----- Original Message -----
From: Neil Tangri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, April 13, 2000 3:08 PM
Subject: (50 Years) D.C. Protests Bucking Media Spin (fwd)


> PROTESTS IN WASHINGTON CLASH WITH MEDIA SPIN
>
> By Norman Solomon   /   Creators Syndicate
>
>
> Converging on the nation's capital this weekend, thousands of
> protesters hope to do more than simply disrupt high-level meetings of the
> World Bank and the International Monetary Fund on Sunday and Monday.
> Demonstrators are eager to help build a movement that can prevail over
> those powerful institutions. But America's mainstream news outlets are
> ill-positioned to shed much light on the underlying issues.
>
> The standard media lexicon is filled with buzzwords that snap
> together as neatly as Leggo plastic blocks. Terms like "economic reform,"
> "free markets" and "eliminating trade barriers" appear with such frequency
> and assurance that they seem to be noting the only rational economic path
> for less-developed countries. In reporting on the World Bank and the IMF,
> as well as the kindred World Trade Organization, familiar media jargon has
> long depicted the wisdom of their "reform" edicts as a no-brainer.
>
> What's implicit in a lot of news coverage often becomes explicit
> in punditry. For example, when the nation's two biggest news weeklies
> reported on the demonstrations against the WTO in Seattle a few months
> ago, the magazines only published fervent pro-WTO commentaries to put it
> all in perspective. Newsweek's sole opinion piece on the subject came from
> Fareed Zakaria, managing editor of Foreign Affairs, who decried "a
> disparate and motley crew of protesters" while bemoaning "the carnival
> tactics of a small but effective minority."
>
> Meanwhile, both of Time's commentaries lauded the WTO and
> belittled the protesters. Under the headline "Return of the Luddites,"
> Charles Krauthammer mocked what he called the "kooky crowd" protesting in
> Seattle -- "one-world paranoids"; "apolitical Luddites, who refuse to
> accept that growth, prosperity and upward living standards always entail
> some dislocation"; and "the leftover left." Krauthammer's essay was
> typeset around a photo of union activists protesting the WTO. The caption
> repeated one of his epithets: "Kooky Crowd."
>
> That sort of media invective is in the cards for the April 16-17
> demonstrations in Washington. Last Tuesday, as a warm-up, The Wall Street
> Journal began its lead editorial with the declaration that protesters
> "will be bringing their bibs and bottles to the nation's capital this week
> to have a run at the annual spring meetings of the IMF and World Bank." In
> the next sentence the newspaper labeled the array of expected protesters
> "a smorgasbord of save-the-turtles activists, anarchists, egalitarians,
> Luddites and Marxists."
>
> The editorial went on to describe the D.C. demonstrations as "an
> anti-trade festival." It's a distortion that commonly makes its way into
> news stories. But protesters taking to the streets against the IMF and
> World Bank aren't opposed to "trade" any more than those who fought to
> outlaw slavery were against work.
>
> "We are not against trade," says former Haitian president
> Jean-Bertrand Aristide, "we are not against free trade, but our fear is
> that the global market intends to annihilate our markets. We will be
> pushed to the cities, to eat food grown on factory farms in distant
> countries, food whose price depends on the daily numbers game" of the
> global marketplace.
>
> In a book being published next week, "Eyes of the Heart," Aristide
> explains that the austerity programs championed by the IMF and World Bank
> offer "a choice between death and death" in poor countries. For instance:
> "Haiti, under intense pressure from the international lending
> institutions, stopped protecting its domestic agriculture while subsidies
> to the U.S. rice industry increased. A hungry nation became hungrier."
>
> On a planet with half of the population -- 3 billion people --
> living on less than two dollars a day, Aristide writes, "the statistics
> that describe the accumulation of wealth in the world are mind-boggling.
> ... Behind this crisis of dollars there is a human crisis: among the poor,
> immeasurable human suffering; among the others, the powerful, the policy
> makers, a poverty of spirit which has made a religion of the market and
> its invisible hand. A crisis of imagination so profound that the only
> measure of value is profit, the only measure of human progress is economic
> growth."
>
> Often, major U.S. media and foes of corporate globalization seem
> to be speaking entirely different languages. Journalists and their usual
> sources like to talk about "economic growth" and "opportunity." But the
> protests in Washington are demanding "global justice."
>
> _________________________________________________
>
> Norman Solomon is a syndicated columnist. His latest book is "The Habits
> of Highly Deceptive Media."
>
>
>
>
> ===========================================================
> 50 Years Is Enough Network           http://www.50years.org
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