Methods of Media Manipulation
By Michael Parenti
Excerpted from the
book, "20 years of Censored News" by Carl
Jensen and Project Censored
August 01, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
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We are told by media people that some news
bias is unavoidable. Distortions are caused by deadline pressures,
human misjudgment, budgetary restraints, and the difficulty of
reducing a complex story into a concise report. Furthermore, the
argument goes, no communication system can hope to report
everything. Selectivity is needed.
I would argue that the media's misrepresentations
are not all the result of innocent error and everyday production
problems, though such problems certainly exist. True, the press has
to be selective--but what principle of selectivity is involved?
Media bias does not occur in a random fashion; rather it moves in
the same overall direction again and again, favoring management over
labor, corporations over corporate critics, affluent Whites over
low-income minorities, officialdom over protesters, the two-party
monopoly over leftist third parties, privatization and free market
"reforms" over public-sector development, U.S. corporate dominance
of the Third World over revolutionary social change, and
conservative commentators and columnists like Rush Limbaugh and
George Will over progressive or populist ones like Jim Hightower and
Ralph Nader (not to mention more radical ones).
The corporate mainstream media seldom stray into
territory that might cause discomfort to those who hold political
and economic power, including those who own the media or advertise
in it.
What follows are some common methods of media
manipluation:
Suppression by Omission.
The most common form of media manipulation is suppression by
omission. The things left unmentioned sometimes include not just
vital details of a story but the entire story itself. Reports that
reflect poorly upon the powers that be are least likely to see the
light of day. Thus the Tylenol poisoning of several people by a
deranged individual was treated as big news, but the far more
sensational story of the industrial brown-lung poisoning of
thousands of factory workers by large manufacturing interests (who
themselves own or advertise in the major media) remained suppressed
for decades, despite the best efforts of worker safety groups to
bring the issue before the public.
Often the media mute or downplay truly sensational
(as opposed to sensationalistic) stories. Thus, in 1965 the
Indonesian military--advised, equipped, and financed by the U.S.
military and the CIA--overthrew President Achmed Sukarno and
eradicated the Indonesian Communist Party and its allies, killing
half a million people (some estimates are as high as a million) in
what was the greatest act of political mass murder since the Nazi
holocaust. The generals also destroyed hundreds of clinics,
libraries, schools, and community centers that had been opened by
the communists. Here was a sensational story if ever there was one,
but it took three months before it received passing mention in
Time magazine and yet another month before it was reported in
The New York Times (April 4, 1966), accompanied by an
editorial that actually praised the Indonesian military for "rightly
playing its part with utmost caution."
Information about the massive repression, murder,
and torture practiced by U.S.-supported right-wing client states
such as Turkey, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, El Salvador,
Guatemala, and others too numerous to mention is simply omitted from
the mainstream media and thereby denied public debate and criticism.
It is suppressed with an efficiency and consistency that would be
called "totalitarian" were it to occur in some other countries.
Attack and Destroy the Target.
Sometimes a story won't go away. When omission proves to be
insufficient, the media move from ignoring the story to vigorously
attacking it. For example, over the course of 40 years, the CIA
involved itself with drug traffickers in Italy, France, Corsica,
Indochina, Afghanistan, and Central and South America. Much of this
activity was the object of extended congressional investigations--by
Congressman Pike's committee in the 1970s and Senator Kerry's
committee in the late 1980s--and is a matter of public record. But
the media did nothing but relentlessly misrepresent and attack these
findings in the most disparaging way.
In August 1996, when the San Jose Mercury News
published an in-depth series about the CIA-Contra crack shipments
that flooded East Los Angeles, the major media suppressed the story.
But after the series was circulated around the world on the Web, the
story became too difficult to ignore, and the media began its
assault. Articles in the Washington Post and The New
York Times and reports on network television and PBS announced
that there was "no evidence" of CIA involvement, that the
Mercury News series was "bad journalism," and that the public's
interest in this subject was the real problem, a matter of
gullibility, hysteria, and conspiracy mania. In fact, the
Mercury News series, drawing on a year-long investigation,
cited specific agents and dealers. When placed on the Web, the
series was copiously supplemented with pertinent documents and
depositions that supported the charge. In response, the mainstream
media simply lied, telling the public that such evidence did not
exist. By a process of relentless repetition, the major media
exonerated the CIA of any involvement in drugs.
Labeling. A
label predefines a subject by simply giving it a positive or
negative tag without the benefit of any explanatory details. Some
positive labels are: "stability," "the president's firm leadership,"
and "a strong defense." Some negative ones are: "leftist
guerrillas," "Islamic terrorists," and "conspiracy theorists." In
the June 1998 California campaign for Proposition 226, a measure
designed to cripple the political activities of organized labor,
union leaders were repeatedly labeled "union bosses," while
corporate leaders were never called "corporate bosses." The press
itself is falsely labeled "the liberal media" by the hundreds of
conservative columnists, commentators, and talk-show hosts who crowd
the communications universe with complaints about being shut out of
it.
A strikingly deceptive label is "reform," a word
that is misapplied to the dismantling of social reforms. So the
media talked of "welfare reform" when referring to the elimination
of family assistance programs. Over the last 30 years, "tax reform"
has served as a deceptive euphemism for laws that have repeatedly
reduced upper-income taxes, shifting the payment burden still more
regressively upon middle- and low-income strata.
Preemptive Assumption.
Frequently the media accept as given the very policy position that
needs to be critically examined. During the 1980s, when the White
House proposed a huge increase in military spending, the press went
along without giving any exposure to those who called for reductions
in the already bloated arms budget.
Likewise with the media discussion on Social
Security "reform," a euphemism for the privatization and eventual
abolition of a program that is working well. Social Security
operates as a three-pronged human service: in addition to retirement
pensions, it provides survivors' insurance to children in families
that have lost their breadwinner, and it offers disability
assistance to people of preretirement age who have sustained serious
injury or illness. From existing press coverage you would never know
the good that Social Security does and how well it works. Instead,
the media assume a very dubious position that needs to be debated:
That the program is in danger of collapsing (in 30 years) and
therefore needs to be privatized.
Face-Value Transmission.
One way to lie is to accept at face value what are known to be
official lies, uncritically passing them on to the public without
adequate confirmation. When challenged on this, reporters insist
that they cannot inject their own personal ideology into their
reports. No one is asking them to. My criticism is that they already
do. Their conventional ideological perceptions usually coincide with
those of their bosses and with officialdom, making them faithful
purveyors of the prevailing political orthodoxy. This confluence of
bias is experienced as the absence of bias, and is described as
"objectivity."
Slighting of Content.
One has to marvel at how the media can give so much emphasis to
style and process, and so little to actual substance. A glaring
example is the way elections are reported. The political campaign is
reduced to a horse race: Who will run? Who will win the nomination?
Who will win the election? News commentators sound more like theater
critics as they hold forth on what candidate is performing well and
projecting the most positive image. The actual issues are accorded
scant attention, and the democratic dialogue that is supposed to
accompany a contest for public office rarely takes place.
Accounts of major strikes--on those rare occasions
when the press attends to labor struggles--offer a similar slighting
of content. We are told how many days the strike has lasted, about
the inconvenience and cost to the company and the public, and that
negotiations threaten to break down. Missing is any reference to the
content of the conflict, the actual issues: the cutback in wages and
benefits, the downgrading of jobs, or the unwillingness of
management to negotiate a new contract.
False Balancing.
In accordance with the canons of good journalism, the press is
supposed to tap competing sources to get both sides of an issue. In
fact, both sides are seldom accorded equal prominence. One study
found that on NPR, supposedly the most liberal of the mainstream
media, right-wing spokespersons are often interviewed alone, while
liberals--on the less frequent occasions when they appear--are
almost always offset by conservatives. Left-progressive and radical
views are almost completely shut out.
False balancing was evident in a BBC World News
report (December 11, 1997) that spoke of "a history of violence
between Indonesian forces and Timorese guerrillas"--with not a hint
that the guerrillas were struggling for their lives against an
Indonesian invasion force that had slaughtered some 200,000
Timorese. Instead, a terrible act of aggression was made to sound
like a grudge fight, with "killings on both sides." By imposing a
neutralizing gloss over the genocidal invasion of East Timor, the
BBC announcer was introducing a distortion.
Framing.
The most effective propaganda relies on framing rather than on
falsehood. By bending the truth rather than breaking it, using
emphasis and other auxiliary embellishments, communicators can
create a desired impression without departing too far from the
appearance of objectivity. Framing is achieved in the way the news
is packaged, the amount of exposure, the placement (front page or
buried within, lead story or last), the tone of presentation
(sympathetic or slighting), the headlines and photographs, and, in
the case of broadcast media, the accompanying visual and auditory
effects.
Newscasters use themselves as auxiliary
embellishments. They cultivate a smooth delivery and try to convey
an impression of detachment. They affect a knowing tone designed to
foster credibility, voicing what I call "authoritative ignorance,"
as in remarks like: "How will this situation end? Only time will
tell"; or "No one can say for sure." Sometimes trite truisms are
palmed off as penetrating truths. So we are fed sentences like:
"Unless the strike is settled soon, the two sides will be in for a
long and bitter struggle."
Learning Never to Ask Why.
Many things are reported in the news but few are explained. We are
invited to see the world as mainstream pundits do, as a scatter of
events and personalities propelled by happenstance, circumstance,
confused intentions, and individual ambition--never by powerful
class interests, yet producing effects that serve such interests
with impressive regularity.
Passive voice and the impersonal subject are
essential rhetorical constructs for this mode of evasion. So
recessions apparently just happen like some natural phenomenon ("our
economy is in a slump"), having little to do with the profit
accumulation process, the constant war of capital against labor, and
the inability of underpaid workers to make enough money to buy back
the goods and services they produce.
In sum, the news media's performance is not a
failure but a skillfully evasive success. Their job is not to inform
but to disinform, not to advance democratic discourse but to mute
it, telling us what to think about the world before we have a chance
to think about it for ourselves. When we understand that news
selectivity is likely to favor those who have power, position, and
wealth, we move from a liberal complaint about the press's sloppy
performance to a radical analysis of how the media serve the ruling
circles with much skill and craft.
Michael Parenti received his Ph.D. in political
science from Yale University in 1962, and has taught at a number of
colleges and universities. He is the author of thirteen books,
including Democracy for a Few (6th edition); Power and the
Powerless; Inventing Reality: The Politics of News Media (2nd
edition); The Sword and the Dollar: Imperialism, Revolution and the
Arms Race; Make-Believe Media: The Politics of Entertainment; Land
of Idols, Political Mythology in America; Against Empire: Dirty
Truths; and Blackshirts and Reds: Rational Fascism and the Overthrow
of Communism. Dr. Parenti's articles have appeared in a wide range
of scholarly journals and political periodicals. He lives in
Berkeley, California, and devotes him self full-time to writing and
lecturing around the country.