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Media Coverage Doesn't Cut It

By Molly Ivins, AlterNet. Posted July 27, 2006.


By the time Chapter 9,271 of the conflicts in the Middle East had gotten its own logo, everyone knew it was huge.
Ivins

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State of play in the Middle East: Lebanon, extensively damaged plus a half-million refugees; Syria, tired of being dissed; Israel, disproportionate. Are you kidding? Did it work last time they occupied Lebanon? Condi Rice, undercut by neocons at home? Iraq, completely fallen apart. Iran, only winner? Everybody else, mad at Bush. Most under-covered story, collapse of Iraq.

And what do I think this is? A media story, of course. From the first day of 24/7 coverage, you could tell this was big. By the time Chapter 9,271 of the conflicts in the Middle East had gotten its own logo, everyone knew it was HUGE. I mean, like, bigger than Natalee Holloway. Then anchormen began to arrive in the Middle East and people like Anderson Cooper and Tucker Carlson -- real experts and then Newt Gingrich -- and who would know better than Newt? -- declared it was World War III. Let's ratchet up the fear here -- probably good for Republican campaigning.

By then, of course, you couldn't find a television story about the back corridors of diplomacy and what was, or more importantly, what was not going on there. Between Anderson Cooper and Tucker Carlson, it was obviously World War III, and besides, there were a bunch of American refugees in Lebanon who couldn't get out, and so, elements of the Katrina story appeared, Thank God Anderson was there.

Meanwhile, people who should have known better were all in a World III SNIT over Chapter 9,271. Actually, they all knew better, but it was a better story if you overplayed it -- sort of like watching a horror movie that you know will turn out OK in the end, but meanwhile you get to enjoy this delicious chill of horror up your spine. What if it really was The End? I mean, any fool could see it could easily careen out of control, and when George W. Bush is all you've got for rational, fair-minded grown-ups, well, there it is.

If I may raise a nasty political possibility. One good reason for the Bush administration to leave Chapter 9,271 to burn out of control is that this administration thrives on fear. Fear has been the text and the subtext of every Republican campaign since 9/11. Endless replay of the footage from 9/11 has graced every Republican campaign since. Could it be that 9/11 is beginning to pall, to feel as overplayed as Natalee Holloway? Fear is actually more dangerous than war in the Middle East. For those who spin dizzily toward World War III, the Apocalypse, the Rapture -- always with that delicious frisson of terror -- the slow, patient negotiations needed to get it back under control are Not News.

All we have to fear, said FDR, is fear itself. And when we are afraid, we do damage to both ourselves and to the Constitution. Our history is rank with these fits of fear. We get so afraid of some dreadful menace, so afraid of anarchists, Reds, crime or drugs or communism or illegal aliens or terrorists that we think we can make ourselves safer by making ourselves less free. We damage the Constitution because we're so afraid. We engage in torture and worse because we're afraid. We damage our standing in the world, our own finest principles, out of fear. And television enjoys scaring us. One could say cynically, "It's good for their ratings," but in truth, I think television people enjoy scary movies, too. And besides, it makes it all a bigger story for them.

What's fascinating about this as a media story is how much attention can be given to one story while still only about a fifth of it gets told. The amount of misinformation routinely reported on television is astounding. For example, "Israel is our only democratic ally in the Middle East." How long has Turkey been a real republic and ally? The more surprising development is how completely one story drives out another. At other times, the collapse of Iraq would have been news.

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Molly Ivins writes about politics, Texas and other bizarre happenings.

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Fear is the mindkiller
Posted by: richardpmendola on Jul 27, 2006 1:01 PM   
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to quote a phrase. And Iran can take this mess to the bank.

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Unfortunately
Posted by: mishanti2 on Jul 27, 2006 1:31 PM   
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fear is going to finally bring about the end of American Civil Rights and the Constitution as we know it. They have until the fall of 2008 to really cause enough fear to even reelect the demons in the present White House.

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» RE: Unfortunately Posted by: PismoBeach
» RE: Unfortunately Posted by: TheJamea
» RE: Unfortunately Posted by: Somedaysoon
» Amen! Posted by: sirossisofliver
A real threat before the elections
Posted by: TKO on Jul 27, 2006 2:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here is something our media should cover before our planes are in the air with bombs loaded. Pardon my rambling before I get to the point. I've come to the conclusion the relationship between Shrub the Bewildered and Pencil Dick Cheney could be likened to Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men. Lenny and George, although this time in real life, Lenny is getting even by playing George. Our real life George is played by a real Dick, supplier of crucial ideas, his hand firmly on Simple George's backside guiding him from one misadventure to another. When will Simple George realize he is a patsy for Evil Dick? Will Simple George realize he is a patsy for Evil Dick? I think we can all agree, Simple George remains bubblebound, only allowing select Republobotomites within the immense area of his rug that he loves so dearly. It's a peaceful rug, much like China is big and Russia is big. His handlers are ever mindful that when Simple George takes action on his own ideas, the occasional Harriet Miers transpires. Today, he was once again allowed off the rug and here is what he was prompted to read since he isn't capable of independent thought. Almost as if some old wily, politician picked him for that role.

Can anyone guess what the common theme is here?


Bush blames Iran for Lebanon

which sounds a lot like

Bolton says Iran a grave world threat

which sounds a lot like

It's Iran, Stupid (name of article, not insult)

Shrub's misadministration's determination to go to war with Iran is like a stupid dog with a bone that would rather keep pulling on the bone then get out of the highway before it's hit by a truck.

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pooper
Posted by: rsaxto on Jul 28, 2006 12:31 AM   
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Anderson Cooper is a pooper and Evil Dick is a rapist.

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GrandPa's greatest gift
Posted by: AlienSlave on Jul 28, 2006 1:33 PM   
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I was 13 when dad was killed. I was then passed into the hands of Grandpa. By 16 I had learned to drink Captain Morgan’s private stock and smoke Cuban cigars good gifts in and of themselves, but the best gift of all was Gramps teaching me how to face my personal fears, and what to do with those who try to control me with fear. Basically most people will threaten with what they fear most themselves, others control with fear of the future, its like they are some accomplished prophet or wizard. In leaving a quote from Yoda, ( Frivolous speculation is when patience reveals all.)

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It's too much for all of us, Molly. Thank goodness we can criticize you.
Posted by: Sojourner on Jul 28, 2006 3:08 PM   
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The fuse in Lebanon has been lit for how long? Since Israel withdrew?

Was everything possible done to avoid the explosion? No. What's the # of the UN Resolution that says Hizbollah should disarm? It's been violated now for a long time, as the response was an increase of arms.

The truth is that arms buildups inevitably lead to explosions. You can take that one to the bank. Anything short of disarmament is whistling past the cemetery.

Right. Bush is not the one we need at the helm. But if all you have to offer is more criticism of him, you might as well be spitting in the wind.

Russia is selling arms to Chavez. We are selling nuclear technology to Pakistan. Please don't expect to be able to make sense of such insanity.

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The Inevitable
Posted by: bohdan on Jul 31, 2006 7:37 PM   
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Reprint 2005: Ovi Magazine - Finlands English Online Magazine

The Inevitable

We keep hearing calls for a solution to the nation building efforts of the United States Forces in Iraq so that our troops can finally exit the quagmire of false pretenses.

The Bush Administration keeps stating that "we" cannot leave Iraq: until the votes for democracy are complete; until the Iraqis can set up a democratic government and govern themselves, until the Iraqi forces can protect their citizens, not until..........
Well, not until we realize the inevitable will the true Iraqi solution come forth. What is that solution you ask? The solution is the one that should have been sought from the very beginning, the obvious one, the one that Iraqis are in the midst of forming themselves through violence instead of diplomacy.

Has it occurred to the Bush Administration that this secular and non-secular warfare is not going to end until the most important lines are finally drawn. (and tragically at the cost of innocent lives,) --- the lines are boundary lines, separating each "tribe" into their own ruling domains.

Mankind has always and will always fight to the end for their country, their territory, their religion, their everything.
That is a Truth of any country, any heritage. Call it nationalism call it anything you want except an untruth. If put to a vote of the Iraqi people, they too would choose their own domain instead of sharing it with "enemies". Does Israel/Palestine come to mind, --- Chechnya ...?

Anyway, even after the United States withdraws from Iraqi civil wars are inevitable. Just look to the secular, and non secular lines drawn presently; lines that mark territories guarded by numerous militias that answer only to their own leaders.

So why not do the most logical thing --- divide the country into three: Kurds, Sunnis, and Shites. The only disagreements there would be the resources. It's all a matter of economics and equality in sharing the country's wealth. I'm sure that can easily be hammered out to the satisfaction of each party. Then and only then can true nation building take place. That should have been the goal from the beginning.

I don't know if that approach is past its time, I hope not, but perhaps it's worth diverting our efforts towards that solution.

Unfortunately here too I doubt if the Bush Administration would condone such a change in its policy, because that would mean admitting a mistake --- and aren't they all infallible --- in their own words, in their own minds.

"Stay the Course" has been their eternal mantra. Too bad the Captain is below deck snoozing (or hiding) while the fanatical First Mate steers a course towards a waterfall.

Ironically, many of the greatest victories in history, both military and political, have come through leadership that was able to improvise, to see the need to change strategies, even if doing so it meant admitting mistakes. Daring moves require Courage, while Strength requires character, and Wisdom usually ensures a final, lasting victory.

Now, does anyone in the Administration have the Strength, Courage, and Wisdom to fully understand the future --- and not use the excuse of, "...nobody could have predicted, nobody could have imagined."

Seems I've heard Republicans use that excuse frequently in their past, from the fall of the Berlin Wall to the insurgency in Iraq . It has now become an idiot's excuse to the very end of time.

If they only saw the Truth.................. then they could predict the future!

the end

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