-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

         Is Media a Danger to Democracy?


         By Robert Parry

         Shortly before New Year's 2000, writer Robert D.
         Kaplan penned a New York Times commentary about
         the world's future.

         He blithely predicted that "political systems in 2100 will be
         elegantly varied, unconstrained by the sanctimony of the late
         20th century, with its simple call for 'democracy.'" Kaplan
added
         that his vision of this post-democratic world included a
         breakdown of national sovereignty and a resurrection of the
         ancient structure of autocratic city-states.

         "The next century will be the age of high-tech feudalism,"
         maintained Kaplan, a senior fellow at the New America
         Foundation which prides itself in "thinking outside the box."
         [NYT, Dec. 27, 1999]

         While Kaplan certainly has the right to his opinion and there
is
         some logic behind his prediction, what was striking was the
         casual way that The New York Times presented the argument,
         as if the end of "simple" democracy was a foregone
conclusion,
         nothing much to worry about.

         This cavalier attitude offered a rare glimpse at what is a
growing
         -- though usually unstated -- notion along the Washington-New
         York power corridor: that free-market forces increasingly
control
         everything and should control everything.

         From this perspective, democracy -- the will of the people --
         becomes more a "sanctimony" than a noble ideal, more an
         impediment to progress than the fairest way to bestow power
on
         leaders.

         This growing view -- what one might call a new-age
capitalistic
         determinism -- has gained adherence among many influential
         journalists and thinkers. Yet, since democracy remains a
popular
         notion with many Americans and since the media retains a
         self-image as the plucky defender of the U.S. Constitutional
         system, the term democracy has been less jettisoned than
         redefined. Within this new body of thought, "democracy" has
         come to mean the freedom of business to operate with minimal
         government constraints.

         This evolving concept also helps explain, to some degree, the
         media�s decline in covering significant affairs of state.
More and
         more, news is debased into �content,� as the out-dated need
for
         a well-informed public fades away. Except for the stock
prices
         and business news, information slides into entertainment.

         But how did this happen? What transformed the Watergate
         press corps of the mid-1970s, which asked grand questions
         about serious government misconduct, into today's media which
         can be alternately frivolous, petulant and obsequious?

         Three books offer an intriguing panorama of the crucial
changes
         in the media over the past quarter century and the media�s
         growing threat to democracy.

         The first, published in 1996, is Kathryn S. Olmsted's
         Challenging the Secret Government. It examines the
         awakening of skepticism within the U.S. news media and the
         Congress in the mid-1970s.

         The second is Edward Herman's The Myth of the Liberal
         Media, which reviews the media's acquiescence to the Reagan
         administration's implausible propaganda during the 1980s. The
         third is Robert W. McChesney's Rich Media, Poor Democracy,
         a study of the rapid concentration of media power during the
         1990s.

         Olmsted starts her story by pointing to the secret
compromises
         that the Cold War brought to the ethics of the U.S.
government.
         She quotes World War II Gen. James Doolittle explaining in a
         secret 1954 report to President Eisenhower why CIA covert
         operations were needed and what they entailed.

         "Hitherto acceptable norms of human conduct do not apply,"
         Doolittle wrote. "If the United States is to survive,
long-standing
         American concepts of 'fair play' must be reconsidered. We
must
         develop effective espionage and counterespionage services
         and must learn to subvert, sabotage and destroy our enemies
by
         more clever, more sophisticated, and more effective methods
         than those used against us. It may become necessary that the
         American people be made acquainted with, understand and
         support this fundamentally repugnant philosophy."

         While Eisenhower and later presidents did implement the first
         part of Doolittle's recommendation -- ordering covert actions
         around the world -- they finessed the latter. Rather than
explain
         the choices to the American people, U.S. leaders dropped a
         cloak of state secrecy around "this fundamentally repugnant
         philosophy."

         That cloak was lifted slightly in the mid-1970s. The Vietnam
War
         had cracked the Cold War consensus and Watergate had
         exposed a parallel challenge to the democratic process.

         Into that breach stepped an energized press corps represented
         by investigative journalists, such as The New York Times'
         Seymour Hersh and CBS News' Daniel Schorr, and a more
         assertive Congress personified by Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho,
         and Rep. Otis Pike, D-N.Y.

         The press and Congress exposed some of the secret
         government's worst abuses -- from spying on U.S. citizens and
         disrupting their constitutionally protected rights to
mounting
         assassination plots against foreign leaders and conducting
drug
         tests on unsuspecting subjects.

         Among the American people, there was shock. Olmsted quotes
         a letter that one woman wrote to Sen. Church. "Perhaps at 57
I
         should know better, but I really want our country to behave
         honorably. I never thought the ideals they taught us were
just
         public relations."

         But, as Olmsted describes, the counterattacks from allies of
the
         secret government were fierce and effective. Its defenders
         questioned the patriotism of the critics. Key news
executives,
         such as The Washington Post's publisher Katharine Graham
         and The New York Times editor Abe Rosenthal, proved
         particularly amenable to CIA overtures for restraint and
         self-censorship.

         Even senior government officials didn't want to know too
much.
         At one point, Vice President Nelson Rockefeller, who was
         heading up a White House-ordered investigation, told CIA
         director William Colby, "Bill, do you really have to present
all this
         material to us?"

         Though the congressional investigations managed to document
         an array of CIA and FBI abuses, Church and Pike faced
         unrelenting pressure. With the White House exploiting the
         murder of a CIA officer in Greece, the counterattack gained
         strength, eventually limiting what Church and Pike could
         accomplish. The House voted to suppress Pike's report and
         hauled Schorr before a hearing when he arranged for the
         publication of its leaked contents.

         After Ronald Reagan's election in 1980, the national media
and
         the Congress were brought to heel even more. Olmsted ends
         her book by quoting comments from senior editors about what
         one called the media�s �new age of deference.� In 1982,
another
         declared that "we should make peace with the government. ...
         We should cure ourselves of the adversarial mindset."

         In a sense, Herman's book picks up the story from there,
though
         he also delves back into the modern media's evolution. But
         Herman's central point is the overriding fact of the media's
         self-censorship during the 1980s and early 1990s.

         Herman details, for instance, the stunning contrast between
the
         media's handling of a fugitive Cuban-American terrorist, Luis
         Posada, and the anti-Western terrorist, Ilich Ramirez
Sanchez,
         known as Carlos the Jackal.

         "For the Western media and Western experts, Carlos is the
         model terrorist and is portrayed without qualification as
evil
         incarnate," Herman wrote. By contrast, the U.S. news media
         largely averted its eyes from Posada, a Cuban-American who
         worked for the CIA. Posada was implicated in the bombing of a
         civilian Cubana airliner in 1976, escaped from a Venezuelan
jail
         and ended up handling logistics for Oliver North's Nicaraguan
         contra supply network in 1986.

         "The mainstream media's treatment of this disclosure was
         extremely muted," Herman continued. "I believe that if Carlos
         had turned up as a literal employee of Bulgaria or the Soviet
         Union in some military-terrorist function, the media would
have
         expressed outrage, and would have cited this as definitive
         evidence of a Soviet terror network. � But as [Posada] was
our
         terrorist, the media were virtually silent."

         McChesney's book, published in 1999, focuses on the
         economics of modern journalism and the concentration of both
         money and power in the hands of a few media conglomerates.

         His argument is that the big media has, in many ways, become
         the power structure and is positioned to exploit its enormous
         influence to advance both its own agenda and those of its
         government-business allies.

         "Media fare is ever more closely linked to the needs and
         concerns of a handful of enormous and powerful corporations,
         with annual revenues approaching the GDP of a small nation,"
         McChesney argues. "These firms are run by wealthy managers
         and billionaires with clear stakes in the outcome of the most
         fundamental political issues, and their interests are often
distinct
         from those of the vast majority of humanity.

         �By any known theory of democracy, such a concentration of
         economic, cultural, and political power into so few hands --
and
         mostly unaccountable hands at that -- is absurd and
         unacceptable."

         McChesney also found little to cheer about at the prospect of
the
         Internet significantly broadening the parameters of political
         debate. "Despite its much-ballyhooed 'openness,' to the
extent
         that it becomes a viable mass medium, it will likely be
         dominated by the usual corporate suspects," McChesney wrote.

         "Certainly a few new commercial content players will emerge,
         but the evidence suggests that the content of the digital
         communication world will appear quite similar to the content
of
         the pre-digital commercial media world."

         The announcement of the AOL-Time Warner merger on Jan. 10
         only underscored McChesney's observations.

         On the broader issue of democracy, McChesney sees the news
         media dumbing down, rather than informing, the public debate.

         "In many respects, we now live in a society that is only
formally
         democratic, as the great mass of citizens have minimal say on
         the major public issues of the day, and such issues are
scarcely
         debated at all in any meaningful sense in the electoral
arena,�
         McChesney wrote.

         �In our society, corporations and the wealthy enjoy a power
every
         bit as immense as that assumed to have been enjoyed by the
         lords and royalty of feudal times."

         So, McChesney, like Kaplan, sees the parallels between the
         feudalism of the old Middle Ages and this new age of
"high-tech
         feudalism." If that analysis turns out to be correct, then
         tomorrow�s relationship between the rulers and the ruled will
         have been driven, in large part, by limitations that the
modern
         media has placed on the knowledge of the common people.

         In the old Middle Ages, the process was more straightforward.
         The serfs were kept illiterate and the secrets were kept by a
         small circle of courtiers.

         Today, the methods must be more subtle. Real information must
         be degraded by mixing in propaganda and disinformation, so
         many people have no idea who to trust and what to believe.

         More than two centuries ago, the Founding Fathers addressed
         the need for an informed electorate by enacting the First
         Amendment's guarantee of press freedom. Today, however,
         another debate is overdue: whether the public should -- and
can
         -- demand a new commitment to openness not just by the
         government, but the corporate media as well.

              Editor Robert Parry has written extensively about
propaganda
              in the modern age. His last book is Lost History:
Contras,
              Cocaine, the Press & �Project Truth.�

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