[Mb-civic] Stenographers to Power
ean at sbcglobal.net
ean at sbcglobal.net
Fri Nov 26 14:51:13 PST 2004
"There is such an enormous gap between our words and deeds!
Everyone talks about freedom, democracy, justice, human rights,
and peace; but at the same time, everyone, more or less,
consciously or unconsciously, serves those values and ideals only
to the extent necessary to defend and serve his own interests, and
those of his group or his state. Who should break this vicious circle?
Responsibility cannot be preached: it can only be borne, and the
only possible place to begin is with oneself."
- Vaclav Havel
-------------------
http://www.commondreams.org/views04/1123-26.htm
Published on Tuesday, November 23, 2004 by The Nation
Stenographers to Power
by John Nichols
The best question asked in the aftermath of the 2004 US election
came from a British newspaper, The Daily Mirror, which inquired
over a picture of George W. Bush, "How can 59,054,087 be so
dumb?
Now, another British newspaper has answered the question. A new
marketing campaign for The Weekly Guardian, one of the most
respected publications in the world, features images of a dancing
Bush and notes that, "Many US citizens think the world backed the
war in Iraq. Maybe it's the papers they're reading."
The weekly compendium of articles and analyses of global affairs
from Britain's liberal Guardian newspaper has long been regarded
as an antidote to government controlled, spun and inept local
media. Nelson Mandela, when he was held in South Africa's
Pollsmor Prison, referred to the Weekly Guardian as a "window on
the wider world."
But is it really appropriate to compare the United States in 2004 with
a warped media market like South Africa during apartheid days?
Actually, the comparison may be a bit unfair to South African media
in the apartheid era--when many courageous journalists struggled to
speak truth to power.
No serious observer of the current circumstance in the United
States would suggest that our major media serves the cause of
democracy. Years of consolidation and bottom-line pressures have
forced even once responsible media to allow entertainment and
commercial values to supersede civic and democratic values when
making news decisions. And the determination to color within the
lines of official spin is such that even the supposed pinnacles of the
profession--the New York Times, the Washington Post and CBS
News' 60 Minutes--have been forced to acknowledge that they got
the story of the rush to war with Iraq wrong.
There can be apologies. But there cannot be excuses because, of
course, media in the rest of the world got that story right.
And there are consequences when major media blows big stories.
As the Weekly Guardian's new marketing campaign suggests, a lot
of Americans voted for George W. Bush on November 2 on the
basis of wrong assumptions.
According to a survey conducted during the fall campaign season by
the Program on International Policy Attitudes--a joint initiative of the
Center on Policy Attitudes and the Center for International and
Security Studies at the University of Maryland School of Public
Affairs--a lot of what Americans know is wrong.
Despite the fact that surveys by the Gallup organization and other
polling firms have repeatedly confirmed that the vast majority of
citizens of other countries opposed the war in Iraq, the PIPA survey
found that only 31 percent of Bush supporters recognized that the
majority of people in the world opposed the Bush administration's
decision to invade Iraq.
Amazingly, according to the PIPA poll, 57 percent of Bush
supporters assumed that the majority of people in the world would
favor Bush's reelection, while only 33 percent assumed that global
views regarding Bush were evenly divided. Only 9 percent of Bush
backers correctly assumed that Kerry was the world's choice.
That wasn't the end of the misperception.
"Even after the final report of Charles Duelfer to Congress saying
that Iraq did not have a significant WMD program, 72 percent of
Bush supporters continue to believe that Iraq had actual WMD (47
percent) or a major program for developing them (25 percent),"
explained the summary of PIPA's polling. "Fifty-six percent assume
that most experts believe Iraq had actual WMD and 57 percent also
assume, incorrectly, that Duelfer concluded Iraq had at least a
major WMD program."
"Similarly," the pollsters found, "75 percent of Bush supporters
continue to believe that Iraq was providing substantial support to al
Qaeda, and 63 percent believe that clear evidence of this support
has been found. Sixty percent of Bush supporters assume that this
is also the conclusion of most experts, and 55 percent assume,
incorrectly, that this was the conclusion of the 9/11 Commission."
PIPA analysts suggest that the "tendency of Bush supporters to
ignore dissonant information" offers some explanation for these
numbers. And there is something to that. After all, Kerry backers
displayed a far sounder sense of reality in PIPA surveys.
But unless we want to assume that close to 60 million Americans
look at the world only through Bush-colored glasses, there has to be
some acceptance of the fact that good citizens who consume
American media come away with dramatic misconceptions about
the most vital issues of the day.
Sure, Fox warps facts intentionally. But what about CBS, NBC,
ABC, CNN, USA Today, the New York Times and the Washington
Post, as well as most local media across the country? They may
strive to be more accurate than Fox or talk-radio personalities such
as Rush Limbaugh. But they still fed the American people an
inaccurate picture when they allowed the Bush team to peddle lies
about Iraq and other issues without aggressively and consistently
challenging those misstatements of fact.
America has many great journalists. And there are still good
newspapers, magazines and broadcast programs. But, taken as a
whole, US media--with its obsessive focus on John Kerry's Vietnam
record, its neglect of fundamental economic and environmental
issues and its stenographic repetition of even the most absurd
claims by the president and vice president--warped the debate in
2004.
Some of those 59,054,087 Bush voters may have been dumb.
But a far better explanation for the election result is summed up by
the Weekly Guardian's observation that, "Maybe it's the papers
they're reading."
John Nichols, The Nation's Washington correspondent, has covered
progressive politics and activism in the United States and abroad for
more than a decade. He is currently the editor of the editorial page
of Madison, Wisconsin's Capital Times.
© 2004 The Nation
###
--
You are currently on Mha Atma's Earth Action Network email list,
option D (up to 3 emails/day). To be removed, or to switch options
(option A - 1x/week, option B - 3/wk, option C - up to 1x/day, option
D - up to 3x/day) please reply and let us know! If someone
forwarded you this email and you want to be on our list, send an
email to ean at sbcglobal.net and tell us which option you'd like.
Action is the antidote to despair. ----Joan Baez
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.islandlists.com/pipermail/mb-civic/attachments/20041126/b16224a3/attachment.htm
More information about the Mb-civic
mailing list