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Many a Jest Spoken as Truth
by Norman Solomon
National Public Radio deserves credit for finally airing a candid
summary of how media spin works at the top of the Executive Branch.
In late May, listeners across the country heard: "Ari Fleischer,
the White House spokesperson, announced that he would be leaving his
post sometime this summer. When asked why, Mr. Fleischer denied he would
be leaving his post. When reminded that he had just said he was leaving
his post, he denied that he had. Then he shouted, 'Look over there! It's
Dick Cheney eating lasagna!' and ducked out of the room."
The announcer was Peter Sagal, host of NPR's weekly news quiz show
"Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me," doing a brief promo shtick for the
satirical program -- illustrating, in the process, that when truth is
spoken on large networks it's apt to be in jest.
But there's little meaningful jesting to be found in the mass-media
world, where deception is serious business. While news reporting from
the White House consists largely of stenographic treacle, such work
appears to make shameless correspondents swell with professional pride.
As Fleischer has shown, masterful machinations from podiums win so
much reverential coverage that the exceptional hard-hitting news reports
get lost in the spin-control cycle. Overachievers in the political field
of "perception management" have combined tragedy and farce into an
ongoing single entity of governance.
Avoidable tragedies -- whether in Baghdad or in unemployment lines
back in the USA -- are successfully marketed as unfortunate but
acceptable necessities. Flag-lapel-waving emptied suits on television
push the envelopes of obsequious deference to huge economic and
political power structures.
At the same time that eager apologists for a status quo of
militarism and corporate domination are appalling to people with more
humanistic values, the criticisms tend to be much less caustic than
warranted. The pretensions and pieties of national leaders merit an
outpouring of derision and scorn.
Consider the heads of state in Washington and London, now presiding
over the oh-so-slow installation of U.S.-selected Iraqi "leaders." After
inflicting the horrors of war on so many people, George W. Bush and Tony
Blair feel compelled to preen themselves as champions of freedom, even
as the Bush administration makes sure that only the slightest trappings
of democracy will emerge in U.S.-run Iraq.
In the name of democracy, top U.S. officials will handpick the
acceptable Iraqi faces to plaster on a new regime of American creation.
And the media war drums are beating for Iran, perhaps the next
beneficiary of U.S. concern.
With some notable exceptions, journalists at major U.S. news
outlets tell us that President Bush has no need to come up with any of
the "weapons of mass destruction" that he swore up and down were in the
possession of Saddam Hussein at the start of the war. The
self-fulfilling media verdict is that the pre-war mendacity of the Bush
administration doesn't matter politically in the United States.
In his March 17 speech, on the eve of launching the war, Bush
declared: "Intelligence gathered by this and other governments leaves no
doubt that the Iraq regime continues to possess and conceal some of the
most lethal weapons ever devised." Where are the outcries from
journalists calling the Bush regime to account for such statements?
It's hardly a sign of mental health that we don't keel over with
derisive laughter or apoplexy when hearing the latest to-be-received
wisdom from media performers such as Bush, Dan Rather, Bill O'Reilly and
Thomas Friedman. The excessively respectful treatment accorded them is
part of the insidious overall pattern that confers credibility on the
incredible and bestows routine respect on flagrant manipulators in very
high places.
At a time when schools, health care facilities and a wide range of
other public services are being drastically curtailed or even decimated
in communities across the country, the U.S. government has boosted its
military spending to well over a billion dollars per day. War industries
are flourishing, while egregious economic inequities grow even more
extreme. But few high-profile journalists have indicated much
willingness to swim against the mainstream tide.
"Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn't Tell You," by Norman Solomon and
Reese Erlich, was published in late January by Context Books. For an
excerpt and other information, go to:
http://www.contextbooks.com/newF.html
Note to online readers:
:
For the transcript of
Solomon's March 11 appearance on CNN discussing U.S. plans for war on Iraq, go to:
www.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0303/11/sdi.04.html
Background link:
www.lcnp.org/global/IraqLetter.htm
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