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Media outlets aren't just giving short shrift to organized labor. The avoidance extends to unorganized labor, too.

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How the Media Fuel Class Warfare

By Norman Solomon, AlterNet. Posted November 26, 2007.


Media outlets aren't just giving short shrift to organized labor. The avoidance extends to unorganized labor, too.

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A few decades ago, upwards of one-third of the American workforce was unionized. Now the figure is down around 10 percent. And news media are central to the downward spiral.

As unions wither, the journalistic establishment has a rationale for giving them less ink and air time. As the media coverage diminishes, fewer Americans find much reason to believe that unions are relevant to their working lives.

But the media problem for labor goes far beyond the fading of unions from newsprint, television and radio. Media outlets aren't just giving short shrift to organized labor. The avoidance extends to unorganized labor, too.

So often, when issues of workplaces and livelihoods appear in the news, they're framed in terms of employer plights. The frequent emphasis is on the prospects and perils of companies that must compete.

Well, sure, firms need to compete. And working people need to feed and clothe and house themselves and their families. And workers hope to provide adequate medical care.

The issue of health insurance is a political talking-point for many candidates these days. But meanwhile, unionized workers are finding themselves in a weakened position when they try to retain whatever medical coverage they may have. And non-unionized workers often have little or none.

With all the media discussion of corporate bottom-line difficulties, the human element routinely gets lost in the shuffle. In day-to-day business news and in general reporting, the lives of people on the line are apt to be rendered as abstractions. Or they simply go unmentioned.

The topic of war in Iraq is huge in the media. I can't say much for the quality of that coverage, but at least it keeps reporting that a military war is happening overseas. But what about the economic war that's happening at home?

Phrases like "class war" have been discredited in American news media -- tarred as too blunt, too combative, too rhetorical. But, call it what you will, the clash of economic interests is with us always.

Waged from the top down, class war is a triumphant activity -- and part of the success involves the framing and avoidance of certain unpleasant realities via corporate-owned media outlets. You don't need to be a rocket scientist or a social scientist to grasp that multibillion-dollar companies are not going to own, or advertise with, media firms that challenge the power of multibillion-dollar companies.

One of the dominant yet little-remarked-upon shifts in the media landscape over the past couple of decades has been the enormous upsurge in business news as general news. A result is that tens of millions of low-income people are seeing constant news stories about challenges and opportunities for well-to-do investors.

The reverse, of course, is not the case. The very affluent of our society don't often pick up a newspaper or tune in the evening news and encounter waves of stories and commentaries about the dire straits of America's poor people and what it's like to be one of them. And it's even more rare to see coverage of ways that a few people grow obscenely wealthy as a direct result of the further impoverishment of the many.

"Class war"? The nation's most powerful editors cringe at the phrase. But every day, millions of Americans are painfully aware that -- by any other name -- class warfare is going on, and they're losing.

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See more stories tagged with: poverty, media consolidation, labor media, call warfare

Norman Solomon's latest book Made Love, Got War: Close Encounters with America's Warfare State (PoliPointPress) is available now. For more information go to www.madelovegotwar.com.

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Warren Buffet
Posted by: JSquercia on Nov 26, 2007 3:33 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Warren Buffet said "if there IS a class WAR , My side is winning " and it is oh soo TRUE .
Give Warren his props though he tesified AGAINST eliminating the Inheritance Tax , He pointed out just how much MORE leona's poor dog Trouble would have HAD if there were NO such Tax .

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Another Complaining Story
Posted by: Joe on Nov 26, 2007 6:48 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So what's the solution? More non-competitive, non-creative, stale unions?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Another Complaining Story Posted by: talkville
» WOW Posted by: rjgwood
The key is financial independence
Posted by: HistArch on Nov 27, 2007 12:34 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Its hard to realize that people in the United States don't really get what the whole country was based on INDEPENCENCE FROM TYRRANY- which means independence from rich, old men. The profiteers, planters, and scoundrels that started this nation knew that if Britain realized how much cash they were making here, the colonists could challenge the authority of the bigger fish that were making money off of the colonies. So they broke away and became kingpins in their new little kingdom and started making rules for their poorer indentured bretheren.

They key is to become independent and help others become free too. How might you ask do we do this? It just takes a little fortitude:

1) Don't buy stuff you don't need. Don't waste anything that you can still use. Reduce your consumption of resources (financial and material). Buy a small house (or dare I say condo/apartment) near your job. Reject the Americanist dream of more=better because you know its not true. Think about it.

2) Save your money and invest it in dependable, interest bearing accounts. Ever wonder what they mean when they say, "foreign investors own America's debt?" What they mean is foreigners own US Treasury Bonds- loans the government issues to keep the country going. So all you need to do is buy some of the country's debt and over the years they will owe you more than you owe them. Forget stockmarket boondoggles that allow investors to take a cut off of the top of your 401k profits. If you do buy stock, buy it yourself.

3) Help others. Start with your immediate family, especially children. Motivate and support each other. Get together and talk with friends and relatives about this, specifically the older, depression era family members. Then volunteer to help strangers fix the country.

The government is total BS. We need to help ourselves. Spread the word and become free. I'm not there yet but with each item I don't buy, penny I stash away, and minute I don't watch TV I move closer to my goal. We need to rise up by turning our backs on corporations and our national representatives. We need to start locally with good government officials because these guys will grow up into national congresspeople. Start today.

Read "Your Money or Your Life" by Joe Dominguez if you want to know more (No I dont work for them)

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Well, here's why AFSCME lost me...
Posted by: Afban on Nov 27, 2007 4:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They endorsed Hillary Clinton. Are they kidding? They're kidding, right? They can't really be a labor union and support that corporatist bleep, can they? I thought they were supposed to be on MY side!

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CommonDreamer
Posted by: CommonDreamer on Nov 27, 2007 7:00 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, the solution is stronger labor unions. These coincided with the greatest growth for everyone in the country - not just a very few - this was in the 40's through the 70';s.

Stop complaining? - that's what Americans did many years ago when they shot themselves collectively in the foot and elected right wing regimes that stomp on them in every way in the name of the rabid free market. Now it is time to stand up and elect someone who will temper the bad side of capitalism that promotes greed over all else. Free market tyranny is stale. You can see it in the worries of the average American who is losing his home, his pension, and seeing his stress level rise - and for what? To make the rich richer?

We need some balance and only unions, perhaps reworked and headed by the well intentioned, can do this.

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Where are the unqualified joes gone?
Posted by: strahlungsamt on Nov 30, 2007 3:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Back when there were unions, it was possible for an unqualified man to earn enough money to pay his rent and feed his kids. Yet it is this very demographic that swallows the media crap and screams to shut unions down. Meanwhile, everybody has traded in Karl Marx for Ayn Rand, real manly work for office world, real learning for self-help books and blames Liberals for their dead-end jobs in Wal-Mart.

Wake Up America!

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Maybe Unions Aren't Perfect, but We Need Them
Posted by: MargoM on Nov 30, 2007 5:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I just had a second interview for an academic position, and I was glad to learn that they're unionized at that place. At my last job the union grievance rep. helped me in getting a severance package.

In the Philadelphia area all the community colleges except one are unionized, and that one has the lowest salaries. And the unions fight for more full-time instead of part-time positions too.

So I'm all for unions. At least by joining together we have that kind of collective clout, whereas the management has the clout of hiring/firing, the purse strings, etc.

I think it's simplistic to say that all our problems are class based, but it's certainly a significant factor.

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what is call warfare. dump the stock pages
Posted by: whealeydj on Dec 2, 2007 12:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I assume it is a typo for class warfare. I think Solomon again is right on. I don't know why the newspapers even have a business section any more since investors are all on line or with Wall Street Journal. non investors never even crack them. If you subscribe and don't read the stock pages, you should write the editor and request more national or world or comic or sports and less stock pages.

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Scared of class warfare, rich guy?
Posted by: DaBear on Dec 7, 2007 7:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've been known to tell more than a few rich boys to keep up the good work, I'm looking forward to seeing how their furniture will look on their lawns...

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