US media reports of the invasion of the
Capitol have contributed to the spread of hatred
and fear
The decline of journalism in America is made
clear by the reporting of the attack
By Patrick Cockburn
February
24, 2021 "Information
Clearing House"
- The invasion of the
Capitol on 6 January now stands alongside
9/11 as an act of war against American
democracy. Unsurprisingly, news coverage of the
incursion has come to resemble war propaganda.
All
facts, true or false, are pointed in the
same direction with the aim of demonising the
enemy and anybody who minimises its demonic
nature.The three-hour
takeover of the Capitol building by a pro-Trump
mob is portrayed as a “coup” or an
“insurrection” egged on by President Trump. The
five who died during the events are seen as
evidence of a violent, pre-planned plot to
overturn the result of the US presidential
election. Film spliced together and shown by
prosecutors during
the impeachment proceedings gives the
impression that what happened resembled a battle
scene in Braveheart.
Does it matter what really did
occur? Many people feel that anything damaging
to Trump and his fascistic followers is all
right by them. They may suspect privately that
accounts of Trump’s plot against America are
exaggerated, but the fabricator of 30,573
falsehoods over the last four years is scarcely
in a position to criticise his opponents for
departing from the strict truth. They argue that
he is an unprecedented threat to American
democracy, even as it becomes clear that what
actually happened in the Capitol on that day was
radically different from the way elements of the
media reported it.
But what is reported matters and particularly so
when it risks exaggerating violence or deepening
fear and a sense of threat. If the US government
really was the target of an armed insurrection,
then this will be used to justify repression, as
it was after 9/11, and not just against right
wing conspiracy theorists. By becoming partisan
instruments for spreading fake news, the media
undermines its own credibility.
A problem with a giant news
story like the Capitol invasion is that at first
it is over-covered before we know the full
facts, and then it is under-covered when those
facts begin to emerge. This has been true of US
media coverage. But even at the time it seemed
to be a very peculiar armed insurrection. Only
one shot appears to have been fired and that was
by a police officer who killed
Trump supporter Ashil Babbitt who was
involved in the storming of the Capitol. In a
country like the US awash with guns, this
absence of gunfire is remarkable.
Five people died during the
takeover of the Capitol building and this is the
main proof of deadly intent by the rioters. But
one of the dead was Babbitt, killed by the
police, and three of the others were members of
the pro-Trump mob, who died, respectively, from
a stroke, a heart attack and from being
accidentally crushed by the crowd.
This leaves just one person,
Capitol policeman Brian Sicknick, as the sole
victim of the Trump supporters who allegedly
beat him to death with a fire extinguisher. On 8
January, the New York Times ran two
stories about his death, quoting anonymous law
officers as describing how pro-Trump rioters had
struck him on the head with a fire extinguisher
causing “a bloody gash on his head”. He is
then reported to have been rushed to hospital,
placed on life support but to have died the
following day. his graphic story went around the
world and was widely picked up by other news
outlets - including The Independent,
the
BBC and
USA Today. It was also separately
reported by the
Associated Press. It gave credibility to the
idea that the pro-Trump mob was willing to kill,
even if they only killed one person. It also
gave credibility to the idea that vice president
Mike Pence, House speaker Nancy Pelosi and
senator Mitt Romney had only escaped being
lynched by seconds.
Yet over the last seven weeks
– without the world paying any attention – the
story of the murder of Officer Sicknick has
progressively unravelled.
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Just how this happened is
told in fascinating detail by Glenn Greenwald,
the investigative journalist and constitutional
lawyer, who concludes that “the problem with
this story is that it is false in all respects”.
It was always strange that, though
every event that took place during the riot was
filmed, there is no video of the attack on Sicknick.
He texted his brother
later that day and sounded as if he was in good
spirits. No autopsy report has been released that
would confirm his alleged injuries. Conclusively,
the New York Times quietly “updated” its
original articles about the murder of Sicknick,
admitting that new information had emerged that
“questions the initial cause of his death provided
by officials close to the Capitol Police”.
Since these officials were the
only source for the original story, this – though
readers might not guess it – amounts to an admission
that it is untrue.
The misreporting of the Capitol
invasion also included: a man carrying zip ties
– that were taken to be evidence of a possible
organised plan to detain political leaders –
were in fact,
according to prosecutors, picked up from a
table within the Capitol, likely to ensure
police could not use them. It is significant
because it is part of a decline in media
reporting everywhere, but particularly in the
US. Trump is both a symptom and cause of this
decline since he is a past master of saying and
doing things, however untruthful or absurd,
which are usually entertaining and always
attention-grabbing. He guarantees high ratings
for himself and the television channels, Trump
haters and Trump-lovers alike, to their mutual
benefit.This symbiotic
relationship between Trump and the media means
that they do less and less reporting, allowing
Trump and his supporters to provide the action
while they provide the talking heads who thrive
on venomous confrontation. Even American
reporters on the ground have turned themselves
into talking heads, willing to waffle on
endlessly to meet the needs of 24/7 newscasts.
Events on Capitol Hill
provided damning evidence of this decline in
American journalism when Robert Moore, ITV
News’s Washington correspondent, was the
only television correspondent to make his way
into the Capitol in the middle of the turmoil.
He later expressed astonishment that, given the
vast resources of US television and the
thousands of journalists in Washington, that it
should be “a solitary TV crew from Britain that
was the only one to capture this moment in
history – it’s bizarre”.
Bizarre, but not surprising. As a
news event, the Capitol invasion showed that
when it comes to spreading “fake facts”, the
traditional media can be even more effective
than the social media that is usually blamed.
Patrick Cockburn is an
award-winning Independent columnist who specialises
in analysis of Iraq, Syria and wars in the Middle
East. He has been with The Independent since 1990.
In 2014 he forecast the rise of Isis. He also did
graduate work at the Institute of Irish Studies,
Queens University Belfast and has written about the
effects of the Troubles on Irish and British policy
in light of his experience.
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