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Here is today's ZNet Commentary Delivery from Danny Schechter. The attached
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Here then is today's ZNet Commentary...

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ZNet Commentary: May 11, 1999

Covering Wars At Home and Abroad:
The Kosovo-Columbine Connection
By Danny Schechter

Had the Marine Corps recruiter not gotten hung up on the fact that Columbine
H.S. student Eric Harris lied about taking an anti-depressant, he may very
well have been on his way by now to the front lines of Kosovo, the real war
he reportedly preferred to fight instead of creating his own. The bombs
bursting in air over Serbia and the bombs planted in high school corridors
in Colorado may have differed in scale--and impact--but there are eerie
parallels between l999's two biggest news stories.

It is a connection that is rarely made in the media , but the fact is that
wars overseas often intensify wars at home. The Vietnam experience was not
that long ago. The absurdity of President Clinton lecturing students about
the power of non-violence while NATO, under his command, relies on violence
was not lost on many journalists--especially in other countries.

In both cases, violence has been the method of choice. Frustrated by an
inability to bring Milosovic to heel through a rather convoluted diplomatic
process., NATO launched missiles rather than stepping up less violent
sanctions. Unable to make peace with their schoolmates who they felt
victimized by, the self styled Trench Coat Mafia launched its own "cleansing
" offensive, to wipe out the other cultural groupings which it had
demonized. The macho, the testosterone, the war is the only road to peace
option was in play in both situations. At Columbine High, the perpetrators
committed suicide in a library where they had seemingly no time to read and
get some perspective on their disaffection. In the former Yugolslavia, it is
the Government which seems to be bent on suicide with the co-complicity of
its miscalculating NATO adversaries with their far ineffective air campaign.

Perhaps that's why the news coverage of both events followed a similar
trajectory. On both stories, the networks deployed regiments of
correspondents with the assignment of providing saturation coverage. In both
cases, the analysis of causes were downplayed in favor of images of the
action--constantly replayed helicopter footage of students fleeing their
school in horror in one instance, endlessly recycled footage of refugees
fleeing in horror in the other.

In both cases, the genre has been crime and punishment. In Kosovo, that has
meant an almost exclusive focus on Milosovic's criminality, with barely any
examination of the role the West played over the years in looking the other
way and not consistently challenging the pervasive human rights abuses.

At Colorado, and in communities across America, young people are virtually
ignored by a media more interested in selling them products than engaging
their concerns. The video games they buy, the slasher movies they consume,
and the TV shows like MTV's "celebrity death match" are all manufactured by
corporate America which does very little to provide other programming about
positive role models and alternatives to conflict. This Beavis and Butthead
culture has been fostered by a dumbing down of TV programming--a calculated
strategy that media companies have no interest in critiquing in any serious
way. How many times have you seen the suggestion that there is a link
between media violence and real world violence brushed off --despite all the
studies that document a connection.

The Kosovo story has been presented through two images--fires in the sky,
and lines of displaced people on the road or in camps. It has been
relatively bloodless and stage managed with well tested propaganda
techniques on both sides. NATO bombs Serb TV after it shows the consequences
to civilians of the growing number of collateral damage' incidents. This
language is as dehumanized as much of the coverage. The Serbs in turn muzzle
the brave voices of their independent media while the media here the critics
and even the victims who are shown but rarely heard. The confusing vote on
the issue in the American Congress--where a majority voted for and against
the war at the same time mirrors media coverage that lacks depth, context
and background.

In Colorado meanwhile, most of the coverage initially highlighted the
military style SWAT squad police operation which looked like it might have
been taking place in the Balkans. There were endless human interest stories
about the bravery of the police, the tragedy of the families who had lost
children, and the shocked community who though "it can't happen here." Give
us a break. There has been a form of low intensity warfare between
generations and cultures within America for years that has been ignored by
educators and media alike. Getting kids to conform as a form of
socialization is what many schools do with their standardized tests.
emphasis on team sports and reinforcing gender roles.

Ultimately, both Columbine and Kosovo are treated as entertainments--with
their dramatic footage, conflicts, characters, and narrative story telling
style journalism. These are stories tailor made for news magazines that
prefer emotion to information. What we are learning from all of this is that
we won't learn very much. The lessons of Vietnam are lost on the NATO
Generals who are bombing Kosovo to save it. The lessons of the lessons are
children are learning is more obscure. Meanwhile at the networks the ratings
are up.

Danny Schechter, executive producer of Globalvision, is the author of "The
More You Watch, The Less You Know " just out in paperback from (Seven
Stories Press) and the forthcoming "News Dissector."(Electron Press). He has
won awards for TV coverage of the Balkans and youth issues,



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