The illiberal orthodoxy  of the American media 

by Jack Cashill  
The accepted wisdom seems to be that a certain liberal  orthodoxy permeates 
the American media, especially on matters of religion. I  would agree that 
there is an orthodoxy. Rarely, for instance, can one find any  substantive 
disagreement among the networks, the major news magazines, the New  York 
Times and the other leading newspapers on any given issue. Rarely bordering  on 
never. But I would contend that although this orthodoxy may occasionally be  
liberal in its profession, it is anything but liberal in its execution.  
Liberalism, in its purer forms, demands a certain coherence and  
consistency. It insists on free expression, abhors guilt by association, 
rejects  
malicious stereotyping, refuses to pass judgment on cultural and religious  
differences, and keens for open-mindedness and tolerance, almost to a fault.  
But as shall be seen, in matters of religion, the media indulge  regularly 
in the illiberal side of all these equations.  
A page-three story in the Washington Post of June 20 tells the  discerning 
reader almost everything he needs to know about the media's take on  
religion in this the year of the Lord, 2002 A.D., excuse me, the year 2002,  
C.E..  
The lead sentence points the way: "Leading evangelical  Christians, 
including the Rev. Jerry Falwell, are supporting a prominent  Southern Baptist 
preacher's condemnation of the prophet Muhammad as a  "demon-possessed pe
dophile."  
The opening sentence of the second paragraph completes the  mission the 
Washington Post had set for itself. "The controversy has also  embroiled the 
White House."  
Controversy? How can the remarks of the Reverend Jerry Vines, a  man almost 
no non-Baptist had ever heard of before, a man whose current posting  is as 
pastor of the First Baptist Church of in Jacksonville, Florida, cause a  
controversy that embroils the president.  
No sweat. The media manufacture such controversies routinely.  Here is how 
they do it.  
    1.  The media cover the Southern Baptist convention every year hoping 
that some  pastor will say something that offends their own professed liberal 
 sensibilities--as Southern Baptists are wont to do. In fact, the Post 
article  recites a litany of past offenses. "In 1988, the convention said 
salvation was  found only through Jesus Christ. In 1998, it said a wife should 
"submit  herself graciously" to the leadership of her husband etc. etc.  
    2.  The media run the offending remark by the Reverends Jerry Falwell 
or Pat  Robertson, hoping that they will not repudiate it.  
    3.  They next find some "mainline Protestant groups" and "Jewish 
leaders"  expecting to find someone among them who will repudiate the remark.  
    4.  They will then find some way to implicate the highest ranking 
Republican  in the controversy, in this case, the president who was dragged in 
only  because he addressed the group by satellite the next day. But that was 
enough.  
To make its point, the Washington Post uses cut-outs: the  first, an 
obscure Episcopal minister from Missouri, who argues that the  Christian 
imperative is to "love one another and to break down the barriers that  
separate us." 
This implies, of course, that Vines' "demon-possessed pedophile"  remark is 
un-Christian; the second is the national director of the  Anti-Defamation 
League, who finds the remark "deplorable." adding that it is  "not surprising 
coming from the leadership of the Southern Baptist Convention."  
This is amazing.  
Through its cut-outs, the Post professes religious tolerance  but then 
turns around and harshly condemns the Southern Baptists and, by  association, 
their allies on the Christian Right, for failing to honor the  Post's own 
rigid orthodoxy.  
There is, however, a shred of consistency to the media  position, one 
inspired not by any liberal ideal but rather by an illiberal and  irrational 
bigotry--and that is the hatred of the so-called "religious right," a  
collective that the Washington Post once famously stereotyped in a hard news  
story 
on the front page as “largely poor, uneducated, and easy to command.” In  
fact, the Christian right tend to be prosperous, well educated, and less 
likely  to vote in bloc than either blacks or Jews. Where were the Post’s 
editors 
that  day?  
So deep is the animus among the American media against  conservative 
Christian--and, as appropriate, Jews--that the media will assume  positions 
fully 
contrary to their professed core beliefs to keep the  Judaeo-Christian right 
as far out of power as possible.  
This paradox manifests itself along any number of fronts in the  ongoing 
culture war. Among them, as suggested in this instance, is the media's  
obvious sympathy for Muslims in their perceived conflict with conservative Jews 
 
and Christians.  
There is an irony at work here. Islamic extremists in America  have proven 
to be exactly the bogeyman that the media have long imagined the  Christian 
right to be--patriarchal, theocratic, sexist, homophobic, anti-choice,  and 
openly anti-Semitic. And according to at least one brave Muslim moderate,  
Sheik Muhammad Kabani, 80% of the mosques in America are in the hands of 
genuine  extremists, some of whom are not above encouraging murder to get their 
way.  
Had the media bypassed the Baptist gathering in favor of those,  say, of 
the Muslim American Youth Association or the Islamic Society of North  America 
or the Muslim American Alliance, they might have heard songs with lyrics  
like "No to the Jews, descendants of the apes" or shouts of "death to the 
west"  or the more succinct "kill the Jews," and they might have been the wiser 
for it.  
But the media chose not to report on those meetings. Why should  they? The 
ongoing media morality play is as pre-scripted as a WWF smackdown, and  in 
it, the Judaeo-Christian right enter the media ring as the heavies, no matter 
 the opposition, no matter the facts, no matter the right's guilt or 
innocence  for a given offense.  
Take the case, for instance, of Mathew Shepard, a college  student whose 
search for rough sex led him into the night with a pair of  parentless, 
soulless, meth-addled desperados that had likely never been to  church in their 
lives.  
>From the media perspective, the true Christian, indeed the true  
Christ-like figure, in this drama was Shepard himself. The networks made no  
fewer 
than three movies celebrating his life in each of which he was depicted as  
being crucified.  
This was too much even for the Village Voice. "It can't be  coincidental," 
said the exasperated Voice reviewer, "that both [new] films are  being shown 
in the shadow of Good Friday and Easter Sunday." Mathew Shepard's  mother 
felt compelled to remind his acolytes in the media that Shepard was found  
slumped at the base of the fence, not strung up on it, and that he was "no  
saint."  
The villain in this same drama is, perversely but predictably,  the 
Christian right. Consider, for instance, Katie Couric's leading line of  
questioning on the Today Show to the governor of Wyoming, Jim Geringer.  
"Some gay-rights activists have said that some conservative  Christian 
organizations, like the Christian Coalition, the Family Research  Council and 
Focus on the Family, are contributing to this anti-homosexual  atmosphere by 
having an ad campaign saying, 'If you're a homosexual, you can  change your 
orientation.' That prompts people to say, 'If I meet someone who's  
homosexual, I'm going to take action and try to convince them or try to harm  
them.' 
Do you believe that such groups are contributing to this climate?" 
"Convince them or harm them?" Among real liberals, the Great  Satan was Joe 
McCarthy. His great sin was his imputation of guilt by  association. But 
McCarthy, even at his most reckless, would never attempt an  association as 
insidious as the one Couric casually made between the Christian  Coalition and 
the outlaws who killed Shepard. As I said, illiberal.  
Couric's take was hardly unique. Led by gay advocacy groups,  her 
colleagues were widely condemning the Christian right before Shepard's body  
had 
grown cold. The fact that Shepard died six weeks before the critical  
congressional elections of 1998 was a coincidence. The exploitation of his  
death, 
however, was as cold and calculated as a truck bomb.  
A less serious, but no less indicative media assault on the  right occurred 
in the exquisitely timed days leading up to Bill Clinton's Senate  trial. 
At that time, the lead in a BBC story picked up the networks' spin on  this 
story almost too perfectly, "The innocent world of the Teletubbies is under  
attack from America's religious right." The BBC posting continued: "The 
Reverend  Jerry Falwell, a former spokesman for America's Moral Majority, has 
denounced  the BBC TV children's show. He says it does not provide a good role 
model for  children because Tinky Winky is gay." The BBC, like the major 
American media,  accused Falwell of being the one man crazed enough to "out" 
this entirely  "innocent" character.  
The reporting on this story was so wrong in so many details  that it begs 
explication. For one, Falwell never wrote about Tinky Winky. The  "outing" 
occurred only as one of many brief pieces in a "Parents Alert" section  of 
Falwell's theretofore obscure National Liberty Journal. Nor did the Journal  
"out" Tinky Winky. Rather, it accurately reported the fact that the Washington 
 Post had outed this character just weeks before and that, as the Post 
admitted,  gay groups had "claimed Tinky Winky as their own." Given the fact 
that Tinky  Winky carries a red handbag, speaks in a male voice, and wears an 
utterly  symbolic purple triangle on his head, one can understand why gays 
did embrace  him. Gayness was designed into his character, and the BBC knew 
it. Two years  earlier, when the BBC, which produces the show, wanted to fire 
the human who  plays Mr. Winky for dancing in the streets wearing only a 
balloon, gay groups  protested.  
This story broke when it did to protect Bill Clinton. Clinton  may be no 
saint, read the subtext in this reporting, but he is the man who  shields us 
from the demented likes of Jerry Falwell.  
So keen are the media on exploiting the perceived threat from  religious 
conservatives—a “far greater threat than the old threat of communism”  to 
quote the Reverend Meneilly, the leading mainstream protestant spokesman in  
Kansas City--that they are not above manufacturing crimes of which to accuse  
them, none more egregious than the burning of black churches. "Arson Study 
Finds  Racism Runs Deep," screamed the USA Today headline in the presidential 
election  year of 1996. "Church Fires Show Racism, Panel Says," echoed the 
New York Times.  
And who was responsible for these fires? For the answer the  media turned 
to people like Mary Frances Berry, the chairman of the U.S.  Commission on 
Civil Rights (U.S.C.C.R.). After the Christian Coalition had set  up a fund 
for burned black churches, Berry was quoted widely as saying, "You  have the 
very people who created the context for the fires rushing over and  saying 
`Let us help you put them out.'" Had Joe McCarthy known the word  "context," 
he would have loved it.  
In fact, there was no epidemic of black church fires that year.  Indeed, no 
more black churches burned down than normally did. Of the 90 or so  fires 
studied by Berry's commission only three could be laid at the door of the  
racist "establishment," and these were the work of drunken rednecks. Indeed,  
more white churches were burned by blacks than black churches were burned by 
 whites. To the degree that there were any identifiable themes among the  
arsonists they were insurance fraud and Satanism, and it is hard to imagine 
that  the Christian Coalition contributed to the "context" of either.  
There was, however, one deliberate church burning during the  Clinton years 
in which _28  innocent black people were killed_ 
(http://cashill.com/natl_general/forgotten_28.htm) , ages six to sixty-one. 
They were  members of the 
Mount Carmel community, a multi-racial group whose philosophy  offended 
certain sensibilities and for which their community was destroyed.  Haven't 
heard about this one? There is a reason why. The media perceived the  group as 
being of the religious right and thus not worthy of support or even  
sympathy. And so when the Clinton Justice Department stormed this enclave on 
the  
lonely plains outside of Waco, Texas, the media chose not to protest the most  
egregious assault on civil liberties since Wounded Knee. More insidiously, 
they  shielded the American people from knowing that most of the dead were 
racial  minorities. Such knowledge would only confuse the morality play.  
As I said, illiberal.  
I could cite a score more comparable examples. One that I am  currently 
researching is the Clinton Justice Department's pursuit of Catholic  activist 
James Kopp for the murder of abortion doctor Barnett Slepian ten days  before 
the 1998 elections. Within hours of his death, without a shred of  
evidence, an outraged media were laying that murder at the feet of the pro-life 
 
movement. “[Slepian’s] death shows again how tentative the right to abortion 
has  become in the face of terrorism by anti-choice fanatics,” thundered the 
New  York Times. Within 48 hours, Eliot Spitzer was running ads denouncing  
pro-life incumbent New York State Attorney General Dennis Vacco for 
contributing  to the "context" of that murder. The Justice Department announced 
Kopp's alleged  involvement on election morning just in case anyone had 
forgotten who was  responsible. Spitzer overcame an 8 point margin in those 
last ten 
days to win by  a disputed half-point and has been paying NARAL back ever 
since. But more on  this case some other time.  
If you don't mind, I'd like to get back to that demon-possessed  pedophile 
remark. For starters, I checked to see if, in fact, the prophet  Muhammad 
was a pedophile. What I learned, depending on the source, was that he  had 
somewhere between 11 and 14 wives, some of whom, by our standards, were  
underage. At least one of these sources identifies his third wife, `A´isha Bint 
 
Abi Bakr, as being either six or seven at the time of her marriage to 
Muhammad  and nine at the time of consummation, but I don't know the source 
well 
enough to  substantiate the claim.  
I will leave the job of making unsubstantiated claims of  pedophilia about 
someone else's religious leader to the media. They seem to have  been doing 
an excellent job of it lately. You have to ask yourself, though, what  has 
so enraged the media of late about pedophilia?  
When director Roman Polanski got a 13 year-old girl loaded up  on qualudes 
in 1978, raped her and then fled the country, he lost no luster in  
Hollywood. Just this year he won the top prize at the Cannes film festival. 
When  in 
1983, Congressmen Gerry Studds was censured by the House for getting a  
17-year old House page drunk and then seducing him the media scarcely took 
note.  The good people of Massachusetts elected him five more times before he 
retired,  and Studds is now something of a folk hero in liberal circles. When 
in 1988, at  the Democratic convention no less, actor Rob Lowe made his own 
little porn film  of himself and a 16 year-old, he served--get this--20 
hours of community service  as punishment. Today, with art imitating life, he 
unashamedly plays a Democrat  on TV. When in 1993 Michael Jackson reportedly 
paid 13 year old Jordy Chandler  18 and a half million dollars to buy his 
silence in a child molestation case, he  bought the media's silence too. Last 
seen, Michael Jackson was headlining a  Democratic fundraiser at the Apollo 
with Bill Clinton, himself with a known  penchant for exploiting young girls 
sexually and occasionally, dare I say it,  even raping them, for one of 
which alleged rapes he was actually impeached.  
So why are the media so upset with Catholic priests, why  especially the 
Boston Globe which has supported homeboy Gerry Studds. I have  heard it said 
that the scandal was not really about pedophilia but about  homosexuality 
which is essentially true, but homosexuality in the church would  upset the 
Globe and other media less than pedophilia. After all, the Globe has  supported 
Barney Frank, the Massachusetts congressman whose roommate ran a call  boy 
ring out of Frank’s house in Washington.  
No, the scandal isn't really about pedophilia or about  homosexuality. 
Although lord knows Catholic priests have been guilty of both,  the media would 
never have invested the emotional energy and resources to expose  either 
issue. They are openly sympathetic to homosexuals and largely indifferent  to 
pedophiles.  
No, the Church's largely left-leaning hierarchy has cast its  lot with the 
religious conservatives that the media so thoroughly disdains on  the one 
issue that matters most in America's newsrooms--life. Life. If the media  have 
to ferret out every homosexual among the catholic priesthood to destroy the 
 single greatest world wide proponent of the culture of life, so be it.  
As I said, irrational, incoherent, illiberal. 

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to