So
much for the �liberal� media.
If
there ever was proof needed about where the sympathies of
the major news outlets lie, it was in the coverage of the
�One Nation� march and rally at the Lincoln Memorial in
Washington D.C. over the past weekend.
The
right wing loves to accuse the �media� of liberal bias and
it certainly seems to have worked well, so far.� Over the
past 15 or 20 years�some would say it has been much longer�the
press (showing our age) or media has been bent toward the
right in its coverage of most issues.
That�s
because they don�t want to be seen as favoring the center
or left-of-center in any given story.� Historically, there
have been newspapers and other means of communication that
have been liberal or leaned to the left, but, as ownership
of newspapers and magazines has migrated to the giant chains,
and television and radio stations have been bought by giant
industrial corporations, and ownership of all of these has
been placed in fewer hands, the drift to the right has been
almost inevitable.
To
be sure, there are a few magazines and some other outlets
that have a liberal or left viewpoint, but they reach only
a few million of our 306 million Americans and, therefore,
we are left with the broadcast networks for television coverage
and their radio stations for reaching a general audience.
Last
weekend�s rally, led by the AFL-CIO and the NAACP, included
members from hundreds of other organizations, large and
small, for jobs, a reordering of the priorities of the federal
government, peace and justice.� It was termed a �left wing�
rally by those on the right and the right-wing propaganda
machine immediately went into high gear.
Some
of the unions came under especially virulent attack, with
some equating their members with terrorists (admittedly,
these were bloggers, and they were simply �asking the question�).�
Union members who take care of their mothers and fathers,
brothers and sisters, sons and daughters, in nursing homes,
hospitals, and halfway houses, left, right, and center�they
are a threat to the country?
Bloggers
and others can make such accusations in the form of �questions,�
because the right-wing-owned media has prepared the ground
for them.� They are powerful enough to encourage these same
people to call their own outlets �liberal,� when they know
very well that the thrust of their coverage of news (some
would just call it �content�) is powerfully geared toward
the status quo.�
In
our time, the status quo includes the great disparity in
wealth, which has contributed to the rapid shrinking of
the middle class and a thriving working class, has resulted
in the starving of social services and education and health
care for the people.� The wars (they have been paid for,
in large part, with borrowed money over the past nine years)
have further starved the government programs that provide
for the health and well being of the people.�
All
of this starving of government and its programs has further
enriched the already rich, who want to keep it that way.�
One of the prime examples is Rupert Murdoch, who owns the
New York Post and the Wall Street Journal, and lots of other
�news� properties, including the infamous right-wing bastion,
Fox News.� Maintaining the status quo means more consolidation
of wealth and power for Murdoch and many others like him.
The
best part of it for him is that, once set in motion, the
money keeps rolling in and, even better, his Fox News property
is an unvarnished propaganda wing of Corporate America,
the Republican Party, and the extreme right, in general.
A
slight difference between Fox and other outlets is that
it makes no bones about where it stands and hustles its
viewers to participate in their own demise.� When one of
their hucksters (the star of their show at this time), Glenn
Beck, set up his own rally at Lincoln Memorial several weeks
ago, the Fox airwaves were full of promotion for what was
billed as a �restore-honor-to-America� event.� Beck and
most of the crew at Fox shamelessly promoted the rally,
as did others who identify themselves as �conservatives,�
including the radio talk chatterers.
It�s
no wonder that they were able to turn out so many.� The
Beck crowd was able to get more of their followers to the
national mall because they saturated the airwaves and the
Internet with their invitations.
The
difference in the character of the two rallies is something
else.� While the �restore honor� rally was largely made
up of angry Tea Party members and supporters, a rather vanilla
pudding bunch, the �One Nation� rally actually looked like
a cross-section of America, with virtually every group represented�young
and old, rich and poor, gay and straight, black, white,
red, and brown, religious believers and atheists.
Because
of that, the right wing had to disparage it in other ways,
for example, by citing the calls for socialism and an end
to capitalism by some in the gathering, as if that were
the main theme, which was not true.� Rather, what the rally
last weekend was calling for was jobs, rights for wage-working
Americans, and better schools.� Many were calling for health
care for all and an end to war.
The
right also questioned the financing of the �one nation�
rally, which was largely funded by the individuals and their
organizations.� It has been widely reported, by contrast,
that the Tea Party events of the last year-and-a-half (and,
possibly, Beck�s rally, as well) have been funded in part
(or largely) by billionaires and other wealthy personalities,
many of whom would like to remain anonymous.
What
Beck and his followers are looking for is support for government
policies that will further enrich those same billionaires
and others in the top 1 percent of Americans or, better
still, a withering of government that will allow Corporate
America a free hand to do what it will, in the U.S. and
around the world.� Beck�s followers, most of whom are working
people themselves, are demanding policies that will harm
them and their families.� However, as long as �honor� and
�patriotism� and �god� and �law and order� are included
in the speeches, it seems that virtually anything is acceptable
to them.
Despite
what amounted to untold millions of dollars of free advertising
from Fox and other news outlets, the �restore honor� rally
could not turn out much more than the rally of Oct. 2, which
had no such free advertising for weeks before the event.
In
the wake of the two rallies, there was a vast difference
in coverage, as well.� While major news outlets analyzed
the Fox/Beck rally and gave it considerable coverage, there
was a little coverage of the �one nation� rally in the national
news, but the network affiliates seemingly were not interested
at all in that rally.
One
reason for the disparity could be that the Tea Party has
been covered as a part of the political season and, thus,
they just added the �restore honor� rally to their endless
coverage of what is essentially the horse-race aspect of
politics.
The
�one nation� rally was more about the substance of what
a political race should be about and, therefore, it was
not very interesting to news directors�so they didn�t cover
it, either before or after.
Consolidation
of the ownership of our major means of communication has
been a great concern of many Americans for several decades.�
The difference in treatment by the mainstream media of the
two rallies is just one example, but it presents in rather
stark terms how information disseminated by a few sources,
owned by a few very rich individuals can sway public opinion.
These
powerful individuals can cause people to accept violations
of their rights and endanger the welfare of their own families,
while making them feel satisfied that they have done the
right thing for their country.
That�s
a lot of power and that�s a lot of danger.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist, John Funiciello, is a labor organizer and former union organizer. His union
work started when he became a local president of The Newspaper
Guild in the early 1970s. He was a reporter for 14 years
for newspapers in New York State. In addition to labor work, he is organizing family
farmers as they struggle to stay on the land under enormous
pressure from factory food producers and land developers.
Click here to contact Mr. Funiciello. |