-Caveat Lector-

<A HREF="http://www.consortiumnews.com/consor43.html">The Consortium</A>
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Dec. 5, 1998

Seldes on Clinton Scandals

By Rick Goldsmith
Rick Goldsmith is the producer and director of “Tell the Truth and Run:
George Seldes and the American Press,” an account of Seldes’s life and
career. The documentary was nominated for the 1996 Academy Award for
Best Documentary Feature.
The 111-minute film is available, for home viewing only, on VHS
videotape by check or money order for $44.95 (includes shipping and
handling) from Kovno Communications, 2600 Tenth St. #104F, Berkeley, CA
94710. (Requests for educational or institutional sale or rental of the
videotape should contact New Day Films, 888-367-9154 or see
www.newday.com.)

Over the past year, I've been asked several times, "What do you think
George Seldes would have written about the Clinton-Lewinsky affair?"
Taking the question literally, the answer is, of course, elusive,
unknowable. But pondering the answer, i.e. examining the onslaught of
media coverage and its effect on America's politics from what I can
surmise would be Seldes's perspective, says volumes about the timeliness
-- and timelessness -- of Seldes's journalism.

George Seldes was America's most prolific and undoubtedly its most
important press critic. He was preceded in this century by muckrakers
Will Irwin and Upton Sinclair, and The Nation's Oswald Villard, among
others. But each of those writers wrote a book, or an extended article
on press criticism, then moved on to other journalistic endeavors.

In the late 1920s, Seldes -- already a noted foreign correspondent who
had borne more than his share of censorship -- set his sights on the
press, sunk in his teeth, and never so much as loosened his jaw for more
than two decades.

His books included You Can't Print That! (1929), Freedom of the Press
(1935), and his controversial Lords of the Press (1938), which profiled
the publisher or head of every major American news organization, from
the tabloids to the chains to The Associated Press, from the Jewish
Daily Forward to The New York Times.

In 1940, Seldes founded the newsletter In fact, a combination of press
criticism and investigative journalism, which he published each week for
a decade, and which served as a model for I.F. Stone's Weekly.

What was so flawed -- and so important -- about the press that Seldes
should make its scrutiny his life's work? The answer lies, at least in
part, in Seldes's early journalistic career.

Seldes became a reporter at age 18 in 1909, at the tail end of the
progressive/muckraker era. He was exposed as a young man to a journalism
of moral righteousness, and to a dedicated group of writers who exposed
abuse of power in general and specifically the sins or consequences of
monopoly capitalism.

Nine years later, Seldes was reporting from the battlefields of France,
essentially selling the Great War to the home front. Only after the
Armistice did Seldes realize, or let himself realize, that he and his
colleagues (American and European) had helped to enable, by falsifying
the facts and glorifying war, the greatest orgy of slaughter in the
history of mankind.

But the Great War was also Seldes's entree, as a reporter, to the great
stage of Europe. As Berlin bureau chief for Colonel Robert McCormick's
Chicago Tribune, Seldes traveled to every capital on the continent,
including, in 1922, to Moscow of the newly formed Soviet Union.

Sympathetic to the Soviet socialist experiment by upbringing -- Seldes's
father had been a spokesperson for the U.S.-based Friends of Russian
Freedom during the Russian revolution of 1905 -- Seldes discovered in
short order that the Soviet government had no use for a free press.

The Soviet press officer proudly proclaimed, "censorship is a brother"
of the revolution. Seldes was not-so-politely "asked to leave" after he
and three other reporters were discovered smuggling stories out of the
country in the diplomatic mailbag.

Seldes judged the Soviet Union's form of communism the worst political
system he could imagine -- until he reached Italy less than two years
later.

In late 1924, Italian fascism was two years old. Capitalists the world
over, especially in the United States, were impressed with the Corporate
State -- an orderly place where might and money united to create the
"ultimate business climate."

Europe was in terrific upheaval and disarray from the World War I, and
fascism's brutal underbelly had not yet been exposed, so the seeming
"order" that had been restored in Italy impressed many a foreigner.
American muckrakers Ida Tarbell and Lincoln Steffens, for example, were
early supporters of Italian fascism.

And with the death in 1924 of both Lenin and Woodrow Wilson, the
charismatic Benito Mussolini, the father of fascism, became the most
prominent leader on the world stage.

Into this setting stepped George Seldes. He quickly learned of the
involvement of Mussolini in the assassination earlier that year of
Giacomo Matteotti, a socialist member of parliament and Mussolini's
chief political rival.

Under the headline "Link Mussolini with Murder," Seldes laid out the
facts that no reporter, Italian or foreign, had dared to write. Seldes
was summarily attacked in the fascist press as a "liar, a communist, and
a grosso porco, a big swine."

The American embassy was pressured by the Italian government to rein
Seldes in, but Seldes did not relent. Into 1925, Seldes's Tribune
 articles continued, under such heads as "Mussolini Is Again Linked With
Murder" and "Italy Ends Last Bit of Democracy."

When Seldes wrote about a fascist mob's fatal beating of yet another
Mussolini political rival, the axe finally came down. Seldes was
officially expelled, then chased out of Italy by fascist thugs. It was
to be the only expulsion of a foreign journalist by Mussolini in his
first 13 years of rule, until after Italy's invasion of Abyssinia in
1935.

What few people knew at the time of Seldes's expulsion in mid-1925 was
that fascist Italy was a financial house of cards. Fascist officials
were pleading with American bankers and government officials for
desperately-needed help. The kind of publicity Mussolini had been
getting from Seldes jeopardized the very future of the fascist state.

Once Seldes was expelled, the American reporters that remained in Italy
were either so intimidated, or else proto-fascist themselves (the AP
 man, Italian-born, doubled as Mussolini's press agent),only positive
news of fascism appeared in American newspapers for the next six months.

In early 1926, with the press leading the way, the U.S. Senate forgave
the Italian war debt, and the House of Morgan loaned the fascist
government the then-unheard-of sum of $100 million, ensuring fascism's
survival well into the future.

Seldes wrote about the Italian incident in a 1927 Harper's Magazine
article, "The Truth About Fascist Censorship." He recognized the vital
role the press played in political affairs, and how those in power --
for reasons political and economic -- suppressed and colored the news.

>From that point on, Seldes concentrated his attentions on the press --
how and why it censored, suppressed, colored and omitted news.

As the 1930s evolved, Seldes saw that democracy and a free press were
interdependent -- that the loss of one meant the loss of the other. His
focus on the press was no academic exercise. The political future of
western civilization was up for grabs. Dictatorship endangered democracy
everywhere, including, many felt, in the United States.

In his 1935 book, Freedom of the Press, Seldes laid out the essential
question:

Is the press meeting its responsibilities today in telling us the truth,
keeping us intelligently informed on important issues, the great and
minor problems of the world?

He goes on to list these "great and minor problems," as he saw them in
1935:

"--War and Peace. Is the press leading us into another war or working
for international accord?

“--Bolshevism and Fascism. Has the press told us and is it telling us
the truth about new systems of government which we may have to choose
some day?

“--The great labor unrest....

“--Child Labor....

“--Pure Food and Drugs....

“--The Economic System. Has capitalism broken down or merely suffered an
eclipse? ... Can it enslave or deliver us?"

Seldes goes on to document the many ways the press indeed failed to
"meet its responsibilities" and the reasons for the failure: the
economic interests of the publishers, their political leanings
(especially during the politically-polarized New Deal era), their own
labor relations issues, etc.

In Lords of the Press, he writes,

"The press needs free men with free minds intellectually open; but its
leadership consists of moral slaves whose minds are paralyzed by the
specter of profits. The publishers are not leading the American people
forward. They are not facing the social issues."

Seldes began publishing In fact in May of 1940. The four-page weekly
newsletter was a combination of investigative reporting and press
criticism.

To Seldes, the big stories of the day, almost by definition, involved
abuse of power -- by right-wing politicians, by anti-labor corporate
bosses, by racist and anti-Semitic members of Congress, by newspaper
publishers across the board.

Seldes was decades ahead of his colleagues in documenting the health
hazards of cigarettes (as early as 1938), the deceptive promotional
practices of the tobacco companies, and the lack of coverage of these
issues in the pages of the mainstream press -- which accepted millions
every year in cigarette advertising.

In the pages of In fact, Seldes went after J. Edgar Hoover for spying on
unions, infiltrating political organizations and keeping dossiers on
American citizens; the National Association of Manufacturers, then a
collection of the most right wing of business leaders, which wrote the
anti-union Taft-Hartley Act of 1947; the American Medical Association,
which opposed and eventually killed President Truman's national health
insurance proposals by branding them "socialized medicine"; and Senator
Joe McCarthy. And Seldes never consulted with libel lawyers before
publishing.

His criteria for choosing stories, and for analyzing press coverage:
Does it affect the average working (or unemployed) person or family? Is
it an assault on civil liberties? Does it adversely affect the
democratic process? Is it an abuse of power? Is it a policy issue that
ought to be in the public debate? Is it an issue that has been omitted
or under-reported, or distorted, in the mainstream press?

Because Seldes's criteria differed from that of the mainstream press
(whose criteria included, among other considerations: Will it sell
newspapers? Will it offend advertisers? Will it affect profits?),
Seldes's stories in In fact usually were stories that his readers were
reading for the first time, or at least for the first time in depth,
with facts and figures often culled by Seldes from government reports
and documents.

Always the stories were geared towards refocusing his readers to what
was important, in terms of public policy and the lives of citizens.

Getting back to the Lewinsky affair of 1998, three things are clear on
how Seldes might have responded, journalistically, that should be
instructive to today's reporters.

1) He would not be writing about the affair itself for the simple reason
that Seldes specifically focused on information that you couldn't get
elsewhere.

2) To the extent that he saw the Starr investigation as an unjustified
and unethical attack on the president, AND an impediment to the public
debate of important policy issues, Seldes would probably be digging up
and exposing the contradictions in Starr's own background: his
association with the most right-wing organizations and politicians, the
conflict-of-interest issues of his law firm, etc.

3) Seldes would be trying to re-focus public attention on what he judged
to be the most important public policy issues of the day, AND the ones
that most deserved genuine, spirited public debate. He would do that by
citing or reprinting articles on such issues that did appear in the
mainstream press, and by researching and writing his own articles.

Seldes would surely have used his own guidelines set out by the
"essential question" above, regarding the press meeting its
responsibilities. His 1998 version of the "great and minor problems"
might be framed, "How has the blizzard of media coverage on the
President's private sexual life affected -- and how will it continue to
affect -- public debate and public policy." More specific issues might
be:

--The consequences of "welfare reform", including child care for
welfare-to-work mothers?

--National and world economic policy?

--Campaign finance reform?

--American governmental response to "terrorist acts"?

--HMO Reform?

--Tobacco control?

Seldes, whose style was moral outrage mixed with righteous indignation,
might have concluded, "America's news media has served as Kenneth
Starr's lapdog. By headlining his selective leaks and carefully timed
published reports, the media has allowed him to control the front pages
and news broadcasts across the nation for a year.

“If this trend continues, Starr and America's news media will have
effectively conspired to keep important public policy debate out of the
news, dis-informing and alienating the electorate, thereby subverting
the democratic process no less than President Nixon and his cronies did
in 1972."

George Seldes never lost his belief in the possibilities of journalism
and of a free press. He spent 80 years in journalism, the last half
century of which was dedicated largely to press criticism, specifically
because he recognized the critical impact -- for better or worse -- that
the media has on free-flowing public debate, the most necessary
ingredient in a healthy democracy.



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Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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