7 Reasons that the Corporate Media Is
Pro-War
Why There Is So
Much Pro-War Reporting?
By WashingtonsBlog
December 03,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "WashingtonsBlog"
-
American media is
always pro-war:
Can you
name a single paper, or a single TV network, that
was unequivocally opposed to the American wars
carried out against Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan,
Yugoslavia, Panama, Grenada, and Vietnam while they
were happening, or shortly thereafter? Or even
opposed to any two of these seven wars? How about
one?
In 1968,
six years into the Vietnam War, the Boston Globe
(Feb. 18, 1968) surveyed the editorial positions of
39 leading U.S. papers concerning the war and found
that “none advocated a pull-out.” Has the phrase
“invasion of Vietnam” ever appeared in the U.S.
mainstream media?
In 2003,
leading cable station MSNBC took the much-admired
Phil Donahue off the air because of his opposition
to the calls for war in Iraq.
Why?
There are seven
reasons that the mainstream media and many of the
largest “alternative” media websites are all pro-war.
1.
Self-Censorship by Journalists
There is
tremendous self-censorship by journalists.
A survey by the
Pew Research Center and the Columbia Journalism
Review in 2000
found:
Self-censorship is commonplace in the news media
today …. About one-quarter of the local and national
journalists say they have purposely avoided
newsworthy stories, while nearly as many acknowledge
they have softened the tone of stories to benefit
the interests of their news organizations. Fully
four-in-ten (41%) admit they have engaged in either
or both of these practices.
Similarly, a 2003 survey reveals that 35% of reporters
and news executives themselves admitted that journalists
avoid newsworthy stories if
“the story would be embarrassing or
damaging to the financial interests of a news
organization’s owners or parent company.”
Several months
after 9/11, Dan Rather
told the BBC that American reporters were practicing
“a form of self-censorship”:
There was a
time in South Africa that people would put flaming
tires around peoples’ necks if they dissented. And
in some ways the fear is that you will be necklaced
here, you will have a flaming tire of lack of
patriotism put around your neck. Now it is that fear
that keeps journalists from asking the toughest of
the tough questions…. And again, I am humbled to
say, I do not except myself from this criticism.
What we are
talking about here – whether one wants to recognise
it or not, or call it by its proper name or not – is
a form of self-censorship.
Rather
said in 2008:
One of the
most pernicious ways in which we do this is through
self-censorship, which may be the worst censorship
of all. We have seen too much self-censorship in the
news in recent years, and as I say this please know
that I do not except myself from this criticism.
As Mark
Twain once said, “We write frankly and freely but
then we ‘modify’ before we print.” Why do we modify
the free and frank expression of journalistic truth?
We do it out of fear: Fear for our jobs. Fear that
we’ll catch hell for it. Fear that someone will seek
to hang a sign around our neck that says, in
essence, “Unpatriotic.”
We modify
with euphemisms such as “collateral damage” or “less
than truthful statements.” We modify with
passive-voice constructions such as “mistakes were
made.” We modify with false equivalencies that
provide for bad behavior the ready-made excuse that
“everybody’s doing it.” And sometimes we modify with
an eraser—simply removing offending and inconvenient
truths from our reporting.”
Keith Olbermann
agreed that there is self-censorship in the American
media, and that:
You
can rock the boat, but you can never say that the
entire ocean is in trouble …. You cannot say: By the
way, there’s something wrong with our …. system.
Former
Washington Post columnist Dan Froomkin
wrote in 2006:
Mainstream-media political journalism is in danger
of becoming increasingly irrelevant, but not because
of the Internet, or even Comedy Central. The threat
comes from inside. It comes from journalists being
afraid to do what journalists were put on this green
earth to do. . . .
There’s the
intense pressure to maintain access to insider
sources, even as those sources become ridiculously
unrevealing and oversensitive. There’s the fear of
being labeled partisan if one’s bullshit-calling
isn’t meted out in precisely equal increments along
the political spectrum.
If
mainstream-media political journalists don’t start
calling bullshit more often, then we do risk losing
our primacy — if not to the comedians then to the
bloggers.
I still
believe that no one is fundamentally more capable of
first-rate bullshit-calling than a well-informed
beat reporter – whatever their beat. We just need to
get the editors, or the corporate culture, or the
self-censorship – or whatever it is – out of the
way.
MarketWatch
columnist Brett Arends
wrote in 2013:
Do you want
to know what kind of person makes the best reporter?
I’ll tell you. A borderline sociopath. Someone
smart, inquisitive, stubborn, disorganized, chaotic,
and in a perpetual state of simmering rage at the
failings of the world. Once upon a time you saw
people like this in every newsroom in the country.
They often had chaotic personal lives and they died
early of cirrhosis or a heart attack. But they were
tough, angry SOBs and they produced great stories.
Do you
want to know what kind of people get promoted and
succeed in the modern news organization? Social
climbers. Networkers. People who are gregarious, who
“buy in” to the dominant consensus, who go along to
get along and don’t ask too many really awkward
questions. They are flexible, well-organized, and
happy with life.
And it
shows.
This is
why, just in the patch of financial and economic
journalism, so many reporters are happy to report
that U.S. corporations are in great financial shape,
even though they also have surging debts, or that a
“diversified portfolio” of stocks and bonds will
protect you in all circumstances, even though this
is not the case, or that defense budgets are being
slashed, when they aren’t, or that the U.S. economy
has massively outperformed rivals such as Japan,
when on key metrics it hasn’t, or that companies
must pay CEOs gazillions of dollars to secure the
top “talent,” when they don’t need to do any such
thing, and such pay is just plunder.
All of
these things are “consensus” opinions, and
conventional wisdom, which are repeated over and
over again by various commentators and vested
interests. Yet none of them are true.
If you
want to be a glad-handing politician, be a
glad-handing politician. If you want to be a
reporter, then be angry, ask awkward questions, and
absolutely hate it when everyone agrees with you.
The Jerusalem
Post
wrote last year:
Any
university journalism course will teach that there
are two forms of media censorship in the media:
censorship and self-censorship. As one online
article explains: “Censorship occurs when a state,
political, religious or private party prohibits
information from reaching citizens.
Self-censorship occurs when journalists themselves
prevent the publication of information… because they
are fearful of what could happen if they publish
certain information – they are fearful of injury to
themselves or their families, fearful of a lawsuit
or other economic consequence.”
***
A 2014
academic article was more alarmist in tone. M. Murat
Yesil, assistant professor at Turkey’s Necmettin
Erbakan University, wrote that “self-censoring
practices of journalists put the future of
journalism into danger… [such] practices may be
threatening the future of journalism.” This
past week, Spanish journalists are claiming a new
law that protects police officers from having their
photographs published will encourage
self-censorship.
Self-censorship
obviously occurs
on the web as well as in old media. As Wikipedia
notes:
Self-censorship is the act of censoring or
classifying one’s own work (blog, book(s), film(s),
or other means of expression) …
2. Censorship
by Higher-Ups
If journalists
do want to speak out about an issue, they also are
subject to tremendous pressure by their editors or
producers to kill the story.
The 2000 Pew
and Columbia Journalism Review survey
notes:
Fully half
of [the investigative journalists surveyed] say
newsworthy stories are often or sometimes ignored
because they conflict with a news organization’s
economic interests. More than six-in-ten (61%)
believe that corporate owners exert at least a fair
amount of influence on decisions about which stories
to cover….
The Pulitzer
prize-winning reporter who uncovered the Iraq prison
torture scandal and the Mai Lai massacre in Vietnam,
Seymour Hersh,
said:
“All of the
institutions we thought would protect us —
particularly the press, but also the military, the
bureaucracy, the Congress — they have failed. The
courts . . . the jury’s not in yet on the courts. So
all the things that we expect would normally carry
us through didn’t. The biggest failure, I would
argue, is the press, because that’s the most
glaring….
Q: What can
be done to fix the (media) situation?
[Long
pause] You’d have to fire or execute ninety percent
of the editors and executives. You’d actually have
to start promoting people from the newsrooms to be
editors who you didn’t think you could control. And
they’re not going to do that.”
In fact many
journalists are
warning that the true story is not being reported.
A
series of interviews with award-winning journalists
also documents censorship of certain stories by media
editors and owners (and see
these samples).
It’s not just
the mainstream media. The large “alternative” media
websites censor as well.
For example:
Every year
Project Censored [which Walter Cronkite and other ]
puts together a list of the top 25 stories censored
and ignored by the mainstream media.
How
many of these stories were you aware of?
Even regular consumers of
alternative, independent media may be surprised to
learn about some of these stories ….
There are many
reasons for censorship by media higher-ups.
One is money.
The media has a
strong monetary interest to avoid controversial topics
in general. It has always been true that advertisers
discourage stories which challenge corporate power.
In 1969, Federal Communications Commission commissioner
Nicholas Johnson noted that tv networks
go to great lengths to please their sponsors.
Indeed, a
3-time Emmy Award winning CNN journalist says that
CNN took money from the royalty in Bahrain to kill
her hard-hitting expose, and instead run flattering
propaganda for Bahrain.
Some media
companies make a lot of money from the government, and
so don’t want to rock the boat. For example, Glenn
Greenwald
notes:
Because
these schools [owned by the Washington P0st’s parent
company, whose profits subsidize the Post] target
low-income students, the vast majority of their
income is derived from federal loans. Because there
have been so many deceptive practices and defaults,
the Federal Government has become much more
aggressive about regulating these schools and now
play a vital role in determining which ones can
thrive and which ones fail.
Put another
way, the company that owns The Washington Post is
almost entirely at the mercy of the Federal
Government and the Obama administration — the
entities which its newspaper ostensibly checks and
holds accountable. “By the end of 2010, more than 90
percent of revenue at Kaplan’s biggest division and
nearly a third of The Post Co.’s revenue overall
came from the U.S. government.” The Post Co.’s
reliance on the Federal Government extends beyond
the source of its revenue; because the industry is
so heavily regulated, any animosity from the
Government could single-handedly doom the Post Co.’s
business — a reality of which they are well aware:
The
Post Co. realized there were risks attached to
being dependent on federal dollars for revenue —
and that it could lose access to that money if
it exceeded federal regulatory limits.
“It
was understood that if you fell out of grace
[with the Education Department], your business
might go away,” said Tom Might, who as
chief executive of Cable One, a cable service
provider that is owned by The Post Co., sat in
at company-wide board meetings.
Beyond
being reliant on federal money and not alienating
federal regulators, the Post Co. desperately needs
favorable treatment from members of Congress, and
has been willing to use its newspaper to obtain it:
Graham
has taken part in a fierce lobbying campaign by
the for-profit education industry. He has
visited key members of Congress, written an
op-ed article for the Wall Street Journal and
hired for The Post Co. high-powered lobbying
firms including Akin Gump and Elmendorf Ryan, at
a cost of $810,000 in 2010. The Post has also
published an editorial opposing the new federal
rules, while disclosing the interests of its
parent company.
The
Post is hardly alone among major media outlets
in being owned by an entity which relies on the
Federal Government for its continued profitability.
NBC News and MSNBC were long owned by GE, and now by
Comcast, both of which desperately need good
relations with government officials for their
profits. The same is true of CBS (owned by Viacom),
ABC (owned by Disney), and CNN (owned by TimeWarner).
For each of these large corporations, alienating
federal government officials is about the worst
possible move it could make — something of which all
of its employees, including its media division
employees, are well aware. But the Post Co.’s
dependence is even more overwhelming than most.
How can a
company which is almost wholly dependent upon
staying in the good graces of the U.S. Government
possibly be expected to serve as a journalistic
“watchdog” over that same Government? The very idea
is absurd.
In addition, the government has allowed tremendous
consolidation in ownership of the airwaves during the
past decade.
Dan Rather has
slammed media consolidation:
Likening
media consolidation to that of the banking industry,
Rather claimed that “roughly 80 percent” of the
media is controlled by no more than six, and
possibly as few as four, corporations.
This is
documented by the following must-see charts prepared by:
And check out
this list of interlocking directorates of big media
companies from Fairness and Accuracy in Media, and
this resource from the Columbia Journalism Review to
research a particular company.
This image
gives a sense of the decline in diversity in media
ownership over the last couple of decades:
The large media
players stand to gain billions of dollars in profits if
the Obama administration continues to allow monopoly
ownership of the airwaves by a handful of players. The
media giants know who butters their bread. So there is a
spoken or tacit agreement: if the media cover the
administration in a favorable light, the MSM will
continue to be the receiver of the government’s goodies.
The large
alternative media websites also censor news which are
too passionately anti-war.
Huffington Post
– the largest liberal website – is owned by media giant
AOL Time Warner, and censors any implication that a
Democratic administration could be waging war for the
wrong reasons. So HuffPost may criticize poor
prosecution of the war, but would never say that the
entire “War on Terror” as currently waged by the Obama
administration is a stupid idea.
The largest
“alternative” websites may weakly criticize minor
details of the overall war effort, but would never say
that more or less
worldwide war-fighting is counterproductive. They
may whine about a specific aspect of the war-fighting …
but never look at the
larger
geopolitical
factors
involved.
They all seem
to follow Keith Olbermann’s
advice:
You can
rock the boat, but you can never say that the entire
ocean is in trouble …. You cannot say: By the way,
there’s something wrong with our …. system.
3. Digital
Demonetization
The
biggest social media websites censor the
hardest-hitting anti-war stories. And
see this.
We
noted in 2013:
Reddit,
Facebook, Digg, Youtube and other social media sites
have long censored content as well.
For
example, Facebook
pays low-wage foreign workers to delete certain
content based upon a censorship list. For
example, Facebook deletes accounts created by any
Palestinian resistance groups. [See
this]
Digg was
caught censoring stories which were controversial or
too critical of the government. See
this and
this.
Many accuse
Youtube of
blatant censorship.
Indeed, Youtube
admits that it censors:
Controversial or sensitive subjects and events,
including subjects related to war, political
conflicts, natural disasters and tragedies,
even if graphic imagery is not shown
Moreover, all
of the social media giants
say they’re going to crack down on “fake news”. For
example,
Facebook, Twitter, Youtube and other social media are
partnering with corporate media such as the ABC
News, NBC News, Washington Post, New York Times, to
filter out what they label as fake news.
Why is this a
problem?
Because
corporate media giants like the Washington Post are
labeling virtually any website which
questions U.S. foreign policy as “fake news” … and
calling on them to be “investigated” by the FBI and
Department of Justice for treason.
So think about
how this will play out
1. First,
criticizing U.S. wars will get a website listed on a
slapdash “fake news” list
2. Second, the
blacklisting will lead to social media – and perhaps
search engines – blocking links to the site
3. With links
blocked, ad revenue for the site will plummet, which
will destroy the main source of revenue for
most websites, effectively shutting them down.
Get it?
If this trend
continues, it will lead to tremendous pressure to stop
criticizing U.S. military policy.
4. Drumming Up
Support for War
In addition,
the owners of American media companies have long
actively played a part in drumming up support for war.
It is painfully
obvious that the large news outlets studiously avoided
any real criticism of the government’s claims in the run
up to the Iraq war. It is painfully obvious that the
large American media companies acted as lapdogs and
stenographers for the government’s war agenda.
Veteran
reporter Bill Moyers
criticized the corporate media for parroting the
obviously false link between 9/11 and Iraq (and the
false claims that Iraq possessed WMDs) which the
administration made in the run up to the Iraq war, and
concluded that the false information was not challenged
because:
The
[mainstream] media had been cheerleaders for the
White House from the beginning and were simply
continuing to rally the public behind the President
— no questions asked.
As NBC News’
David Gregory (later promoted to host Meet the Press)
said:
I think
there are a lot of critics who think that . . . . if
we did not stand up [in the run-up to the war] and
say ‘this is bogus, and you’re a liar, and why are
you doing this,’ that we didn’t do our job. I
respectfully disagree. It’s not our role.
Even after all
of the mea culpas for their horrible Iraq war
coverage – by the
New York Times,
Washington Post,
MSNBC and others – they did the exact same thing
in the
Libyan and
Syrian wars.
But this is
nothing new. In fact, the large media companies have
drummed up support for all previous wars.
For example,
Hearst helped drum up support for the Spanish-American
War.
So why has the
American press has consistently served the elites in
disseminating their false justifications for war?
One of of the
reasons is because the large media companies are owned
by those who
support the militarist agenda or even directly
profit from war and terror (for example, NBC
was owned by General Electric, one of the largest
defense contractors in the world … which directly
profits from war, terrorism and chaos. NBC was
subsequently sold to Comcast).
Another seems
to be an unspoken rule that the media will not criticize
the government’s imperial war agenda.
And the media
support isn’t just for war: it is also for various other
shenanigans by the powerful. For example, a BBC
documentary
proves:
There was
“a planned coup in the USA in 1933 by a group of
right-wing American businessmen . . . . The coup was
aimed at toppling President Franklin D Roosevelt
with the help of half-a-million war veterans. The
plotters, who were alleged to involve some of the
most famous families in America, (owners of Heinz,
Birds Eye, Goodtea, Maxwell Hse & George Bush’s
Grandfather, Prescott) believed that their country
should adopt the policies of Hitler and Mussolini to
beat the great depression.”
Moreover,
“the tycoons told the general who they
asked to carry out the coup that the American people
would accept the new government because they controlled
all the newspapers.“
See also
this book.
Have you ever
heard of this scheme before? It was certainly a very
large one. And if the conspirators controlled the
newspapers then, how much worse is it today with media
consolidation?
(Kevin Dutton –
research psychologist at the University of Cambridge –
whose research has been featured in Scientific American
Mind, New Scientist, The Guardian, Psychology Today and
USA Today – also notes that
media personalities and journalists – especially
when combined in the same persons – are likely to be
psychopaths. Some
12 million Americans are psychopaths or sociopaths,
and psychopaths
tend to rub each others’ backs.)
5. Direct
Government Funding and Support
An official
summary of America’s overthrow of the
democratically-elected president of Iran in the 1950′s
states,
“In cooperation with the Department of State,
CIA had several articles planted in major
American newspapers and magazines which, when reproduced
in Iran, had the desired psychological effect in Iran
and contributed to the war of nerves against Mossadeq.”
(page x)
Indeed, it is
well-documented that the CIA
has long paid journalists to write propaganda. This
includes foreign, as well as American
reporters.
And the
military-media alliance has continued without a break
(as a highly-respected journalist
says, “viewers may be taken aback to see the
grotesque extent to which US presidents and American
news media have jointly shouldered key propaganda chores
for war launches during the last five decades.”)
As the
mainstream British paper, the Independent,
writes:
There is a
concerted strategy to manipulate global perception.
And the mass media are operating as its compliant
assistants, failing both to resist it and to expose
it. The sheer ease with which this machinery has
been able to do its work reflects a creeping
structural weakness which now afflicts the
production of our news.
The article in
the Independent discusses the use of “black propaganda”
by the U.S. government, which is then parroted by the
media without analysis; for example, the government
forged a letter from al Zarqawi to the “inner
circle” of al-Qa’ida’s leadership, urging them to accept
that the best way to beat US forces in Iraq was
effectively to start a civil war, which was then
publicized without question by the media.
Indeed,
many branches of the U.S. government – and allied
governments – fund propaganda.
For example,
the New York Times
reports:
Richard
Stengel, the State Department’s undersecretary for
public diplomacy [i.e. minister of propaganda] … has
approved State Department programs that teach
investigative reporting and empower truth-tellers ….
In other words,
the State Department is supporting reporters who spout
its party line about U.S. foreign policy without
question.
And Robert
Parry, the investigative reporter who many of the
Iran-Contra stories for The Associated Press and
Newsweek in the 1980s,
points out:
In May
2015, the U.S. Agency for International Development
(USAID) issued
a fact sheet summarizing its work
financing friendly journalists around the world,
including “journalism education, media business
development, capacity building for supportive
institutions, and strengthening legal-regulatory
environments for free media.”
USAID
estimated its budget for “media strengthening
programs in over 30 countries” at $40 million
annually, including aiding “independent media
organizations and bloggers in over a dozen
countries,” In Ukraine before the 2014 coup ousting
elected President Viktor Yanukovych and installing a
fiercely anti-Russian and U.S.-backed regime, USAID
offered training in “mobile phone and website
security,” skills that would have been quite helpful
to the coup plotters.
***
Beyond
funding from the State Department and USAID, tens of
millions of dollars more are flowing through the
U.S.-government-funded National Endowment for
Democracy, which was started in 1983 under
the guiding hand of CIA Director William Casey.
NED became
a slush fund to help finance what became known,
inside the Reagan administration, as
“perception management,” the art of controlling
the perceptions of domestic and foreign populations.
6. Access
Dan Froomkin,
Brett Arends and many other mainstream
reporters have noted that “access” is the most
prized thing for mainstream journalists … and
that they will keep fawning over those in power
so that they will keep their prized access.
But there
is another dynamic related to access at play:
direct cash-for-access payments to the media.
As
previously mentioned, a 3-time Emmy Award
winning CNN journalist says that
CNN takes money from foreign dictators to
run flattering propaganda.
Politico
reveals:
For
$25,000 to $250,000, The Washington Post has
offered lobbyists and association executives
off-the-record, nonconfrontational access to
“those powerful few”: Obama administration
officials, members of Congress, and — at
first — even the paper’s own reporters and
editors…
The
offer — which essentially turns a news
organization into a facilitator for private
lobbyist-official encounters — was a new
sign of the lengths to which news
organizations will go to find revenue at a
time when most newspapers are struggling for
survival.
That
may be one reason that the mainstream news
commentators hate bloggers so much. The more
people who get their news from blogs instead of
mainstream news sources, the smaller their
audience, and the less the MSM can charge for
the kind of “nonconfrontational access” which
leads to puff pieces for the big boys.
7.
Censorship by the Government
Finally, as if the media’s own interest in
promoting war is not strong enough, the
government has exerted tremendous pressure on
the media to report things a certain way.
If
reporters criticize those in power, they may be
smeared by the government and
targeted for arrest (and
see this).
Indeed,
the government
treats real reporters as terrorists.
Because the core things which reporters do
could be considered terrorism, in modern
America, journalists are sometimes targeted
under
counter-terrorism laws.
The
government
spies on reporters. Columbia Journalism
Review
notes:
The
Edward Snowden leaks made clear that the
internet is a tool for peering into the
lives of citizens, including journalists,
for every government with the means to do
so. Whether domestic spying in the United
States or Great Britain qualifies as
censorship is a matter of debate. But the
Obama administration’s authorization of
secret wiretaps of journalists and
aggressive leak prosecutions has had a
well-documented chilling effect
on national-security reporting. At the very
least, electronic snooping by the government
means that no journalist reporting on
secrets can promise in good conscience to
guarantee a source anonymity.
Not
only has the government
thrown media owners and reporters in jail if
they’ve been too critical, it also claims the
power to
indefinitely detain journalists
without trial or access to an attorney
which chills
chills free speech.
After
Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Chris Hedges,
journalist Naomi Wolf, Pentagon Papers
whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg and others sued
the government to enjoin the NDAA’s allowance of
the indefinite detention of Americans – the
judge asked the government attorneys 5 times
whether journalists like Hedges could be
indefinitely detained simply for interviewing
and then writing about bad guys. The
government
refused to promise
that journalists like Hedges won’t be thrown in
a dungeon for the rest of their lives without
any right to talk to a judge.
An
al-Jazeera journalist – in no way connected to
any terrorist group – was held at Guantánamo for
six years … mainly to be
interrogated about the Arabic news network.
And see
this.
Wikileaks’ head Julian Assange
could face the death penalty for his heinous
crime of leaking whistleblower information which
make those in power uncomfortable … i.e.
being a reporter.
As
constitutional lawyer Glenn Greenwald
notes:
It
seems clear that the US military now deems
any leaks of classified information to
constitute the capital offense of “aiding
the enemy” or “communicating with the enemy”
even if no information is passed directly to
the “enemy” and there is no intent to aid or
communicate with them. Merely informing the
public about classified government
activities now constitutes this capital
crime because it “indirectly” informs the
enemy.
***
If
someone can be charged with “aiding” or
“communicating with the enemy” by virtue of
leaking to WikiLeaks, then why wouldn’t that
same crime be committed by someone leaking
classified information to any outlet: the
New York Times, the Guardian, ABC News or
anyone else?
***
International Law Professor Kevin Jon Heller
made a similar point when the charges
against Manning were first revealed:
“[I]f Manning has aided
the enemy, so has any media organization
that published the information he
allegedly stole. Nothing in Article 104
requires proof that the defendant
illegally acquired the information that
aided the enemy. As a result, if
the mere act of ensuring that harmful
information is published on the internet
qualifies either as indirectly ‘giving
intelligence to the enemy’ (if the
military can prove an enemy actually
accessed the information) or as
indirectly ‘communicating with the
enemy’ (because any reasonable person
knows that enemies can access
information on the internet), there is
no relevant factual difference between
[Bradley] Manning and a media
organization that published the relevant
information.”
***
It is always worth
underscoring that the New York Times has
published far more government secrets than
WikiLeaks ever has, and more importantly,
has published far more sensitive secrets
than WikiLeaks has (unlike WikiLeaks, which
has never published anything that was
designated “Top Secret”, the New York Times
has repeatedly done so: the Pentagon Papers,
the Bush NSA wiretapping program, the SWIFT
banking surveillance system, and the
cyberwarfare program aimed at Iran were all
“Top Secret” when the newspaper revealed
them, as was the network of CIA secret
prisons exposed by the Washington Post).
There is simply no way to convert basic
leaks to WikiLeaks into capital offenses –
as the Obama administration is plainly doing
– without sweeping up all leaks into that
attack.
***
The
same [Obama] administration that has
prosecuted whistleblowers under
espionage charges that threatened to
send them to prison for life without any
evidence of harm to national security, and
has brought
double the number of such prosecutions as
all prior administrations combined.
Converting all leaks into capital offenses
would be perfectly consistent with the
unprecedented secrecy fixation on the part
of the
Most Transparent Administration Ever™.
The irony from these
developments is glaring. The real
“enemies” of American “society” are not
those who seek to inform the American people
about the
bad acts engaged in by their government in
secret. As
Democrats once recognized prior to the
age of Obama – in the
age of Daniel Ellsberg – people who do
that are
more aptly referred to as “heroes”.
The actual
“enemies” are those who abuse secrecy powers
to conceal government actions and to
threaten with life imprisonment or even
execution those who blow the whistle on
high-level wrongdoing.
Former
attorney general Mukasey said the U.S. should
prosecute Assange because it’s
“easier” than prosecuting the New York Times.
Congress is considering a bill which would
make even mainstream reporters liable for
publishing leaked information (part of an
all-out war on whistleblowing).
As
such, the media companies have felt great
pressure from the government to kill any real
questioning of the endless wars.
For
example, Dan Rather
said, regarding American media, “What you
have is a miniature version of what you have in
totalitarian states”.
Tom Brokaw
said “all wars are based on propaganda.
And the
head of CNN
said:
There was ‘almost a patriotism police’ after
9/11 and when the network showed [things
critical of the administration’s policies]
it would get phone calls from advertisers
and the administration and “big people in
corporations were calling up and saying,
‘You’re being anti-American here.’
Indeed,
former military analyst and famed Pentagon
Papers whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg
said that the government has ordered the
media not to cover 9/11:
Ellsberg seemed hardly surprised that
today’s American mainstream broadcast media
has so far failed to take [former FBI
translator and 9/11 whistleblower Sibel]
Edmonds up on her offer, despite the
blockbuster nature of her allegations [which
Ellsberg calls “far more explosive than the
Pentagon Papers”].
As
Edmonds has also alluded, Ellsberg pointed
to the New York Times, who “sat on the NSA
spying story for over a year” when they
“could have put it out before the 2004
election, which might have changed the
outcome.”
“There will be phone calls going out to the
media saying ‘don’t even think of touching
it, you will be prosecuted for violating
national security,’” he told us.
* *
*
“I
am confident that there is conversation
inside the Government as to ‘How do we deal
with Sibel?’” contends Ellsberg. “The first
line of defense is to ensure that she
doesn’t get into the media. I think any
outlet that thought of using her materials
would go to to the government and they would
be told ‘don’t touch this . . . .‘”
Indeed,
in the final analysis, the main reason today
that the media giants will not cover the real
stories or question the government’s actions or
policies in any meaningful way is that the
American government and mainstream media been
somewhat blended together.
Can We
Win the Battle Against Censorship?
We
cannot just leave governance to our “leaders”,
as “The price of freedom is eternal vigilance”
(Jefferson). Similarly, we cannot leave news to
the corporate media. We need to “be the media”
ourselves.
“To
stand in silence when they should be protesting
makes cowards out of men.”
– Abraham Lincoln
“Our
lives begin to end the day we become silent
about things that matter.”
– Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
“Powerlessness and silence go together.
We…should use our privileged positions not as a
shelter from the world’s reality, but as a
platform from which to speak. A voice is a gift.
It should be cherished and used.”
– Margaret Atwood
“There
is no act too small, no act too bold. The
history of social change is the history of
millions of actions, small and large, coming
together at points in history and creating a
power that governments cannot suppress.”
– Howard Zinn (historian)
“All
tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people
of good conscience to remain silent”
– Thomas Jefferson
The views
expressed in this article are the author's own and do
not necessarily reflect Information Clearing House
editorial policy. |