I Can't Stand Fox News, But Censoring It
Might Be The Dumbest Idea Ever
How will the latest campaign against
"misinformation" backfire for the country? Let's
count the ways
By Matt Taibbi
February 25, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - Two and a half
years ago, when
Alex Jones of
Infowars
was kicked off a series of tech platforms in a
clearly coordinated decision, I knew this was not
going to be an isolated thing.
Given that people like Connecticut Senator Chris
Murphy were saying the ouster of Jones was just a
“good first step,” it seemed obvious the tactic was
not going to be confined to a few actors. But
corporate media critics insisted the precedent would
not be applied more broadly.
“I don't think we are going to be seeing big tech
take action against Fox News… any time
soon,”
commented CNN’s Oliver Darcy.
Darcy was wrong. Just a few years later, calls to
ban Fox are not only common, they’re
intensifying, with media voices from
Brian Stelter on CNN to MSNBC analyst
Anand Giridharadas to former Media Matters
critic
Eric Boehlert to Washington Post
columnists
Max Boot and
Margaret Sullivan all on board.
The movement crested this week with a
letter from California House Democrats Anna
Eshoo and Jerry McNerney, written to the CEOs of
cable providers like Comcast, AT&T, Verizon, Cox,
and Dish. They demanded to know if those providers
are “planning to continue carrying Fox News,
Newsmax, and OANN… beyond any contract renewal date”
and “if so, why?”
The news comes in advance of Wednesday’s House
Energy and Commerce Committee
hearing on “traditional media’s role in
promoting disinformation and extremism.”
This sequence of events is ominous because a
similar matched set of hearings and interrogations
back in 2017 — when Senators like Mazie Hirono
at a Judiciary Committee hearing demanded that
platforms like Google and Facebook come up with a
“mission statement” to prevent the “foment of
discord” — accelerated the “content moderation”
movement that now sees those same platforms
regularly act as de facto political
censors.
Sequences like this — government “requests” of
speech reduction, made to companies subject to
federal regulation — make the content moderation
decisions of private firms a serious First Amendment
issue. Censorship advocates may think this is purely
a private affair, in which the only speech rights
that matter are those of companies like Twitter and
Google, but any honest person should be able to see
this for what it is.
In the last go-around, Virginia Senator Mark
Warner prepared a
lengthy white paper called “Potential Policy
Proposals for Regulation of Social Media and
Technology Firms,” that among other things
considered making the tech giants more susceptible
to tort claims, as well as beefing up FTC authority
over the firms. This was the sword raised over the
head of Silicon Valley as it considered whether or
not it had a duty to implement those Senatorial
demands for plans to prevent the “foment of
discord.”
The line to potential government action isn’t
quite as direct this time, but it’s notable that
Blair Levin, the former chief of staff of the F.C.C.
under Bill Clinton, said that this week’s hearings
could serve as a first step to
what the
New York Times
called “meaningful action.”
“You have to establish a factual record,” Levin
said of this week’s hearings, “and then try to
figure out: What are the appropriate roles for the
government in changing that dynamic?”
No Advertising - No Government
Grants - This Is Independent Media
Press freedoms have been in steep decline for a
while. Barack Obama’s record targeting of
whistleblower sources (and in some cases,
journalists themselves)
using the Espionage Act was a first serious
sign, followed by Donald Trump’s prosecution of
Julian Assange. We progressed to a particularly
dangerous new stage in recent years, with
oligopolistic tech companies, urged on by
politicians, engaging in anticompetitive agreements
to suppress political voices on both the left and
the right.
The so-called media reporters at major
organizations like CNN and the New York Times
have mostly either been silent or have played
cheerleading roles during the most eyebrow-raising
recent developments: the decision by Facebook and
Twitter to block access to a pre-election New
York Post story about Hunter Biden, the
stunning exercise in monopoly influence by Amazon
and Apple in swallowing up the “free speech”
platform Parler, the banning of Socialist Worker
Party accounts in England and the U.S., and the
shutdown of livestream capability by alternative
media outlets (and the removal of celebrated
footage shot from the Capitol riot by people like
Status Coup videographer Jon Farina), a
story that amazingly
only got major play at… Fox News.
All of these stories share the same theme: small,
unelected groups of private executives making
sweeping decisions about speech, cheered on by
Democratic Party politicians. If it proceeds to its
logical conclusion, it poses a much more serious
problem for society than even Fox News at
its worst.
The campaign against Fox is being framed as part
of an effort to combat what Eshoo and McNerney
characterize as “misinformation, disinformation,
conspiracy theories, and lies.” There are so many
problems with this point of view, it’s hard to know
where to start.
For one thing, complainants rarely make
an effort to distinguish between opinions they find
obnoxious, and actual lies or errors. This blurring
of lines between “misinformation” or
“disinformation,” and reporting that simply has
political effects deemed deleterious by Democrats
and their pals in media, has been going on since
2016, when for instance the leaked-but-true Podesta
and DNC emails were regularly described as elements
of a “misinformation
campaign.”
It was the same with the Hunter Biden story last
autumn, where there was no evidence that any of the
material was false, but newspapers regularly
described it as reading “suspiciously
like disinformation” or a “misinformation
test for social media.”
Take a look, for instance, at the timeline of “Fox
News misinformation in 2020,” put out by Media
Matters, a media-criticism agency founded by
notorious once-Republican, now-Democratic Party
attack dog David Brock. Here are some things listed
as “misinformation,” a word that in almost every
dictionary carries a connotation of “false” or
“incorrect” communication. These are
verbatim entries from December, 2020:
— A Fox “straight news” program mentioned
Benghazi more than the over 3,100 people who
died from the pandemic the day before. [Outnumbered
Overtime, 12/10/20]
— Laura Ingraham encourages viewers to gather
for the holidays. [The Ingraham Angle, 12/16/20]
— Fox & Friends goes full War on
Christmas, after over 2,600 Americans died from
the pandemic the day before. [Fox & Friends, 12/9/20]
— Dana Perino: Biden should show “a little
bit of grace and gratitude” to Trump for
COVID-19 vaccines. [The Daily Briefing, 12/8/20]
These are political, not factual complaints, as
is Sullivan’s beef that Tucker Carlson “tries to sow
doubt about the prevalence of white supremacy,” or
that Sean Hannity likes to “blast Biden as
‘cognitively struggling.’” As to that last point,
news features wondering about Donald Trump’s mental
fitness were myriad for four years (hell, even I
wrote one), as were “Trump
with tiny wang” cartoons, and “Trump
touchingly gay with Putin” jokes. Confusing that
which you find politically offensive with actually
erroneous or deceptive reporting has become so
common, even media professionals don’t seem to care
about the difference anymore.
Fox absolutely does drift into outright
deceptions, though it hardly has a monopoly on this
behavior (more on that in a moment). But being the
gigantic money-obsessed enterprise that it is, it
still tends to steer clear of the worst kinds of
offenses in this business, i.e. actionable lies.
It was amazing to see the Washington Post
media critic Sullivan argue in favor of
extraordinary measures to remove or boycott Fox
by citing the fact that the network was considering
a promotion for Maria Bartiromo, who was “among
those… recently forced under threat of a lawsuit to
air a video that debunked repeated false claims on
her show that corrupt voting software had given
millions of Trump votes to Biden.”
Sullivan glossed over this episode, which was
actually evidence against the need to take these
channels down. Before the New Year, a
cease-and-desist letter from Dominion Voting Systems
went out to Fox, the Epoch Times,
OAN, Newsmax, and others,
demanding an end to evidence-free claims about their
company. It worked, as even
OAN
retreated, and Newsmax, tail between
its legs, broadcast a two-minute statement to
“clarify” that it had
no evidence for claims of election fraud made
against the companies Dominion and Smartmantic.
This is exactly how the existing system is
supposed to work, in a legal framework that still
makes the cost of broadcasting provable deceptions
prohibitive to deep-pocketed companies like Fox.
Libel and defamation laws are imperfect, but
effective. If the massive Fox audience were
driven further underground, that tool would no
longer be worth much.
However, those gunning for the removal of Fox,
Newsmax, and other outlets are clearly not
interested in getting there by way of the law. They
want to take advantage of the hyper-concentration of
power among media distributors — the tech giants
like Apple and Amazon that can zap a massively
successful app like Parler overnight, and the
confederation of cable carriers like Comcast, AT&T,
and Verizon that hold dominion over broadcast
networks.
We have to ask politicians like Eshoo and critics
like Sullivan and Boot: where exactly do they want
massive conservative audiences to go, if Fox is
removed from the air? By any rational standard,
having them watch Fox is way down the list
of worst-case scenarios.
Take the example of Carlson and Trump lawyer
Sidney Powell. Carlson asked for proof of election
theft last year, and “she
never sent us any evidence, despite a lot of polite
requests.” Trump voters mostly don’t read the
Washington Post or watch CNN, but they
do watch Carlson, which made that segment
significant, just as the following sizzle-reel of
Fox personalities trying to convince viewers the
election story was over was significant.
Sullivan went so far as to post this in her piece
decrying Fox — would she prefer that a station with
even less appetite for challenging its viewers rose
in its place?
The unspoken subtext to all of these efforts is a
hope that those enormous conservative audiences
eventually won’t be able to go anywhere at all. The
Internet, it is hoped, will gradually be cleansed of
their “misinformation” agents, and red-staters will
either watch CNN or suck eggs. The information
distribution business is now sufficiently
concentrated that it’s possible to imagine a fully
politically homogenous news landscape. That’s the
clear endgame, and the reason letting Fox go to the
guillotine is a serious mistake.
It’s no accident that this campaign to go after
Fox comes at the end of a very long and painful
process of kneecapping the alternative press in
America, one that benefited the biggest corporate
actors every step of the way.
The introduction of the Internet destroyed the
commercial formula of local newspapers, among other
things by undercutting the revenue base long
provided by classified ads. Marshall McLuhan wrote
all the way back in 1964 that “classified ads (and
stock-market quotations) are the bedrock of the
press. Should an alternative source of easy access
to such diverse daily information be found, the
press will fold.”
He was right. According to PEN, in the fifteen
years between 2004 and 2019,
1,800
newspapers closed, and the news media, most of
it local, lost $35 billion in revenue, and roughly
47% of its staff. Roughly
1,300 communities in this country have no newspapers
now, a dynamic that more and more forces people
to look to regional or national news sources for
information.
Having severely undercut the ability of
alternative media outlets to survive — just look at
the preposterous YouTube restrictions of independent
videographers like Farina and Ford Fischer —
audiences are herded into ever-larger informational
pens. Within those pens, the trend in recent years
has accelerated toward ideological homogeneity, so
that most people are getting their information from
one of two ecosystems, conservative or “liberal”
(which is really more like “neoliberal”). I warned
four years ago where this was headed:
The model going forward will likely involve
Republican media covering Democratic corruption
and Democratic media covering Republican
corruption. This setup just doesn’t work.
The reason it doesn’t work is that CNN, the
Washington Post, MSNBC, the New York Times,
the Boston Globe, and NPR do
not act like competitors in this sort of landscape.
In a binary setup, they don’t police each other’s
mistakes, any more than Fox and the
Daily Caller do.
Even forgetting about the appalling free speech
issues involved, if you take Fox, Newsmax,
and OANN off the air, who will check the
work of the remaining CNNs of the world? CNN’s own
media reporter, who is
at the head of the line calling for Fox
to be removed? Because the undeniable fact about the
last four years, in particular, is that as bad as
Fox often is — and I’ve found its cynical
cheering of mask rebellion in particular almost
viscerally off-putting — the so-called “reputable”
press has of late been just as bad if not worse,
from a factual point of view.
From calling Carter Page a foreign agent to
raising massive fusses about an absurd and disproven
Alfa-Bank-Trump secret server story to erroneous
coverage of the Covington High School fiasco to
rampant lying about the source of the “pee tape”
story to putting Michael Avenatti on live TV to make
dubious rape accusations to doing exactly what Fox
is accused of doing, perhaps at a smaller scale but
still — raising
questions
about the legitimacy of Donald Trump’s election
— the last four years have shown that Fox does not
have a monopoly on “misinformation,” not by a long
shot. The Russiagate stupidity alone marks the whole
business with a failing grade for the whole era,
especially as it caused news outlets to openly align
with political actors.
Just to take one example, virtually every
“reputable” news agency incorrectly denounced the
so-called “Nunes memo” detailing FISA abuse by the
FBI, written in February 2018 by Republican
congressman Devin Nunes. The Washington Post
called it a “joke”
and a “sham,” while another of its editorialists
said Trump’s release of it was “his
most unethical act since firing [James] Comey.”
New York Magazine, bravely defending the
honor of the FBI, wrote, “FBI
Director Opposes Release of False Nunes Memo.”
Bloomberg: “FBI
Has Grave Concerns About Nunes Memo.” CBS quoted
Nancy Pelosi’s warning that release of this “fake”
and “distorted” intelligence
might cause a “constitutional crisis,” and
called for Nunes to be removed as a Committee Chair.
In the end, the report by Justice Inspector
General Michael Horowitz ratified virtually every
assertion about FBI misdeeds in the Nunes memo. Who
covered this? A few random independents
like me, but mainly, big conservative outlets
like Fox News:
When congressional testimony of figures like
former deputy FBI director Andrew McCabe was
declassified, and we found out that the FBI as far
back as August, 2016 had dropped George Papadopoulos
as an investigative target because the evidence
“didn’t particularly indicate… that he was
interacting with the Russians,” who covered that key
information about the ostensible origin of the
Trump-Russia probe?
Not the papers that
hyped to the sky the story of Papadopoulos as a
conduit to Russian spies. No, these stories appeared
in the fine print of The Wall Street Journal
and in the work by
figures like, of all people, Sean Hannity. The
pattern is firm: when the Times or
CNN screws up, you look for the real
correction at Real Clear Investigations or
Fox, and vice versa. Removing one side from
the scene will leave the other with a monopoly on
error.
When original Fox programming architect
Roger Ailes died a few years ago, I criticized the “Christopher
Columbus of hate” for helping invent the toxic
media culture that had long been tearing the country
apart. Ailes made a fortune innovating a programming
strategy based upon a “factory-like production of
news stories that spoke to Americans’ worst
fantasies about each other,” realizing “the more
scared and hate-filled we are, the more advertising
dollars come pouring in.”
His version of Fox stoked the divisive
effect with an endless barrage of stories mainly
designed to terrify older, conservative audiences,
who were told over and over — in between ad blocs,
of course — that the America they remembered was
under attack, by everyone from campus lesbians to
al-Qaeda.
This looked like the corporate news media version
of ripping off the elderly with telemarketed
magazine subscriptions, and I wanted no part of it,
which is one reason I never appeared on the channel
despite regular invitations. It’s also why in
Hate Inc., I described Fox as the clear
progenitor of the division-for-profit model of
modern commercial media.
Circumstances have come all the way around.
Incredibly, Fox News may soon be the last
line of defense against an all-out assault on the
heterogenous free press as an institution, and
people like me, who’ve despised the channel their
whole lives, now find themselves in the unenviable
position of having to defend the “Fair and Balanced”
channel as a matter of self-preservation.
The local and alternative presses are already
dying, and tech platforms have already successfully
asserted their rights to censor. All that remains is
to topple a behemoth like Fox as a show of strength,
leaving an untouchable Soviet-style club of Chuck
Todds and Jennifer Rubins and Max Boots in charge of
disseminating an approved™ top-down version of
reality. Are you excited yet?
Imagine the reaction! Do the Eshoos of the world
think Fox viewers would just shrug off the
L, and find ways to warm up to Rachel Maddow, Chris
Hayes, and Joy Reid? To the many Fox-haters
out there: imagine a world in which you’re told, by
an unelected bund of cable distributors, that you
have to get used to watching Tucker and Sean. Would
you take that lying down? Or would you lose your
mind with rage, and reach for something sharp? How
does anyone think this is going to end well?
Matt Taibbi is an American
author, journalist, and podcaster. He has
reported on finance, media, politics, and
sports. He is a contributing editor for Rolling
Stone, author of several books, co-host of
Useful Idiots, and publisher of a newsletter on
Substack
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