CNN: Corrupt News Network
Tim Rutten

A self-serving agenda was set for the Republican presidential debates.
December 1, 2007


THE United States is at war in the Middle East and Central Asia, the economy is 
writhing like a snake with a broken back, oil prices are relentlessly climbing 
toward $100 a barrel and an increasing number of Americans just can't afford to 
be sick with anything that won't be treated with aspirin and bed rest.

So, when CNN brought the Republican presidential candidates together this week 
for what is loosely termed a "debate," what did the country get but a 
discussion of immigration, Biblical inerrancy and the propriety of flying the 
Confederate flag?


 
In fact, this most recent debacle masquerading as a presidential debate raises 
serious questions about whether CNN is ethically or professionally suitable to 
play the political role the Democratic and Republican parties recently have 
conceded it.

Selecting a president is, more than ever, a life and death business, and a news 
organization that consciously injects itself into the process, as CNN did by 
hosting Wednesday's debate, incurs a special responsibility to conduct itself 
in a dispassionate and, most of all, disinterested fashion. When one considers 
CNN's performance, however, the adjectives that leap to mind are corrupt and 
incompetent.

Corruption is a strong word. But consider these facts: The gimmick behind 
Wednesday's debate was that the questions would be selected from those that 
ordinary Americans submitted to the video sharing Internet website YouTube, 
which is owned by Google. According to CNN, its staff culled through 5,000 
submissions to select the handful that were put to the candidates. That process 
essentially puts the lie to the vox populi aura the association with YouTube 
was meant to create. When producers exercise that level of selectivity, the 
questions -- whoever initially formulated and recorded them -- actually are 
theirs.

That's where things begin to get troubling, because CNN chose to devote the 
first 35 minutes of this critical debate to a single issue -- immigration. Now, 
if that leaves you scratching your head, it's probably because you're included 
in the 96% of Americans who do not think immigration is the most important 
issue confronting this country. We've got a pretty good fix concerning what's 
on the American mind right now, because the nonpartisan and highly reliable Pew 
Center has been regularly polling people since January on the issues that 
matter most to them. In fact, the center's most recent survey was conducted in 
the days leading up to Wednesday's debate.

HERE'S what Pew found: By an overwhelming margin, Americans think the war in 
Iraq is the most important issue facing the United States, followed by the 
economy, healthcare and energy prices. In fact, if you lump the war into a 
category with terrorism and other foreign policy issues, 40% of Americans say 
foreign affairs are their biggest concern in this election cycle. If you do 
something similar with all issues related to the economy, 31% list those 
questions as their most worrisome issue. As anybody who has looked at their 
401(k) or visited a gas pump would expect, that aggregate figure has increased 
dramatically since Pew started polling in January. Back then, for example, 
concerns over the war outpaced economic anxieties by fully 8 to 1. By contrast, 
just 6% of the survey's national sample said that immigration was the most 
important electoral issue. Moreover, that number hasn't changed in a 
statistically meaningful way since the first of the year. In other words, more 
than nine out of 10 Americans think something matters more than immigration in 
this presidential election.

So, why did CNN make immigration the keystone of this debate? What standard 
dictated the decision to give that much time to an issue so remote from the 
majority of voters' concerns? The answer is that CNN's most popular 
news-oriented personality, Lou Dobbs, has made opposition to illegal 
immigration and free trade the centerpiece of his neonativist/neopopulist 
platform. In fact, Dobbs led into Wednesday's debate with a good solid dose of 
immigrant bashing. His network is in a desperate ratings battle with Fox News 
and, in a critical prime-time slot, with MSNBC's Keith Olbermann. So, what's 
good for Dobbs is good for CNN.

In other words, CNN intentionally directed the Republicans' debate to advance 
its own interests. Make immigration a bigger issue and you've made a bigger 
audience for Dobbs.

That's corruption, and it's why the Republican candidates had to spend more 
than half an hour "debating" an issue on which their differences are 
essentially marginal -- and, more important, why GOP voters had to sit and 
wait, mostly in vain, for the issues that really concern them to be discussed. 
That's particularly true because that same Pew poll reported findings of 
particular relevance to Republican voters, the vast majority of whom continue 
to support the war in Iraq.

According to this most recent poll, a substantial number of Americans believe 
the surge is working. As Pew summarized their findings, "While Iraq remains a 
deeply polarizing issue across party lines, there has been improvement in how 
both Democrats and Republicans view the war. At the lowest point in February, 
barely half of Republicans (51%) said things were going well. Today, 74% of 
Republicans say the same. And while Democrats remain far more skeptical than 
Republicans, the proportion of Democrats expressing a positive view of the Iraq 
effort has doubled since February (from 16% to 33%).

"Independents' assessments of how the military effort is going remain far 
closer to the views of Democrats than of Republicans. Currently, 41% of 
independents offer a positive assessment, while half say things are not going 
well. In February, 26% of independents expressed a positive view of the 
situation in Iraq."

Those are significant swings of opinion, yet the poll also found that more than 
half of Americans still favor withdrawing American troops. That disconnect is a 
real issue for the GOP candidates, all but one of whom support the war. Unless 
we're going to believe that the self-selecting YouTube questioners were utterly 
different from the rest of American voters, it seems pretty clear that CNN 
ignored these complex -- and highly relevant concerns -- for an issue that 
served its ratings interests -- immigration -- or ones that made for moments of 
conventional television conflict, like gun control, which doesn't even show up 
in surveys of voters' concerns.

THIS is intellectual venality, but it pales beside the wickedness of using some 
crackpot's query about the candidates' stand on Biblical inerrancy to do 
something that's anathema in our system -- to probe people's individual 
religious consciences. American journalists quite legitimately ask candidates 
about policy issues -- say, abortion -- that might be influenced by their 
religious or philosophical convictions. We do not and should not ask them about 
those convictions themselves. It's nobody's business whether a candidate 
believes in the virgin birth, whether God gave an oral Torah to Moses at Sinai, 
whether the Buddha escaped the round of birth and rebirth or whether an angel 
appeared to Joseph Smith.

The latter point is relevant because CNN's noxious laundering of this question 
through the goofy YouTube mechanism quite clearly was designed to embarrass 
Mitt Romney -- who happens to be a Mormon -- and, secondarily, to help Mike 
Huckabee -- who, as a Baptist minister, had a ready answer, and who happens to 
be television's campaign flavor of the month.

Beside considerations like these, CNN's incompetent failure to weed out 
Democratically connected questioners pales.

In any event, CNN has failed in its responsibilities to the political process 
and it's time for the leaders of both the Republican and Democratic parties to 
take the network out of our electoral affairs.

[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-rutten1dec01,0,4122002.column?coll=la-home-center



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