There
have been lots of words written about the demise of newspapers and
other “news outlets” in the U.S. by such organizations as
FAIR, Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting, which tries valiantly to
balance its analysis against the multitude of Right Wing groups that
have pounded American citizens’ brains with the propaganda that
the “media” is liberal (even a conspiracy) and that
conservatives do not stand a chance of having their story told in the
mass media.
In
fact, nothing could be further from the truth. It is the billions
spent by the millionaire and billionaire class to buy up the means
(newspapers, magazines, radio and television stations) by which
citizens are expected to get their information to make informed
choices in voting. The struggle of curious citizens to break free of
this hamstringing of democracy continues to this week and this day.
Newspapers
always have been cash cows, especially in small towns and in rural
areas, but now, most of them are in financial trouble and are seeking
ways to cut their expenses by—what else?—cutting news
staff and anyone else they can to lift their sagging profit margins.
That’s
why the Times
Union in
Albany (the paper of record for New York’s Capital District)
tried to squeeze its news staffers for a few drops of that profit
increase. How are they doing that? By failing to negotiate in good
faith with the Guild and refusing those workers a raise for the past
eight years. In case you missed that: Union news gatherers have
gone eight years without a raise in Albany, try as they might to
settle the contract.
Next
thing you know, Capital Newspapers (owned by the Hearst Corporation)
will be offering yet another buyout, just as the Columbus
Dispatch,
Columbus, Ohio, offered its workers last year. In mid-August, the
Ohio paper was set to meet with its news staffers about the buyout.
According to Columbus
Business First,
“Interim
Publisher Jim Hopson first told staff about the buyout option in
a July 30 meeting, pitching it as a way to save jobs of other
employees who might otherwise be cut. New Media Investment Group
Inc. (NYSE:NEWM) bought the newspaper and other assets in June and
last month revealed plans to cut costs by $10 million during
the next two years.”
It
didn’t take the “new owner” long to decide that a
newspaper could sacrifice its news gatherers and other
workers, to help the bottom line of its investors reach the $10
million in savings.
Here’s
how insidertradingreport.org describes the new owner in August: “New
Media Investment Group, Inc. is a publisher of locally-based print
and online media in the United States. It is focused primarily on
investing in a diversified portfolio of local media assets, and
on
existing advertising and digital marketing businesses. As of
September 28, 2014, the Company operated in over 370 markets across
27 states. Its portfolio of products, as of September 28, 2014,
included 450 community publications, over 370 related Websites, and
six yellow page directories, serve more than 130,000 business
advertising accounts and reach over 14 million people on a weekly
basis.”
By
and large, this has worked and it is seen in the current presidential
primary elections. One could ignore the Republican primaries,
because the front-runner status of a political neophyte, Donald
Trump, has thrown the Grand Old Party into a maelstrom of worry that,
if nominated by his party to be its presidential candidate, would
lose the general election and finish off what’s left of the
party’s perceived unity. That, the party’s leadership
fears, could set the party back decades, if not generations.
The
facts are out there about the purveyors of mass information, but it
is little reported by the same mass media: All of our information
comes from sources that are owned by fewer and fewer corporations and
very rich individuals. A generation, or so, ago, a majority of these
outlets were owned by some 50 different corporations, with a healthy
smattering of family- or small town-owned newspapers and radio
stations. Those days are long gone and the results couldn’t be
made clearer than this one example pointed out this week by FAIR.
In
one 16-hour period, March 6 and 7, the Washington Post ran 16
negative stories on the campaign being run by Senator Bernie Sanders,
who describes himself as a Democratic Socialist. It can be argued
whether he is an actual socialist, but leaving that aside for the
moment, the very word is enough to throw the millionaire and
billionaire class into a tizzy. Some of the headlines the newspaper
of the nation’s capital ran against Sanders included: “Bernie
Sanders Pledges the U.S. Won’t Be No. 1 in Incarceration.
He’ll Need to Release Lots of Criminals;” “Clinton
is Running for President, Sanders is Doing Something Else,” and
“This Is Huge: Trump, Sanders Both Using Same Catchphrase.”
Surprise!
The Washington Post was purchased in the recent past by Jeff
Bezos, who is described as a libertarian and who is CEO of Amazon,
arguably one of the worst corporations in American, from the
standpoint of its low-wage warehouse workers. Bezos can be counted
on to declare that he doesn’t interfere with the editorial
policy and staff of the paper, but that’s like saying that
Rupert Murdoch has nothing to do with the editorial policies of Fox
“News” or the New York Post. Or, that Sun Myung
Moon had no influence on the editorial policies of his Right Wing
Washington Times. They all would claim that they have not,
and do not, tell editors what to cover or what to write on a daily
basis, but there is such a thing as self-censorship and it is applied
generously by the staffs of each outlet, every day. They know who
the boss is, they know what’s expected of them, and they
deliver.
Pundits
can blame “low information” voters for the state of the
country and the condition of its politics, but much of the blame can
be laid at the feet of those who are the gatekeepers of our “news
media,” and those who aim to destroy public education as we
know it (see the charter school “movement” that was
started by millionaires and billionaires to weaken free and universal
public education). Voters need accurate information and they need
the education necessary to process that information.
They
need the truth. Even so, even with the propaganda that passes for
news, the body politic seems to innately know how to thwart those who
would manipulate their opinions and their actual votes. This appears
to have happened just this past Tuesday, when the expected winner of
the Democratic primary in Michigan, Hillary Clinton, was upset by
Sanders and the upset was not by a small margin, considering that the
powers that be want no part of a self-described socialist winning
elections. Talk about upset apple carts.
Getting
back to the buyouts offered to news and other staff of daily
newspapers, it’s clear that investors, not news people, are in
charge of the dissemination of information that a democracy needs.
Everything is a “product” and news is no different than
the latest electric can opener. The culmination of this process has
come at a particularly bad time, when the people need accurate
information to make their decisions about their democracy, or what we
once called a democracy. The country is in as much trouble in every
way as the newspapers are.
The
only thing is, there’s no one to offer the American people a
buy-out.
|