Welcome to the Freakshow
Media Gets Targeted by Obama, Discovers No One Cares Except the Media
by BETHANIA PALMA MARKUS
I was watching the local network news one recent evening because 
apparently I like to torture myself. And what were they reporting on? 
Michael Jackson. My hometown paper, the Los Angeles Times, also ran a 
story that day, May 22, 2013, about Michael Jackson.
Don’t get me wrong. Jackson is and deserves to be a cultural icon. That’s fine. 
But he died four years ago, so why is it still in the news? Can anyone explain 
to me why mainstream American news outlets are still “breaking” news with 
obsessive zeal 
about a 4-year-old story that has no bearing on anyone’s life?
Maybe it’s journalistic laziness or whoring to the public’s base 
desire for sensationalism and depraved celebrity gossip. But the news 
media has a role to play and it’s not entertainment.
This leads me to more salient matters. While my local press corps was babbling 
about some ancient history-Michael Jackson-related minutia 
bullshit, another media storm was brewing. Apparently the Associated 
Press and Fox News recently found themselves on the business end of the 
Obama Administration’s hostility toward journalists. The AP learned the 
Justice Department searched troves of their phone records. Meantime, Fox News’ 
James Rosen had his personal email account scoured by the DOJ and he’s being 
called an “aider and abettor” and “co-conspirator” in a 
criminal case regarding classified document leaks.
So now, all of a magical sudden, the news media in this country seem 
to be waking up. After years of either promoting or ignoring George W. 
Bush’s, then Obama’s constant infringements on the civil liberties of 
average Americans, the media suddenly think it’s a scandal now that 
they’re the butt of it. But while the AP and Fox News aren’t the first, 
they’ve never caused a stir about the U.S. government’s abuse of 
journalists until it hit them in the face.
Yemeni investigative reporter Abdulelah Haider Shaye, who exposed a 
deadly U.S. bombing that killed dozens of women and children in the 
village of Majala, is sitting in prison after being convicted for 
terror-related charges in sham proceedings condemned by human rights 
groups worldwide. Thanks to public pressure, Shaye was about to be 
pardoned in 2011.
But in February that year, Obama personally called Yemen’s president 
and “expressed concern” over Shaye’s pending release, according to a 
White House summary of the phone call. As a result, Shaye continues to 
sit in prisons for doing his job as a reporter. He isn’t the only one. 
Under Bush, Al Jazeera journalist and cameraman Sami Al Hajj spent seven years 
in Gitmo. Pulitzer Prize winner Bilal Hussein was detained for 
two years by the U.S. military for doing his job – with cheerleading by 
the same right-wing blogosphere now howling over the attack on Fox’s 
Rosen.
I don’t recall any major news outlets reporting these cases despite 
the fact they’re obviously outrageous. In fact the first I heard of 
Hussein and Al-Hajj was in reading this eye-opening run-down in 
Salon.com by Glenn Greenwald. 
(http://www.salon.com/2012/03/14/obamas_personal_role_in_a_journalists_imprisonment/)
I can personally recall recent instances where my local media corps 
sold out the public and kowtowed to authorities in direct opposition to 
their duties, causing members of the public to pay a painful price. When Occupy 
L.A. was raided at City Hall in November 2011, the Los Angeles 
Police Department told the media that they couldn’t cover it unless they were 
hand-selected by the LAPD. No one, not even the big dog in the 
room, the LA Times, took them to task on this, even though it was 
obviously unconstitutional.
Meantime the TV stations shut off their aerial camera feeds upon 
order by the LAPD. The result of this was, people were beaten and abused while 
in custody. Protesters had bones broken. But none of this made it into public 
view. Instead, reporters swarmed the next-day presser, 
eager to pepper the powerful with pandering, meaningless questions and 
hear the police chief and mayor crow about how smoothly things went. I 
guess it was smooth if you didn’t have your arm fractured by a bean bag 
gun, your ribs broken by a baton, or forced to piss on yourself while in 
custody. 
(http://egpnews.com/2011/12/reports-of-police-abuse-emerge-after-occupy-la-eviction/)
A similar thing happened during the Chris Dorner saga this February. 
At the culmination of their pursuit, with former LAPD officer Dorner 
pinned down in a Big Bear cabin, police told news outlets with aerial 
feeds to stop filming, so they did. We all know what happened next, 
because people listening to scanners had the presence of mind to record. The 
cops commenced with an apparently pre-planned “burn.” They fired 
incendiary devices into the cabin and Dorner burned inside. Would they 
have given that order if the news choppers were still filming overhead? 
Probably not. The media’s decisions to be obedient lapdogs to authority 
enabled authority to assume too much power, abuse protesters and 
extra-judicially execute someone.
Meantime, the reasons behind Dorner’s vendetta rang all-too-true to 
L.A.’s maltreated communities of color. His accusations of police 
brutality hit a nerve. But you don’t see L.A.’s news media aggressively 
digging into officer involved shootings, killings or beatings even 
though there is a history of police brutality in Los Angeles. If they 
report it, they usually source only the police, and they don’t follow 
up. They don’t put it in context. No one is held to task for the pattern of 
abuse on civil liberties and human rights in L.A.’s poorest 
neighborhoods. The police are given the benefit of the doubt, and people of 
color are treated like criminals. In fact, in an apparent 
collaboration with the LAPD, the media chose to redact the names of 
officers Dorner accused of being abusive when they published his 
“manifesto,” even though the un-redacted version was all over the 
Internet.
The American news media has made pandering to power standard practice when 
their mission should be speaking truth to power and “afflicting 
the comfortable, comforting the afflicted.” In fact, new Orange County 
Register co-owner and publisher Aaron Kushner flat out told his newsroom that 
the long-held journalistic credo of “afflicting the comfortable” 
no longer applies. This runs parallel with fantastic displays of 
incompetence like the flagrant misreporting of facts surrounding the 
Boston marathon bombing by the likes of CNN and New York Post.
The result? The public no longer believes much of what the media 
reports and any trust in the Fourth Estate to expose truth and provide a voice 
for the voiceless is shattered. So it seems the public no longer 
gives a shit about the media, and it’s the media’s own damned fault.
But the public should care about recent developments, even though I 
understand why it doesn’t. The decision by Obama’s Justice Department to go 
after domestic journalists is grave. Why? The way this country is 
set up is reporters are the check on government. When the government 
gets out of line, the role of the journalist is to call it. But, if the 
government grants itself the authority to criminalize journalists for 
performing that role, it weakens the institution intended to keep the 
government from abusing its power. And that’s exactly what’s happened. 
Setting the precedent of criminalizing the press means the federal 
government has given itself limitless and unchecked power.
The current administration has gone after more leakers than any 
other, and without leakers, investigative reporting doesn’t exist. 
Investigative reporting in this country brought to light and forced 
accountability for the My Lai massacre in Vietnam and the Watergate 
scandal that brought Nixon down. It revealed the human rights abuses at 
Abu Ghraib. Leaks by currently-incarcerated Bradley Manning to Wikileaks 
revealed the U.S. military fired on and killed a Reuters journalist and his 
team in Baghdad, among other “war on terror” atrocities.
People who leak government indiscretions and journalists who report 
it are the key to holding government accountable and limit it from 
overreaching its authority. They play a pivotal role in a functioning 
democracy and open society and are the gatekeepers against 
totalitarianism. The Rosen case is the first in U.S. history where the 
federal government has treated a domestic reporter as a full-scale 
criminal for doing his job as a reporter, while the AP phone record grab is the 
widest infringement on the working press in U.S. history. This 
is a chilling development. First Amendment, RIP.
Whether the general public cares or understands these implications 
isn’t clear. But from the comments I’ve seen surrounding these stories, 
doesn’t look like it. If the public doesn’t care, what defense do the 
media have? A bunch of policy wonks, university professors and civil 
liberties lawyers yammering on a high level about the role of the free 
press in a democracy don’t resonate with a cynical, over-worked, 
under-informed public accustomed to seeing partisan hacks and 
incompetent, hyperventilating sensationalists talking about Lindsay 
Lohan, tailing car chases or acting like the danger they’re personally 
in after leaving their comfortable offices is the story.
Thanks to the proliferation of cable “news,” the line between ethical 
journalism and slanting or cherry-picking stories to fit an ideological 
narrative has been badly blurred. As a result, self-described liberals 
don’t give a shit about James Rosen because he works at Fox News, 
regardless of the ominous and universal implications of his case. And 
that’s because Fox News is a shitty, partisan hack organization that 
would have celebrated if any New York Times reporter was criminally 
investigated for doing critical, accurate reporting on the early stages 
of the Iraq war.
I wish though. No one did, and the media marched along wide-eyed with the war 
drum. Turns out, it was all a lie. While some corporations and 
individuals made off like gangbusters with war profits, the general 
American public is paying for the media’s green-lighting of the bungled 
Iraq war and failed policies in Afghanistan with utter fiscal decimation and 
violent blowback. Writing for Truthdig, journalist Chris Hedges 
estimates it was around this time television news officially hit the 
skids. 
(http://www.truthdig.com/report/page2/the_day_that_tv_news_died_20130324/)
While reporters in the Vietnam era fanned out at will to cover that 
war uncensored, the post-9/11 media started out “embedding” themselves 
with U.S. troops to provide a bunch of biased crap journalism before 
getting bored and ignoring the wars completely. Now, no one knows what 
the hell their own government is doing with drones in places like 
Waziristan and Somalia, nor the futility and misery we inflicted in Iraq and 
Afghanistan.
Because journalists no longer care to analyze current events, too few Americans 
understand how war spending and a tax code favoring the rich 
affects the country’s deficit, nor do people recognize “blowback.” 
Instead of informing people what their government is doing abroad, news 
organizations are making up fiction about food stamps breaking the 
budget, digging through Michael Jackson’s grave and conjuring silly 
bells and whistles like CNN’s holograms. A couple days ago I watched CBS News 
dedicate most of its allotted airtime to breathlessly following 
the last minutes of a police car chase.
Maybe that’s why no one gives a shit when Associated Press phones are spied on. 
And Rosen’s plight is at least in part a result of his own 
employer’s cheerleading of their pal Bush’s PATRIOT Act. Oh, the irony. 
Maybe if both had done their jobs when Al-Hajj, Hussein and Shaye were 
persecuted, this wouldn’t have been able to happen in the first place.
It remains to be seen whether the media will start doing its job now 
that it’s been subjected to a small taste of what the public has been 
bludgeoned with for years via FISA, CISPA, the NDAA, the PATRIOT Act, et 
cetera. All these laws basically allow unlimited spying on and 
detention of Americans without any due process guaranteed by the 
Constitution. There are signs of hope, I guess. For instance, I noticed 
the LA Times reported about drones last week when Obama decided to talk 
about it at a press conference. Still, the media’s silence on these 
issues has been bizarre and disturbing, and it’s still bizarre and 
disturbing that they only start covering something when “officials” 
officially talk about it.
But then again, they also wrote about Michael Jackson. It’s such a 
hot mess. But why do I care? Maybe I should just take George Carlin’s 
advice and be happy to have a front-row seat to the freak show.
Bethania Palma Markus is a former staffer with 
the Los Angeles Newspaper Group which covered East LA County from 
Pasadena through the San Gabriel Valley down to Long Beach. She hold sa 
Master’s degree in Middle Eastern/Islamic history. She has written for 
LANG, the LAist and the OC Weekly and Hunter Thompson-honoring, literary 
journalism zine Bat Country Word.

http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/05/29/media-gets-targeted-by-obama-administration-discovers-no-one-cares-except-the-media/


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