Reykjavík Grapevine - 27.06.2003, Page 27

Reykjavík Grapevine - 27.06.2003, Page 27
A familiar, oft repeated formula for sidelining journalists who persist in raising embarrassing facts was quickly employed. After angry denials from Washington and a smear campaign in the national press, the reporter was withdrawn from El Salvador. Bonners report was later fully confirmed by the U.N. Truth Commission who exhumed the mass graves. Throughout Reagan’s Latin American adventures, had news media spent less time slavishly cheerleading Washington and the Pentagon and more time actually investigating the full truth about Washington sponsored terror, many of the most brutal crimes against civilians, paid for by the U.S. taxpayer, might have been prevented. Lies, damn lies and news media In terms of sustained and deliberate manipulation of the facts, the 1991 Gulf War could well become the model for media complicity in government’s decep- tion of the public, so successful was its practice. The first fully televised war and one that made a household name of CNN, it heralded the advent of the embedded journalists, round the clock coverage and satellite technology to ensure on the spot reporting and instant live feeds. Yet western medias portrayal of the war was one of the greatest works of jingoistic fiction since the memoirs of Henry Kissenger. The root cause brings us back to this insidious notion of con- flict of interest. Take General Electric for instance, a U.S. owned, multi-national corporation and one of the largest com- panies in the world. Among its assets are two of America’s biggest news networks ABC and NBC. To this conglomerates formidable portfolio we can also add a whole chain of arms factories, supply- ing parts for patriot missiles and other weapons used in Iraq. This all worked out quite neatly for ol’ G.E.; while one arm of this corporate giant was literally making a killing from the war through expensive contracts with the Pentagon, another arm of the same company was reporting the war on television. Needless to say, both networks were enthusiastic supporters of the slaughter, obediently accepting dubious official reports and even outright suppression of facts and events damaging to the popularity of a lucrative war. When NBC reporter Jon Al- pert unearthed video footage of civilian devastation in Basra caused by massive bombing in residential areas, the NBC news president Michael Gartner promptly suppressed the footage and banned Alp- ert from ever working for NBC again. As ever the Allies’ deliberate campaign of disinformation and wholesale lies is now a matter of public record. It was exposed belatedly by the same news media who accepted it unquestioningly in the first place, but of course much too late to do any good. Such considerations mattered little to corporate news media and the allied governments whose agendas were mutually served. Bush and Thatcher, for domestic political reasons, wanted war, the likes of General Electric, profits. The human price? About 700,000 largely in- nocent lives, a statistic that you won’t be hearing on NBC, CBS or Sky News any time soon. The public strikes back? In the face of such corporate and official media domination, how can we reassert our right to independent, accurate news and reporting? How can the average citizen get behind the news and past the headlines to find the real story? Not sim- ply the right or the left view but the 27 other angles any event worth investigat- ing will surely have, A task that seasoned media watchers find difficult, never mind an average citizen, trying to hold down a job, raise a family and still find time the make sense of the world around him. This was one of the issues I raised with Robert Crenshaw, author of Media Watch, a comprehensive analysis of bias in mainstream broadcasting. He responded that although the growing emasculation of diverse and fearless independence in reporting is a grave threat to our basic freedoms, the average citizen is still left with a choice, to lazily accept the official source or the corporately framed view or to strive to find those alternative and untainted sources that still exist. Crenshaw cites examples like the Internet, alternative bookshops, independent publishers and organisations like F.A.I.R., Oxfam and Hu- man Rights Watch who avoid corporate and interest vested sponsorship. Martin Luther King was just one of many great twentieth century leaders who considered full and frank reporting not only a right but also a duty in the sense that citizens cannot afford be pas- sive agents but must struggle to assert this vital freedom. It is a clear if depress- ing example of Kings prescience that in the age of the military/industrial/Media Complex this responsibility has become an ever more onerous and daunting one. - the reykjavík grapevine -26 june 27th - july 10th, 2003 - the reykjavík grapevine - 27june 27th - july 10th, 2003 No TV please, we’re Icelandic While Icelandic television has recently begun to take on the formulaic structures of free market television this is a fairly recent phenomenon. From 1966 when Iceland’s national channel came on the air for the first time until the mid eighties, Icelandic govt policy with regard to television was somewhere to the left of Ho Chi Minh. From the outset strict regulatory laws were introduced to protect a vulnerable population from the dangers of excessive exposure to the box. These included the compulsory closedown of the national channel every Thursday. As well as being a catchy slogan “no telly on Thursday” this ensured that the nations children created their own fun at least once a week. The solitary national station also shut for the entire month of July. The government of the day, in their wisdom, decided that the population should be forced to do something better with their month of 24 hour daylight than sit in a drape-drawn room watching re-runs of Starksy and Hutch. Nowadays, in the face of rampant free-market ideology and endless choice for-the- sake-of-it, such benign Stalinism is of course no longer possible. In any case there’s the reasonable argument that adults being treated as such should be left to make up their own minds and when all else fails there is always the off button. Whom does the corporate media ultimately serve, its paymasters or the truth? WE’RE ON A MISSION FROM GOD LIVE MUSIC YOU NEVER DRINK ALONE Smiðjustíg 6, p: 551-5522

x

Reykjavík Grapevine

Direct Links

If you want to link to this newspaper/magazine, please use these links:

Link to this newspaper/magazine: Reykjavík Grapevine
https://timarit.is/publication/943

Link to this issue:

Link to this page:

Link to this article:

Please do not link directly to images or PDFs on Timarit.is as such URLs may change without warning. Please use the URLs provided above for linking to the website.