The Gatekeepers
By Simon Wood
"One of the
questions asked in that study was, How
many Vietnamese casualties would you
estimate that there were during the
Vietnam war? The average response on the
part of Americans today is about
100,000. The official figure is about
two million. The actual figure is
probably three to four million. The
people who conducted the study raised an
appropriate question: What would we
think about German political culture if,
when you asked people today how many
Jews died in the Holocaust, they
estimated about 300,000? What would that
tell us about German political culture?"
- Noam Chomsky (Media Control,
2002)
"Whoever controls the media controls
the mind" - Jim Morrison
April 08, 2015 "ICH"
- In an era of gross inequality, total
surveillance, global war and rampant
lawlessness of state powers, the role of the
media in this escalating tragedy has come
under increasing scrutiny, with media
ownership by giant, interlocking
conglomerates now concentrated to an extreme
degree. This
diagram from 2004 presents a clear
picture of the conflicts of interest that
can not fail to arise. To illustrate: on
this list alone, with only four media
companies represented, board members of
major arms manufacturers Boeing and Northrop
Grumman can be found. [Note: a more recent
diagram was not available, but nothing has
changed in 2015 aside from a re-shuffling of
personnel]
A clear understanding of the role and
methods of the corporate media is therefore
essential for interpreting the (often
confusing and conflicting) 'narratives' put
forward 24/7 for mass consumption.
Along with the obvious conflicts of interest
of lobbyists and CEOs serving on
interlocking boards, print and online
newspapers depend heavily on news agencies
like AP and Reuters both in general and for
information that would otherwise be too
expensive to obtain. Under this system,
statements of government officials and
agencies are published verbatim and
uncritically. The devastating dangers of
this approach are perhaps best illustrated
by the findings of a 2008
study by the Center for Public Integrity
which found 935 false statements about the
threat posed by Saddam Hussein's Iraq issued
by senior Bush administration officials
(including Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld and
Condoleeza Rice and George W Bush himself)
that were reported with no (or virtually no)
verification by major news outlets. This
orchestrated campaign of lies designed
to build public support for a military
invasion was reported uncritically not only
in the US but also around the world, not
least in the UK, the major partner of the US
in the 'Coalition of the Willing'.
The consequences of this criminal
dereliction of duty, for which the New York
Times even issued a tortured
mea culpa, was laid bare last week when
Nobel Prize recipient Physicians for Social
Responsibility (PSR) published a
report entitled 'Body Count' that
concluded:
This investigation comes to the
conclusion that the war has, directly or
indirectly, killed around 1 million people
in Iraq, 220,000 in Afghanistan and 80,000
in Pakistan, i.e. a total of around 1.3
million. Not included in this figure are
further war zones such as Yemen. The figure
is approximately 10 times greater than that
of which the public, experts and decision
makers are aware of and propagated by the
media and major NGOs. And this is only a
conservative estimate. The total number of
deaths in the three countries named above
could also be in excess of 2 million,
whereas a figure below 1 million is
extremely unlikely.
This report, published by a serious,
credible, respected and decorated
organization, makes it very clear that a war
built on deliberate lies propagated
uncritically by the corporate-owned media
has led to the deaths of 1.3 million people,
possibly 2 million. It will come as no
surprise, therefore, that this landmark
report has been greeted with absolute
silence by the very same media outlets,
while little effort is required to imagine
the blanket response if this report
concerned the actions of a current official
enemy: Russia or Venezuela in particular.
For Western leaders and other establishment
figures, it seems mass killings on this
scale - 'holocausts' - only occur when
firmly esconced in (approved) history books,
when they can safely bow their heads once a
year and solemnly swear 'never again' and
'we shall not forget them'.
The lesson here should be simple:
journalistic negligence of any sort - which
can be caused by conflict of interest,
editorial framing, or fear of challenging
powerful figures for career reasons (loss of
future access) - has cost innocent lives by
the million. It has directly enabled one of
the greatest crimes ever - the Iraq War. It
has unleashed devastation and suffering on
an unimaginable scale. Yet no responsibility
is felt or borne by even the most
enthusiastic cheerleaders, many of whom are
unrepentant and continue to write articles
advocating new wars or '(humanitarian)
interventions'.
Meanwhile, stocks in the arms industry are
booming:
Investors see rising sales for makers of
missiles, drones and other weapons as the
U.S. hits Islamic State fighters in Syria
and Iraq, said Jack Ablin, chief investment
officer at Chicago-based BMO Private Bank.
President Barack Obama approved open-ended
airstrikes this month while ruling out
ground combat.
“As we ramp up our military muscle in the
Mideast, there’s a sense that demand for
military equipment and weaponry will likely
rise,” said Ablin, who oversees $66 billion
including Northrop Grumman Corp. and Boeing
Co. shares. “To the extent we can shift away
from relying on troops and rely more heavily
on equipment -- that could present an
opportunity.”
...
“There’s no doubt the world is getting to be
a more and more dangerous place, and
there are countries around the world that
could look to buy aircraft and artillery,"
Jeff Babione, deputy manager of Lockheed’s
F-35 Lightning II program, said in an
interview in Oslo. “There’s a sense that
there’s less stability in the world than
there was before.”
...
“Clearly the world has become increasingly
unstable. The question of whether that has a
major impact on the defense budget is
uncertain,” Finnegan said. “There may be
an investor psychology that suggests that
there’s going to be a large benefit to these
companies. But the jury is still out.”
[Note: Emphasis (bold) on commercial
language mine]
It is not only the 'defense' (arms) industry
that benefits from media narrative framing;
indeed the largely unsuspecting readership,
the overwhelming majority of the world's
news consumers, is drenched from all angles
with a systematic, corporate-friendly
outlook on all aspects of life. This heavily
promoted worldview is also anti-democratic,
as one would expect from corporations -
totalitarian structures by definition. True
democracy - a community sharing resources
fairly and working together for peace,
security, justice and prosperity - is
antithetical to the ideology of the profit
motive. For this reason, rule number one of
the corporate media's version of reality is
to present at all times the illusion of
freedom, the idea that people are actually
in control of their societies, economies and
leaders. This demonstrably false idea must
be promoted relentlessly in order to quell
and misdirect the anger and hopelessness
felt by the millions upon millions of
victims of the corporate credo - the now
utterly discredited idea that the 'free
market' is the best and fairest method of
running humanity.
This is accomplished in part by the
artificial creation in the media of endless
divisions in society and throughout the
world as a whole, with specific focus on
conflict or disagreement between those of
differing race, religion, sexuality,
political ideology, and even gender. This
serves the dual purpose of generating
manufactured outrage, safely misdirecting
anger and hate away from the targets it
should be focused upon (while simultaneously
driving up clicks for increased revenue) and
also - crucially - making the idea of a
functioning, harmonious community seem more
and more unlikely as every day goes by.
Faced with such a belief backed up with the
purely manufactured 'evidence' created by
media campaigns of division and hatred such
as those perpetrated by the Daily Mail etc.,
the average citizen is likely to henceforth
scorn the idea of harmonious community as a
naive pipe dream, reserved for 'idealists'
and 'activists' who are stuck in Star-Trek
fantasies and 'don't have a clue'. The
undisputable reality that we are all simply
human beings, brothers and sisters whatever
our background, color or religion, is the
one thing that absolutely must be refuted
and indeed disdained at every opportunity.
Hyperbole grows more and more extreme as an
increasingly fickle, easily bored and
atomized readership demands ever more
outlandish distractions - things they
haven't seen yet - various forms of ultra
violence or skateboarding cats etc. This
hyperbole normalizes extreme language and
serves as an effective screen of the
real-life extreme ideology we all now suffer
beneath. It is now quite normal for people,
when informed, for instance, that 21,000
people die
daily of hunger - a preventable
condition - to shrug and say 'shit happens'
or ask "what do you expect me to do about
it?' There are even those who will find
fault with the victims, saying they only
have themselves to blame. The extreme is
normal and, with tragic irony, the normal
extreme.
The findings of a key 1970s study on the
influence in society in television have
particular relevance here. From an earlier
article on this blog:
A most insidious and damaging form of
deception is achieved through the
utilization and deployment of fear.
Professors George Gerbner and Larry Gross of
the University of Pennsylvania in the 1970s
researched the effect of television on
viewers in the United States in the belief
that in the few decades since its appearance
and mass acceptance the medium had come to
wield a power over humanity comparable to
that of religion.
They developed a hypothesis known as
Cultivation Theory and found through their
research that over time the perception of
reality of heavy, long-term viewers is
subtly changed, eventually coming to closely
resemble the televised version. Crucially,
it was found that the more often such
viewers were told or shown something, the
greater significance they attached to it.
Conversely, issues rarely or never
encountered on television were attached
relatively little or no importance in
comparison.
These findings have far-reaching
consequences. As TV delivery has become more
and more violent and dramatic, heavy viewers
tend to see the world as a more dangerous
place than it actually is, particularly with
regard to personal safety. Gerbner labelled
this 'Mean World Syndrome', and found that
affected people tended to believe, for
instance, that violent crime was prevalent
even if it was falling, and that they felt
more likely to be a victim of a crime.
Gerbner et al. developed a Mean World Index,
which comprises three statements:
Most people are just looking out for
themselves.
You can't be too careful in dealing with
people.
Most people would take advantage of you if
they got the chance.
...
These findings can be extended beyond the
realm of fear and television. If a narrative
is adopted, repeated and reinforced
throughout various media, this can only
cement the perceptual reality adopted
through the distorting lens of the mass
media.
As the overwhelming majority of media is
owned by corporations, a narrative that
serves the purposes of such entities and
their proxies can be hammered home literally
twenty-four hours a day (with lashings of
celebrity and other manufactured distraction
for both starter and dessert).
As discussed, Cultivation Theory shows that
the greatest significance is attached to
issues that are most relentlessly repeated,
and that the converse is also true. No
surprise then that, to cite a recent
example, the British public is woefully
ignorant of the reality of...well,
pretty much everything:
From the article:
Teenage pregnancy: on average, we think
teenage pregnancy is 25 times higher than
official estimates: we think that 15% of
girls under 16 get pregnant each year, when
official figures suggest it is around 0.6%.
Foreign aid: 26% of people think foreign aid
is one of the top 2-3 items government
spends most money on, when it actually made
up 1.1% of expenditure (£7.9bn) in the
2011/12 financial year. More people select
this as a top item of expenditure than
pensions (which cost nearly ten times as
much, £74bn) and education in the UK
(£51.5bn).
Benefit fraud: people estimate that 34 times
more benefit money is claimed fraudulently
than official estimates: the public think
that £24 out of every £100 spent on benefits
is claimed fraudulently, compared with
official estimates of £0.70 per £100.
Reality is skewed beyond recognition and in
ways that benefit the elite political and
financial classes, who without exception
desire the continuation (and entrenchment)
of the status quo and know all too well that
any viable democratic system would spell
their doom as it would signal the end of
unaccountability, two-tiered justice and
deeply immoral and destructive entities like
tax havens.
This deep perversion of reality has made it
possible for a new 'shock and awe' strategy
that has gained favor in recent years:
namely, blanket coverage of a significant
event or incident that works heavily for the
benefit of the political or corporate
classes, and then blanket silence when
evidence later surfaces that contradicts the
promoted version of events. Clear examples
of this can be seen with regard to the
US-instigated coup in Ukraine - an
unmentionable topic in the corporate media -
as well as the chemical weapons attack
allegedly carried out by President Bashar
al-Assad of Syria. This was particularly
instructive in that the
assertions of Seymour Hersh, one of the
world's foremost and most respected
investigative journalists, were ignored by
the media establishment, dismissed in favor
of the findings of a stay-at-home blogger,
Eliot Higgins. The reason? Hersh's findings
contradicted the official story already put
forward, while Higgins' supported them.
Hersh, who has won numerous prestigious
prizes for journalism and has broken some of
the most famous stories of all time, had to
be content with his piece being published in
a British literary journal - the London
Review of Books - while Higgins and his
assertions were accorded wide acceptance.
This shock and awe tactic has proved
extremely successful. As casual readers of
news do not look at the details of stories,
they will remember only the headlines and
carefully chosen soundbites that stabbed
into their brains relentlessly over a
24/48-hour period. With this comes mass
acceptance of the story, which also means
mass condemnation of any questioning of it.
Those few brave individuals sticking their
head over the parapets to politely point out
inconsistencies or lack of evidence are
quickly shot to pieces, subjected to
vitriolic abuse and disdain on social media
and elsewhere and smeared as 'conspiracy
theorists'. This functions as a powerful
form of social control, in that it plays on
confirmation bias and also fear of
association with objects of ridicule. A
recent example of this phenomenon can be
seen in the dearth of people willing to
publicly support Russell Brand for simply
calling for a fairer system, with millions,
many of whom actually agreeing with what he
says, choosing instead to castigate and
denigrate his character and motivations.
It is this lie of omission that is most
devastating of all because it permits
plausible deniability on the part of those
responsible. Outright lies can at least be
exposed, but omission can be blamed on the
need for 'objectivity' (impossible
in any reporting) or a professed inability
to verify information credibly. This excuse,
of course, does not stop
outright lies being used to discredit
current official enemies, as Russian (also
Iranian and Venezuelan) officials will
attest, but it is a most powerful weapon in
constructing a 'reality' that is acceptible
to the Western elites who control the
editorial pages.
[Note: Highly recommended: US journalist
Paul Street in a recent
article discusses in further detail the
methods and aims of the corporate media]
This filtering and framing occurs in all
corporate media, but while one can expect
newspapers like the Daily Mail or the Daily
Telegraph to openly espouse an establishment
and/or right-wing agenda, the most essential
(and insidious) service in support of the
corporate system comes from traditionally
'liberal left' 'vanguards', most notably the
UK's Guardian newspaper. They perform the
vital function of bringing self-described
liberals into the pro-interventionist
(pro-war) camp, a function the right-wing
press would have no hope of accomplishing.
The classic modern example of this process
outside the media was the election of Barack
Obama in 2008 on a global, media-driven tide
of 'hope and change'. Literally billions of
people believed the dark days of the Bush
era were finally gone and that there was
real hope for peace and justice around the
world, with the Nobel Peace Prize committee
obviously in agreement. Obama proceeded to
become one of the most warlike US Presidents
in history (which is really saying
something),
presiding also over a drone 'kill list'
(renamed the 'disposition matrix') on
'Terror Tuesday' to personally decide that
week's innocent victims of the world's
largest ever terrorist campaign (the drone
program). He has also
persecuted those essential elements of
democracy - whistleblowers - to an
unprecedented degree, imprisoning and
persecuting anyone shining a light on the
wide-ranging criminal activities of the US.
The significance of this? The President made
millions of starry-eyed Obama fans support
positions that they vociferously opposed
under the Bush administration, possibly
becoming therefore the most effective
servant of the military-industrial complex
in history.
The Guardian in its role as the most liberal
mainstream outlet does the same. Consider
this delusional Guardian
editorial on Libya:
'Britain and France led the Libyan
intervention, drawing in a reluctant United
States and other Nato countries...'
Media Lens
commented:
The chasm in honesty separating the
corporate and non-corporate media is
staggering. As we have seen, the corporate
media generally assume that the West has a
God-given right to wage war on other
countries because a) 'our'
corporate-dominated states are driven by
high moral purpose, b) 'we' have the right
to decide who should wage war, where and
when because, c) 'we' know best, and d) it's
just normal to wage war. The better
non-corporate media challenge this as the
vicious social pathology that it is.
Consider that, according to the text, UN
resolution 1973 had 'the aim of facilitating
dialogue to lead to the political reforms
necessary to find a peaceful and sustainable
solution...' It also excluded a 'foreign
occupation force of any form'.
The three regular 'radical' Guardian
columnists who serve as fig-leaves (Seumas
Milne, George Monbiot and Owen Jones), while
often writing powerful, informative and
power-challenging articles (especially Milne
and Monbiot), nonetheless by their regular
presence alone lend crucial
legitimacy to a newspaper that is servile to
corporate power overall.
As noted by Media Lens in a recent article,
the Daily Telegraph
reported that the Guardian changed a
headline to avoid offending Apple, with whom
it had an advertising contract:
However, The Telegraph can disclose that
in July last year Apple bought wraparound
advertising on The Guardian's website and
stipulated that the advertising should not
be placed next to negative news.
A Guardian insider said that the headline of
an article about Iraq on The Guardian's
website was changed amid concerns about
offending Apple, and the article was later
removed from the home page entirely.
The insider said: "If editorial staff knew
what was happening here they would be
horrified."
Investigative journalist Nafeez Ahmed's
Guardian blog was axed after he published a
post detailing Israel's interest in
Gaza's natural gas reserves.
Former Guardian journalist Jonathon Cook
explains:
It is okay to criticise individual
western policies as flawed, especially if
done so respectfully, but not to suggest
that the whole direction of western foreign
policy is flawed, that it is intended to
maintain a system of control over, and
exploitation of, weaker nations. Policies
can be dubious, but not our leaders’ moral
character.
Nafeez Ahmed himself, now writing freelance,
explains in a separate
article how 'fraudulent blood money
makes the world go round', with specific
reference to connections between multiple
scandal-tainted HSBC and the Guardian (among
others):
Here’s something you won’t read in the
Guardian. During the Treasury Select
Committee meeting on 15th February, it
emerged that the newspaper that styles
itself as the world’s “leading liberal
voice” happens to be the biggest recipient
of HSBC advertising revenue: bigger even
than the Telegraph.
According to the Guardian Media Group’s
annual financial review last year, its
American website, Guardian US, delivered
“record online traffic” in the form of over
20 million unique monthly users
“representing year-on-year growth of 12%.”
User growth permitted a dramatic increase in
advertising revenues: “Revenues from US
operations more than doubled on the previous
12-month period, reflecting advertising
demand and sponsorship deals with partners
such as HSBC, Netflix and Airbnb.”
HSBC’s “partnership” with the Guardian Media
Group has thus played an integral role in
enabling the Guardian’s US venture to
maximise its revenues, and expand its work.
The Guardian’s links with HSBC go beyond
mere advertising. Much has been made of the
fact that the newspaper is owned and run by
The Scott Trust, originally created in 1936
“to safeguard the title’s journalistic
freedom.” The paper, wrote leftwing
columnist Owen Jones in the wake of Peter
Oborne’s revelations, “is unique for being
owned by a trust rather than a media mogul.”
I have a lot of respect for Jones, who is
doing important work, but his assertion here
is untrue and misleading.
The Guardian is not owned by a trust at all.
In 2008, “the trust was replaced with a
limited company” that was accordingly
re-named “The Scott Trust Limited.” Though
not a trust at all, but simply a
profit-making company, it is still referred
to frequently as ‘The Scott Trust,’
promulgating the widely-held but mistaken
belief in the Guardian’s inherently benign
ownership structure.
The new company purports, like many other
corporate entities, to be guided by a range
of commendable values, including the task of
maintaining the Guardian’s editorial
independence. The problem, of course, is
that the Guardian functions under the same
sort of corporate structure as any other
major media company.
After Peter Oborne quit the Daily Telegraph
in protest at being expected to whitewash
the HSBC scandal because of advertising
revenue concerns, Media Lens wrote:
In a free society, Oborne's courageous
whistleblowing would have triggered a
wide-ranging debate on how profit-seeking
media owned and run by a tiny elite,
dependent on corporate advertisers,
subsidised by state and corporate 'news',
obviously produce a vision of the world in
which corporate domination is viewed as
'just how things are'. The astonishing,
hidden story of the vast corporate campaigns
to
stifle political choice, to
subvert democracy,
control culture and even to
brainwash children, would have poured
forth. Instead, heads bowed, journalists
focused on 'maverick' Oborne, on isolated
problems at the Telegraph, on the specific
problem of advertising, and on defending
their employers. The truth, as ever, was not
a concern.
'Radical' fig-leaves are a necessary evil
for the corporate media as they are
essential for providing 'balance'. Flak
against corporate-influenced policies and
actions in society is inevitable, more so as
the grip tightens, and information that is
hostile to corporate aims will inevitably
reach some people anyway through alternative
and social media. It costs little,
therefore, to allow discussion of
power-challenging topics in the Guardian's
pages such as the
TPP/TTIP. Indeed, as a bonus, radical
articles in the Guardian can then safely be
left to be torn to pieces by astroturfers
and other hostile elements in comments below
the line, comments that do not engage with
issues and use inflammatory rhetoric and/or
attack the credibility of the writer.
Ironically, George Monbiot himself wrote a
good
article on this issue.
They also help to give the false impression
that the Guardian is holding power to
account, when in fact - when one looks at
the results - the status quo is always
preserved. When Edward Snowden leaked the
NSA disclosures to Glenn Greenwald, the
Guardian - with Greenwald on its payroll -
won a Pulitzer Prize for its reporting. Yet
the surveillance continues, with only
cosmetic safeguards proposed. When John
Kiriakou disclosed that the illegal torture
technique of waterboarding was used
systematically by the CIA, he went to
prison. The CIA torture report was later
released, detailing horrific acts by US
agents on detainees. The world's media
didn't hold back,
detailing even some of the most gruesome
acts, but succeeded in framing the narrative
in such a way that none of those responsible
for these illegal acts have been prosecuted,
with the whole episode now quietly buried
along with
Abu Ghraib and
Collatoral Murder.
When challenged, liberal journalists often
claim that they are aware of the nature and
aims of the corporate media but are
nonetheless using it as a platform to spread
progressive ideas to a mass readership. This
seems plausible until one remembers that
newspapers like the Guardian will always
require progressive journalists, be they
Milne, Monbiot or Jones or anyone else. If
Owen Jones was not writing there, someone
like him would be easily found to replace
him. In the case of Jones, with his 271,000
Twitter followers who retweet everything he
does, mass readership is guaranteed wherever
he writes. There is also the option of
writing as an occasional guest columnist (as
true radicals sometimes do), which would
reach the same audience but from someone
outside the corporate structure, a
crucial difference as the Guardian can no
longer use his presence as a source of
legitimacy.
The role of the corporate media is to
protect, promote and legitimize the
destructive and amoral aims of
profit-seeking private power. Any journalist
or columnist working within that system is
actively aiding the corporate media achieve
this goal. These gatekeepers, especially
those regarded as liberal, are therefore
culpable in the illegal wars and rapacious,
planet-destroying actions of the worst
corporations. A right-thinking journalist of
conscience would extricate themselves from
the machine, as the aforementioned Jonathon
Cook and Nafeez Ahmed have done, along with
famed journalists such as John Pilger. With
enough big names breaking free, the dream of
a mass-market, ad-free, donation-based
investigative journalism enterprise
employing the best writers would be one step
closer to reality.
Simon Wood, Writer and author
with a particular interest in human rights and
direct democracy. His book on human rights and the
urgent need for a move towards direct democracy is
available for free download at www.99998271.com.
Also the founder of The Humanistas:
http://99998271.blogspot.jp/2014/09/the-humanistas.html
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