It is difficult to understand how anyone with even a modicum
of critical intelligence, can still believe the right-wing complaint that the
mainstream media (MSM) "has a liberal bias." Evidence to the contrary
is overwhelming, and new evidence appears almost daily.
The persistent belief in "the myth of the liberal
media" is still more evidence of the efficacy of "the big lie."
The myth is repeated so often and forcefully that, among the "true
believers," it is accepted despite the evidence. "They wouldn�t say
it, if it weren�t true, right?"
And so the mainstream media, with a very few honorable
exceptions, persists in its unwavering service to the GOP, George Bush, and his
"war on terror."
Case in Point: The (alleged) London/Airline Bomb Plot
On August 10, the day after Ned Lamont�s victory over Joseph
Lieberman, the MSM breathlessly announced that an imminent plot to blow up as
many as 10 trans-Atlantic airliners had been foiled in London. Some 24r British
Moslems, we were told, had devised the plan which would cause, in the words of
a London police administrator, "mass murder on an unimaginable
scale." (So much for fabled British understatement).
And who will save us from such dastardly deeds? Why, none
other than our "wartime president" along with his faithful Brit ally,
Tony Blair. (The polls indicate that "the war on terror" is Bush�s
strongest issue, and perhaps his only effective issue). Thus several Busheviks
were quick to claim credit for the work of British law enforcement.
Sensational! And Topic #1 on the MSM for a few days,
at least.
Then it all began to unravel:
- Specific
details of the plot were obtained from lead suspect, Rashid Rauf, under torture
by Pakistani authorities. As is well known, testimony obtained by
torture is of little value, since the victim will say anything he believes
the torturers want to hear, regardless of the truth.
- The
plot couldn't have been "days away," as first announced, since
none of the alleged plotters had airline tickets, and a few did not even
have passports (required for international flights).
- Chemistry
experts report that the kind of "binary" chemical explosives
described in news reports would be virtually
impossible to activate and explode in flight.
- Moreover,
why should terrorists resort to such complicated and unreliable methods,
when all they need to do is stash explosive devices in the cargo
compartments of the airliners (as was done in the Lockerbie bombing)? The
Bush administration, let us recall, has declined to enact full-scale
inspection of airline cargo. "Too costly," we are told.
Away from "the mainstream," additional serious and
informed doubts about the plot have been raised by Geov Parrish in Working for
Change, Craig Murray in The Guardian,
Christopher Reed in Counterpunch, James K. Galbraith in The
Guardian, Gwyn Dyer in The Age, Bev Conover in Online
Journal, and Michel Chossudovsky in Global
Research (reprinted in Online
Journal), among others.
PSST! That�s the sound of another "terror plot
story" being deflated.
And so, we�ve heard very little about the "deadly
liquids bomb plot" of late. But it did succeed in diverting public
attention from the Connecticut primary. Mission accomplished.
In short, in with a bang, out with a whimper. "The
Great Liquid Bomb Plot" shrivels in the light of subsequent evidence -- and
lack of evidence.
This is not to say that there was no serious terrorist bomb
threat that further investigation might prove, followed by the conviction of
the culprits. We just don't know. And that's the outrage. We have a right to
know, and the media has an obligation to report. But once again, the MSM, in
its typical failure to report counterbalancing doubts and anomalies, casts no
light on the issue. It merely adds more fuel to fire up public fear in support
of Bush's "war on terra."
Rot at the Top: The
decline and fall of "The Grey Lady"
Junk journalism has always been with us, and always will be.
So in attempting to discredit the MSM, there is no point in exposing the
shortcomings of such dregs of journalism as The National Enquirer, The
Washington Times, or The New York Post.
Nor is there any need to do so. The decline of American
journalism can be better demonstrated if we can find it in the most prestigious
and esteemed publications, such as The Washington Post and The New
York Times. And, sadly, it appears that we can.
At The Washington Post, Bob Woodward, the scourge of
the Nixon administration and an essential instrument to Nixon�s downfall, has
become a stenographer and apologist for the Busheviks. And efforts at
investigation and reform by John Conyers are met with scorn and derision by the
likes of "reporter" Dana Milbank.
But I choose, instead, to direct my attention to The New
York Times: the "flagship" of American journalism and the
so-called "newspaper of historical record" which proudly proclaims
every day on its masthead: "All the News that�s Fit to Print." If The
New York Times, presumably the best of American journalism, has been
corrupted, then whom or what can we trust?
So what have we to learn from the New York Times? In the
last decade, we have learned:
- There
is good reason to suspect that Bill and Hillary Clinton were involved in
an illegal land deal: "Whitewater." (They have since been
totally exonerated).
- A
Chinese-American nuclear scientist, Dr. Wen Ho Lee, may have sent
classified secrets to China. (Also exonerated).
- A
newspaper consortium analysis of the 2000 Florida vote "proved"
that Bush would have won the state and the election despite the Supreme
Court ruling, "Bush v. Gore." (The text of that November 12,
2001 article refuted the headline assertion).
- As
reported by now-discredited Times reporter Judith Miller, Saddam Hussein
imported aluminum tubes that could only be used to refine uranium for
nuclear bombs. Miller also "informed" us that, according to
"reliable sources" (i.e., the convicted embezzler, Ahmed
Chalabi), Saddam Hussein had stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction. All
these claims were subsequently proven to be false.
And this is what the New York Times has not
told us -- presumably not "fit to print."
- That
the GOP slanders against Al Gore (e.g., that he claimed to have invented
the Internet and to have "discovered" the toxic site, Love
Canal) were all groundless.
- That
the "Swift Boat Veterans for Truth" conducted a baseless smear
against John Kerry, and conversely, that Kerry�s military record and his
medals were authentic.
- That
George Bush was absent without leave from his military obligation with the
Texas Air National Guard.
- That
Bush likely violated securities law as an executive and investor with
Harken energy.
- That
there is compelling evidence that the 2000, 2002 and 2004 elections were
stolen by the Republicans through vote fraud.
- That
the Bush administration violated the FISA laws on wiretapping of US
civilians. (The Times did report this eventually, but "held" the
story past the 2004 election, which might have been affected by the
disclosure).
"All the news that�s fit to print?" I think not.
How the mighty have fallen! With a record like this, why
should anyone pay any attention to what The New York Times might be
reporting?
Decades ago, when I lived in Manhattan and taught at the
City University of New York, one of the highlights of the week was when I
brought a newly-minted Sunday New York Times to my flat, and spread it
out on my bed, reading voraciously.
No more! Today, I won�t pay the annual $50 for access
online to the NYT columnists. "It will only encourage them." Despite
the worthy contributions of such "exceptions" as Frank Rich and Paul
Krugman, "the best of American journalism" is simply not good enough.
So we must turn to the remaining independent media, the
foreign press, and the Internet for our news.
We, the progressive public, do not own The New York Times,
nor do we have a voice on its editorial board. Still, we do have leverage -- simply
by ignoring them. Like all modern newspapers, The New York Times relies
more on advertising than on subscriptions and sales for its revenue. But
advertising rates are a function of circulation. If the public gives The New
York Times (and The Washington Post, etc.), the attention and
credence they authentically deserve (i.e., very little), their bottom
lines will suffer. Then, at long last, a reform of American journalism may soon
be at hand.
A Plea to the
(formerly) responsible media: "Just the facts, please."
We don�t need a mirror-image liberal-bias to
"balance" the rightward slant of the MSM. "Just the facts,"
will do just fine. For, as Steven Colbert so aptly put it, "reality has a
liberal bias."
And so to The New York Times in particular, we plead,
fulfill the daily promise on your masthead: "All the news that�s fit to
print."
If, in general, American journalists are once again
permitted to report the unbiased facts, then the fall of Bushism will be
assured and the restoration of our democracy will take care of itself.
Copyright � 2006
Ernest Partridge
Dr.
Ernest Partridge is a consultant, writer and lecturer in the field of
Environmental Ethics and Public Policy. He has taught Philosophy at the
University of California, and in Utah, Colorado and Wisconsin. He publishes the
website, "The Online Gadfly" (www.igc.org/gadfly)
and co-edits the progressive website, "The Crisis Papers" (www.crisispapers.org). His book in
progress, "Conscience of a Progressive," can be seen at www.igc.org/gadfly/progressive/^toc.htm.