Truthout Original

Media Reformers: It's the Economy!!

by: Michael Winship, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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FCC Commissioner Michael Copps speaking at the National Conference on Media Reform (NCMR). Michael Winship observed at the 2008 NMCR an absence of dialogue about the widening economic inequalities in the US. (Photo: Flickr / NCMR2007)

    Last weekend's National Conference on Media Reform in Minneapolis was a freewheeling, articulate, committed gathering of activists, policy wonks and everyday citizens dedicated to the idea that there can be no real democracy without a media democracy - independent reporting from diverse communities free of the interference and spin of government and big business. Perhaps, nowhere else can you witness an FCC commissioner like Michael Copps get a rock-star-like standing ovation worthy of Mick Jagger, or hear the words, "Common carrier rules are hot!"

    Some 3,500 assembled to participate in panels and hear a range of speakers that included my colleague Bill Moyers, Senator Byron Dorgan, Center for Internet and Society founder Lawrence Lessig, Naomi Klein, Louise Erdrich and Dan Rather. Participants grappled with mobilizing grass roots movements around such hot-button issues as continuing big media consolidation and net neutrality - the latter two words perhaps more elegantly phrased as "Internet freedom" - keeping cyberspace open and accessible to all, regardless of income. As Moyers has pointed out, neutrality sounds too much like Switzerland, and as my colleague Patric Verrone, president of the Writers Guild, West, says, the notion of fighting for neutrality seems oxymoronic. So, "Internet freedom" it is.

    Marty Kaplan, director of the University of Southern California's Norman Lear Center, told those gathered they were a crowd that "may not color inside the lines but sure can connect the dots." Yet, as perceptive and informed as attendees were, sadly absent from the weekend's energetic dialogues was any significant discussion of this country's economy, the vast gap between rich and poor, the way gross inequality in such desperate times is being largely ignored by the media, our candidates and the progressive movement.

    "The economic crisis is just not that compelling or sexy to the many progressives who are stirred into action by every ugly utterance by Bill O'Reilly," media activist and journalist Danny Schecter writes. "... Cheering on political personalities or mounting one more issue oriented e-mail campaign is certainly easier than confronting the economic and power imbalances caused by the structural conflicts in our economy."

    Schecter goes on to quote an executive with the Cincinnati-based Fifth Third Bank, who describes our current situation as, "A CRISIS OF BIBLICAL PROPORTIONS." The exec elaborates: "I'm not talking New Testament biblical; I'm talking Old Testament hellfire and brimstone. This is the worst credit crisis we've ever seen."

    Thirty-six and a half million Americans - one in eight Americans, one in six children - that we KNOW of, because there are no good ways to really measure - live below the official federal poverty level, $20,000 a year for a family of four. Half of us - half! - will have gone through a year or more of poverty by the time we turn 60.

    In contrast, behold the woeful case of Alan Schwartz, former CEO of the now defunct investment bank Bear Stearns. As that company nosedived last year, with subprime mortgage hedge funds crashing in flames, Schwartz relinquished his usual annual bonus, which meant his total compensation for 2007 and the prior four years was a piddling $141 million. Poor guy had to rent out his 7,800 square-foot house in the New York suburbs and squat at his new, $28 million Manhattan apartment; his seven-acre home in Greenwich, Connecticut; and his Colorado condo. Just a couple of weeks ago, shareholders approved Bear Stearns's merger with JP Morgan, which received $30 billion in taxpayer-funded, federal loan guarantees to take over what little was left.

    John McCain says the fundamentals of the economy are strong, but admits it's a subject he doesn't know a lot about. He counts among his economic advisers Carly Fiorina, fired chief executive of Hewlett Packard, where, you'll recall, she was accused of breathtaking mismanagement and street-bully tactics. Of her role in the McCain campaign, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld of the Yale School of Management told The New York Times, "You couldn't pick a worse, non-imprisoned C.E.O. to be your standard-bearer."

    Among McCain's other top advisers are John Green and Wayne Berman, who received $720,000 in lobbying fees from Ameriquest Mortgage, one of the noteworthy, predatory lenders in the country's mortgage mess. As The New York Daily News reported this past spring, Ameriquest, which has since been bought out by Citigroup, "was forced to settle suits with 49 states for $325 million. More than 13,680 New York homeowners got taken for a ride by the company, records show."

    Barack Obama believes our current economic crisis is "the logical conclusion of a tired and misguided philosophy that has dominated Washington for far too long." Nonetheless, his economic policy director, Jason Furman, has been a defender of Wal-Mart and was director of former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin's Hamilton Project at the Brookings Institution, a group of Wall Street Democrats committed to continuing Bill Clinton's economic doctrine - i.e., growth based on deficit reduction and free trade.

    Until his resignation Wednesday, Obama's team also included Jim Johnson, ex-Mondale chief of staff and former CEO of Fannie Mae, the government-sanctioned banker that buys and resells loans from other banks and lenders. According to The Wall Street Journal, Johnson, who was leading the search for Obama's running mate, was given preferential treatment when he received $2 million in personal loans from one of Fannie Mae's biggest customers, subprime lender Countrywide Financial Services.

    A front page story in Wednesday's Washington Post added that Johnson was also "the beneficiary of accounting in which Fannie Mae's earnings were manipulated so that executives could earn larger bonuses. The accounting manipulation for 1998 resulted in the maximum payouts to Fannie Mae's senior executives - $1.9 million in Johnson's case - when the company's performance that year would have otherwise resulted in no bonuses at all, according to reports in 2004 and 2006 by the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight."

    Both candidates need economic advisers untainted by association with corporate interests, folks who know what it's like to have to live on macaroni instead of meat, to spend sleepless nights in subways or shelters, to let diseases like cancer and diabetes gnaw away at a person's insides because they can't afford medicine and doctors. And the media need to tell their stories, not only to make the rest of us aware and stir us to action, but also to validate and empower with web space, column inches and airtime the plight of those so afflicted, to bring dignity and gravitas to their predicament. Attention must be paid.

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Michael Winship is senior writer of the weekly public affairs program Bill Moyers Journal, which airs Friday nights on PBS. Check local airtimes or comment at The Moyers Blog at www.pbs.org/moyers.

Comments

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It was none other than Bill

It was none other than Bill Clinton (the greatest Republican president we've had since Eisenhower) who willingly signed the Telecommunications Bill (drafted by Republicans) back in the mid-90s, which gave away the airwaves free of charge to all the media moguls who fill TV and the newspapers with the garbage we see and read today. I, like the others who have written comments above, am truly angry at the media for not reporting Dennis Kucinich's draft of 35 Articles of Impeachment of Bush, who should be tried at The Hague as a war criminal, along with Cheney, Wolfowitz, Rumsfeld,Rove, and all his other war loving cronies. And until the public gets angry enough to threaten withdrawing votes and ousting our elected officials who continue to let this ride, it's going to be business as usual.

As a product of the past 45

As a product of the past 45 years in America, I feel qualified to say that there is certainly a central big media theme that runs through what is really intended to sell all manner of products: a deeply twisted, happy-go-lucky, no-worries sort of pandering/ de-sensitizing that only asks that we focus on ourselves and buy what the TV is selling. I remember when cable TV had very few commercials, and that was it's selling point, and presumably where its money was made for a time. Now, we pay $40-$100 per month and get nearly as many commercials as old school network TV. Curious. Coupled with the (mostly) awful fill material between commercials that passes for programming is the almost awful excuse for an education we get in our public schools. If you should happen to be someone who learns faster than the slowest students in the class, good luck, and I feel sorry for you. If you want to learn something consider moving ahead a grade or two, or transferring to another school, like a private school or a religious school. There are not many kids that would want that, especially if they have also managed to make a friend or two while waiting to learn something. The teachers (and parents) are also products of this same system, so are we expecting miracles here folks? Oh yeah, we're taught to do that too! Our world in America does seem to be run by a different class of Americans, one that gets a different education that includes financial subjects, and one that most people never see, or at least don't know it if they do. Let's all wake up to the fact that the very small class of extremely wealthy people that includes business moguls, that include the "mainstream media", are happy as clams (or as happy as people who care only about money can be) about OUR current crisis where the middle class is threatened with continued survival, and our food and transportation is economically linked by the forced insecurity of our "president's" preference for playing king through the promotion of empire. But you see we are relatively safe because the moneypeople live here too, but that's not news fit for the masses. No, the masses get all kinds of scary and sensational stories pitched at a grossly incomplete understanding of the issues (by design). I'd get more use out of cheap steak knives, even if I didn't eat steak. Oh, and let's not pay any attention to the fact that a big part of our dilemma stems from big business promoting the American lifestyle all over the globe. Are the owners of Shell Oil worried if the Chinese are willing to compete for oil with the US to fuel their new "western" lifestyles? I'd say they instead enjoy the feeling. Just listen to Big Media, which sounds a lot like Big Auto, they'll tell you that this is what America WANTS. "You're getting the coverage you deserve!" What they're really saying is "this is what you get, because it makes us more money and you wouldn't know what to do with it if you had some anyway. Just look at your credit debt, your habit of spending more than you make, shameful, so just call 1-800..." Actually it is all connected, just like you hear in the cell phone commercials, only not as easy to swallow. Getting a crappy education, (but thinking it's okay because you passed some tests) and then following it up with crappy TV programming, is a social experiment that old-school Communists would envy. But we have it right here in the good ol' US of A, Where the word democracy is wholly owned, but seldom experienced.

Subliminal seems to be the

Subliminal seems to be the operative word. Like it or not we are living in a SKULL AND BONES WORLD.

I too was stunned by the

I too was stunned by the fact that Kusinich's impeachment proposal wasn't aired. McClelands book was publlicized, but then, that's conjecture and can be disputed... What bothered me the most was the recent ruling on Gitmo..and the reponse by Bush, who wants to come back from Europe and try to change that ruling...and then he adds that he's going to 'protect' the American people from terrorists...and giving prisoners the right to a fair trial seems ludacrist. But it's not just Bush who feels this way...there are millions of journalists and Americans who see no problem in warehousing people for an indefinite period of time...some for six years without the right to a fair trial...is this the third Reich rising from the ashes of Hitler?..what other explanation is there. These same folks evidently do not trust the judicial system...so do these same folks think we should be living in a country with a dicatator? How did we get to this point in time? And, of course, just as in Hitlers time, these brainwashed people are highly intelligent...and thus, come across as credible to some. I can understand why the democrats don't want to see a democrat motivated impeachment process before this election...but I don't see that there's a choice. We, as Americans, cannot stand by, like the people of Germany did, and allow this C student ruin our democracy...or can we? If that happens ... I'm moving.

Someone here mentioned how

Someone here mentioned how little real news there is in the major media, YOU ARE NOT KIDDING. Did anybody notice how there was no mentioned almost anywhere of DENNIS KUCINICH and his 35 ARTICLES FOR IMPEACHMENT OF BUSH? Such an historical event and no coverage, not only that but Kucinich's site was sabotaged and was off for a couple of days. TALK ABOUT EVIL FORCES manipulating our lives, our country and the world! THE PEOPLE SHOULD BE ARISING BUT THEY CAN'T BECAUSE MOST ARE OBLIVIOUS AND SCARED TO DEATH.

Democrats control Congress

Democrats control Congress now. But what kind of Dems are they? Under the bluedog leadership of Pelosi and Reid, they support the Bush regime all the way. What does the media say? Well, zilch.

thank you Michael, and God

thank you Michael, and God bless Bill Moyers and all who help bring his messages to PBS and the world. maybe we could create a cabinet post Secretary of Keeping Americans Fed, with Roofs Over their Heads, and Transportation to their Jobs!!! I nominate John Edwards.

I agree with Radline9 except

I agree with Radline9 except for "eak" which should be "eke". I confess, though, that my agreement stems from previous exposure, not the specific cases he mentions, as I have stopped watching television altogether for several months now. It is an invigorating experience. On the other hand, " Anonymous(not verified" writes in a way that smacks of Astroturf. Who is "Anonymous(not verified"?

This article was a joke

This article was a joke right? Mr. Super propaganda himself, on the side of freedom of expression? Humanity is driving demands that will attempt to impose less propaganda in the news. The agency this man heads, intends to cut off them off at the pass. The best reform would eliminate the FCC, and all media regulation, including spectrum allocation, content, copyright, patent, license and distirubtion control and regulation of whatever kind, from whatever source, for whatever reason. The FCC has been and is the most anti democratic institution ever devised. It was authorized by the wealthy elite 573 few who dictate by "rule of law" the behavior of the masses. The elected elite oversee who is appointed to that commission and carefully guard what it does.

Television news sucks. I can

Television news sucks. I can count on the fingers of one hand their news stories this week that were worthy of reporting. They eak every drop of blood they can out of those same 4 stories so real news can never make it to that hopeless little screen. They show the same tired footage over and over like it's a subliminal message: "forget it, we are never going to show the real story." And they love to keep the "dirt" flowing around the candidates with petty tit for tat stories between the two candidates never getting into any real substance. Only sound bites: McCain will lower taxes and Obama will raise taxes. I must have heard John McPain say that 10 times this week even if it is not true about Obama. People who only watch television and do not read (most of America it seems) will get the false message and vote for McCain because he will lower taxes (which will increase the debt further devaluing the dollar and making poor people pay twice as much while they thought they were getting a tax break exactly what happened during he bush presidency. The Military Industrial Media complex is to blame for duping Americans to elect an idiot for president. They will try the same thing now. WAKE UP AMERICA!

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