what we're
offered, the items on the screens and shelves will, necessarily, have been
concocted to appeal to what is worst in us. It is this process, and not some
mysterious upsurge of mass barbarism, that will explain the domination of
the mainstream by the likes of Murdoch, Jenny Jones, Rush Limbaugh, Judith
Regan, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Howard Stern, Charles Barkley, Gordon Liddy,
Butt-head and Bob Grant.
Although, thus far, the right alone has decried the media's nastiness, when
it comes to antitrust, those pseudo-populists would never walk the walk,
since they themselves are part of the behemoth: Limbaugh's TV show belongs
to Gannett/Multimedia, Pat Robertson's Family Channel is partly owned by
TCI, and Bob Dole -- despite his mock attack on Time Warner -- has done his
best to give the giants all they want. Those on the right would not dismantle
the monopoly, which they would like to run themselves (and which to some
extent they do already). It is therefore the left's responsibility to guide
this movement, since on this issue it is actually much closer to the
people.
Such an effort will require that the left stop being too hip for its own
good, and start to honor the concerns of the appalled majority. "Two-thirds
of the public thinks TV shows have a negative impact on the country," notes
U.S. News & World Report in a major poll released in April, "and huge
majorities believe TV contributes to social problems like violence, divorce,
teen pregnancy and the decline of family values." This is no hick prejudice
but a sound mass response to the routine experience of all-pervasive titillation.
"The greatest anxieties are expressed by women and by those who are religious,
but," the pollsters found, "the anger is 'overwhelming and across the
board.'"
Of course, there are some deep antipathies between the left and those uneasy
"huge majorities" -- some out there don't want to be disturbed by anything,
and the general audience may never go for feminism, and may forever cheer
for shows like Desert Storm. Nevertheless, we have the obligation to make
common cause with the offended -- for what offends both them and us has all
alike been worsened by the downward pressure of the trust. The ubiquitous
soft porn, the gangsta manners, the shock jocks and the now-obligatory shouting
of the F-word are all products of the same commercial oligopoly that is also
whiting out the news, exploiting women, celebrating gross consumption, glorifying
guns and demonizing all the wretched of the earth.
There are pertinent movements under way. In early March, there was an important
and well-attended Media & Democracy Congress in San Francisco, organized
by the Institute for Alternative Journalism, whose purpose was to unify the
forces of the progressive media to fight the trust before it can rigidify
beyond democracy. Soon after, in St. Louis, the first convention of the Cultural
Environment Movement was held; founded by George Gerbner, the C.E.M. is committed
to the broadest, toughest possible campaign for media reform.
The arousal of mass interest would raise possibilities for major legal action.
The F.C.C. could be served with a class-action suit for its neglect of the
antitrust laws -- as could President Clinton for his failure "to see that
[those] laws are faithfully executed." It might be feasible to sue them on
First Amendment grounds. Although the giants themselves cannot be nailed
for censorship, the movement could, says antitrust attorney Michael Meyerson,
sue the U.S. government for collusion in the corporate move against our First
Amendment rights.
While such distant possibilities await broader public support, some current
cases show what could be done. Time Warner's acquisition of the Turner
Broadcasting System has not yet won the blessing of the F.T.C., and there
have been some strong petitions to deny the agency's approval. [For other
steps, see "A Twelve-Step Program for Media Democracy" by Jeffrey A. Chester
and Anthony Wright, page 21.] Looking further ahead, we must begin undoing
what the media trust itself accomplished through the Telecommunications Act
of 1996, which was devised to rush us in the wrong direction (and which the
media -- both mainstream and alternative -- largely failed to examine). For
a start, we might consider Chester's notion of an eventual move to force
the four colossi to divest themselves of their beleaguered news divisions.
For P.R. purposes, GE (say) could still boast its affiliation with NBC News
-- a most impressive civic contribution -- but the annual budget for the
news would come primarily from the same sort of trust fund, based on corporate
taxes, that would pay for PBS.
Right now, however, what we need to do is tell the people who owns what.
This campaign of public information must involve the whole alternative press,
as well as unions, churches, schools and advocacy groups -- and progressives
on the Internet, which is still a medium of democratic promise, although
that promise is also at risk. Indeed, the same gigantic players that control
the elder media are planning shortly to absorb the Internet, which could
be transformed from a thriving common wilderness into an immeasurable de
facto cyberpark for corporate interests, with all the dissident voices exiled
to sites known only to the activists and other cranks (such renovation is,
in fact, one major purpose of the recent telecommunications bill). Therefore,
to expect the new technology to free us from the trust is to succumb to a
utopian delusion [see Andrew L. Shapiro, "Street Corners in Cyberspace,"
July 3, 1995].
Which is another way of saying that there is no substitute for actual democracy
-- which cannot work unless the people know what's going on. And so, before
we raise the proper legal questions and debate the legislative possibilities,
we need simply to teach everyone, ourselves included, that this whole failing
culture is an oversold dead end, and that there might be a way out of
it.
Mark Crispin Miller, chairman of the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins
University, is the author of Mad Scientists, a study of U.S. propaganda,
forthcoming from Norton in 1997. The centerfold was compiled by Janine Jaquet
Biden; research assistance from Jessica Garrison and Ben
Terrall.
Copyright (c) 1996, The Nation Company, L.P. All rights reserved. Electronic
redistribution for nonprofit purposes is permitted, provided this notice
is attached in its entirety. Unauthorized, for-profit redistribution is
prohibited. For further information regarding reprinting and syndication,
please call The Nation at (212) 242-8400, ext. 226 or send e-mail to Max
Block.
"The true movement isn't a thing, or some collective entity of people, or
even any person. It has no form or structure and so can't be distributed,
or possessed, or detained. No one else can exclude you, as you must invite
yourself." - Rush (When We Were Iron)
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