A televisual fairyland: The US media is disciplined by corporate America into promoting the Republican cause
- Originally published in The Guardian (London) - January 18, 2005 [here]
Copyright 2005 Guardian Newspapers Limited
By: George Monbiot
On Thursday, the fairy king of fairyland will be recrowned. He was
elected on a platform suspended in midair by the power of imagination.
He is the leader of a band of men who walk through ghostly realms
unvisited by reality. And he remains the most powerful person on earth.
How did this happen? How did a fantasy president from a world of make
believe come to govern a country whose power was built on hard-headed
materialism? To find out, take a look at two squalid little stories
which have been concluded over the past 10 days.
The first involves the broadcaster CBS. In September, its 60 Minutes
programme ran an investigation into how George Bush avoided the Vietnam
draft. It produced memos which appeared to show that his squadron
commander in the Texas National Guard had been persuaded to "sugarcoat"
his service record. The programme's allegations were immediately and
convincingly refuted: Republicans were able to point to evidence
suggesting the memos had been faked. Last week, following an inquiry
into the programme, the producer was sacked, and three CBS executives
were forced to resign.
The incident
couldn't have been more helpful to Bush. Though there is no question
that he managed to avoid serving in Vietnam, the collapse of CBS's
story suggested that all the allegations made about his war record were
false, and the issue dropped out of the news. CBS was furiously
denounced by the rightwing pundits, with the result that between then
and the election, hardly any broadcaster dared to criticise George
Bush. Mary Mapes, the producer whom CBS fired, was the network's most
effective investigative journalist: she was the person who helped bring
the Abu Ghraib photos to public attention. If the memos were faked, the
forger was either a moron or a very smart operator.
It's true, of course, that CBS should have taken more care. But I think
it is safe to assume that if the network had instead broadcast
unsustainable allegations about John Kerry, none of its executives
would now be looking for work. How many people have lost their jobs, at
CBS or anywhere else, for repeating bogus stories released by the Swift
Boat Veterans for Truth about Kerry's record in Vietnam? How many were
sacked for misreporting the Jessica Lynch affair? Or for claiming that
Saddam Hussein had an active nuclear weapons programme in 2003? Or that
he was buying uranium from Niger, or using mobile biological weapons
labs, or had a hand in 9/11? How many people were sacked, during
Clinton's presidency, for broadcasting outright lies about the
Whitewater affair? The answer, in all cases, is none.
You can say what you like in the US media, as long as it helps a
Republican president. But slip up once while questioning him, and you
will be torn to shreds. Even the most grovelling affirmations of
loyalty won't help. The presenter of 60 Minutes, Dan Rather, is the man
who once told his audience" "George Bush is the president, he makes the
decisions and, you know, as just one American, he wants me to line up,
just tell me where." CBS is owned by the conglomerate Viacom, whose
chairman told reporters: "We believe the election of a Republican
administration is better for our company." But for Fox News and the
shockjocks syndicated by Clear Channel, Rather's faltering attempt at
investigative journalism is further evidence of "a liberal media
conspiracy".
This is not the first time
something like this has happened. In 1998, CNN made a programme which
claimed that, during the Vietnam war, US special forces dropped sarin
gas on defectors who had fled to Laos. In this case, there was plenty
of evidence to support the story. But after four weeks of furious
denunciations, the network's owner, Ted Turner, publicly apologised in
terms you would expect to hear during a show trial in North Korea:
"I'll take my shirt off and beat myself bloody on the back." CNN had
erred, he said, by broadcasting the allegations when "we didn't have
evidence beyond a reasonable doubt". As the website wsws.org has
pointed out, it's hard to think of a single investigative story -
Watergate, the My Lai massacre, Britain's arms to Iraq scandal - which
could have been proved at the time by journalists "beyond a reasonable
doubt". But Turner did what was demanded of him, with the result that,
in media fairyland, the atrocity is now deemed not to have happened.
The other squalid little story broke three days before the CBS people
were sacked. A US newspaper discovered that Armstrong Williams, a
television presenter who (among other jobs) had a weekly slot on a
syndicated TV show called America's Black Forum, had secretly signed a
$ 240,000 contract with the US Department of Education. The contract
required him "to regularly comment" on George Bush's education bill
"during the course of his broadcasts" and to ensure that "Secretary
Paige (the education secretary) and other department officials shall
have the option of appearing from time to time as studio guests".
It's hard to see why the administration bothered to pay him. Williams
has described as his "mentors" Lee Atwater - the man who, under
Reagan's presidency, brought a new viciousness to Republican
campaigning - and the segregationist senator Strom Thurmond. His
broadcasting career has been dedicated to promoting extreme Republican
causes and attacking civil rights campaigns.
What makes this story interesting is that the show he worked on was
founded, in 1977, by the radical black activists Glen Ford and Peter
Gamble, to "allow black reporters to hold politicians and activists of
all persuasions accountable to
black people". They
sold their shares in 1980, and the pro gramme was later bought by the
Uniworld Group. With Williams's help, the new owners have reversed its
politics, and turned it into a recruitment vehicle for the Republican
party. Williams appears to have been taking money for doing what he was
doing anyway.
These stories, in other
words, are illustrations of the ways in which the US media is
disciplined by corporate America. In the first case the other corporate
broadcasters joined forces to punish a dissenter in their ranks. In the
second case a corporation captured what was once a dissenting programme
and turned it into another means of engineering conformity.
The role of the media corporations in the US is similar to that of
repressive state regimes elsewhere: they decide what the public will
and won't be allowed to hear, and either punish or recruit the social
deviants who insist on telling a different story. The journalists they
employ do what almost all journalists working under repressive regimes
do: they internalise the demands of the censor, and understand, before
anyone has told them, what is permissible and what is not.
So, when they are faced with a choice between a fable which helps the
Republicans, and a reality which hurts them, they choose the fable. As
their fantasies accumulate, the story they tell about the world veers
further and further from reality. Anyone who tries to bring the people
back down to earth is denounced as a traitor and a fantasist. And
anyone who seeks to become president must first learn to live in
fairyland.
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