Opinion

Is the Fourth Estate a Fifth Column?

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by: Bill Moyers, In These Times

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Bill Moyers. (Photo: Peter Krogh / AP)

Corporate media colludes with democracy's demise.

    I heard this story a long time ago, growing up in Choctaw County in Oklahoma before my family moved to Texas. A tribal elder was telling his grandson about the battle the old man was waging within himself. He said, "It is between two wolves, my son. One is an evil wolf: anger, envy, sorrow, greed, self-pity, guilt, resentment, lies, false pride, superiority and ego. The other is the good wolf: joy, peace, love, hope, serenity, humility, empathy, generosity, truth, compassion and faith."

    The boy took this in for a few minutes and then asked his grandfather, "Which wolf won?"

    The old Cherokee replied simply, "The one I feed."

    Democracy is that way. The wolf that wins is the one we feed. And in our society, media provides the fodder.

    Our media institutions, deeply embedded in the power structures of society, are not providing the information that we need to make our democracy work. To put it another way, corporate media consolidation is a corrosive social force. It robs people of their voice in public affairs and pollutes the political culture. And it turns the debates about profound issues into a shouting match of polarized views promulgated by partisan apologists who trivialize democracy while refusing to speak the truth about how our country is being plundered.

    Our dominant media are ultimately accountable only to corporate boards whose mission is not life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness for the whole body of our republic, but the aggrandizement of corporate executives and shareholders.

    These organizations' self-styled mandate is not to hold public and private power accountable, but to aggregate their interlocking interests. Their reward is not to help fulfill the social compact embodied in the notion of "We, the people," but to manufacture news and information as profitable consumer commodities.

    Democracy without honest information creates the illusion of popular consent at the same time that it enhances the power of the state and the privileged interests that the state protects. And nothing characterizes corporate media today more than its disdain toward the fragile nature of modern life and its indifference toward the complex social debate required of a free and self-governing people.

    Let's look at what is happening with the Internet. This spring the cable giant Comcast tried to pack a Federal Communications Commission (FCC) hearing on network neutrality by hiring strangers off the street to ensure that advocates of net neutrality would not be able to get a seat in the hearing room.

    SaveTheInternet.com - a bipartisan coalition - and its supporters helped expose the ruse. Soon after, there was a new hearing, this time without the gerrymandering seating by opponents of an open Internet.

    Now Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) has introduced a bill to advance network neutrality, and it has become an issue in the presidential campaign.

    We must be vigilant. The fate of the cyber-commons - the future of the mobile Web and the benefits of the Internet as open architecture - is up for grabs. And the only antidote to the power of organized money in Washington is the power of organized people at the net roots.

    When Verizon tried to censor NARAL's (National Abortion Rights Action League) use of text messaging last year, it was quick action by Save the Internet that led the company to reverse its position. Those efforts also led to an FCC proceeding on this issue.

    Wherever the Internet flows - on PCs, cell phones, mobile devices and, very soon, new digital television sets - we must ensure that it remains an open and nondiscriminatory medium of expression.

    By 2011, the market analysts tell us, the Internet will surpass newspapers in advertising revenues. With MySpace and Dow Jones controlled by News Corporation's Rupert Murdoch, Microsoft determined to acquire Yahoo!, and with advertisers already telling some bloggers, "Your content is unacceptable," we could potentially lose what's now considered an unstoppable long tail of content offering abundant, new, credible and sustainable sources of news and information.

    So, what will happen to news in the future, as the already tattered boundaries between journalism and advertising is dispensed with entirely and as content programming, commerce and online communities are rolled into one profitably attractive package?

    Last year, the investment firm of Piper Jaffray predicted that much of the business model for new media would be just that kind of hybrid. They called it "communitainment." (Oh, George Orwell, where are you now that we need you?)

    Across the media landscape, the health of our democracy is imperiled. Buffeted by gale force winds of technological, political and demographic forces, without a truly free and independent press, this 250-year-old experiment in self-government will not make it. As journalism goes, so goes democracy.

    Mergers and buyouts change both old and new media. They bring a frenzied focus on cost-cutting, while fattening the pockets of the new owners and their investors. The result: journalism is degraded through the layoffs and buyouts of legions of reporters and editors.

    Advertising Age reports that U.S. media employment has fallen to a 15-year low. The Los Angeles Times alone has experienced a withering series of resignations by editors who refused to turn a red pencil into an editorial scalpel.

    The new owner of the Tribune Company, real estate mogul Sam Zell, recently toured his new property Los Angeles Times, telling employees in the newsroom that the challenge is this: How do we get somebody 126 years old to get it up? "Well," said Zell, "I'm your Viagra."

    He told his journalists that he didn't have an editorial agenda or a perspective about newspapers' roles as civic institutions. "I'm a businessman," he said. "All what matters in the end is the bottom line."

    Zell then told Wall Street analysts that to save money he intends to eliminate 500 pages of news a week across all of the Tribune Company's 12 papers. That can mean eliminating some 82 editorial pages every week just from the Los Angeles Times. What will he use to replace reporters and editors? He says to the Wall Street analysts, "I'll use maps, graphics, lists, rankings and stats." Sounds as if Zell has confused Viagra with Lunesta.

    Former Baltimore Sun journalist and creator of HBO's The Wire, David Simon, chronicled the effect that crosscutting and consolidation has had in media businesses and on the communities where those businesses have made so much money. He wrote in a Washington Post op-ed, "I did not encounter a sustained period in which anyone endeavored to spend what it would actually cost to make the Baltimore Sun the most essential and deep-thinking and well-written account of life in central Maryland. The people you needed to gather for that kind of storytelling were ushered out the door, buyout after buyout."

    Or as journalist Eric Alterman recently wrote in the New Yorker: "It is impossible not to wonder what will become of not just news but democracy itself, in a world in which we can no longer depend on newspapers to invest their unmatched resources and professional pride in helping the rest of us to learn, however imperfectly, what we need to know."

    For example, we needed to know the truth about Iraq. The truth could have spared that country from rack and ruin, saved thousands of American lives and hundreds of thousands of Iraqi lives, and freed hundreds of billions of dollars for investment in the American economy and infrastructure.

    But as reporters at Knight Ridder - one of the few organizations that systematically and independently set out to challenge the claims of the administration - told us at the time, and as my colleagues and I reported in our PBS documentary Buying the War, and as Scott McClellan has now confessed, and as the Senate Intelligence Committee confirmed in June, the Bush administration deceived Americans into supporting an unprovoked war on another country. And it did so using erroneous and misleading intelligence - and with the complicity of the dominant media. It has led to a conflict that, instead of being over quickly and bloodlessly as predicted, continues to this day into its sixth year.

    We now know that a neoconservative is an arsonist who sets a house on fire and six years later boasts that no one can put it out. You couldn't find a more revealing measure of the state of the dominant media today than the continuing ubiquitous presence on the air and in print of the very pundits and experts, self-selected message multipliers of a disastrous foreign policy, who got it all wrong in the first place. It just goes to show, when the bar is low enough, you can never be too wrong.

    The dominant media remains in denial about their role in passing on the government's unverified claims as facts. That's the great danger. It's not simply that they dominate the story we tell ourselves publicly every day. It's that they don't allow other alternative competing narratives to emerge, against which the people could measure the veracity of all the claims.

    Now the dominant media is saying, "Well, we did ask. We did do our job by asking tough questions during the run-up to the war."

    But I've been through the transcripts. And I'll tell you, you will find very few tough questions. And if you come across them, you will discover that they were asked of the wrong people.

    John Walcott, Washington bureau chief for McClatchy, formerly Knight Ridder, recently said of his colleagues in the dominant media, "They asked a lot of questions, but they asked even the right questions of the wrong people." They were asked of the sources who had cooked the intelligence books in the first place or who had memorized the White House talking points and were prepared to answer every tough question with a soft evasion or an easy lie, swallowed by a gullible questioner.

    Following the March 2003 invasion, Vice President Dick Cheney dropped into a media dinner to thank the guests for their all-the-war-all-the-time coverage of the contrived and manufactured war.

    Sadly, in many respects, the Fourth Estate has become the fifth column of democracy, colluding with the powers that be in a culture of deception that subverts the thing most necessary to freedom, and that is the truth.

    But we're not alone and we know what we need to say. So let us all go tell it on the mountains and in the cities. From our websites and laptops, the street corners and coffeehouses, the delis and diners, the factory floors and the bookstores. On campus, at the mall, the synagogue, sanctuary and mosque, let's tell it where we can, when we can and while we still can.

    Democracy only works when ordinary people claim it as their own.

    --------

    This article was adapted from Bill Moyers' keynote address at the National Conference for Media Reform Conference in Minneapolis on June 7. You can read and respond to the full speech at http://www.pbs.org/moyers.

    Bill Moyers is the president of the Schumann Center for Media and Democracy and the host of Bill Moyers Journal on PBS.

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Comments

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Unfortunately, this is

Unfortunately, this is not news. The consolidation of business in the USA and the rest of the world has been going on for a long time. The needs and interests of globalizers have been paramount for a long time. And, people have been stupid, lazy, uninformed and gullible for longer than there has been a USA. I fear the future. I truly do.

America will stand idle. Our

America will stand idle. Our standard of living is too great now. We all feel like we have too much to lose to run off and become a revolutionary. We'd have to give up our whole 'lives' and live off the grid to really have enough maneuverability to make a difference. (Alternatively we could all organize and protest simultaneously, but that's not likely.) Revolution will come only when the grid goes down and we are all forced to care for ourselves again. Most of us don't know how to do that, and there will be chaos, but it is necessary. One step back to take two forward. There is no denying it: to correct the mistakes of our fathers, America as we know it will have to fall. I guess that's the whole point of a revolution though, huh? Let's start preparing for living in the 19th century while we still can. Anybody know how to field dress a deer?

thank you mr. moyers. thank

thank you mr. moyers. thank you for being one of the few voices of hope in a country spiraling downward into insanity.

I do agree that the media

I do agree that the media are a big part of the problem, but I do not think that the corporatization of the media is the primary cause. In a society where the battle for dominance is fought in terms of ideas, the communications media immediately becomes the battleground. And battlegrounds are messy and ultimately unattractive. Is it any wonder that celebrity antics are a preferred spectacle? Unfortunately, the results of the media war ultimately get played out upon the bodies of unsuspecting innocent, from unwanted children to uninformed tribesmen and disempowered minorities everywhere. And so what happens in the media really does matter, and those who speak in public should consider that responsibility and privilege very carefully - especially since victory in the realm of ideas is not measured in dollars or body-bags but in the size and resilience of a community consensus. Perhaps a renaissance of truly local news is the only hope for a reversal of the fragmenting of our world-view, I just worry deeply about the damage to our world that will occur before we sort out the consensus-building machinery of our communincations media.

The post at 02:39 expresses

The post at 02:39 expresses an illusion that is widely held by professionals - and until recently b myself - that "the New York Times still prints most of the important news...". Sorry my friend, not so. I am finding that the media is regularly killing important stories, and when the networks and Murdoch's papers agree on silencing a story, without exception I have found that the Times (and NPR!) do too! Check it out. Use news.google.com or news.yahoo.com to search for their coverage of House Continuing Resolution 362 calling for a blockade of Iran! (One example of many!)............ To those who have pointed out how vulnerable the Internet is, you're absolutely right. The Internet is a commons only so long as the people defend it. Defend it we must, vigorously, but we must not neglect developing our ability to get the news out in our own communities on paper. ............ And losing Yahoo to Microsoft (or Murdoch) will be a grievous loss. We need to take stock of what it does for us and how we can replace it, since I see no way we can defend it....................Finally, Truthout Editors: eliminating "paragraphination" makes long posts unreadable. Please re-think.

As a European, I applaud Mr.

As a European, I applaud Mr. Moyers' analysis - also very valid, with many of the same culprits, on this side of the Atlantic. A recent particularly poignant example is the role of the "British press", much of it part of the Murdoch empire, in turning round a probable "yes" in the Irish referendum on the European Union's Lisbon Treaty (Ireland has seen untold development and prosperity since joining the EU) into a "no", scuppering for the time being enhanced representation of the people of the EU in the "Brussels" scapegoat and particularly the European Parliament (thereby failing to lessen the so-called "democratic deficit" of which "Brussels" is accused, and which was used as an argument in the "no" campaign - what a paradox!), and scuppering also the means to enhance the means to coordinate the efforts of 27 countries to pull together in harmony. I shall not however bore you with all the other lies and inuendo of that campaign, gallons of ink and key-tapping have been expended on them, but it is yet another example also of the ineptness and blindness of some of our leaders in not realising the extent of the threat nor reacting to it with sufficient skill and timeliness.

Someone please ask Mr.

Someone please ask Mr. Moyers when the U.S. media ever thwarted a war? When did the Fourth Estate ever deflect the intentions of the U.S. Government on any issue or event of the magnitude of a war? When have the major forces of the U.S. media not been in the hands of the economically potent? Is Murdoch any more or less a self-serving materialist than a Hearst or a Pulitzer or a McCormack?

First order of business:

First order of business: revoke Rupert Murdoch's honorary citizenship (bestowed upon him by Reagan and the Republican Criminal Organization so he could set up a right wing propaganda network in this country) and deport him and his entire organization out of the country, sell his assets to local newspapers, community TV and radio outlets, and newly chartered media entities operating under a revised Fairness Doctrine. Prosecute Clear Channel and jail drug addict fascist propagandist Rush Limbaugh. Investigate, prosecute, try and jail the Republican Criminal Organization under the RICO act. War crime trials fo Bush, Cheney, Rice, Rumsfeld et al. And don't forget: Republicans are scum.

It would seem from your

It would seem from your article that the only course open to a consolidating media is the approach it has taken to muzzle the democratic tendencies of the internet.A second alternative may become available when the first fails: a return to the kind of reporting you suggest as the salvation of print media. I fear we may have a bit of a wait.

We need to force the

We need to force the Networks and Local Television stations to make their PUBLIC FILE publicly available ONLINE. We need to bombard the FCC with complaints about the fascist corporate media not being in the public interest. We need to protest at the Network's Good Day / Rockafella's Plaza and at their stations. But NOT protest in Washington DC, where they have created "free speech zones" and arrest, torture and lock protesters up and they are well organized. We need to promote, support and provide content to Public Access TV, and Radio (PEG programming) and even provide content ourselves. We need to stop the constant assault on Net Neutrality, Data caps, and all these stupid laws that squish the small guy on the web providing alternative content, and voices. Just like the alarm bell has finally rung on the bank insolvency, mortgage failure crisis (because of the Senate's lack of action), it over now, it's time for action, not more of the same. The FDIC only has $50 billion, and more banks are insolvent, YOU DO THE MATH! And finally, the electronic voting machines that use electronic vote tabulation devices MUST go!

Thank you... and just an

Thank you... and just an example of MSM being pundits and not journalists... http://www.dailykos.com/story/2008/7/12/234210/510/465/549726

"Perhaps the chance for

"Perhaps the chance for democracy in America has come and gone." Anonomous has got it dead on except for the ONE LAST CHANCE NAMED BARACK OBAMA. Thank you Bill Moyers for explaining why the media backs the status quo and does not allow for any real dialogue because all the stories are about car crashes and lurid as you can get sex scandals. I could not have explained it as well as you have. We need you to get to the right wing talk show audience who have not had an original thought for 60 years. They are really stuck on more oil drilling in pristine areas of America. They use this ruse to take attention away from all their enormous faiures in foreign policy and economic savvy. Will it work? "I hope that the way they lied and all those corny tricks they tried will not forstall the rising tide of"1 Obama supporters. Mothers Unite! 1Zappa!

I love and respect Bill

I love and respect Bill Moyers but really . . . why is there a question mark at the end of the lede? Frankly, the 4th Estate isn't a 5th Column -- it's part of the Military/Industrial/Infotainment Complex that owns and runs the government. The mainstream media wasn't fooled by the Administration into disseminating lies back in 2003 -- it was a conscious, willing and active participant in that propaganda campaign and it still is. So many ask, "how could the media have gotten it so wrong?" The answer is simple: "because they wanted to." Democracy in America died right about the time Paddy Chayefsky was showing us "Network." It's only now that we're becoming aware of the stink off the corpse.

Moyers '08

Moyers '08

It is hard to get upset at

It is hard to get upset at the "commercializing" of the internet. That is what this latest "censure" is, just another news-outlet being corrupted by advertisers. Ben Franklin warned that if readers did not pay the full cost of their newspaper, it would fall into corporate hands and cease to be of any use. The internet began life as a government entity... anyone who actually believes this medium will somehow lead us to freedom has been P.T.Barnumed.

Moyer's article, "Is the

Moyer's article, "Is the Fourth Estate a Fifth Column?" is a breath of fresh air in a cigar smoke filled room.

Since we're quoting

Since we're quoting Jefferson, "the price of freedom is eternal vigilance" comes to mind. He was right. Any news outlet that has a wide reach and impacts a large number of people is by definition a part of "the establishment". The price of freedom must be paid by the individual. Keep your eyes open, see what's going on and make up you own mind. The establishment, naturally, does not seek to de-establish itself.

After carefully reading the

After carefully reading the following: If we're going to hold media accountable - Name names !! Sun, 07/13/2008 - 03:48 — Chris Aable I agree wholeheartedly - Name Names. I've got three for starters: Michelle Malkin, Ann Coulter and the place that has given them voice, loud clear and often: Fox "news". "Fair and balanced" ? Neither.

Have a read, Khalo

Have a read, Khalo

Perhaps the chance for

Perhaps the chance for democracy has come and gone in America. We seem to care much more about increasing fuel, food, and medical-care prices. We want to be sure we can sustain our standard of living through our retirement years. And we'll kiss the establishment's ass to achieve this security. Maybe the only way to ensure democracy is to risk life and financial security. Few among us seem willing.

The answers to lawlessone's

The answers to lawlessone's questions are in Mr. A. Sharon's "salami tactic".

Boston,New York,

Boston,New York, Philadelphia, Washington DC, Detroit, Chicago, LA and San Francisco are probably the most lucrative media markets in the country. They are also among the most Progressive communities in the country. Therefor it can only be from lack of will or awareness that they have not challenged the continued licensing of NBC, CBS, ABC, Fox and some Clearchannel Radio Stations over air broadcast stations. If the sleeping giant wakes and inundates the FCC with requests to deny continuing licenses Wall Street and the media will take notice and begin to change.

If we're going to hold

If we're going to hold corporate media accountable for it's distortions, lies and spins, then we have to name names and expose their lies. We can point the finger at CNN, MSNBC, ABC, etc. all we want, but all of them combined are not half the match to Fox s0-called "news" as the most blatant propagandist in the history of radio and television. The Fox daily lie of "fair and balanced" is asserted almost hourly every day. If they weren't, we wouldn't see so many self-reported "Republicans" and "conservatives" defending Fox, even when Fox's lies are unequivocal. The fact alone that Fox has hired Nixon's Roger Ailes as its manager, wh9 in turn hired Oliver North and Bush's Karl Rove while Bush hired Fox's Tony Snow is plenty of evidence that Fox remains, unfair, imbalanced and unashamed. Then there is the fact that Fox's conservative moderators outnumber their so-called "liberal" moderators by a factor of ten to one - Brit Hume, Bill O'Reilly, Sean Hannity, Steve Doocey, E.D. Hill, etc., etc. CNN with Lou Dobbs , Glenn Beck, etc. and MSNBC with Joe Scarborough, Tucker Carlson, Par Buchanan, etc., cannot even come close to the Republican bias and partisanship displayed on Fox "news" daily. Even when we factor in one of their few moderators against the failed policies of George Bush - Keith Olbermann, we still find that Oblermann has never lied that he is "fair and balance". It is sad commentary that it will come as a surprise to those at Fox that no one is perfectly fiar nor balanced as we all have a degree of bias, but at least most commentators on the other channels don't lie that they are. The Fox moderators are shameless about their bias, and bring on their favorite "news experts" who are often on the extreme right; Ann Coulter, Newt Gingrich, Bill Bennett, Michelle Malkin, etc., most of whom appear not just a few times per month, but hundreds of times in the last five years alone. The liberal guests they do have are often shouted down by the likes of Sean Hannity and Bill O'Reilly, who lies every week when he states he will "give them the last word" but then more often than not puts in the last word himself or has a conservative on the next day to defend himself. Bill O'Reilly's biggest and most harmful lie was in 2003, when he stated that the Iraq War was going to be a "cake walk", instilling false hope and deadly confidence in soldiers and their parents. . Anyone with an elementary understanding of the hundreds of years of history of sectarian violence in Iraq knew much better. Then there was the matter of Bill O'Reilly's sexual harassment of Andrea Mackris. O'Reilly lied to the world when he stated he would fight her lies to the end - until O'Reilly found out that she had taped his perverted phone calls. The next day, he announced on the Factor that it had all been settled and that he "will never talk about this again." Hardly a "fight to the end" when he and Fox settled for $10 million out of court. Yet, we don't hear much about this on the "news" and we don't have many people naming names. The so-called "news" media has not only lowered the bar on journalistic ethics and standards, but so has much of the public who consumes it. So as Moyers wisely notes: "......let's tell it where we can, when we can and while we still can". To that I would only add: Name names like Bill O'Reilly and quote their lies of "fair and balance" and "cake walk" in their own words. Perhaps that will be the only way the above moderators I've listed will finally be shamed into being half as "fair and balanced" as they have lied about for over 10 years now. Until then, many at Fox "news" subscribe to being "unfair, imbalanced and unashamed." To that I would only add: Name names. Perhaps that will be the only way the above moderators I've listed will finally be shamed into being half as "fair and balanced" as they have lied about for over 10 years now. Until then, many at Fox "news" subscribe to being unfair, imbalanced and unashamed.

I've been a teacher for a

I've been a teacher for a long time. My file of writings by people who believe what Bill Moyers has come to believe, and who can think and write well, is a good deal longer lately thanks to the internet. So is my cache of documentary film. The New York Times still prints most of the important news, though they sat on warrantless wiretaps until after the 2004 election and are now ignoring impeachment resolutions. As for broadcast news I only watch it now to monitor what the ruling class wants to teach my students so that I can get in their way. I concede that they have the production budget, but I believe I can offer the truth. Back in 1983 I even published a book on the rise and fall of republics in history (The End of Kings). I can hope that my wolf wins, but I'm getting on and must not hope to live to see it.

...correcting my run-on

...correcting my run-on sentence above (can't write in a comment box)-- "Given the intense consolidation of media since the mid-70s and the US government's police-state panic over anti-war protests and dissenting organizations during the Vietnam War, it is reasonable to assume that CIA control of mainstream media is much stronger than it was 35 years ago so as to 'prevent the 60s from happening again' and especially allow the government to wage war despite the wishes of the American people./ ...One of the tasks delegated to Oliver North during the Reagan years was redesigning the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to protect the US government from its own citizens with plans to suspend the US Constitution and put thousands of people in detention camps during a national emergency defined as 'mass dissent during time of war.' "

And the propaganda from the

And the propaganda from the right continues, altothether too successful, that the mainstream media is "liberal" rather than controlled by corporate profits in bed with politicians and visa versa. If this is not yet a fascist state, it is dangerously close. Thank you, Bill Moyers, for having the courage to speak truth to power. Let us hope the American people can summon such courage for themselves--while it still might make a meaningful difference.

It might be worthwhile to

It might be worthwhile to review two of Jefferson's comments on the press that are still so relevant: "I deplore... the putrid state into which our newspapers have passed and the malignity, the vulgarity, and mendacious spirit of those who write for them... These ordures are rapidly depraving the public taste and lessening its relish for sound food. As vehicles of information and a curb on our functionaries, they have rendered themselves useless by forfeiting all title to belief... This has, in a great degree, been produced by the violence and malignity of party spirit." --Thomas Jefferson to Walter Jones, 1814. ME 14:46 But he also wrote: "The basis of our governments being the opinion of the people, the very first object should be to keep that right; and were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter. But I should mean that every man should receive those papers and be capable of reading them." --Thomas Jefferson to Edward Carrington, 1787. ME 6:57 Thank you, Bill Moyers, for your work to preserve our democracy.

Thank you for your words

Thank you for your words and insights, Mr. Moyer. We have another ongoing battle of the press in another land. M3 vs Gahbra Valley, Ireland. If there is a good investigative reporter willing, we sure could use you. Hilloftara@yahoo.com

If we don't remember what we

If we don't remember what we have learned in the past about how the CIA and Pentagon use media, they will keep getting away with it. There's a black-out on the topic of CIA influence and control of what we call mainstream media. A 1976 Senate committee investigation of CIA abuses such as coups and assassinations also got out of DCI William Colby that hundreds of journos were CIA assets or even agents including people at the highest 'decider' levels like editors and publishers. Former CBS News president, Sig Mickleson, admitted in Allan Frankovich's 1980 documentary about the CIA that when he was hired by CBS there was already a working relationship between the network and CIA and he maintained it in his own tenure. The WWII-era overt complicity of media moguls with the US government cooperating with the new propaganda beaurocracy called the Office of War Information... had morphed into a covert propaganda network of Cold War opinion-shapers orchestrated by the CIA and the 1951 Psychological Strategy Board. This 1976 Senate committee expose of a massive propaganda machine unknown to Americans being used to run the country was suppressed in the Church Committee's Final Report by new CIA director, George H.W. Bush, but leaked to Carl Bernstein (of Watergate reporting fame) who wrote it up in his 10/20/77 Rolling Stone article called 'The CIA and the Media.' The article is finally on Bernstein's own website, CarlBernstein.com. Given the intense consolidation of media since the mid-70s and the US government's police-state panic over anti-war protests and dissenting organizations during the Vietnam War, it is reasonable to assume that CIA control of mainstream media is much stronger than it was 35 years ago to 'prevent the 60s' from happening again and allow wars to be waged despite the wishes of the American people, one of the tasks delegated to Oliver North during the Reagan years when North helped FEMA be redesigned to protect the US government from its own citizens with plans to suspend the US Constitution during national emergency and put thousands of people in detention camps. This tightly contolled CIA/corporate propaganda system has censored out information that might alert and outrage the public over war crimes, stolen elections, looting of the treasury, wanton poisoning of the planet...all of which might interfere with military recruiting for a permanent oil war. It is long past time for Americans to learn that long ago their airwaves were stolen from them by agencies in the US government which treat them as the enemy to be contained and controlled.

Quotes from George Orwell's

Quotes from George Orwell's 1984 - 'Who controls the past controls the future: who controls the present controls the past.'" —pg 32 "Until the become conscious they will never rebel, and until after they they have rebelled they cannot become conscious." —pg 61 "If the Party could thrust its hand into the past and say this or that even, it never happened—that, surely, was more terrifying than mere torture and death." —pg 32 ========================================= In times of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act. - George Orwell

Bill Moyers' "Is the Forth

Bill Moyers' "Is the Forth Estate a Fifth Column?" is a most felicitous description of the US commercial press. As in the traditional fifth- column concept, the US commercial press, disguised as a noble partner, has infiltrated US democracy so it can destroy the democracy from within.

It is so for several

It is so for several reasons. First because the media, (which should be nationalized and given over to the major universities), is owned by Corporations: The Military, Medical Industrial Complex. They own media either directly, (or indirectly through massive stock ownership). Second because they hire as "Journalists" by personality type and academic background. They seek out passive, controllable personalities, Careerists who lack ethics and courage whose goals are materialistic and who favor authoritarian structures. And finally because the people they hire mostly come from families which lean to the right. Intellectualism and independent thinking is not a part of the job description. By the way, I am glad you ignored the uptight, which did not want to have letters to editors. I stopped subscribing because of that conservative attitude.

Now it seems to me, a red

Now it seems to me, a red neck with leftist tendencies, that our fear and disdain for government is all upside down ... it is government who should fear us ... and I suppose they do ... enough to have converted as ole Bill says, the 4th estate into the fifth column. But they also converted the word liberal into a cuss word ... and atheist into anathema. Therefore, what this country needs are some good old fashioned socialists and atheists to kick down the walls that prevent dialog. All consideration to brother Bill, but ain't you part of the PBS gang, aka Pentagon Broadcasting System? You and that ex-marine Jim Lehrer talk a good line but I don't actually see either of you doin' squat! Just a thought. Sorta ... Faddy

Thank you, Bill Moyers.

Thank you, Bill Moyers. This is the kind of insightful, sobering analysis so sorely lacking in what passes for journalism (the so-called MSM) in this country.

While we're on the subject,

While we're on the subject, and not to undermine the prose above,...But, does anyone have any of Mr. Moyer's fiery speeches from around, say...oh...late 2003..? Or even 2004...? You know, the ones that called for the impeachment of Mr. Bush and Mr Cheney for what were clear crimes and abuse of power...? I can't seem to find any, or recall seeing or hearing of any... Perhaps someone has a link to an archive we can all visit...eh?

The situation of which Mr.

The situation of which Mr. Moyers speaks has been evident for many years now. Yet, little happens except a perpetual worsening. Why isn't there the fully justifiable outrage there should be? Did we lose the battle decades before in the schools and colleges where reverence for democratic concepts should be created and inpired? It is not just that democracy has been hijacked. It is that few seem to care anymore. While Mr. Moyers points out a tiny handful of successes, I am reminded of the sad slogan long recognized in the environmental and historic preservation battles we have been fighting as well: "Every victory is temporary. Every defeat is permanent." Yet, fight on we must for the alternative is truly frightening.

careful...they might

careful...they might blacklist you if you say this too loudly

Thank you, Mr. Moyers, for

Thank you, Mr. Moyers, for being a light in dark times. Personally, I simply avoid 'big news' and read a variety of sources from around the world. The people still have the power if they choose to exercise it.

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