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-Caveat Lector-

  You have the right
   to be misinformed

Pepe Escobar-Roving USA
Asia Times Online

May 8, 2004

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Front_Page/FE08Aa02.html

BERKELEY, California - Eighty percent of Americans get their information
from Fox News, according to a recent University of Maryland poll. Not
included in this estimate are the usual customers at the Free Speech
Movement Cafe in one of the top US universities, dedicated to a Berkeley
student leader-icon of the 1960s, Mario Savio (1943-96). Buried behind
waves of laptops, stealing a glance toward a flat-screen TV not tuned to
Fox, an international elite at the cafe skateboards to academic - and
professional - glory. Wherever you look around - Cory Hall, the Campanile,
the library - at least 50 percent of the students at the University of
California, Berkeley are from Asia, the future elites of China, South
Korea, India, Singapore, Malaysia.

According to a new Harvard University study, young people are much more
interested in substance concerning the 2004 presidential election campaign
than in previous US elections. An informal survey in Berkeley reveals that
for the absolute majority of students, in view of the miserably poor
planning of the war on Iraq, the current chaos and an unending series of
recent scandals, Washington has definitively lost the battle for hearts and
minds of Iraqis, the people of the Middle East, and Muslims as a whole.
This is what they're discussing at the cafe, and this is what they read in,
among other places, the Daily Californian, established in 1871 and an
independent student paper since 1971.

To compare the students' view with what academe is talking about, nothing
could be more appropriate than the recent annual Travers Ethics Conference
on "Media, Democracy and the Informed Citizen" - a stimulating debate after
conversations with students and professors on campus had revealed that
California's intellectual elite is appalled at the transformation of elite
newspapers to "attack dog journalism" or "lapdog journalism". Howard
Raines, former executive editor of the New York Times, has spoken widely
about the current "stenographic function" of the press.

Mark Danner, who writes for The New Yorker and the New York Review of
Books, cannot understand "how seven in 10 Americans became convinced that
Saddam [Hussein] was involved on September 11 [2001], without the
government explicitly saying so". The only answer he can find is that
"we've had no political opposition. The press itself, increasingly
commercialized, cannot function as an opposition voice."

For Jay Harris, a presidential professor at Santa Clara University and a
member of the Pulitzer Prize Board of directors, the whole problem is
centered on "corporate ethics ... The news media are now a large part of
big business. They are more concerned with how much profit they make, not
with how to best fulfill their role." Because these corporations invariably
resort to "propaganda techniques to shape mass opinion", the "distrust of
news media is at a dangerously high level": they "are not seen anymore as
being disinterested". Harris complains, for example, that TV networks
"don't even acknowledge that have-nots exist in American society". He
despairs that "corporations will not heal the wounds of democracy".

Douglas Kellner, who holds a chair in philosophy of education at the
University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) and has written, among other
books, a delicious study of the 2000 election (Grand Theft 2000: Media
Spectacle and the Theft of an Election), places the whole process in terms
of an orgy of infotainment and tabloidization. He is seriously worried
about the "effects of the Iraqi spectacle" on the 2004 election. Kellner
says, "We have better information sources than any country in history, but
everybody is misinformed." His solution: go and find accurate news sources
on the Internet and in the blogosphere, a process that is "great for
democracy".

John Zaller, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and
whose next book studies how the conflicting interests of reporters,
politicians and citizens shape the news, is also worried about the "ratings
obsession". But in his take on "celebrity politics" may be the answer to
rescue politics as usual from the abyss: "[Arnold] Schwarzenegger was a
good thing. Because he is interesting. They like to watch him. Even before
he started in office [as governor of California], eight networks
established bureaus in Sacramento [the state capital], which they've never
bothered to cover."

Do ghosts cross the Pacific?
Sandy Close, executive director of Pacific News Service, believes a ray of
light can be found in the work of ethnic media. In California, there are 40
Vietnamese publications in Orange County, 14 Armenian papers in Burbank, 15
Thai papers in the state. "This is new, vibrant, hungry media, sharing
information about each other's communities." For these media, the story of
an obscure Vietnamese in San Jose is big news. Close insists that in a
state where one in four people is an immigrant and 40 percent of the
population speaks a foreign language at home, "we can't use the [phrase]
'public opinion' in California anymore without considering other languages
than English".

Political scientist Lance Bennett, a professor at the University of
Washington and director of the Center for Communication and Civic
Engagement, has been studying the phenomenon of the "unelectability" of
former Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean. He started with the
first long character-assassination profile in the Washington Post ("he was
depicted as arrogant, disrespectful, fiery, red-faced", as compared with a
"brilliantly cranky" Donald Rumsfeld). Dean upset insider Democrats. The
press linked his anger to electability. And the growth of the Dean anger
story led to "voters are angry, down, Dean is angry, up." Then the media
clinched it with the contrast with John Kerry, "electable, and not angry".
With "electability" as the story frame, even Dean "going into news rehab"
was not enough to save him.

So this is how it works, says Bennett. 1) Opposition spin and/or candidate
slips prompt "insider" views from press. 2) Press corps recognizes a good
story and decontextualizes everything that does not fit. Bennett is
absolutely sure Kerry will be the next victim, tagged as a "rich, liberal
elitist".

Darry Sragow - a character who looks as if he stepped out of Martin
Scorsese's Goodfellas - brings a political-insider perspective to the
debate. He is one of California's leading consultants to political
campaigns: he has managed five of them, statewide. Sragow complains,
"There's no interest for campaigns, apart for the big circus for
president." He believes Dean was indeed out of control, because "he is an
out-of-control guy. In the beginning they didn't even have a communications
director" - certainly a not-so-subtle way to plug his skills. Sragow
insists that the Kerry candidacy now "has to grow. Voters feel they are in
a rudderless ship. But a lot of the debate will be focused on who is less
risky."

Sragow's perception scares the hell out of Democrats. Many are horrified
that Kerry's campaign has been so out of focus that even with President
George W Bush's credibility being undermined practically on a daily basis -
especially by Iraq fallout - Kerry has not been able to open up a lead,
either on a national level or in key swing states such as Arizona, New
Mexico, Ohio, Michigan and Florida. If he can't manage to do just that in
the crucial month of June, he'll be in deep trouble. Not only at Berkeley,
but in Los Angeles and all over California's huge infotainment industry,
the regime-change-in-Washington sentiment is overwhelming. Kerry will most
certainly win in California. But at the same time there's a feeling that
the ultra-cautious and exceedingly boring Kerry campaign simply can't keep
droning on like this. "Kerry has not focused his message. And he has not
offered a broad vision for our future," says a Korean-American student.

Sragow compares the US presidential election to "a tennis match between two
opponents". And he insists negative ads do work. So in the end US democracy
seems to be reduced to a system of two tennis players running after big
checks to pay for a barrage of negative ads. Is there any way out of
despair for a concerned citizen? Mark Danner believes so: "Forget Fox News.
Read a book! Let a million flowers bloom!"

(Copyright 2004 Asia Times Online Co, Ltd. All rights reserved.

------------------------------------------------
A free people ought not only to be armed and disciplined, but they should
have sufficient arms and ammunition to maintain a status of independence
from any who might attempt to abuse them, which would include their own
government.

--George Washington
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www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:

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<A HREF="http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
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