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Rewriting the First Draft of History

by: William Rivers Pitt, t r u t h o u t | Columnist

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William Rivers Pitt argues that the media is trying to rewrite history for outgoing President George W. Bush. (Photo: Michael McDonough)

    We're all neocons now.
- Chris Matthews, MSNBC, 09 April 2003

    Seeing as how we currently find ourselves hurtling along this downhill run towards new history - the countdown to the day America has itself a president named Obama can be measured in hours instead of days or weeks now - it seems an appropriate moment to pause and reflect on a bit of older history we've already passed through. I'm not talking about any kind of ancient history, mind you. For the purposes of this reflection, we need only take a small leap backwards in time, just six short years ago.

    We all passed through the little slice of history that began to take shape in the early months of 2003, and we all remember that time in our own way. Today, however, there is a great deal of effort being expended to make sure this bit of history is remembered differently than how it really happened. An even better result for those exerting this effort would be if this bit of history were not remembered at all. That may, in fact, be their ultimate goal.

    I am referring, of course, to the very beginning of another downhill run towards history, the one that began in 2003 and led us into the current Iraq debacle that is about to become another president's problem.

    I am not, however, referring to anyone who works or once worked within the Bush administration. To be sure, Mr. Bush would prefer if we remembered all this differently than it happened, as would Mr. Cheney, Mr. Rumsfeld, Mr. Powell, Mr. Wolfowitz, Mr. Feith, Ms. Rice, and every other one of the glorified think-tank cube-rats who ginned the whole thing up to begin with. Richard Perle, in an amusing aside, actually allowed himself to be quoted saying the neocons had nothing to do with Iraq, had no hand in the planning and implementation of same, and anyone who says differently is just wrong and dumb and should go away.

    That one's a hoot, in'it?

    No, I am referring to an equally large, craven and culpable body outside the official bounds of our federal governmental: the mainstream American news media. They work fist in glove with that government now, worked with them yesterday, and will likewise be working with them tomorrow. Specifically, they will be working as hard as Bush & Co. to make us remember that downhill run to Iraq differently, because they never worked more closely with our government on anything than they did on Iraq just six short years ago.

    The mainstream news media did not concoct false evidence to justify a course for war, but they fobbed off that false proof as if it were holy truth. They did not lie to the American people about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, but they passed on Bush administration lies to the American people with full-throated credulity. They did not browbeat the American people with dire threats of impending terrorism to cover up political liabilities, but they passed those threats on from Bush's people to the American people with the kind of breathless energy only seen whenever media types have skyrocketing ratings and ad revenues twinkling in their eyes.

    The mainstream American news media is just as responsible for what has happened in Iraq as the Bush administration; they are as responsible for the lies they repeated as the ones who first told them, and are as guilty for what happened in Iraq as the Bush administration officials they enabled and covered for.

    Many people, by now, may have forgotten the manner in which this gruesome symbiosis played out six years ago. An organization called Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting has compiled a little refresher course on the topic. Behold some of the highlights:

    "Oh, it was breathtaking. I mean I was almost starting to think that we had become inured to everything that we'd seen of this war over the past three weeks, all this sort of saturation. And finally, when we saw that it was such a just true, genuine expression. It was reminiscent, I think, of the fall of the Berlin Wall. And just sort of that pure emotional expression, not choreographed, not stage-managed, the way so many things these days seem to be. Really breathtaking."

    - Ceci Connolly, Washington Post reporter, on Fox News Channel on 09 April 2003

    "This has been a tough war for commentators on the American left. To hope for defeat meant cheering for Saddam Hussein. To hope for victory meant cheering for President Bush. The toppling of Mr. Hussein, or at least a statue of him, has made their arguments even harder to defend. Liberal writers for ideologically driven magazines like The Nation and for less overtly political ones like The New Yorker did not predict a defeat, but the terrible consequences many warned of have not happened. Now liberal commentators must address the victory at hand and confront an ascendant conservative juggernaut that asserts United States might can set the world right."

    - David Carr, New York Times reporter, 16 April 2003

    "We're proud of our president. Americans love having a guy as president, a guy who has a little swagger, who's physical, who's not a complicated guy like Clinton or even like Dukakis or Mondale, all those guys, McGovern. They want a guy who's president. Women like a guy who's president. Check it out. The women like this war. I think we like having a hero as our president. It's simple. We're not like the Brits."

    - Chris Matthews, MSNBC, 01 May 2003

    "He looked like an alternatively commander in chief, rock star, movie star and one of the guys."

    - Lou Dobbs, CNN, 01 May 2003

    "We had controversial wars that divided the country. This war united the country and brought the military back."

    - Howard Fineman, MSNBC, 07 May 2003

    Some people may remember hearing these lines when they were uttered. A great many people can probably remember hearing or reading similar comments during that time. The sentiment was all but ubiquitous, at least within the mainstream media's echo chamber, that the weapons were there, that Bush was right, that war was necessary, so let's go.

    I remember it a little differently.

    In the summer of 2002, after working in concert with former chief UN weapons inspector Scott Ritter, I wrote and had published a book titled "War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to Know." The book argued that there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, no al-Qaeda operatives in Iraq, no connection between Iraq and 9/11, thus there was no reason to go to war against Iraq, and that any such war would be a disaster of vast proportions.

    In short, the book was spot-on correct.

    The latter half of 2002, however, saw very few people arguing these points make their way into the mainstream media conversation. I tried, believe me. I did dozens of radio interviews with every small-market, community-based radio personality in and out of America. I traveled tens of thousands of miles trying to let people know what was what. By the spring of 2003, the book became a New York Times and international best seller, and was translated into 13 languages, but my own informed perspective on the issue had failed to break into the mainstream media conversation.

    Mine was not nearly the only voice shut out of the debate by the mainstream news media. From the very beginning, independent or investigative journalists were sounding the alarm, preparing the facts, and not getting heard. People like Amy Goodman, Sy Hersh, Mike Malloy, Juan Cole, Dahr Jamail, Bernard Weiner, Norman Solomon, William Greider, Joe Conason, Robert Scheer, Robert Kuttner, Molly Ivins and Naomi Klein have been horribly vindicated by the passage of time. There are many, many other voices like theirs which, had they been included in the conversation six years ago, could have perhaps saved us all from the disaster they saw coming a mile away.

    Of course, not everyone in the mainstream news media participated six years ago in making sure the Iraq war happened, but so very many of them did. Those well-known personalities who actively participated in selling the war, along with their editors, producers and corporate owners, want no part of being rightly remembered for their role in the debacle that is Iraq. For the last couple of years, they've been backpedaling furiously away from the mess they were deeply involved in creating; all those once-dismissed "left-wing" talking points about the folly of this war and the absence of Iraqi WMD, seemingly overnight, were adopted by the mainstream news media with nary a hiccup.

    Remember how that worked? From 2003 until around 2006, the line from the media was, "Of course everyone knows there are weapons of mass destruction in Iraq." But after the WMD's failure to turn up entered a fourth year, a switch got thrown. Suddenly, the line from the media was, "Of course everyone knows there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq," after which came all the anti-Bush rhetoric they'd once ridiculed.

    They skipped the all-important middle part. In between "Of course they have WMD" and "Of course they had no WMD" should have been a few deadly serious questions: Why did they tell us there were WMD? Why did we accept their version of the facts so easily? How responsible are we for making the American people believe all that WMD stuff was true?

    They skipped all that, because media people avoid self-analysis the way cats avoid water. Now, they want us to remember things differently than how they were. Again.

    The folks in the mainstream news media see themselves as the writers and crafters of the first edition of history. This is a position they monstrously abused regarding Iraq, and now, they would like to rewrite that first draft, so they can edit out their own direct involvement as major players in the drama.

    Bush must be held responsible, along with all his minions and Congressional enablers, for the bloodbath of criminal wrongdoing that took place and continues in Iraq. But the media must be held accountable, as well. They'd like us to forget what they did. Don't let them let us forget. We all have skin in this particular game.

  

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William Rivers Pitt is a New York Times and internationally bestselling author of two books: "War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to Know" and "The Greatest Sedition Is Silence." His newest book, "House of Ill Repute: Reflections on War, Lies, and America's Ravaged Reputation," is now available from PoliPointPress.

Comments

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The "news" media are not in

The "news" media are not in the business of truth. They make their money from advertising, and are in the business of selling their advertiser's products, nothing more. If they could get away with it, newspapers and television would dispense with the charade and have nothing but ads, for that's what pays the bills and the salaries. Uncovering and reporting corporate and government crimes would be biting the hand that feeds them. It would result in reporters then being denied (a la Helen Thomas, eg) access to the halls of government (unnamed official sources), and in loss of corporate advertising revenue. Right-wing and corporate charges of a liberal press are wholly without basis or merit, but it provides a great cover for further censorship. "There is no such thing in America as an independent press, unless it is in the country towns. You know it and I know it. There is not one of you who dares to write his honest opinions, and if you did you know beforehand that it would never appear in print. I am paid one hundred and fifty dollars a week for keeping my honest opinions out of the paper I am connected with--others of you are paid similar salaries for similar things--and any of you who would be so foolish as to write his honest opinions would be out on the streets looking for another job. The business of the New York journalist is to destroy the truth, to lie outright, to pervert, to vilify, to fawn at the feet of Mammon, and to sell his race and his country for his daily bread. You know this and I know it, and what folly is this to be toasting an "Independent Press." We are the tools and vassals of rich men behind the scenes. We are the jumping-jacks; they pull the strings and we dance. Our talents, our possibilities and our lives are all the property of other men. We are intellectual prostitutes." John Swinton, editor of the New York Tribune, in the 1880s, at a banquet of his fellow editors

Yeah, and it happened all

Yeah, and it happened all over again in the rush to bail out the gang who caused the economic mess to begin with. And it seems to be happening with the stimulus package. It appears supply side economics, while thoroughly discredited, has become too big to fail, just like our military-industrial complex.

Right on Rivers! Also, and

Right on Rivers! Also, and very importantly, we must boycott, divest and sanction the main stream media for their role in promulgating the illegal wars of the US. They are continuing their propaganda with the great crime that Israel is committing at this moment! Please, everyone, turn off your TV!!!! Do not cooperate with FOX NEWS, CNN, MNMBC and all the other media that has the innocent women and children's blood on their hands!!! This is the sure way to make the change we can believe in!!

And if you listen now to

And if you listen now to Chris Matthews, for example, you'd think that he was always opposed to the war, rather than being one of it's biggest cheerleaders. Thanks William Rivers Pitt for this article. Bush & Co. and the media should be held accountable and not be allowed to get away with re-writing history.

We must remember this

We must remember this because it will happen, and indeed, is happening again with Gaza. A slow drumbeat to war with Iran could start. So we must do what we can to call attention to the sad fact that we cannot trust the main stream news.

I could not agree more. The

I could not agree more. The mainstream media have much to answer for. It is worth remembering that half the country saw Bush for the underachieving, smart-assed rich kid that he always was, but the media did its best to portray him as a newer, more sober Winston Churchill. The New York Times is in trouble, and, according to an article in the Atlantic Monthly, may not last through May. Well goodbye, jerks. You have forfeited your right to exist by abusing the public trust.

Fr Tothus, you just wrote

Fr Tothus, you just wrote the best advertisement for all of us to sign up for a 'subscription' to Truthout. Like public TV or radio, if we don't want our news co-opted by advertisers that may one day ask us to shade the truth, we must pay for it directly. Sign up for a monthly debit to your account - $5, $10 - or whatever you would pay for your local paper.

Well, do we as humans on

Well, do we as humans on this globe really grasp the concepts of the end game? Does an end game scenario actually exist? Myself, looking back through the annals of history that is within my grasp, have the events of the last 6 years been any different compared to history? It seems we are a wretched bunch easily duped as a mass. History bears this out over and over again. What we are witnessing at this point in time has been witnessed before, in a different light (or should I say darkness), but all the same. We will witness this in the future also. The human condition is just so as to have individual choice and the common good clash. This conflict is what, IMHO, leads to the rise of the dark side in some to worm into the fold. Left to its' own accord, the choices can lead to the common good BUT once the worm has entered the equation, well, we are seeing the results as history. The worst thing in this world is the third party. Like they say, 'Two is company, three is a crowd'.

The scariest part is that

The scariest part is that their support of the neocons and the military industrial complex and the companies and lobbyists that benefit from incessant military spending and war is not over: witness the reporting on the Israel Gazan war and the drumbeat (somewhat tamped down since last Summer) to attack Iran.

as we used to say in the

as we used to say in the good ol days----right on!--next article should be about how we get the media to do their bloody job!

I think the journalists who

I think the journalists who acted as stenographers for President Bush's lies should be fired for negligence. There's been no accountability for all the lives lost because journalists failed to fact-check. They failed to do the ethical responsibilities of their profession. A lot of us were reading these "alternative media" sources in 2002 and knew the whole propaganda campaign to start the Iraq War was bogus from the beginning. I remember yelling at the TV news because they kept repeating known falsehoods. In my opinion, American corporate journalism is ethically corrupted and cannot redeem itself until it acknowledges culpability, purges the guilty, and vows to never repeat these mistakes.

The US public deserves some

The US public deserves some blame for (the large majority of them) complacently accepting the lies that were told. Any person who was paying attention would have known the Bush administration was lying. It would have taken a little critical thinking and enough curiosity to delve into alternative press sources such as foreign reporting and the alternative news sources cited above, but the information was accessible, as many of us know. In order to restore the US democracy, the US electorate is going to have to turn off their TV's and exert some effort and critical thinking to the problem of how to regain and maintain a democracy rather than the fascism we live under now. Other countries work well for their citizens, providing government sponsored healthcare, education, child care, workplace regulations, etc. The US will eventually have these benefits, and peace, too, if citizens inform themselves and unite for change, real change, which we all hope will begin with this new administration, but only if we keep the pressure on. We must hold Obama's and Congress's feet to the fire to end the war, fix healthcare, etc. Those with wealth and power are not going to give it up without a fight. People fought and died on picket lines to bring us the 40 hour work week, over time pay, safe work places, anti-pollution laws, and for the past three decades the US electorate has put into power administrations that have done their best to undermine the middle class. The current mess is the end result of poor political choices, starting with charming Uncle Ronny. Wake up, America!

As one of the minor minions

As one of the minor minions who toil in "main stream" media, I see little stomach for expressing ideas that go beyond the conventional. It's one reason I get the majority of my news from outlets other than my place of employment. I am not in a position to shape editorial content, and few times times I have attempted to express an alternative view have been ridiculed or ignored. I just take my beleaguered union paycheck home and read the internet.

The thing one can never say

The thing one can never say in a soft country is that the folk are largely responsible. Sadly, it is not just the lack of critical thinking and curiosity that hypnotized us with these siren songs of bloody war. It is moral cowardice and a foolish belief system regarding the destiny of our nation, and regarding its exceptionalism, bolstered by some stunningly low-brow religions, pre-Copernican in outlook, not simply imperial, but dynastic. The unspoken failure may unfortunately be that the American people have not heeded the wise advice at Delphi, Know Thyself. Unwittingly, she has cultivated in her belly that nasty bug we see in so many prideful nations: Displaced anger. We may not yet be a nation of the righteously indignant who scream fascistic slogans at those who haven't heard the word of God. But we are quite like the unhappy working stiff who comes home, has a drink, and kicks the dog. We may, indeed, become a truly great nation, in a spiritual sense, one day. But this will require the humility that looks in the mirror, and finally, painfully, maturely, abandons the foolish hypothesis that we are by birth the supreme nation. The press may, as Pitts suggests, be a machine that feeds lies to larval hatchlings. But still, we must ask why we have grown larval and thin-skinned, and addicted to hearing what we want to hear. In one word, what is the relationship of press to folk in our times? Perilous co-dependancy. Let's not further this "enabling" by telling the people that they are not largely to blame.

Yes, the media has failed us

Yes, the media has failed us miserably. What else is new? The Administration made it a test of patriotism to report things as they wanted and punish those who did not comply. The corporate media was only too willing to fawn. Media empires are not interested in news, only profits. The FCC was most helpful here. What is remarkable is that not more of the op-ed experts that were so wrong have not found other occupations or at least apologized to the public.

Yes, of course this is true.

Yes, of course this is true. 'Bread and circus' has been a simple and effective way of manipulating the unwitting masses for ages. We can persistently rail against this endless vicious cycle, which does have its social and political value. Telling the truth of a matter is absolutely critical. But if you’re really wanting a solution, social and political backlash offer us no end to the never-ending mechanism of mass exploitation by the wicked minded. If we really want a solution the only way is the process of evolution--for individual human beings to decide to invest their time and energy to evolve their own consciousness. By consciousness, I don't mean consciousness in the "new age" senseβ€”a little bit of love for your neighbor, the recognition that we shouldn’t trash the environment, that what we speak has some impact on life around us. I'm speaking of a peak perception that goes well beyond this. A truly evolved consciousness blossoms out of a maturity of being that is not subject to the whims and fears of one’s own mind. The masters and sages of the East understood the value of this path and elevating their own perception became the singular endeavor of their whole lives. Only when our emotions and attitudes are not so easily manipulated will those who leverage our fears to rob us of our intelligence be out of business.

Let's call it 1984

Let's call it 1984

You don't need to read much

You don't need to read much history to learn that the business of government is business. The military has always been employed by governments to support capitalistic ventures in the broadest sense. Once they were simply called plunder. Then they were called empires. Now it is called security. This Iraq war was about oil and about supporting the ancillary industries that support oil.... the military industrial complex. To be diverted by the straw man of WMD's was to succumb to the oldest ploy in history. If you want to make people do your bidding, first make them afraid. Many, many people became very, very rich over this war. Many, many Americans did their part by squandering the scarce resource at the center of the conflict. That this house of cards has come tumbling down is only poetic justice. The only difference between now and earlier dissenters, is that we who were never taken in and said so were not executed for our views.

"Main Stream Media" and

"Main Stream Media" and "Defense Department" are obviously euphemisms for "Ministry of Propaganda" and "War Department." I wish thinking people would always label them as such when they write.

Excellent analysis. Well

Excellent analysis. Well written. Too bad they are immune from prosecution.

It appears to me that we

It appears to me that we have a massive Bush bubble syndrome here where the MSM is totally oblivious to the situation as it actually is. The reason that they won't retract their former positions is that they don't believe that they exist, just like Bush and Cheney on their recent good-by TV tour are projecting a vision totally at odds with reality. And they are doing it with every sign that they actually believe the rot that they are spewing forth. I would bet that right now if you asked Judy Miller about her stories in the NYT she would deny that she wrote them or that they had anything to do with the run-up to the war.

The answer is: Don't listen

The answer is: Don't listen to the politicians, don't look at Fox News. Check the internet.

I too spent most of 2003 to

I too spent most of 2003 to the present, screaming at any TV I was unfortunate enough to run across out in the world. Good to know I'm not alone. Let us not forget that Ronny Raygun's watch also saw the destruction of the equal-time concept on the PUBLIC airwaves. The BS slight-of-hand that was used to excuse that, was the idea that cable providers had blurred the distinction, and weren't actually using the public "airwaves". Except most of the newly-created media giants then went on predatory buying sprees that destroyed all the small, independent news outlets. If we are to ever have a truly free press, we are going to have to elect an anti-monopoly government, that will render our tiny handful of news sources into myriad component parts. Chances of that happening: about zero. Sorry, folks, but I think we'll have to fall A LOT FARTHER as a nation before we actually try to fix things, instead of making a virtue out of self-delusion. Either that, or we'll need an American version of Lenin, willing to run the guillotines day and night until the legions of war criminals, liars, toadies, manipulators, and con-artists are thinned out a bit. But that would be wrong, so do not think about highly-placed criminals going to the guillotines, OK? -Even if it would make very striking footage for the mainstream press, don't think about guillotines. Even though the NeoCONs and their enablers have made the rest of us into accomplices to war crimes, do not think about demanding that they face the guillotine. That's -the guillotine. Do not consider it, America.

But according to truthout,

But according to truthout, they only tell glittering shiny truth about 9/11.

John Swinton rules O.K.

John Swinton rules O.K.

bush, the news folks, us.

bush, the news folks, us. most of us are responsible. along with pitts book there is Hoodwinked by john prados. published in july 2003 he nails every lie to the wall. reading it again years later it is stunning how right he was at such an early date. the point? the information was available for anyone who was willing to look. there is no excuse for supporting the war. instead of doing a little reading americans were too busy pouring good french wine down the sewer and getting fat eating those freedom fries. such a short distance from viet nam and americans let it happen again.

"Whoever controls the past

"Whoever controls the past controls the present and the future." G Orwell. WRP: you left Robert Fisk off your list of clear sighted people. I nominate most of the folks who made comments here, especially Fr Tothus whose well written words have once again skewered the pigs, as replacement workers for the whores now making big bucks kissing power butts.

The lying began BEFORE

The lying began BEFORE 9/11/2001 ! Why do we still accept that preposterous lie? Without 9/11, no Afghanistan or Iraq disasters could have been sold - even by Rush, Sean, Ruppert and the other WAR MONGERING PROFITEERS!

We have the media we

We have the media we deserve. How many Americans really READ and THINK and TALK BACK? How many have EVER called or written to the editor or news director and indicated disappointment, disagreement, disgust? If the people are too lazy or stupid to question the facts that are ladled out, of course we'll keep getting pap and happy talk. We once had an FCC that required stations to operate in for the Interest, convenience and necessity of the public. Now the FCC operates to fill the pockets of broadcast owners. We once had a free and independent press that worked "so that the people may know." Now the gutless wonders in the newsrooms of the US worry only about their ill-paid jobs. What a travesty!!!!