Inside the Military Media Industrial
Complex:
Impacts on Movements for Peace and Social Justice
by Peter Phillips and Mickey Huff
Project Censored. December 21,
2009
Among the most important corporate media
censored news stories of the past decade, one must be that over
one million people have died because of the United States military
invasion and occupation of Iraq. This, of course, does not include
the number of deaths from the first Gulf War nor the ensuing sanctions
placed upon the country of Iraq that, combined, caused close to
an additional one million Iraqi deaths. In the Iraq War, which
began in March of 2003, over a million people have died violently
primarily from US bombings and neighborhood patrols. These were
deaths in excess of the normal civilian death rate under the prior
government. Among US military leaders and policy elites, the
issue of counting the dead was dismissed before the Iraqi invasion
even began. In an interview with reporters in late March of 2002
US General Tommy Franks stated, "You know we don't do body
counts."[i] Fortunately, for those concerned about humanitarian
costs of war and empire, others do.
In a January 2008 report, the British
polling group Opinion Research Business (ORB) reported that, "survey
work confirms our earlier estimate that over 1,000,000 Iraqi citizens
have died as a result of the conflict which started in hemes/advanced/langs/en.js"
type="text/javascript"> 2003. We now estimate that
the death toll between March 2003 and August 2007 is likely to
have been of the order of 1,033,000. If one takes into account
the margin of error associated with survey data of this nature
then the estimated range is between 946,000 and 1,120,000."[ii]
The ORB report came on the heels of two
earlier studies conducted by Dr. Les Roberts and colleagues at
Johns Hopkins University and published in the Lancet medical journal.
The first study done from January 1, 2002 to March 18, 2003 confirmed
civilian deaths at that time at over 100,000. The second study
published in October 2006 documented over 650,000 civilian deaths
in Iraq since the start of the US invasion and confirmed that
US aerial bombing in civilian neighborhoods caused over a third
of these deaths. Over half the deaths were directly attributable
to US forces. The now estimated 1.2 million dead six years into
the war/occupation, included children, parents, grandparents,
cab drivers, clerics and schoolteachers. All manner of ordinary
Iraqis have died because the United States decided to invade their
country under false pretences of undiscovered weapons of mass
destruction and in violation of international law. An additional
four to five million Iraqi refugees have fled their homes. The
magnitude of these million-plus deaths and creation of such a
vast refugee crisis is undeniable. The continuing occupation by
US forces has guaranteed a monthly mass death rate of thousands
of people a carnage that ranks among the most heinous mass killings
in world history. More tons of bombs have been dropped in Iraq
than in all of World War II.[iii] Six years later the casualties
continue but the story, barely reported from the start, has vanished.
The American people face a serious moral
dilemma. Murder and war crimes have been conducted in their name.
Yet most Americans have no idea of the magnitude of deaths and
tend to believe that they number in the thousands and are primarily
Iraqis killing Iraqis. Corporate mainstream media are in large
part to blame. The question then becomes how can this mass ignorance
and corporate media deception exist in the United States and what
impact does this have on peace and social justice movements in
the country?[iv]
Truth Emergency and Media Reform
In the United States today, the rift between
reality and reporting has peaked. There is no longer a mere credibility
gap, but rather a literalTruth Emergency in which the most important
information affecting people is concealed from view. Many Americans,
relying on the mainstream corporate media, have serious difficulty
accessing the truth while still believing that the information
they receive is the reality. A Truth Emergency reflects cumulative
failures of the fourth estate to act as a truly free press. This
truth emergency is seen in inadequate coverage of fraudulent elections,
pseudo 9/11 investigations, illegal preemptive wars, torture camps,
doctored intelligence, and domestic surveillance. Reliable
information on these issues is systematically missing in corporate
media outlets, where the vast majority of the American people
continue to turn for news and information.
Consider these items of noteworthy conditions.
US workers have been faced with a thirty-five year decline in
real wages while the top few percent enjoy unparalleled wealth
with strikingly low tax burdens. US schools, particularly in the
west, are more segregated now than half a century ago. The US
has the highest infant mortality rate among industrialized nations,
is falling behind in scientific research and education, leads
the world as a debtor nation, and is seriously lacking in healthcare
quality and coverage, which results in the deaths of 18,000 people
a year. America has entered another Gilded Age. Someone should
alert the media.[v]
The Free Press or Media Reform Movement
is a national effort to address mainstream media failures and
the government policies that sanction them. During the 2008 National
Conference for Media Reform (NCMR) in Minneapolis, Project Censored
interns and faculty conducted a survey, completed by 376 randomly
selected NCMR attendees out of the 3,500 people registered for
the conference. This survey was designed to gauge participants'
views on the state of the corporate news media and the effectiveness
of the media reform movement. The survey also sought to determine
the level of belief in a truth emergency, a systematic hiding
of critical information in the US. Not surprisingly, for a sample
of independent media reform activists, majorities in the 90% plus
range agreed on most criticisms of mainstream media, that corporate
media failed to keep the American people informed on important
issues facing the nation and that a truth emergency does indeed
exist in the US. Regarding the reasons, 87% of the participants
believed that a military-industrial-media complex exists in the
US for the promotion of the US military domination of the world
and most agreed with research conclusions by Project Censored,
and others, that a continuing powerful global dominance group
inside the US government, the US media, and the national policy
structure is responsible. What was clear from our survey is that
media democracy activists strongly support not only aggressive
reform efforts and policy changes but also the continuing development
of independent, grassroots media as part of an overall media democracy
movement.
While most progressive media activists
do not believe in some omnipotent conspiracy, an overwhelming
portion of NCMR participants do believe the leadership class in
the US is dominated by a neo-conservative group of some several
hundred people who share a goal of asserting US military power
worldwide. This Global Dominance Group (GDM) continues under both
Republican and Democratic rule. In cooperation with major military
contractors, the corporate media, and conservative foundations,
the GDM has become a powerful long-term force in military unilateralism
and US political processes.
The Global Dominance Group and Information
Control
A long thread of sociological research
documents the existence of a dominant ruling class in the US,
which sets policy and determines national political priorities.
C. Wright Mills, in his 1956 book The Power Elite, documented
how World War II solidified a trinity of power in the US that
comprised corporate, military and government elites in a centralized
power structure working in unison through "higher circles"
of contact and agreement.[vi] This power has grown through the
Cold War and, after 9/11, the Global War on Terror.
At present, the global dominance agenda
includes penetration into the boardrooms of the corporate media
in the US. Only 118 people comprise the membership on the boards
of director of the ten big media giants. These 118 individuals
in turn sit on the corporate boards of 288 national and international
corporations. Four of the top 10 media corporations share board
director positions with the major defense contractors including:
William Kennard: New York Times, Carlyle
Group
Douglas Warner III, GE (NBC), Bechtel
John Bryson: Disney (ABC), Boeing
Alwyn Lewis: Disney (ABC), Halliburton
Douglas McCorkindale: Gannett, Lockheed-Martin.
Given an interlocked media network of
connections with defense and other economic sectors, big media
in the United States effectively represent the interests of corporate
America. Media critic and historian Norman Solomon described the
close financial and social links between the boards of large media-related
corporations and Washington's foreign-policy establishment: "One
way or another, a military-industrial complex now extends to much
of corporate media."[vii] The Homeland Security Act Title
II Section 201(d)(5) provides an example of the interlocked military-industrial-media
complex. This Act specifically asks the directorate to "develop
a comprehensive plan for securing the key resources and critical
infrastructure of the United States including information technology
and telecommunications systems (including satellites) emergency
preparedness communications systems."
The media elite, a key component of the
Higher Circle Policy Elite in the US, are the watchdogs of acceptable
ideological messages, the controllers of news and information
content, and the decision makers regarding media resources. Their
goal is to create symbiotic global news distribution in a deliberate
attempt to control the news and information available to society.
The two most prominent methods used to accomplish this task are
censorship and propaganda.
Sometimes the sensationalist and narrow
media coverage of news is blamed upon the need to meet a low level
of public taste and thereby capture the eyes of a sufficient market
to lure advertisers and to make a profit. But another goal of
cornering the marketplace on what news and views will be aired
is also prominent. Billionaire Rupert Murdoch loses $50 million
a year on the NY Post, billionaire Richard Mellon Scaife loses
$2 to $3 million a year on the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, billionaire
Philip Anschutz loses around $5 million a year on The Weekly Standard,
and billionaire Sun Myung Moon has lost $2 to $3 billion on The
Washington Times. The losses in supporting conservative media
are part of a strategy of ideological control. They also buy bulk
quantities of ultra-conservative books bringing them to the top
of the NY Times bestseller list and then give away copies to "subscribers"
to their websites and publications. They fund conservative "think
tanks" like Heritage and Cato with hundreds of millions of
dollars a year. All this buys them respectability and a megaphone.
Even though William Kristol's publication, the Standard, is a
money-loser, his association with it has often gotten him on TV
talk shows and a column with The New York Times. Sponsorships
of groups like Grover Norquist's anti-tax "Americans for
Tax Reform" regularly get people like him front-and-center
in any debate on taxation in the United States. This has contributed
to extensive tax cuts for the wealthy and the most unfair tax
laws of any industrialized country - all found acceptable by a
public relying upon sound-bites about the dangers of 'big government.'
Hence media corporation officials and others in the health care,
energy and weapons industries remain wealthier than ordinary people
can imagine. Their expenditures for molding opinion are better
understood as investments in a conservative public ideology[viii]
Modern Media Censorship and Propaganda
A broader definition of contemporary censorship
needs to include any interference, deliberate or not, with the
free flow of vital news information to the public. Modern censorship
can be seen as the subtle yet constant and sophisticated manipulation
of reality in our mass media outlets. On a daily basis, censorship
refers to the intentional non-inclusion of a news story - or piece
of a news story - based on anything other than a desire to tell
the truth. Such manipulation can take the form of political pressure
(from government officials and powerful individuals), economic
pressure (from advertisers and funders), and legal pressure (the
threat of lawsuits from deep-pocket individuals, corporations,
and institutions). or threats to reduce future access to governmental
and corporate sources of news. Following are a few examples of
censorship and propaganda.
1. Omitted or Undercovered Stories- The
failure of the corporate media to cover human consequences, like
one million , mostly civilian deaths of Iraqis, reduces public
response to the wars being conducted by the US. Even when activists
do mobilize, the media coverage of anti-war demonstrations has
been negligible and denigrating from the start. When journalists
of the so-called free press ignore the anti-war movement, they
serve the interests of their masters in the military media industrial
complex.[ix]
Further, the corporate mainstream press
continues to ignore the human cost of the US war in Iraq with
America's own veterans. Veteran care, wounded rates, mental disabilities,
VA claims, first hand accounts of soldier experiences, and pictures
of dead or limbless soldiers are rare. One of the most important
stories missed by the corporate press concerned the Winter Soldier
Congressional hearings in Washington, D.C. The hearings, with
eyewitness testimony of US soldiers relating their experiences
on the battlefield and beyond, were only covered by a scant number
of major media, and then only in passing. In contrast to the virtual
corporate media blackout concerning American soldiers' views of
the war, the independent, listener sponsored, community Pacifica
Radio network covered the hearings at length.[x]
A common theme among the most censored
stories over the past few years has been the systemic erosion
of human rights and civil liberties in both the US and the world
at large. The corporate media has ignored the fact that habeas
corpus can now be suspended for anyone by order of the President.
With the approval of Congress, the Military Commissions Act (MCA)
of 2006, signed by Bush on October 17, 2006, allows for the suspension
of habeas corpus for US citizens and non-citizens alike. While
media, including a lead editorial in The New York Times October
19, 2006, have offered false comfort that American citizens will
not be the victims, the Act is quite clear that 'any person' can
be targeted.[xi]
Additionally, under the code-name Operation
FALCON (Federal and Local Cops Organized Nationally), federally
coordinated mass arrests have been occurring since April 2005
and netted over 54,000 arrests, a majority of whom were not violent
criminals as was initially suggested. This unprecedented move
of arresting tens of thousands of "fugitives" is the
largest dragnet style operation in the nation's history. The raids,
coordinated by the Justice Department and Homeland Security, directly
involved over 960 agencies (state, local and federal) and mark
the first time in US history that all domestic police agencies
have been put under the direct control of the federal government.[xii]
All these events are significant in a
democratic society that claims to cherish individual rights and
due process of law. To have them occur is a tragedy. To have a
"free" press not report them or pretend these issues
do not matter to the populace is the foundation of censorship
today.
2. Repetition of Slogans and Sound Bites-
The corporate media in the US present themselves as unbiased and
accurate. The New York Times motto of "all the news that's
fit to print" is a clear example, as is CNN's authoritative
"most trusted name in news" and Fox's mantra of "fair
and balanced." The slogans are examples of what linguist
George Lakoff has referred to as framing. Through constant repetition,
the metaphors and symbols that pervade our media turn into unquestioned
beliefs. Terms like "liberal media," "welfare
cheaters," "war on terror," illegal aliens,"
"tax burden," "support our troops," are all
distorted images serving to conceal a transfer of wealth from
people needing a safety net to corporations seeking profitable
markets and military expansion.
3. Embedded Journalism- The media are
increasingly dependent on governmental and corporate sources of
news. Maintenance of continuous news shows requires a constant
feed and an ever-entertaining supply of stimulating events and
breaking news bites. The 24-hour news shows on MSNBC, Fox and
CNN maintain constant contact with the White House, Pentagon,
and public relations companies representing both government and
private corporations.
By the time of the Gulf War in 1991, retired
colonels, generals and admirals had become mainstays in network
TV studios during wartime. Language such as "collateral damage"
and "smart bombs" flowed effortlessly between journalists
and military men, who shared perspectives on the occasionally
mentioned but more rarely seen civilians killed by U.S. firepower.
This clearly foreshadowed the structure of "embedded"
reporting in the second Iraq War, where mainstream corporate journalists
literally lived with the troops and had to submit all reports
for military review.[xiii] A related militarization of news studies
by Diane Farsetta at the Center for Media Democracy documented
a related introduction of bias. These investigations showed Pentagon
propaganda penetration on mainstream corporate news in the guise
of retired Generals as "experts" or pundits who turned
out to be nothing more than paid shills for government war policy.[xiv]
The problem then becomes more complex.
What happens to a society that begins to believe such lies as
truth? The run up to the 2003 war in Iraq concerning weapons
of mass destruction (WMDs) is a case in point. It illustrates
the power of propaganda in creating not only public support for
an ill-begotten war, but also reduces the possibility of a peace
movement, even when fueled by the truth, to stop a war based on
falsehoods. The current war in Iraq was the most globally protested
war in recorded history. This did nothing to stop it and has done
little to end it even under a Democratic president who promised
such on the campaign trail. The candidate of "hope and change,"
with peace groups in tow, has proven to be dependent upon the
same interests in foreign policy that got the US into war in the
first place.[xv]
The Progressive Press
Where the left progressive press may have
covered some of the Winter Soldier issues, most did not cover
the major story of Iraqi deaths. InManufacturing Consent, Wharton
School of Business Professor of Political Economy Edward Herman
and MIT Institute Professor of Linguistics Noam Chomsky claim
that because media are firmly embedded in the market system, they
reflect the class values and concerns of their owners and advertisers.
The corporate media maintain a class bias through five systemic
filters: concentrated private ownership; a strict bottom-line
profit orientation; over-reliance on governmental and corporate
sources for news; a primary tendency to avoid offending the powerful;
and an almost religious worship of the market economy. These filters
limit what will become news in society and set parameters on acceptable
coverage of daily events.[xvi]
The danger of these filters is that they
make subtle and indirect censorship more difficult to combat.
Owners and managers share class identity with the powerful and
are motivated economically to please advertisers and viewers.
Social backgrounds influence their conceptions of what is "newsworthy,"
and their views and values seem only "common sense."
Journalists and editors are not immune to the influence of owners
and managers. Reporters want to see their stories approved for
print or broadcast, and editors come to know the limits of their
freedom to diverge from the "common sense" worldview
of owners and managers. The self-discipline that this structure
induces in journalists and editors comes to seem only "common
sense" to them as well. Self-discipline becomes self-censorship-independence
is restricted, the filtering process hidden, denied, or rationalized
away.
Project Censored's analysis on the top
ten progressive left publications and websites coverage of key
post-9/11 issues found considerable limitations on reporting of
specific stories. The evidence supports the Chomsky and Herman
understanding that the media barrage may in fact contribute to
the news story selection process inside the left liberal media
as well.[xvii] Even the left progressive media showed limited
coverage of the human costs of the 9/11 wars.
The figure reported in summer, 2007 documenting
a million dead did appear in progressive websites and radio including
After Downing Street, Huffington Post, CounterPunch, Alternet,
Democracy Now! and the Nation, but several took months to get
to it. This lack of timely reporting on such a critical story
on the humanitarian crisis of the US occupation by the alternative
press in America does not bode well for a strong, public, peace
movement. The US is in dire need of a media democracy movement
to address truth emergency concerns.
In response, the Truth Emergency Movement,
held its first national strategy summit in Santa Cruz, California
Jan. 25-27, 2008. Organizers gathered key media constituencies
to devise coherent decentralized models for distribution of suppressed
news, synergistic truth-telling, and collaborative strategies
to disclose, legitimize and popularize deeper historical narratives
on power and inequality in the US. In sum, this truth movement
is seeking to discover in this moment of Constitutional crisis,
ecological peril, and widening war, ways in which top investigative
journalists, whistleblowers, and independent media activists can
transform how Americans perceive and defend their world. We learn
from grassroots actions in the US but also from experiences of
other countries. This requires us to transcend the stereotypes
of other countries hammered by the corporate media. It is not
by chance that two Latin American nations, both targets of US
efforts to remove their popular leaders by force, have been vilified
by mainstream media. Both Cuba and Venezuela, however, have been
experiments in local democratic participation in which voices
of communities weigh heavily upon social policy.
International Models of Media Democracy
in Action: Venezuela
Democracy from the bottom is evolving
as a ten-year social revolution in Venezuela. Led by President
Hugo Chavez, the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) gained
over 1_ million voters in the November, 2008 elections. "It
was a wonderful victory," said Professor Carmen Carrero with
the communications studies department of the Bolivarian University
in Caracas. "We won 81 percent of the city mayor positions
and seventeen of twenty-three of the state governors," Carrero
reported.
The Bolivarian University is housed in
the former oil ministry building and now serves 8,000 students
throughout Venezuela. The University (Universidad Bolivariana
de Venezuela) is symbolic of the democratic socialist changes
occurring throughout the country. Before the election of Hugo
Chavez as president in 1998, college attendance was primarily
for the rich in Venezuela. Today over one million, eight hundred
thousand students attend college, three times the rate ten years
ago. "Our university was established to resist domination
and imperialism," reported Principal (president) Marlene
Yadira Cordova in an interview November 10, 2008, "We are
a university where we have a vision of life that the oppressed
people have a place on this planet." The enthusiasm for learning
and serious-thoughtful questions asked by students was certainly
representative of a belief in the potential of positive social
change for human betterment. The University offers a fully staffed
free healthcare clinic, zero tuition, and basic no-cost food for
students in the cafeteria, all paid for by the oil revenues now
being democratically shared by the people.
Bottom up democracy in Venezuela starts
with the 25,000 community councils elected in every neighborhood
in the country. "We establish the priority needs of our area,"
reported community council spokesperson Carmon Aponte, with the
neighborhood council in the barrio Bombilla area of western Caracas.
Aponte works with Patare Community TV and radio station and is
one of thirty-four locally controlled community television stations
and four hundred radio stations now in the barrios throughout
Venezuela. Community radio, TV and newspapers are the voice of
the people, where they describe the viewers/listeners as the "users"
of media instead of the passive audiences.[xviii]
Democratic socialism has meant healthcare,
jobs, food, and security, in neighborhoods where in many cases
nothing but poverty existed ten years ago. With unemployment down
to a US level, sharing the wealth has taken real meaning in Venezuela.
Despite a 50 percent increase in the price of food last year,
local Mercals offer government subsidized cooking oil, corn meal,
meat, and powdered milk at 30-50 percent off market price. Additionally,
there are now 3,500 local communal banks with a $1.6 billion dollar
budget offering neighborhood-based micro-financing loans for home
improvements, small businesses, and personal emergencies.
"We have moved from a time of disdain
[pre-revolution-when the upper classes saw working people as less
than human] to a time of adjustment," proclaimed Ecuador's
minister of Culture, Gallo Mora Witt at the opening ceremonies
of the Fourth International Book Fair in Caracas, November, 2007.
Venezuela's Minister of Culture, Hector Soto added, "We try
not to leave anyone out. . . before the revolution the elites
published only 60-80 books a year, we will publish 1,200 Venezuelan
authors this yearthe book will never stop being the important
tool for cultural feelings." In fact, some twenty-five million
books-classics by Victor Hugo and Miguel de Cervantes along with
Cindy Sheehan's Letter to George Bush-were published in 2008 and
are being distributed to the community councils nationwide. The
theme of the International Book Fair was books as cultural support
to the construction of the Bolivarian revolution and building
socialism for the 21st century.
In Venezuela the corporate media are still
owned by the elites. The five major TV networks, and nine of ten
of the major newspapers maintain a continuing media effort to
undermine Chavez and the socialist revolution. But despite the
corporate media and $20 million annual support to the anti-Chavez
opposition institutions from USAID and National Endowment for
Democracy, two-thirds of the people in Venezuela continue to support
President Hugo Chavez and the United Socialist Party of Venezuela.
The democracies of South America are realizing that the neo-liberal
formulas for capitalism are not working and that new forms of
resource allocation are necessary for human betterment. It is
a learning process for all involved and certainly a democratic
effort from the bottom up.
International Models of Media Democracy
in Action: Cuba
"You cannot kill truth by murdering
journalists," said Tubal Páez, president of the Journalist
Union of Cuba. In May of 2008, One hundred and fifty Cuban and
South American journalists, ambassadors, politicians, and foreign
guests gathered at the Jose Marti International Journalist Institute
to honor the 50th anniversary of the death of Carlos Bastidas
Arguello -the last journalist killed in Cuba. Carlos Bastidas
was 23 years old when he was assassinated by Fulgencia Batista's
secret police after having visited Fidel Castro's forces in the
Sierra Maestra Mountains. Edmundo Bastidas, Carlos' brother, told
about how a river of change flowed from the Maestra (teacher)
mountains, symbolized by his brother's efforts to help secure
a new future for Cuba.
The celebration in Havana was held in
honor of World Press Freedom Day, which is observed every year
in May. The UN first declared this day in 1993 to honor journalists
who lost their lives reporting the news and to defend media freedom
worldwide.
Cuban journalists share a common sense
of a continuing counter-revolutionary threat by US financed Cuban-Americans
living in Miami. This is not an entirely unwarranted feeling in
that many hundreds of terrorist actions against Cuba have occurred
with US backing over the past fifty years. In addition to the
1961 Bay of Pigs invasion, these attacks include the blowing up
of a Cuban airlines plane in 1976 killing seventy-three people,
the starting in 1981 of an epidemic of dengue fever that killed
158 people, and several hotel bombings in the 1990s, one of which
resulted in the death of an Italian tourist.
In the context of this external threat,
Cuban journalists quietly acknowledge that some self-censorship
will undoubtedly occur regarding news stories that could be used
by the "enemy" against the Cuban people. Nonetheless,
Cuban journalists strongly value freedom of the press and there
was no evidence of overt government control. Ricardo Alarcon,
President of the National Assembly Cuba allows CNN, AP and Chicago
Tribune to maintain offices in Cuba, noted that the US refuses
to allow Cuban journalists to work in the United States.[xix]
Cuban journalists complain that the US
corporate media is biased and refuses to cover the positive aspects
of socialism in Cuba. Unknown to most Americans are the facts
that Cuba is the number one country in percentage of organic foods
produced in the world, has an impressive health care system with
a lower infant mortality rate than the US, trains doctor from
all over the world, and has enjoyed a 43% increase in GDP between
2005 and 2008
Neither Cuba nor Venezuela are utopian
societies. Developing countries subject to continuing pressure
by the US may be cautious and suspicious of provocateurs that
would incite violence or provoke US military intervention. But
in these countries, the ability of local media expressing voices
of local communities is something from which media reformers can
learn.
Grassroots Antidotes to Corporate Media
Propaganda
Tens of thousands of Americans engaged
in various social justice issues constantly witness how corporate
media marginalize, denigrate, or simply ignore their concerns.
Activist groups working on issues like 9/11 Truth, election fraud,
impeachment in the Bush era, war propaganda, civil liberties abridgements,
torture, the Wall Street meltdown, and corporate-caused environmental
crises have been systematically excluded from mainstream news
and the national conversation leading to a genuine Truth Emergency
in the country as a whole.
Now, however, a growing number of activists
are finally saying "enough!" and joining forces to address
this truth emergency by developing new journalistic systems and
practices of their own. They are working to reveal the common
corporate denominators behind the diverse crises we face and to
develop networks of trustworthy news sources that tell people
what is really going on. These activists know we need a journalism
that moves beyond inquiries into particular crimes and atrocities,
and exposes wider patterns of corruption, propaganda and illicit
political control by a military and corporate elite.
Recent efforts at national media reform through micro-power
community radio- similar to the 400 people's radio stations in
Venezuela- and campaign finance changes, that would mandate access
for all candidates on national media, have been strongly resisted
by the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB). NAB, considered
one of the most powerful corporate lobby groups in Washington,
works hard to protect over $200 billion dollars of annual advertising
and the several hundred million dollars political candidates spend
in each election cycle.
The Truth Emergency movement now recognizes
that corporate media's political power and failure to meet its
First Amendment obligation to keep the public informed leaves
a huge task. Citizens must mobilize resources to redevelop news
and information systems from the bottom up. Citizen journalists
can expand distribution of news via small independent newspapers,
local magazines, independent radio, and cable access TV. Using
the internet, the public can interconnect with like-minded grassroots
news organizations to share important stories. These changes
are already in progress.
Becoming the Media: Media Freedom International
and Project Censored
In response to Truth Emergency conference,
the Media Freedom Foundation and Project Censored launched an
effort to both become a repository of independent news and information
as well as a producer of content in what are called Validated
Independent News stories vetted by college and university professors
and students around the world. As corporate media continue their
entertainment agenda and the PR industry-working for governments
and corporations-increasingly dominates news content, there exists
a socio-cultural opening to transform how the public receives
and actually participates in the validation and creation of their
own news.
Corporate media are increasingly irrelevant
to working people and to democracy. People need to tell their
own news stories from real experiences and perspectives, as an
alternative to the hierarchically imposed and "official"
top-down narrative. What better project in support of media democracy
than for universities and colleges worldwide to support truth
telling and validate news stories and independent news sources.
Only 5% of college students under 30 read
a daily newspaper. Most get their news from corporate television
and increasingly on the internet. One of the biggest problems
with independent media sources on the internet is a perception
of inconsistent reliability. The public is often suspicious of
the truthfulness and accuracy of news postings from non-corporate
media sources. Over the past ten years, in hundreds of presentations
all over the US, Project Censored staff has frequently been asked,
"what are the best sources for news and whom can we trust?"
The goal of this effort is to encourage
young people to use independent media as their primary sources
of news and information and to learn about trustworthy news sources
through the Media Freedom International News Research Affiliate
Program. By the end of 2008, there were over thirty affiliate
colleges and universities with plans to expand that participation
several fold this next year. Through these institutions, validated
independent news stories can be researched by students and scholars,
then written, produced and disseminated via the web. In addition,
on any given day at the Media Freedom Foundation website, one
can view enough independent news stories from RSS feeds to fill
nearly fifty written pages, more than even the largest US newspapers.
An informed electorate cannot remain passive consumers of corporate
news. As aforementioned activist David Mathison suggested in his
how-to manual, Be the Media, where he argues and instructs not
only about how to build community media but how to build community
through media.[xx]
Part of building community is in developing
awareness about the type of world we want to participate in creating,
and developing strategies for achieving change. New forms of media
that promote widespread responsibility for both creating and disseminating
information do not remove the need for people to protest, to demonstrate,
to march, to boycott and to demand entry into corporate board
rooms. Rather it assures that voices can be heard and, as shown
in Howard Rheingold's Smartmobbing Democracy,[xxi] the power of
new Internet communication technologies can be harnessed to mobilize
more effectively. Contrasted with previous more limited technologies,
Rheingold points out that now, "[m]obile and deskbound media
such as blogs, listserves and social networking sites allow for
many-to-many communication." Technology has helped level
the playing field by creating a virtual sphere where people can
exchange ideas and instigate activism. Grassroots, bottom-up,
peer-to-peer efforts have increased in influence and effectiveness
due to the speed and breadth of new communication technologies.
We are currently experiencing a potential for collective activism
on a scale never before seen.
The continued expansion of independent
internet news sources allows for the mass political awareness
of key issues and truth emergencies in the world. The involvement
of university and college professors and their students in validating
news stories will be an important component of reliability verification
of these sources. As we learn who we can trust in the independent
news world, we will be in a stronger position for the continued
development and expansion of democratic social movement/anti-war
efforts in the future.
It is up to the people to unite and oppose
the common oppressors manifested in a militarist and unresponsive
government along with their corporate media courtiers and PR propagandists.
Only then, when the public forms and controls its own information
resources, will it be armed with the power that knowledge gives
to move beyond the media induced mindsets that limit change to
modest reform. Grassroots media providing voice to those who would
challenge elite domination are our best hope to create a truly
vibrant democratic society that promises as well as delivers liberty,
peace, and economic justice to all.
Peter Phillips is a Professor of Sociology
at Sonoma State University and President of the Media Freedom
Foundation and recent past director of Project Censored.
Mickey Huff is an Associate Professor
of History and Social Science at Diablo Valley College and serves
on the executive committeeof the Media Freedom Foundation and
is recent past associate director of Project Censored.
Media Freedom website include:
Daily News at: http://mediafreedom.pnn.com/5174-independent-news-sources
Validated News & Research at: http://www.mediafreedominternational.org/
Daily Censored Blog at: http://dailycensored.com/
Project Censored: http://www.projectcensored.org/
[i] US General Tommy Franks, quoted in
The San Francisco Chronicle, March 23, 2002, onlinehttp://www.globalsecurity.org/org/news/2002/020323-attack01.htm.
[ii] Peter Phillips and Andrew Roth, Censored
2009, (New York: Seven Stories, Press, 2008), 19-25. This story
is the number one censored story of the year at Project Censored
for this year, archived online http://www.projectcensored.org/top-stories/articles/1-over-one-million-iraqi-deaths-caused-by-us-occupation/
and for the earlier casualty numbers see http://www.countercurrents.org/iraq-polya070207.htm.
[iii] Ibid.
[iv] Various theories exist on the problem
of the subject, from historian Rick Shenkman's Just How Stupid
Are We to historian and cultural critic Thomas Frank's What's
the Matter with Kansas, but few examine its affects on the peace
community. For more on the issue of American historical amnesia,
see Gore Vidal on Democracy Now! at http://www.democracynow.org/2004/5/21/gore_vidal_on_the_united_states
, also, In These Times online at http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/3099/the_united_states_of_amnesia/
and for a broader academic look at the issue of how Americans
have become arguably the least informed, most entertained people
in the modern world, see the now classic work from the late New
York University media scholar Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves
to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business, (New
York: Viking Adult, 1985). This article hopes to shine more
light on the impact of all of the aforementioned on the peace
movement in general and what can be done about it. For another
view of this written earlier, at the outset of the US invasion
of Iraq in 2003, see Felix Kolb and Alicia Swords, "Do Peace
Movements Matter?" Commondreams.org, May 12, 2003, online
at http://www.commondreams.org/views03/0512-08.htm.
[vi] C. Wright Mills. The Power Elite,
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2000, reissue). Also, continuing
with this theme in terms of democratic communications theory/policy
and the ideas of an open society, see the work of Jurgen Habermas,
The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: An Inquiry
into a category of Bourgeois Society, published in1962, and The
Theory of Communicative Action, from 1981, as well as Karl Popper's
The Open Society and Its Enemies, first published in 1945.
[vii] Norman Soloman, "The Military-Industrial-Media
Complex
Why war is covered from the warriors'
perspective," Extra! July/August 2005, published by Fairness
and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR), on the FAIR website at http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2627.
[viii] Cenk Uygur, "Conservative
Media vs Progressive Media" Posted on The Daily Kos blog,
July 1, 2009.<http://www.dailykos.com/story/2009/7/1/748854/-Conservative-Media-vs.-Progressive-Media>
)
[ix] Linda Milazzo, "Corporate Media
Turned Out for Jena, but Not for Anti-War. Here's Why." Atlantic
Free Press, September 23, 2007, online at http://www.atlanticfreepress.com/news/1/2473-corporate-media-turned-out-for-jena-but-not-for-anti-war-heres-why.html.
[x] For more on the Winter Soldiers, see
Censored 2009, chapter 1, story 9, pp. 58-62 and online http://www.projectcensored.org/top-stories/articles/9-iraq-and-afghanistan-vets-testify/
and chapter 12, pp.297-319. See the KPFA radio and Corp Watch
website for the coverage athttp://www.warcomeshome.org/wintersoldier2008.
[xi] Peter Phillips, Censored 2008, (New
York: Seven Stories Press, 2007), 35-44. Online http://www.projectcensored.org/top-stories/articles/1-no-habeas-corpus-for-any-person/
and http://www.projectcensored.org/top-stories/articles/2-bush-moves-toward-martial-law/.
[xii] See Censored 2008, chapter 1, story
6, 55-59. Also online at http://www.projectcensored.org/top-stories/articles/6-operation-falcon-raids/.
[xiii] Ibid.
[xiv] Diane Farsetta, Center for Media
Democracy, studies on Pentagon propaganda online at http://www.prwatch.org/pentagonpundits
and http://www.prwatch.org/node/8180.
[xiv] Norman Soloman, "The Military-Industrial-Media
Complex:
Why war is covered from the warriors'
perspective," Extra! July/August 2005, published by Fairness
and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR), on the FAIR website at http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2627.
[xv] For several excellent studies of
US Iraq War propaganda, see PR Watch's John Stauber and Sheldon
Rampton, Weapons of Mass Deception: The Uses of Propaganda in
Bush's War on Iraq, (New York: Tarcher Penguin, 2003), and their
follow up Best War Ever: Lies, Damned Lies, and the Mess in Iraq,
(New York: Penguin, 2006), and the exhaustive work by Anthony
R. DiMaggio, Mass Media, Mass Propaganda: Examining American
News in the "War on Terror," (UK: Lexington Books,
2008). Additionally, forthcoming in fall 2009, just reviewed
by the authors, is Robert P. Abele, The Anatomy of a Deception:
A Reconstruction and Analysis of the Decision to Invade Iraq,
(Baltimore: University Press of America, 2009).
For reports on the continuation of war
policy under President Barack Obama, see Center for Media Democracy's
John Stauber, "How Obama Took Over the Peace Movement"
online http://www.prwatch.org/node/8297, and Peter Phillips, "Barack
Obama Administration Continues US Military Dominance" online
http://www.projectcensored.org/articles/story/http-wwwprojectcensoredorg-articles-story-barack-obama-administration-c/.
[xvi] Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky,
Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media,
(New York: Pantheon Books, 1988, 2002). For an introduction
of the Propaganda Model, see chapter 1, or see a retrospective
by Edward Herman online http://www.chomsky.info/onchomsky/20031209.htm.
[xvii] Peter Phillips, Censored 2008,
see chapter 7, "Left Progressive Media Inside the Propaganda
Model," 233-251. Online at http://www.projectcensored.org/articles/story/left-progressive-media-inside-the-propaganda-model/.
[xviii] Co-author Peter Phillips interviewed
Carmon Aponte while visiting the Patare Community TV and radio
station in a trip to Venezuela for a book fair in 2008. The station
was one of thirty-four locally controlled community television
stations and four hundred radio stations now in the barrios throughout
Venezuela.
[xix] Co-author Peter Phillips attended
the major journalism conference in Cuba in 2008. About his experiences
there, Phillips remarked, "During my five days in Havana,
I met with dozens of journalists, communication studies faculty
and students, union representatives and politicians. The underlying
theme of my visit was to determine the state of media freedom
in Cuba and to build a better understanding between media democracy
activists in the US and those in Cuba."
Phillips continued, "I toured the
two main radio stations in Havana, Radio Rebelde and Radio Havana.
Both have Internet access to multiple global news sources including
CNN, Reuters, Associated Press and BBC with several newscasters
pulling stories for public broadcast. Over 90 municipalities in
Cuba have their own locally run radio stations, and journalists
report local news from every province."
"During the course of several hours
in each station I (Phillips) was interviewed on the air about
media consolidation and censorship in the US and was able to ask
journalists about censorship in Cuba as well. Of the dozens I
interviewed all said that they have complete freedom to write
or broadcast any stories they choose. This was a far cry from
the Stalinist media system so often depicted by US interests."
[xx] For more details see the Project
Censored website at http://projectcensored.org/, for independent
media feeds see Media Freedom Foundation at http://mediafreedom.pnn.com/5174-independent-news-sources,
and for more on the Project Censored International Affiliates
Program, see http://projectcensored.org/project-censored-international-affilates-program
and http://mediafreedominternational.org. For more on how to
become the media, see David Mathison's work online http://bethemedia.com.
For more on Smart Mobs, see Howard Rheingold's work onlinehttp://www.smartmobs.com/book/.
[xxi] Howard Rheingold, "Smartmobbing
Democracy," in Rebooting America: Ideas for Redesigning American
Democracy for the Internet Age," ed. Allison Fine, Micah
L. Sifry, Andrew Rasiej and Josh Levy. Retrieved from The Personal
Democracy Press Website:http://rebooting.personaldemocracy.com/node/5484.
*The co-authors would like to express
sincere appreciation for editing assistance provided by Rebecca
Norlander and Ellen Gaddy.
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