George W. Bush once joked before a Gridiron crowd, �you can
fool some of the people all of the time, and those are the ones I have to
concentrate on.� That offhand joke accurately describes how Bush gains support
for his Iraq policy.
Mainstream media commentators sometimes help Bush fool the
public. They often parrot Bush�s talking points as if they were �news� and let
his outright lies go unquestioned. When it comes to the Cindy Sheehan story,
some mainstream reporters still allow Bush to frame the debate in deceptive
ways.
When media pundits claim the lies that got us into the Iraq
war no longer matter, and that all that currently counts is what we do from
here on in Iraq, they miss an important point. Bush keeps peddling the exact
same falsehoods as if they�d never been disproved, and he continues to use them
in ways that do deadly harm.
It�s now common knowledge among well-informed Americans Bush
misled the country about WMD, the imaginary link between Iraq and 9/11, and his
shifting rationales for the Iraq invasion. The anti-reality Bush administration
still tries to fool the public (or to concentrate their propaganda on the
people who can be fooled all of the time) by repeatedly insinuating there
really is a link between Iraq and 9/11, and by continuing to try to sell other
such fairy tales.
The mainstream media help Bush by failing to forcefully
challenge him each and every time he tries to peddle the same old lies. They
assist in fooling the easily fooled folks by failing to pose tough questions.
Bush gets away with repeating the tired line: �We have to
fight terrorists in Iraq so we don�t have to fight them here at home.� The
media should question this Mother of All Non Sequiturs every time it comes up.
By what Mad Hatter �logic� could our fighting a few terrorists in Iraq prevent
a few others from doing dirty work here? Does Bush expect us to believe such
people would be so distracted by Iraq they couldn�t send a few bad guys our way
while simultaneously fighting there?
When Bush claims U.S. presence in Iraq somehow makes
Americans freer, why won�t reporters ask: �Exactly how has invading Iraq�or how
could it even potentially�increase our freedom here? Since Iraq had nothing to
do with 9/11, was no more a 'terrorist haven' than many other countries we did
not invade, and had no known intention of attacking us, by what stretch of the
imagination are Americans freer or safer now that we�ve invaded?�
Why won�t mainstream media make every effort to correct the
public�s misperceptions about the war? When Bush supporters trump up fake
grassroots (AstroTurf) protests, why do mainstream media commentators play
along with the pretense? The anti-Cindy Sheehan group called �You Don�t Speak
for Me, Cindy,� is being promoted by the Republican PR firm, Russo March &
Rogers, backed group, Move America Forward (MAF). Right-wing talk show host,
Melanie Morgan, is an MAF vice chair. (For more on this, see Diane Farsetta�s �Moving America One
Step Forward and Two Steps Back."
Morgan has appeared on TV news programs, including Chris
Mathews� Hardball on MSNBC, and she�s managed to get away with selling her
anti-Sheehan group as one that originated spontaneously from the bottom up,
from ordinary people, with no push from a top-down PR firm.
The problem is not that media commentators never help dispel
the Bush deceptions. They just don�t do it consistently or vigorously enough to
constitute their taking a firm stand behind the facts. Their hit and miss,
piecemeal truth-telling conveys to the people among us who are easy to fool the
false notion that Bush�s anti-reality propaganda about Iraq is simply another
legitimate side of the debate.
When reporters sometimes state the truth�for example that
there�s no link between Iraq and 9/11�and at other times let Bush or his
supporters slip in the implication there is a legitimate link, it appears the
media can�t make up its mind between fiction and reality. If a commentator
confirms what all the factual evidence shows about Iraq in one breath, but in
the next breath gives equal credence to the idea the U.S. is in Iraq to protect
American freedom, that commentator is no more reality-based than is the Bush
administration.
No wonder Bush can fool some of the people all of the time.
The mainstream media won�t firmly and consistently set the record straight.
In his Aug. 25 article, �Will News Media Help
Bush Exploit the 9/11 Anniversary Again,� journalist Norman Solomon writes
that the upcoming fourth anniversary of 9/11 will give the Bush administration
many media opportunities to falsely connect the rationale for the Iraq war with
9/11.
Solomon points out that often �the propaganda tag-team of
government and media has conveyed implicit lies as actual facts.� He notes the
media let Bush get away with saying on Sept. 11, 2003, �what our enemies have
begun, we will finish.� While one network reporter explained that Bush �had the
Iraqi leader in mind,� no one bothered to remind the public that equating the
�enemies� who have allegedly �begun� the conflict (purportedly al Qaeda) with a
�finish� in Iraq amounts to an outright lie.
As Solomon says, �with routine assistance from news
coverage, the Bush administration touts the U.S. war effort in Iraq as a
legitimate response to what happened on Sept. 11, 2001. With the White House
now desperate to shore up its sinking political fortunes, a vast amount of such
propaganda is on the horizon.�
Lincoln said, �You can fool all of the people some of the
time, and you can fool some of the people all of the time, but you can�t fool
all of the people all of the time.� He probably had no idea a deceitful future
president would fool roughly 40 percent of the people into supporting an
illegal war of aggression based entirely on lies.
Is it possible Chris Mathews, Wolf Blitzer and all the other
network reporters are unaware that their allowing Bush to mislead the nation
into an unjust war makes them largely responsible for every soldier killed in
that war? Could it be those in mainstream media simply don�t know the consequences
of their failure to �un-fool� the many Americans Bush has concentrated on
fooling?
When Bush-supporting mothers say they happily send their
sons to die in Iraq �for our freedom,� don�t reporters feel remotely obliged to
point out in some tactful manner that factual reality opposes the notion that
the Iraq war relates to securing America�s freedom? Thanks to the Downing
Street Memos and other solid sources, most facts are now in regarding Iraq, yet
many in mainstream media behave as if these facts are still up for debate.
Cindy Sheehan�s critics have claimed her son, Casey, and
other soldiers volunteered to fight of their own free will and that Cindy and
other soldiers� families, therefore, have no room to complain. Media
commentators often fail to mention that many American soldiers volunteered
based on Bush�s misleading rhetoric, and I�ve never heard anyone in mainstream
media admit they helped further the Bush lies.
With
the Republican PR firm�s �You Don�t Speak for Me, Cindy� group on the march,
and with the 9/11 anniversary�s propaganda blitz on the horizon, it would be
good to have a few people of conscience in mainstream media cut through all the
impending bull. If they did, maybe Bush would fool fewer of the people and fool
them less of the time, and maybe some lives would be saved in the process.