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Dan Rather Slams Corporate News at National Conference for Media Reform

by: Dan Rather  |  Visit article original @ Free Press

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    Former CBS News anchor Dan Rather delivered a blistering critique of corporate news on Saturday night at the National Conference for Media Reform hosted by Free Press.

    The following are Dan Rather's prepared remarks:

    I am grateful to be here and I am, most of all, gratified by the energy I have seen tonight and at this conference. It will take this kind of energy - and more - to sustain what is good in our news media... to improve what is deficient... and to push back against the forces and the trends that imperil journalism and that - by immediate extension - imperil democracy itself.

    The Framers of our Constitution enshrined freedom of the press in the very first Amendment, up at the top of the Bill of Rights, not because they were great fans of journalists - like many politicians, then and now, they were not - but rather because they knew, as Thomas Jefferson put it, that, "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free... it expects what never was and never will be."

    And it is because of this Constitutionally-protected role that I still prefer to use the word "press" over the word "media." If nothing else, it serves as a subtle reminder that - along with newspapers - radio, television, and, now, the Internet, carry the same Constitutional rights, mandates, and responsibilities that the founders guaranteed for those who plied their trade solely in print.

    So when you hear me talk about the press, please know that I am talking about all the ways that news can be transmitted. And when you hear me criticize and critique the press, please know that I do not exempt myself from these criticisms.

    In our efforts to take back the American press for the American people, we are blessed this weekend with the gift of good timing. For anyone who may have been inclined to ask if there really is a problem with the news media, or wonder if the task of media reform is, indeed, an urgent one... recent days have brought an inescapable answer, from a most unlikely source.

    A source who decided to tell everyone, quote, "what happened."

    I know I can't be the first person this weekend to reference the recent book by former White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan, but, having interviewed him this past week, I think there are some very important points to be made from the things he says in his book, and the questions his statements raise.

    I'm sure all of you took special notice of what he had to say about the role of the press corps, in the run-up to the war in Iraq. In the government's selling of the war, he said they were - or, I should say, we were "complicit enablers" and "overly deferential."

    These are interesting statements, especially considering their source. As one tries to wrap one's mind around them, the phrase "cognitive dissonance" comes to mind.

    The first reaction, a visceral one, is: Whatever his motives for saying these things, he's right - and we didn't need Scott McClellan to tell us so.

    But the second reaction is: Wait a minute... I do remember at least some reporters, and some news organizations, asking tough questions - asking them of the president, of those in his administration, of White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer and - oh yes - of Scott McClellan himself, once he took over for Mr. Fleischer a few months after the invasion.

    So how do we reconcile these competing reactions? Well, we need to pull back for what we in television call the wide shot.

    If we look at the wide shot, we can see, in one corner of our screen, the White House briefing room filled with the White House press corps... and, filling the rest of the screen, the finite but disproportionately powerful universe that has become known as "mainstream media" - the newspapers and news programs, real and alleged, that employ these White House correspondents - the news organizations that are, in turn, owned by a shockingly few, much larger corporations, for which news is but a miniscule part of their overall business interests.

    In the wake of 9/11 and in the run-up to Iraq, these news organizations made a decision - consciously or unconsciously, but unquestionably in a climate of fear - to accept the overall narrative frame given them by the White House, a narrative that went like this: Saddam Hussein, brutal dictator, harbored weapons of mass destruction and, because of his supposed links to al Qaeda, this could not be tolerated in a post-9/11 world.

    In the news and on the news, one could, to be sure, find persons and views that did not agree with all or parts of this official narrative. Hans Blix, the former U.N. chief weapons inspector, comes to mind as an example. But the burden of proof, implicitly or explicitly, was put on these dissenting views and persons... the burden of proof was not put on an administration that was demonstrably moving towards a large-scale military action that would represent a break with American precedent and stated policy of how, when, and under what circumstances this nation goes to war.

    So with this in mind, we look back to the corner of our screen where the White House Press Corps is asking their questions. I have been a White House correspondent myself, and I have worked with some of the best in the business. You have an incentive, when you are in that briefing room, to ask the good, tough questions: If nothing else, that is how you get in the paper, or on the air. There is more to it than that, and things have changed since I was a White House correspondent - something I want to talk about in a minute. But the correspondents - the really good ones - these correspondents ask their tough questions.

    And these questions are met with what is now called, euphemistically and much too kindly, what is now called "message discipline."

    Well, we used to have a better and more accurate term for "message discipline." We called it "stonewalling." Now, cut back to your evening news, or your daily newspaper... where that White House Correspondent dutifully repeats the question he asked of the president or his press secretary, and dutifully relates the answer he was given - the same non-answer we've already heard dozens of times, which amounts to a pitch for the administration's point of view, whether or NOT the answer had anything to do with the actual question that was asked.

    And then: "Thank you Jack. In other news today... ."

    And we're off on a whole new story.

    In our news media, in our press, those who wield power were, in the lead-up to Iraq, given the opportunity to present their views as a coherent whole, to connect the dots, as they saw the dots and the connections... no matter how much these views may have flown in the face of precedent, established practice - or, indeed, the facts (as we are reminded, yet again, by the just-released Senate report on the administration's use of pre-war intelligence). The powerful are given this opportunity still, in ways big and small, despite what you may hear about the "post-Katrina" press.

    But when a tough question is asked and not answered, when reputable people come before the public and say, "wait a minute, something's not right here," the press has treated them like voices crying in the wilderness. These views, though they might be given air time, become lone dots - dots that journalists don't dare connect, even if the connections are obvious, even if people on the Internet and in the independent press are making these very same connections. The mainstream press doesn't connect these dots because someone might then accuse them of editorializing, or of being the, quote, "liberal media."

    But connecting these dots - making disparate facts make sense - is a big part of the real work of journalism.

    So how does this happen? Why does this happen?

    Let me say, by way of answering, that quality news of integrity starts with an owner who has guts.

    In a news organization with an owner who has guts, there is an incentive to ask the tough questions, and there is an incentive to pull together the facts - to connect the dots - in a way that makes coherent sense to the news audience.

    I mentioned a moment ago that things have changed since I was a White House correspondent. Yes, presidential administrations have become more adept at holding "access" over the heads of reporters - ask too tough a question, or too many of them, so the implicit threat goes, and you're not going to get any more interviews with high-ranking members of the administration, let alone the president. But I was covering Presidents Johnson and Nixon - men not exactly known as pushovers. No, what has changed, even more than the nature of the presidency, is the character of news ownership. I only found out years after the fact, for example, about the pressure that the Nixon White House put on my then-bosses, during Watergate - pressure to cut down my pieces, to call me off the story, and so on... because, back then, my bosses took the heat, so I didn't have to. They did this so the story could get told, and so the public could be informed.

    But it is rare, now, to find a major news organization owned by an individual, someone who can say, in effect, "The buck stops here." The more likely motto now is: "The news stops... with making bucks."

    America's biggest, most important news organizations have, over the past 25 years, fallen prey to merger after merger, acquisition after acquisition... to the point where they are, now, tiny parts of immeasurably larger corporate entities - entities whose primary business often has nothing to do with news. Entities that may, at any given time, have literally hundreds of regulatory issues before multiple arms of the government concerning a vast array of business interests.

    These are entities that, as publicly-held and traded corporations, have as their overall, reigning mandate: Provide a return on shareholder value. Increase profits. And not over time, not over the long haul, but quarterly.

    One might ask just where the news fits into this model. And if you really need an answer, you can turn on your television, where you will see the following:

    Political analysis reduced to in-studio shouting matches between partisans armed with little more than the day's talking points.

    Precious time and resources wasted on so-called human-interest stories, celebrity fluff, sensationalist trials, and gossip.

    A proliferation of "news you can use" that amounts to thinly-disguised press releases for the latest consumer products.

    And, though this doesn't get said enough, local news, which is where most Americans get their news, that seems not to change no matter what town or what city you're in... so slavish is its adherence to the "happy talk" formula and the dictum that, "If it bleeds, it leads."

    I could continue for hours, cataloging journalistic sins of which I know you are all too aware. But, as the time grows late, let me say that almost all of these failings come down to this: In the current model of corporate news ownership, the incentive to produce good and valuable news is simply not there.

    Good news, quality news of integrity, requires resources and it requires talent. These things are expensive, these things eat away at the bottom line.

    Years ago, in the eighties and the nineties, when the implications of these cost-trimming measures were becoming impossible to ignore, and the quality of the news was clearly threatened, I spoke out against this cutting of news operations to the bone and beyond. Even then, though, I couldn't have imagined that the cost-cutting imperatives would go as far as they have today - deep into the marrow of what was once considered a public trust.

    But since the financial resources always seem to be available for entertainment, promotion, and - last but not least - for lobbying... perhaps there is an even more important reason why the incentive to produce quality news is absent, and that is: quality news of integrity, by its very nature, is sure to rock the boat now and then. Good, responsible news worthy of its Constitutional protections will, in that famous phrase, afflict the powerful and comfort the afflicted.

    And that, when one feels the need to deliver shareholder value above all, means that good news... may not always mean good business - or so goes the fear, a fear that filters down into just about every big newsroom in this country.

    Now, I have spent my entire life in for-profit news, and I happen to think that it does not have to be this way. I have worked for news owners who, while they may have regarded their news divisions as an occasional irritant, chose to turn that irritant into a pearl of public trust. But today, sadly, it seems that the conglomerates that have control over some of the biggest pieces of this public trust would just as soon spit that irritant out.

    So what does this mean for us tonight, and what is to be done?

    It means that we need to be on the alert for where, when, and how our news media bows to undue government influence. And you need to let news organizations know, in no uncertain terms, that you won't stand for it... that you, as news consumers, are capable of exerting pressure of your own.

    It means that we need to continue to let our government know that, when it comes to media consolidation, enough is enough. Too few voices are dominating, homogenizing, and marginalizing the news. We need to demand that the American people get something in exchange for the use of airwaves that belong, after all, to the people.

    It means that we need to ensure that the Internet, where free speech reigns and where journalism does not have to pass through a corporate filter... remains free.

    We need to say, loud and clear, that we don't want big corporations enjoying preferred access to - or government acting as the gatekeeper for - this unique platform for independent journalism.

    And it means that we need to hold the government to its mandate to protect the freedom of the press, including independent and non-commercial news media.

    The stakes could not possibly be higher. Scott McClellan's book serves as a reminder, and the current election season, not to mention the gathering clouds of conflict with Iran, will both serve as tests of whether lessons have truly been learned from past experience. Ensuring that a free press remains free will require vigilance, and it will require work. Please, take tonight's energy and inspiration home with you. Take it back to your desks and your workplaces, to your colleagues and your fellow citizens. magnify it, multiply it, and spread it. Make it viral. Make it something that cannot be ignored - not by the powers in Washington, not by the owners and executives of media companies. Write these people. Call them. Send them the message that you know your rights, you know that you are entitled to news media as diverse and varied as the American people... and that you deserve a press that provides the raw material of democracy, the good information that Americans need to be full participants in our government of, by, and for the people.

    There is energy here, that can be equal to that task, but this energy must be maintained... if the press - if democracy - is to be preserved.

    Thank you very much, and good night.

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Comments

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Thank you, Dan Rather! I

Thank you, Dan Rather! I hope you keep speaking out! The problem is urgent, and vital to keeping our democracy!

I am heartened to see that

I am heartened to see that Dan has learned from his mistakes, and those made by the rest of the media. Further, I agree that the Net needs to be remain neutral, without gov't or corporate control/manipulation. His comments remind me why TruthOut and other independent sources are so important, especially today.

Thank You Truthout for

Thank You Truthout for bringing this to us. Proof a internet is working and may be the only solution. I also hoped Dan would talk about the twisted election process. On the internet we can separate the news from entertainment.

Good for Dan Rather for

Good for Dan Rather for speaking so eloquently to the heart of the problem: "quality news of integrity starts with an owner who has guts." That is absolutely right. And not the kind of guts that Rupert Murdoch has, either! Not the kind of guts (unmitigated gall, actually) to spew right-wing slanted talking points, spin -doctored analysis, half-witted pundit doubletalk, and outright war-propagating propaganda all over the airwaves and call it NEWS! No! Dan Rather is talking about the kind of guts that will enable a news anchor, division chief - or even network OWNER - to give their HIGHEST PRIORITY and GREATEST ALLEGIANCE to reporting the TRUTH - as backed up by the FACTS! And if it happens to contradict the official government line, so be it. If America is to ever regain the moral high ground in the world, we must demand nothing less. And make no mistake: the future of democracy is hanging precariously in the balance!

Dan, I think you're the

Dan, I think you're the coolest, and if CBS hadn't acted so s-----, we would all be better off. They're one of the greatest offenders, being obsessed with religious nothingness and drunken/drugged-up starlets rather than real news. I'm rooting for you in your case against CBS and I would have written you a letter telling you so if I had known where to send it. And I'm not clever with the computer either which makes it tough. I still have your picture from TIME magazine, Feb. 25, 1980 framed and hanging on the wall in my "office" (pig-stye is more descriptive), as well as your framed letter to me, July 31, 1978. Go, Dan, go!!!

Those of us who work in the

Those of us who work in the media, like Mr Rather, saw this time coming 25 years ago. But no one believed it could ever go this far. I am glad to hear him speak out, and believe like him that we must all continue to demand more from those who provide our "news." More than ever Truthout, and the Internet provide critical contrast and an incentive to return the airwaves to the public interest, and not just corporate huckstering.

Thank you for speaking out!

Thank you for speaking out! We need strong and informed voices like yours to help us in these dangerous times.

RECENTLY, DAN RATHER

RECENTLY, DAN RATHER PROVIDED ANOTHER SUPERB TELEVISION PROGRAM PERTAINING TO OUR TOTALLY INSECURE SYSTEM OF VOTING. THIS WASN'T AIRED ON THE "MAINSTREAM" TELEVISION STATIONS SO THE AUDIENCE WAS LIMITED. HOWEVER, RATHER DEMONSTRATED, IN NO UNCERTAIN TERMS, EXACTLY HOW 'INSECURE' OUR VOTING SYSTEM IS--A TRUTH THAT WAS ESTABLISHED IN THE EIGHTIES WHEN PROFESSOR HOWARD STRAUSS OF PRINCETON UNIV. REPORTED ON THE SUBJECT TO "THE NEW YORK TIMES." STRAUSS, ONE OF THE WORLD'S LEADING COMPUTER THEORETICIANS, CLEARLY DEMONSTRATED THE VULNERABILITY OF THE VOTING APPARATUS CURRENTLY USED IN THE U.S. SO IT SHOULDN'T COME AS A SURPRISE THAT THIS COUNTRY HASN'T HAD AUTHENTIC GOVERNANCE SINCE AT LEAST 1968 WHEN NIXON "DEFEATED" HUBERT HUMPHREY. UNTIL WE AMEND THE U.S. CONSTITUTION TO GUARANTEE EVERY AMERICAN CITIZEN THE RIGHT TO VOTE--AND BACK THAT UP BY ESTABLISHING A SECURE VOTING SYSTEM, WE CAN AND SHOULD EXPECT MORE OF WHAT MR. RATHER HAS DESCRIBED IN HIS SPEECH YESTERDAY.

Thanx Dan ! I cost you

Thanx Dan ! I cost you SOOO much to learn how Independence and Truth can be costly in this society. You have recovered beautifully. We all are please for you !

At least Dan Rather has the

At least Dan Rather has the ethics and conviction to speak out about the outrageous lies and systematic abuses in which reporters and the media have been wholeheartedly involved, in direct detriment to the nation of the United States of America. Now it is time to see if the rest of them have any scruples, or if they are as decrepit as those they protected and supported.

I was there. Naomi Kline

I was there. Naomi Kline gave a far better speech, right after him. She talked about the fact that Barack Obama is a war monger, laid out his plans for troop "redeployment", lack of plan for global warming or for the poor. Points that will NEVER be covered by Air America. Obama, Change indeed. Changing seats on the Titanic.

Yes, thank you Dan! But I'm

Yes, thank you Dan! But I'm wondering...What sorts of laws could we promote at this point to reclaim the public airwaves for the kind of news organizations that our democracy requires? Is anyone clear about specific changes to the law that we should fight for?

Kudos to you Dan. More than

Kudos to you Dan. More than ever , we need to hear the truth . Our freedom is at stake, in fact our little planet is at stake if we don't wake up , stand up, and demand it . The Bush administration has gotten away with murder right before our very eyes . It is shameful that the all mighty buck has more power than our right to hear the truth .

I bet they are sorry they

I bet they are sorry they screwed with Dan Rather now! Go Dan, keep it up. There is nothing they can do to you now.

Note to Mr. Rather:

Note to Mr. Rather: McClellan confessed to aiding and abetting some of history's most notorious war criminals and domestic enemies of our Constitution and Bill of Rights, and also confessed to openly lying to the American people for over three years about said war crimes (not to mention all the other issues he consistently lied about,) facts you do not even mention because... he made some "important points?" How pathetic - McClellan should be in jail awaiting arraignment on multiple counts of treason, not doing the talk show circuit as if he's some sort of innocent victim.

And here it is late

And here it is late afternoon on the day after this call to arms and the comments are sparse. did the audience really hear what was said? or did they prefer not to hear what was said? either answer gives away the importance to Americans in today's world of the Bill of Rights. Pity, we had such a short ride in history as a democracy. What do we call a country ordered about by global businesses looking for instantly increasing bottom lines.

A free press is essential to

A free press is essential to ensuring that the government is accountable for its actions.

Empower free and fair

Empower free and fair media! What is to be done? How can we undo the commercial entanglements that are smothering good journalism? How can we restore the Free Press to its role of Constitutional expectations -- a virtual Fourth Branch of checks and balances? If you could pass a law to revitalize Democracy's media, what would it be? If you could enact a Constitutional Amendment to rescue the press from stifling corporatism, what would it say? I have only just begun to imagine how it might be done, but here's an initial flash: a Tax Holiday for Free and Fair Media. It would have to thought through, and structured such that corporate shills and shock jocks would benefit far less -- or not at all -- but local and regional and diverse newspapers and radio stations and internet sources would out-thrive the hate-speechers. I don't know how else to make it happen, than to give this special function in society some special protection and advantage. (And, pardon my naivety, if the tools are already present and simply merely unenforced by the current administration -- viz. FCC's winking at consolidation, ignoring public-service obligation, etc. -- in which case something is still needed to harden the protection against administration dependence.)

I have admired you for many

I have admired you for many many years. Thank you for speaking out against the propagandist smokescreen that masquerades as news. Your voice is a clear call. yeah. go Dan.

Great speech - I hope it has

Great speech - I hope it has its intended effect on reporters. My only argument is his referring to "news consumers" rather than citizens!

I still think that National

I still think that National Guard document was planted by Rove. Hang in there Dan!

Thanks Dan Rather, we

Thanks Dan Rather, we except your professional image and your contribution to excellent journalism. We are not blaming you for the lack of the news we have gotten for the last 8 years, as we know everything is controlled by Corporations and for Profit only. We know GW BUSH is stupid and couldn't have organized his theft of two elections, and we know it was Corporations owning all the News media that was in collusion with the right wing-nuts that have controlled our fate and the fate of this great country. All we can do now is help change by forcing those people responsible, out of office and make the FCC break up the control of the peoples Airwaves. Lots of heads must roll from now on. I'm really hoping Obama will take the hint and force these changes for the better of this Country.We have been treated like sheep for to long.

I appreciate Truthout

I appreciate Truthout publishing this speech, and have a renewed appreciation for Dan Rather. I also was dismayed at so many of the news media themselves trashing Scott McClellan and not accepting any blame. Think of Phil Donahue questioning and then being swept out BEFORE the Iraq war, even tho his show was hugely popular. The wires also didn't carry much of the kind of questioning reporting that Knight Ridder was publishing, asking troubling questions. Also we must keep the web independent and without gov't or corporate control and manipulation. This becomes free enterprise running roughshod over free press. There needs to be the balance, and who will hold us to that but we ourselves.

Mr. Rather makes several

Mr. Rather makes several good points. Wee need to take heed and fix it now. It isn't just the media. Corporate America doesn't give a rats a-- about a free press. Thats a thing that can hurt it. How do you think it feels about the people it supposedly employs? Our country is allowing itself to be a mere shadow of what it can be for fear of loosing it's job. Sit down shut up and do your work and if you're strong enough to make it through the day we'll allow you to come back tomorrow. Meanwhile, lets see how far we can cut things back. Lets see if there's one more penny that can be wrung from your effort. Mr Rather points out the fear of the corporations in allowing a free press. They have interests too far and too varied now. How do they make up for the fear? They take control of what they fear. It's a shame that so few have said so little. I for one thank God that there are still voices that say "Enough, we need the truth." Let's not stop with the lead up to Iraq. We all know it was a sham and is still only a front for more profiteering. Look forward, see whats on the horizon. Oil, Drugs, Guns...all of you listen. Listen . We want the truth. Thanks for seeking it Dan

Right on Dan! Mass media

Right on Dan! Mass media owned by the few--particularly television and talk radio are going to so delude our democracy that we lose it. A recent poll reported by a reputable source indicated that 2/3rdfof Americana polled, when asked to name the three branches of the Federal government, could not. Many people seem unable to distinguish partisan spokespersons from reliable reporters and further unable to separate factual matter from opinion. The so called presidential debates were demeaning to all the candicates and also the voting public. Let us not forget that Lincoln and Douglas each spoke for two hours, and citizens listened! Keep up the good work.

not impressed

not impressed

Now this is a good speech

Now this is a good speech and a good choice by truthout to put in whole cloth for us, the readers. Thanks! A real service!

Great -- now can we see the

Great -- now can we see the full text of Naomi Klein's speech that followed Dan Rather's? I suspect it's a lot closer to what really ought to be said.

Thanks Dan for THE TRUTH,

Thanks Dan for THE TRUTH, THE WHOLE TRUTH, AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH. That is the basis for judges and jurors to make fair, honest decisions. It should also be the basis for citizens of a democracy to make informed (conservative as well as liberal) voting choices. It is the responsibility of the press to provide that level of truth, and they should be held legally responsible for providing it, and treated as criminals if they spin, twist, or otherwise cheat on giving us these truths.

If the Pentagon attacks Iran

If the Pentagon attacks Iran it will endanger the whole world. It is the last desperate act of a regime that has indugled in lunacy. Many nations are depandent on oil and gas from Iran. Scott Ritter has already reported that the disinformation coming from the White House shows no evidence of designs by Iran to build a nuclear weapon. Oil prices will sky rocket and I believe that is on the agenda of the oil companies. But writing commentary on Truthout is like preaching to the converted. I call and write my senators and congressmen everyday. I sign every petition from the ACLU, to DownsizeDC, you name it. The question is how to reach those who are not one of us?

Great speech. I couldn't

Great speech. I couldn't agree more with Dan. However.... What does the future hold? It seems the the 'blogosphere' is taking over the role of disseminator of investigative reporting. Unfortunately, it is ever more difficult to separate the real from the total BS in this arena. The news delivering mechanisms are evolving and, in the future, Dan Rather's speech may well be viewed as a requiem for the 'old ways' of doing things.

Dan, thank you so very much.

Dan, thank you so very much. We appreciate your immense courage and wisdom.  In our own way, we are working to spread the need of Peace and Love based on Truth. Click into IMAGINEPEACE.com, and you will see that there are so many of us who respect what you stand for. Just know that you are not alone. With love and deep respect, 'Imagine' yoko ono

Solution #1 is to get the

Solution #1 is to get the FCC to give back the airwaves to the American public, and then regulate it honestly and with integrity, the way it could be, and the way it ought to be. Our govt. violated the public trust--and the actual laws of our country--in the way it divvied up the airwaves, which still belong to "we the people" despite what the networks and conglomerates would have you believe. FIND OUT more about these laws so you can organize and function better. ( ANYBODY OUT THERE WHO KNOWS HOW TO POST THIS FCC STUFF SO MORE PEOPLE SEE IT and can use it? I'm technically "challenged"--to say the least) Then, demand that the FCC enforces the "public service" doctrine so that political debate doesn't cost so much that only the rich and connected can access media. That is a huge reason why politics is money-driven and so disgusting and devoid of ethics. If the FCC was enforcing the law, we'd have real news...and we'd have "public service announcements" at times of the day when people are actually awake and able to benefit from the "service". Then, we wouldn't have FOX and their ilk deciding what story or view point we get, depending upon which politician they are backing at the time, to serve their interests. Yes, we need media owners with guts, and we need guys like Dan Rather back in the chair behind the desk, and we need a lot fewer "warm puppy" or gossipy news bites. But more than anything we need the public to take responsibility, learn the laws, keep writing to their local TV channel news directors with a list of names of people who are going to stop watching, and writing to their representatives with similar lists, and demanding that they do their job to take back our airwaves, or they'll be thrown out. You need to show that you are informed and not just nuts, but it takes nothing magical to do that, and you aren't (hopefully) trying to control the news, you are trying to have the laws enforced. Start with your church or work group or start at your local tavern. This is exactly (sans tavern) how the Evangelical right wing nuts took over. Beat them at their own game. If the conglomerates want to play consumerism...let the games begin! Oh ...by the way, "Thanks Dan"... go get 'em, and take no prisoners.

Excellent speech, by a news

Excellent speech, by a news man and reporter who covered events with alacrity and courage over forty years. Spoon fed news is not news; it is indeed provided us with an agenda of providing "eyes" to the advertisers, and to augment the bottom line of the entertainment networks who also provide "news". Keeping the web outlets like Truthout and others (including the so-called conservative sources) free of commercial ownership may be the last bastion of resistance to the spiderweb of for-pofit corporate ownership as piece of the conglomerate of other ventures. Thanks Dan Rather.

Perhaps he couldn't mention

Perhaps he couldn't mention it because his CBS/Viacom lawsuit is still pending, but McClellan's revelations may start to connect a few more dots concerning the controlling hand within the White House that put the kibosh not only on Rather's Texas Air Guard Story, but the Downing Street Memos, VP Cheney being on the DC Madam call list and so much more. Your news is being scrubbed right now and CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN (or FOX) should all be protested and boycotted.

Splendid! Thank you Dan for

Splendid! Thank you Dan for giving a new generation of readers/watchers the confidence of independent thought and for demonstrating the real backbone of news. Despite all of the false tales fed to the citizens of the US by "media" it's most appropriate that we know about how news operated in the past, and how the dissemination of real information so heavily influences our future. A fact we have managed to forget over the past 8 years...

Please, stop praising Mr.

Please, stop praising Mr. Rather, It was he who said at the beginning of this "war" against innocence, that he would, "follow my president and do whatever he asks." Not his exact words perhaps, but close. He never questioned Bush and his criminal administrations' rush to take Iraq and it's oil. Doesn't anyone out there remember his flag waving patriotic diatribes? How easily our public forgets.

Surprised that only 1

Surprised that only 1 comment covered Roves involvement in getting rid of Dan Rather. Praises to that person! Now for the scoop on : The Stacked Supreme Court Justice Debocle, the Installation of Bush by same, (any one seen a receipt?) the Media Hush Up of Bush wearing a Wire during a Debate, the Bush cabinets involvement with Robert Novak & Scooter Libby & friends over that TREASON thing, & his get out of jail free card, the unspoken damage of Gonzo, the selling of Our Country to Big Oil & China, & who has paid for & Will Be PAYING for this? LOL!

While Mr. Rather's argument

While Mr. Rather's argument is 100% valid, he merely glances at a much much larger problem with our national condition, our failing educational system. We can quote statistics about how little the general public knows about our system of government, how improbably misinformed we have become and how gullible we are when served lies, but it isn't entirely a problem with corporate media. The other branch of this phenomena can be found in the government's handling of the obligation to educate its people, and oddly enough, it seems that there is a corporate/government interest in keeping the people stupid. The weaker our people are, the more likely they are to swallow the official story. The short answer: get involved in your local school board, push for higher standards in critical thinking in your own community. And of course report your feelings about "happy face" news reporting to your local affiliates. Many thanks to Dan Rather. May we all pick up the fight.

right on cuz, you speak

right on cuz, you speak whatz up Viva El Frente

I may be 81 but feel there

I may be 81 but feel there are those who stand behind me and agree that the wisdom of age declares a Truth when the 80th birthday arrives - the ability to know right from wrong. I knew it the day I watched the debacle of 9/11 at the moment it happened. And you know what I mean, Dan Rather. You can't say it, you can't print it, and I understand. But the hallowed speech you gave above is filled with that understanding, and as your journalism is pledged to bringing the wisdom of your disseminating the Truth for those who need and depend upon it, I can only say, "Keep up the good work. There's much to be done yet."

Rather is correct about

Rather is correct about fighting media consolidation. As I recall, Obama and several others including Chris Dodd have been trying to get measure through the Senate. But we the people must begin asking for it.

thank you Mr. Dan Rather for

thank you Mr. Dan Rather for finally speaking out against the media morons.The main reason we have journalists and news papers as well as news on the television is to keep the people of this once wonderful and free country informed of the on goings in our government and our country. Now because our government is based on and controlled by big corporations,and those big corporations own the big media groups,they only report what they are told to report,which is nothing more than a bunch of lies.Now,Mr.Rather if you really want to make a difference how about you and Mr. Olberman getting together and starting your own media network and reporting the news the way it should be told.Your words,sir, are very impressive but actions have always spoken louder than words. Respectfully Captainah

Nobody I know reads a local

Nobody I know reads a local or national newspaper because in their opinion and mine that the newspapers aren't relevant to us or our country. Newspapers are all about ads. Several months ago I was invited on online to reply to questions about how that newspaper could be a better one. People are hungry in the street and without a hope of living wage jobs that will support families however the Az Republic rolls on with their protect the rich theology.

O.K. Dan...great speech...is

O.K. Dan...great speech...is this a one shot blast, or will you follow up and make an effort to be heard in the media...on air...etc? What will you do to keep the energy flowing?

The internet is the simplest

The internet is the simplest and perhaps only answer to this conundrum. Since only a few of us have the honor of being "Nielson Families" its always unclear how many people actually watch the tv news anymore, or which channels. I mean its not like a movie channel where you have to pay extra for it. But I digress. Internet access as a national right could be the answer. [Obviously not everyone can afford a computer, but knowing you'd have free access would certainly be an incentive to get one somehow.] This infotainment news you get on television is useless. And if the people that run it won't give us the truth, we should look elsewhere for it. This is not a system that can be toppled easily, but perhaps, with time, it can be starved to death. Though there is one exception, strange as it seems... The Daily Show and The Colbert Report on Comedy Central. Their approach to the news could be called Medieval. Since one of a court jesters callings was to say outrageous things before the king and court that everyone else was afraid to utter aloud.

Mr. Rather projects himself

Mr. Rather projects himself as the guardian of truth and honestly in an American free press, however his memory is somewhat afflicted. Dan Rather was the first, and only journalist for the first 15 years after the assassination, to view the Zapruder film of the Kennedy assassination. He described the president's fatal head shot as his head "went forward with considerable violence." This remained the only journalistic "truth" until Geraldo Rivera aired the film on television on March 6, 1975. At that time, caught with his pants down, Rather described his erroneous distortion of American history as "an honest error.". I challenge anyone to view Zapruder's film on You Tube and decide for yourself if Rather is honest or was in error In my opinion this makes him complicit in the assassination of a U.S. president and an accessory after the fact. What do you think?

Dissemination of thoughtful

Dissemination of thoughtful truth is the problem presented in Mr. Rather's well presented remarks. It is also the problem in getting this particular speech out to the citizenry. With the "media" focused on their own hide, the Internet becomes the primary source of hard news and comment for most of us. I came to this page from StumbleUpon. Without this random happenstance I doubt that I would have ever been exposed to these insightful and stirring words. I will forward this page to others. What will you do?

Better late than never :

Better late than never : after the Washington Post, the New York Times and others, Dan Rather is finally doing his mea culpa (of sorts) after being such a flag-waving "patriot" at the start of the Iraqui invasion. Perhaps the 'divide and conquer' tactics the Bushies used to control the 'press' will no longer work and the ones who bring the ( oftentimes only...) news to people across the U.S. will use their responsabilities a little more judiciously and critically. Nice speech though and refreshing to see that pride does not prevent one from recognizing past errances. Hope still flourishes!Genklag

We need to pass laws that

We need to pass laws that require the corporations that own the newspapers, tv stations and radio stations to sell them to INDIVIDUAL owners. No cross ownership of any of the entities in any city to ensure diversity of news in each city. There should also be restrictions on ownership between cities, for example, limit ownership to 3 or 4 separate media outlets total in different cities so they have some economies of scale but do not control a large chunk of the news available to the country overall. Having many independent and diverse sources of news across the country NOT controlled by corporations would foster competition between the media outlets to actually investigate and report REAL news. Everyone should write their Congresspeople demanding that we re-establish a true FREE PRESS in this country.

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