Clinton and the Democrats grievously
misunderstood the modern concept of “information warfare” and how the
Republicans were waging it at home. The Republicans and especially the
neoconservative intellectuals realized that control of information – or
one might say replacing it with propaganda – was the key to solidifying
their political power within the United States. That’s why the
conservatives have invested billions of dollars over the past quarter
century in building their own potent media infrastructure, ranging from
cable networks and major daily newspapers to AM talk radio and
well-organized Internet bloggers. Besides writing their own historical
narrative, the conservatives succeeded in throwing the mainstream press
onto the defensive with endless charges of “liberal bias.” The
conservative success was compounded by the fact that while this media
apparatus was under construction, American liberals largely sat on the
sidelines, thinking that the mainstream news media would somehow
respond or hoping that some metaphorical pendulum would swing back in
their direction. Neither has happened. Instead, the Republicans
consolidated their dominance of the heartland “red states” where voters
who listened to talk radio in their cars had little choice but to tune
in rants about the evils of “librhuls” and “guvmint.” [more]