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The Press Hates Democrats

By Jamison Foser, Media Matters for America. Posted June 8, 2006.


John Murtha, Harry Reid and Hillary Clinton are just the latest Democrats to face biased media coverage -- but they won't be the last.
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Last week, Media Matters wrote:

At this point, you'd have to be blind to miss the pattern. Every prominent progressive leader who comes along is openly derided in the media as fake, dishonest, conniving, out-of-the-mainstream, and weak. We simply can't continue to chalk this up to shortcomings on the part of Democratic candidates or their staff and consultants. It's all too clear that this will happen regardless of who the candidate or leader is; regardless of who works for him or her. The smearing of Jack Murtha should prove that to anyone who still doubts it.
The recent media treatment of Rep. John P. Murtha (D-Pa.), Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV), and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY) illustrate this point: No matter who emerges as a progressive leader, or a high-profile Democrat, they're in for the same flood of conservative misinformation in the media. Too many people chalk up outrageous media treatment of, say, Al Gore or John Kerry to the men's own flaws, pretending that if they were better candidates, they'd have gotten better press coverage. That's naïve. The Democratic Party could nominate Superman to be their next presidential candidate, and two things would happen: conservatives would smear him, and the media would join in. To illustrate this, we look back over the last dozen or so years.

By the mid-1990s, after several years of obsessive media coverage of the non-scandal known as "Whitewater" -- but with several more still to come -- some journalists recognized that they (or their colleagues) had gone overboard. Miami Herald reporter Tom Fiedler -- who broke the Gary Hart-Donna Rice affair in 1987 and, thus, can hardly be considered overly kind to Democrats -- wrote on August 4, 1996:
Listen closely and you'll hear the sound of what's happening to the Whitewater investigations: Pffffssssssst![...] The fact is, no matter how much Rush Limbaugh and the conspiracy theorists who bottom-feed on the Internet wish otherwise, none of the remaining matters raise legal questions of the sort that lead to indictments of the president's inner circle, including Mrs. Clinton.[...]
All of which should raise this question in the public's mind: How could such a nothing loom so large for so long over the national scene? Two things: superheated partisan politics and lousy journalism.[...] For me, the more troubling part of Whitewater is what it says about the state of American journalism. Many scholars and fellow journalists have documented well in recent years the danger of a national news media that practices a sort of ready- fire-aim sort of journalism.[...]
Reporting on Whitewater and all its aspects is beginning to become a textbook example of ready-fire-aim journalism run amok. Ironically, about the only place in America that wasn't sucked in on all the alleged misdeeds has been Little Rock, where the local news media -- even the newspaper long dedicated to trashing the Clintons -- has pooh-poohed Whitewater as a non- story concocted by Arkansas Republicans that only the most gullible outsiders would swallow.
And we almost did.
The first reporter to fall for the tale was The New York Times' Jeff Gerth, an investigative reporter. He produced an almost incomprehensible report on the Clintons' Whitewater land investments in early 1992. But incomprehensible or not, the fact that it appeared in so prestigious a paper as The New York Times insinuated that something must have been wrong. And that meant that every other baying hound in the pack had to give chase.
If anything, Fiedler was too kind to his colleagues. Writing at Salon.com, journalists Joe Conason and Gene Lyons offered an example of the media's dishonest Whitewater reporting:
Even more damning was a "Nightline" report broadcast that same evening. The segment came very close to branding Hillary Clinton a perjurer. In his introduction, host Ted Koppel spoke pointedly about "the reluctance of the Clinton White House to be as forthcoming with documents as it promised to be." He then turned to correspondent Jeff Greenfield, who posed a rhetorical question: "Hillary Clinton did some legal work for Madison Guaranty at the Rose Law Firm, at a time when her husband was governor of Arkansas. How much work? Not much at all, she has said."
Up came a video clip from Hillary's April 22, 1994, Whitewater press conference. "The young attorney, the young bank officer, did all the work," she said. "It was not an area that I practiced in. It was not an area that I know anything, to speak of, about." Next the screen filled with handwritten notes taken by White House aide Susan Thomases during the 1992 campaign. "She [Hillary] did all the billing," the notes said. Greenfield quipped that it was no wonder "the White House was so worried about what was in Vince Foster's office when he killed himself."
What the audience didn't know was that the ABC videotape had been edited so as to create an inaccurate impression.[...]
ABC News had seamlessly omitted thirty-nine words from her actual answer, as well as the cut, by interposing a cutaway shot of reporters taking notes. The press conference transcript shows that she actually answered as follows: "The young attorney [and] the young bank officer did all the work and the letter was sent. But because I was what we called the billing attorney -- in other words, I had to send the bill to get the payment sent -- my name was put on the bottom of the letter. It was not an area that I practiced in. It was not an area that I know anything, to speak of, about."
ABC News had taken a video clip out of context, and then accused the first lady of prevaricating about the very material it had removed. Within days, the doctored quotation popped up elsewhere. ABC used the identical clip on its evening news broadcast; so did CNN. The New York Times editorial page used it to scold Mrs. Clinton, as did columnist Maureen Dowd. Her colleague William Safire weighed in with an accusatory column of his own.
There's simply no other way to describe the Nightline report: it was dishonest.

Yet too many journalists and progressive activists shrugged off years of obvious journalistic misdeeds in pursuit of the Whitewater "story." Sure, maybe reporters got a little overzealous, the argument went, but it's just because the Clintons were a little dodgy -- they didn't answer questions completely or quickly enough, and it was suspicious that they didn't remember every detail of an ancient real estate deal. Surely that kind of frenzy -- or the Lewinsky-era media malpractice -- was something unique to coverage of Clinton. And then Al Gore came along and, as The Daily Howler's Bob Somerby argues convincingly, was treated to the most relentlessly hostile (not to mention dishonest) media coverage any major party presidential candidate had ever seen. He was mocked for wearing "earth tones" (who doesn't?). Reporters simply made up quotes they attributed to him, then declared him a liar because the quotes -- which he never spoke -- were exaggerations. And, to be clear: when we say reporters made up quotes, we aren't talking about Rush Limbaugh or Matt Drudge. We're talking about The New York Times and The Washington Post.

And still, reporters and pundits and progressive activists and Democratic leaders -- people who should have known better -- chalked it all up to Gore being a lousy candidate. Sure, they said, the media exaggerated about Gore's exaggerations, but they wouldn't have if he wasn't such an exaggerator. Never mind that every example given fell apart under scrutiny: each lie told about Gore being a liar reinforced the others. It was Gore's fault the media went overboard, just as it had been Clinton's. And his consultants' fault, too -- there were too many of them, or too few, or too inside, or they weren't good enough. And so people who should have known better thought it wouldn't happen again; not when there was a new candidate with new consultants.

Then Howard Dean emerged as the front-runner for the 2004 Democratic presidential nomination. And the media depicted him as a crazy man, a wild-eyed hippie liberal freak -- despite the fact that he had won the endorsement of the National Rifle Association during his career as governor of Vermont, during which time he was widely regarded as a moderate. And still, reporters and pundits and progressive activists and Democratic leaders -- people who should have known better -- chalked it all up to Dean being a little crazy: How could he not be a little crazy: Remember that scream in Iowa? Sure, some reporters eventually acknowledged that they overplayed it. Sure, some eventually reported that audio and video clips of the "scream" were wildly misleading. Still: he must have brought the ridiculous coverage on himself. The same press corps that swoons daily over the notoriously ill-tempered John McCain relentlessly attacked Howard Dean for being "angry." And people who should have known better blamed Dean. And his staff -- they were too young, too inexperienced, too outside, too liberal.

Enter John Kerry. Sure, Clinton, and Gore, and Dean had all been misleadingly slimed by the national media. But that's just because, by stunning coincidence, they were all deeply flawed candidates who brought it on themselves. But John Kerry was a genuine war hero -- and so people who should have known better by then were surprised when right-wing activists connected to the Bush campaign smeared his military service, with the ready assistance of the nation's leading news organizations. And they were surprised (or worse, thought nothing of it) when Kerry was portrayed in the media as a flip-flopper and Bush was given a pass on his own lengthy history of flip-flops.

And still, too many journalists, pundits, progressive activists and Democratic leaders chalked this up to John Kerry's failings as a candidate, or his consultants failings. They blamed the victim (again): Kerry talked too much about his military service, they said: he was asking to be smeared by Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. He spoke with too many qualifiers (remember: when Dean was blunt, he was derided as angry and crazy). He flip-flopped too much (Bush's own flips and flops escaped similar scrutiny).

Those who would apologize for the media's treatment of Clinton, Gore, Dean, and Kerry -- or who somehow fail to recognize it even now -- chalk it up to Clinton's supposed slickness, or Gore's trouble with the truth, or Dean's craziness, or Kerry's liberalism, and on and on and on -- somehow failing to recognize that they're excusing flawed media storylines about these candidates by citing those same flawed storylines. Hopefully hoping for the day when a progressive leader would emerge without these weaknesses.

Enter Democratic Rep. Jack Murtha. Murtha is, by general consensus, a conservative Democrat. A U.S. Marine and a highly decorated veteran of the Vietnam War. Ranking member of the Defense Appropriations committee. The kind of politician the media tends to refer to as a "pro-military Democrat" (buying into the ridiculous and offensive right-wing smear that most Democrats are anti-military). A serious, plain-spoken man with an impeccable record of serving his country and a "leading Democratic hawk."

Surely, if Clinton, Gore, Dean, and Kerry faced such abusive media coverage because of there own faults, here was a Democrat who didn't share those flaws.


Of course, Murtha has been the target of relentless attacks anyway. Bill O'Reilly calls him a coward. (Yes, that Bill O'Reilly.) James Taranto calls him "pro-surrender." The Washington Post dutifully gives prominent coverage to thinly sourced smears of Murtha's military record (sound familiar?) Chris Matthews lies about Murtha's proposal to withdraw troops from Iraq as soon as possible. And Fox News gives John O'Neill, who spearheaded the Swifties' smears of John Kerry, airtime to do the same to Murtha.

Who else? How about Hillary Clinton? Media heavyweights like David Broder and Chris Matthews and Patrick Healy have stopped even pretending that they don't hold her to a different standard than the one to which they hold Republican candidates.

Last week, we noted that Patrick Healy's 2,000-word front-page New York Times gossip article about Clinton's marriage set off a media feeding frenzy, led by Broder and Matthews. This week, all three have responded to criticism of their obsessive focus on Clinton's personal life. We'll take Healy first. Appearing on CNN's Paula Zahn Now, Healy acknowledged that the time the Clintons spend together is "pretty similar" to other families that include a member of Congress. Yet Healy didn't mention that fact in his article. Nor has he written a 2,000-word front-page article on the marriages of those other Congressional families.

Broder, during a June 1 broadcast of Washington Post Radio's Post Politics On-Air, acknowledged that he has heard from many readers who had told him Sen. Clinton's marriage "is her business and her husband's business, and it's nobody else's business." Broder claimed to "wish that were the case," before arguing that "in reality, because of the special role that he has played in her life -- played again yesterday in making a nominating speech, in effect, for her at the Democratic convention up in Buffalo -- he is not a silent partner."

The "special role" Bill Clinton plays in Hillary Clinton's life is, of course, "husband." If that "special role" demands the media explore the Clintons' personal lives and traffic in rumor and innuendo and leering speculation, the same is true of John McCain and his second wife. And Rudy Giuliani and his third wife. And the personal lives of all other candidates. But Broder doesn't think so; he prefers to explore the Clintons' personal lives while giving Republicans privacy. During a June 2 online discussion, Broder was asked, "When can we expect an article from you on the marriages and divorces of the top Republican contenders for the presidental race of '08?" Broder's response? "Why would I write such an article? I know of no occasion for that."

Which tells you pretty much everything you need to know about David Broder: he traffics in baseless gossip about the Clintons' marriage, but can't imagine why he should treat Republicans the same way. Later, after another reader took Broder to task for his focus on the Clintons' personal lives, Broder dug himself even deeper:
David S. Broder: Thank you8 [sic] for syour [sic] message. I recived [sic] a lot of criticism for the column on Senator Clinton, and I take the criticism seriously. As a general rule, I would shy away from discussions about the personal life of a public figure. But the Clintons have presented themselves to the public as a couple -- beginning with his statement as a candidate, "Buy One. Get one free." They are deeply involved in each other's public life, as witness his role at the New York Democratic convention that just nominated her for a second term.
Broder's trying hard, we'll give him that. But this doesn't fly. First, Broder himself has previously argued against coverage of candidates' personal lives. Second, his "Buy One. Get one free" comment simply doesn't make any sense. Broder's invocation of that famous 1992 phrase about the Clintons might be justification for covering Bill Clinton during Hillary Clinton's (presumptive) presidential campaign -- but it isn't justification for media focus on their personal lives. Finally, and most crucially: nearly all candidates' spouses are "deeply involved" in the candidates' public life. Laura Bush was recently sent out to lie for her husband; does that mean that their marriage is fair game? Not to David Broder.

Broder continued:
It is a fact of political life -- as reflected in the New York Times story -- that political people contemplating the possibility of her presidential candidacy are concerned about the role he would play in the campaign and in the administration. That concern is heightened by the history of the Clintons' marriage, which I do not have to rehearse here. But I cannot pretend that the concern does not exist when, in fact, it is a major topic of discussion.
When the question is whether the media should cover something, the fact that the media is covering it is a pretty poor justification. And, of course, Broder ignores his own role in making the matter a topic of conversation. But most importantly, Broder again highlights his double-standard: if the "history of the Clintons' marriage" makes their current personal lives fair game for reporters like Broder, the history of Rudy Giuliani's marriage, and the history of John McCain's marriage, and the histories of every other candidates marriage make them fair game as well. Rather than rebutting the suggestion that he is unfairly scrutinizing the Clintons while giving Republican candidates a pass, Broder confirms it.

MSNBC's Chris Matthews confirmed his own double standard during the June 1 edition of Hardball. When guest Hilary Rosen pointed out the ridiculousness of focusing on the personal life of the spouse of one candidate while ignoring the personal lives of other candidates, Matthews defended it:
ROSEN: You know, I have to say, I am the last person in the world to cry this, but I just find this whole discussion so ridiculously sexist, that there is no -- MATTHEWS: Sexist?
ROSEN: Sexist. There's no rationale for focusing on a candidate's husband's love life at this point, who is not even a candidate. I mean, if we went down the list, for every potential presidential candidate between now and the next election, and talked about their marriage, their relationship, the potential extracurricular activities, it's offensive, and I actually think -- MATTHEWS: Why don't we just limit that discussion to people who have been impeached over the issue? ROSEN: I actually think that people were offended when they read. They were serious, but offended. MATTHEWS: Why don't we just limit the discussion to people who have been impeached over the issue? ROSEN: Well, you know why? Because nobody was scrutinized the way he was.
Matthews's argument that we should "limit that discussion" to "people who have been impeached over the issue" is the same kind of tautology Broder employed: The Clinton's personal lives are newsworthy because they are newsworthy. It's also incredibly disingenuous. Matthews and countless other D.C. journalist-pundit types spent so much time in 1998 insisting that impeachment "wasn't about sex," it was about perjury and obstruction of justice and lying. Here's Matthews on the December 18, 1998, edition of CNBC's Hardball:
MATTHEWS: I think the reason that President Clinton is probably going to be impeached tomorrow is not because he broke the law in a couple of legal settings, but that for months and years he has a problem of breaking deals and breaking arrangements and not keeping his word with other politicians and with journalists. And that has led to a snowballing effect which caught up -- caught him up in this Lewinsky affair, that began a lot longer ago than him getting involved with Monica. What do you think of that theory?
And here's Matthews on October 15, 1998, arguing against focusing on personal lives:
MATTHEWS: Let me ask you a question. There's two ways to go at this president where he's vulnerable, and he is vulnerable about Lewinsky and lying about it and covering it up and the whole thing. I can tell you that a million times, off the record, on the record, on this show or off the show, I say the same thing. There's two ways to attack him. One way to attack him was the guy's a lying SOB. He's been lying to the American people from day one. He lied to the court. He lied in the deposition. He lied to the grand jury, and he lied to us when he pointed his finger at us. We all know that. Eighty percent of the American people agree on that. The other is that he's had a bad marriage, he's not really a good husband. Why does your party keep focusing on the second question, which is always qu -- tricky?
WILLIAM KRISTOL [editor, The Weekly Standard]: Well, I don't really think it's my party. I wish it were my party. I think I could give it some good advice, but...
MATTHEWS: Don't you realize -- do you agree that that's the wrong place to put the emphasis?
In 1998, when they wanted to justify impeaching a wildly popular president, pundits like Matthews insisted that it wasn't about sex. It was about lying; it was about the rule of law. And now, when Matthews wants to justify peering in the Clintons' bedroom windows, he insists that it's relevant because President Clinton was impeached over his personal life. For anyone still not convinced that the media's treatment of Bill Clinton, Al Gore, Howard Dean, John Kerry, Jack Murtha, and Hillary Clinton has less to do with their shortcomings and more to do with the media itself, we offer one more example: Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid.

One need only look at the coverage Reid has received in the Associated Press in recent months to recognize that something is wrong here.

In February, Media Matters demonstrated that an AP article co-written by John Solomon:
...left out important details of two incidents that purportedly link Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) to disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff. The AP noted that Reid opposed legislation to approve a Michigan casino for a Native American tribe that would have rivaled a casino owned by a tribe represented by Abramoff. But the article omitted the fact that Reid said at the time that he opposed the legislation because it would create a "very dangerous precedent" for the spread of off-reservation gambling -- something Reid had opposed for nearly a decade. The article also suggested that Reid coordinated with Abramoff to sabotage proposed legislation that would have raised the minimum wage in the Northern Mariana Islands, a U.S. territory represented by Abramoff, without noting that, in fact, Reid was a co-sponsor of that legislation and spoke on the Senate floor in favor of its passage.
As Media Matters detailed, Solomon's article left out several key pieces of exculpatory evidence -- evidence that badly undermined the entire premise of the article. And, according to Josh Marshall, the AP didn't even bother to contact one of the key people mentioned in the article. The AP's shoddy and excessively accusatory article was quickly picked up by other news outlets, including CNN. Now, Solomon is back at it. On May 29, the AP published a Solomon article that breathlessly reported:
Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid accepted free ringside tickets from the Nevada Athletic Commission to three professional boxing matches while that state agency was trying to influence him on federal regulation of boxing.
Reid, D-Nev., took the free seats for Las Vegas fights between 2003 and 2005 as he was pressing legislation to increase government oversight of the sport, including the creation of a federal boxing commission that Nevada's agency feared might usurp its authority.
But as Media Matters and TPM Muckraker quickly demonstrated, Solomon's article was badly flawed, omitting and downplaying crucial information that undermine's his suggestion that Harry Reid did something wrong. Among the problems:

  • The "free ringside tickets" Reid took turn out to have been credentials that had no cash value.

  • Reid couldn't have paid for the "tickets" even if wanted to, as they had no cash value, and the Athletic Commission was legally prevented from accepting payment for them.

  • Reid sat on a folding chair in a small, cramped area, not in the fancy ringside seats Solomon suggested.

In a May 31 follow-up article, Solomon continued deceiving readers, falsely suggesting that Reid "abruptly reversed course" and abandoned his prior defense of his actions when, in fact, Reid had done no such thing. Reid instead "reversed course" only on the issue of whether, as he had previously stated, the Senate gift ban allows lawmakers to take gifts only from state agencies in their home state. In fact, the gift ban is less stringent than Reid thought: Senators can take gifts from agencies of any state. That's how Reid "abruptly reversed course": he found out and acknowledged that the gift ban was actually less strict than he thought. Yet the AP spun this as an admission by Reid that he had been wrong to take the tickets. As Media Matters explained: Moreover, in the lead paragraphs of the article, he reported that Reid's office had "abruptly reversed course" in correcting the senator's claim, but failed to provide readers with the substance of Reid's error. This left the false impression that Reid had abandoned his defense of his decision to accept the NAC credentials, when in fact he still stood by it, as the weblogs AmericaBlog and TPM Muckraker noted. Only much later in the article did Solomon inform readers of the manner in which Reid had apparently misinterpreted the Senate rules.

The New York Times compounded the problem by running a version of the AP article that omitted the key portions explaining the nature of Reid's statements. And the AP's faulty reporting was quickly repeated by The New York Times editorial page, as well as other news organizations: the New York Times ran an editorial that ludicrously lumped Harry Reid in with convicted felon Randy "Duke" Cunningham -- the former member of Congress who gave lobbyists a bribe menu. Fox News amplified the AP's distortions. CNN and NPR and countless other news outlets repeated the "story."

To anyone who remembers Whitewater, the pattern should be clear: an overheated, excessively prosecutorial article in a major news outlet downplays exculpatory information and makes suggestions not quite supported by the facts. It's quickly debunked -- but not before other news organizations repeat it so often it "becomes true." And the news outlet that got the story wrong in the first place, rather than acknowledging its error, compounds it in an effort to save face.

Arkansas journalist Gene Lyons described how Whitewater unfolded in his book "Fools For Scandal: How the Media Invented Whitewater" (Franklin Square Press, 1996):
[T]he role of The New York Times and, to a somewhat lesser extent, The Washington Post in creating and sustaining the Whitewater hoax can hardly be overstated. Having bungled the Whitewater story to begin with, both newspapers' goal for months, indeed years, has been to protect themselves and their damaged credibility.[...]
Having bungled the Whitewater-Madison Guaranty S&L story in the first place, the Times found itself in the position of a bookkeeper who'd "borrowed" a couple of thousand from petty cash and, finding himself unable to return it, had two choices: own up and face the music or borrow more cash, head to the race track, and play the trifecta. For whatever combination of reasons, Times reporters and editors opted to gamble. In so doing, the newspaper's coverage fell captive to Republican partisans with a vested interest in promoting scandal. The rest of the media obediently followed.[...]
[I]t all began with a series of much-praised articles by investigative reporter Jeff Gerth in The New York Times: groundbreaking, exhaustively researched, but not particularly balanced stories that combine a prosecutorial bias and tactical omission to insinuate all manner of sin and skullduggery.
That's what seems to be happening at the Associated Press right now: for whatever reason, Solomon has repeatedly ignored or downplayed key exculpatory evidence in several articles that purport to detail ethical problems on the part of Democrats Harry Reid and Byron Dorgan. The AP, like the Times before it, has a decision to make: own up and face the music, or head to the track.

Whatever the AP does next, however, nobody -- no journalist, no activist, no political leader -- should make the mistake of thinking this kind of shoddy reporting will be limited to Harry Reid. Just ask Bill Clinton. Or Hillary Clinton. Or Al Gore. Or Howard Dean. Or John Kerry. Or Jack Murtha.

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WHAT A ONE SIDED BEATING FOR THE LEFT
Posted by: LMNOP on Jun 8, 2006 12:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you Alternet for reprinting this piece which Media Matters recently e-mailed in its action report that is available to subscribed members (a free service available through their site).

Not mentioned were the analous swift-boatings and character assassinations of Ted Kennedy, Tom Daschle, Michael Moore and Cindy Sheehan, as well as an endless littany of lesser characters such as Scott Ritter and Richard Clarke. Of course, the abstraction "liberalism" itself and by extention, we who embrace it, have been taking a non-stop and unanswered beating from a plethora of pundits and media outlets for about two decades now.

Material like this reinforces my conviction of the hopelessness of this battle with the right. This is a rout. Bambi vs. Godzilla. And it's getting old being bambi for so long with no sign of relief on the horizon. I'm tired of playing Washington Generals to the conservatives' Globetrotters, Alan Colmes [picture that word in a miniscule pica a la Al Franken) to their Sean Hannity.

Well, at least they aren't using real bullets any more like they did in the sixties. These are just character assassinations

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Apples to Oranges
Posted by: EZJ on Jun 8, 2006 1:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, the article is right on.

Yet, the Democrats and Republicans remain an illusion of choice.

Take the article, and substitute "Democrat" for "Independents".

Democrats do not, and will not represent the interest of the people anytime soon. As long as the corporate money is flowing, their heads will be forever turned.

And, as long as they continue to vote for the same things behind closed doors, you know that the Democrats and Republicans are tied at the hip.

It is simple really.

Divide and Conquer. "An illusion of choice".

Get it? It's 3rd party time. The 3rd, is always a charm.

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The left killed Howard Dean
Posted by: YogiBear on Jun 8, 2006 2:12 AM   
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I agree that the media tends to softpedal against conservatives, presumably fearing the backlash from a united front on the right, while making life tough on the left. But I have a hard time swallowing the criticism of the media on the Dean issue since it was apparent to all who were paying attention that Dean was torpedoed by his political opponents and their peers during the Democratic primary.

It was Gephardt or Kerry or Clark who done Dean in, not the right-favoring media. It was the Democratic establishment who took him out, him and all the real leaders we could have but never get past the party's internal bloodletting process.

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» RE: The left killed Howard Dean Posted by: SufiLizard
» RE: Both true Posted by: kooz
So what's surprising?!
Posted by: kgs1947 on Jun 8, 2006 4:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not only does corporate-owned media slant the news and deceive the public (Chris Matthews was a sopping mess during the 2004 campaign), but there is NO leadership in the Democratic Party nor any political platform to present to the public. Harry Reid IS a wimp! Howard Dean IS ineffective!
John Kerry left the scene after being defeated, never to be heard from again! The White House is led by an alcoholic, and this country is in denial.

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fascistic media control
Posted by: rsaxto on Jun 8, 2006 4:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All of these crazy character assassinations by prominent media sources can be explained by the simple fact that there is fascistic major media control in the US caused by fascistic corporate leaders. Big media CEOs always try to kill the possibiity of having a decent progressive government at any level.

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WHOA WHOA WHOA!!
Posted by: Suburban Dad on Jun 8, 2006 4:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All is not hopeless!

Let's not forget that Gore and Kerry in all likelihood ACTUALLY WON their respective elections! People are out there voting for the left. Media Schmedia. The Right is not so invulnerable.

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» RE: WHOA WHOA WHOA!! Posted by: OligarchyNot
» That's WHY all is hopeless! Posted by: nc green
» RE: WHOA WHOA WHOA!!..sickofsleaze Posted by: ladybug1@carrollsweb.com
If you want to DO something...
Posted by: Caro on Jun 8, 2006 4:50 AM   
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... about our terrible corporate media, read this (pdf).

Carolyn Kay
MakeThemAccountable.com

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Oh, puh-lease! Try being a Green!
Posted by: nc green on Jun 8, 2006 4:57 AM   
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... or a Libertarian or anything else other than a bought-and-sold corporate candidate.

And you call Clinton, Kerry and Murtha progressives?! Two DLC operatives and a right-of-center Democrat?

Maybe it wouldn't be so easy for the right-wing punditry if the Democrats would stop trying to meet Republicans on conservative rhetorical turf. Democrats have ceded all of their their own real estate because they don't believe there are progressive voters ready to be motivated if their candidate will just take a stand on *something*.

Bottom line is, the Democrats cannot take political control as long as they serve the same funders as Republicans but pretend they're concerned about "the people."

It's time for a third party. It's time for the Greens!

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» Huh? Posted by: VisionQuest
A Vicious Circle
Posted by: inanaturallight on Jun 8, 2006 5:18 AM   
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So where do you start the change? Joe six-pack wants something to get his adrenaline flowing, wants the blood-and-gore, wants to see the scandal. Mr. Right Wing Religoinist is out there taking notes, and if his news says anything positive about a candidate that isn't firmly against [abortion/gays/science/compassion/etc.] (take your pick) then tomorrow's airwaves will be full of Reeds, Dobsons, and Robertsons screaming 'heretic!' Murdoch owns the news, and the execs in the other agencies, seeing the $ for themselves, happily join in for the big entertainment spectacle that the news has become.
And now Bobby Jr. publishes a report indicating the '04 election was stolen (like we didn't know already) but he's got enough solid evidence to convene several grand juries... and where did the news coverage of that story go? The 'solid' part of that story is buried in a couple of lines in paragraph 47 while the remainder of the story ridicules the report... facism, did someone say? Seems like this oughta be enough to get Joe-6-pack's blood a-pumping, oughta be newsworthy, but it's missing in action.
As for the donkeys-vs-elephants issue, yeah, it's been a choice between the evil of two lessers for a long time, but one of those lessers isn't quite so far out on that rightward limb, and if we can get folks listening to that one then they might start to listen a little to those folks a little further toward the middle of the tree. Most change is evolutionary and the scales don't flip overnight, the positive result of any one action is simply to move the median slightly in a positive direction- it didn't get way off to the right where it is today overnight. We can hope for the big changes, but we have to keep plugging away at the little changes, and trying to nudge that median leftward and expose those so far out on the right limb that they have us all hanging from twigs with white knuckles.

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doorman
Posted by: Door man on Jun 8, 2006 5:29 AM   
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One point must be noted -- Hilliary Clinton could not be considered a "progressive" IMO - in the wildest imagination.

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» Hilary Clinton Posted by: fifthworld
How to fight the conservative media and beat the GOP in the bargain
Posted by: rbohan on Jun 8, 2006 5:34 AM   
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Thanks, Alternet, for posting a great article that does a yeoman's job of spelling out the problem. It doesn't, however, get to the root cause of the problem and that is progressive's complicity in this rightward march of the media.

Ask yourself, "How often have I heard someone on the right attack the media?" Gosh, the only comments I can recall regarding the media from the right are attacks on said media. None of us can have missed the relentless battle of the right against the media over the past thirty years. And has it stopped now that the administration, the US Congress the Supreme Court and most state houses and legislatures are right wing? Not hardly.

Now try to recall all the times you heard anyone on the left attack the media...and this article doesn't count. Go ahead. I'll wait.

So let's see...the right attacks the media for thirty years. The more the media do the bidding of the right, the more the right attacks them, and so, the more the media do the bidding of the right. On the other hand, the cozier the left tries to be with the mainstream media, the less they represent us with any degree of fairness or accuracy. And the more we try to cozy up to them. Call me crazy but I think I see a pattern here.

And as for my argument that liberals are complicit in this, look at Hillary and Bill Clinton. Who has been more vilified by the right and by the media than the Clintons? Yet what is their response. Yep...."If I'm nice enough to them, maybe they'll finally like me." Or look at how we all respond to warrantless media attacks on progressives. When Dean said more Dems needed to listen to folks who have Confederate flag bumper stickers (admittedly probably not exactly the way he wanted to say it), who were some of the first to take swipes at him. Dems. And liberals were just about as likely to get all snotty and supercilious as the wingnuts about the accuracy of every last detail in Michael Moore's movie. And do you remember what Kerry's response to the initial Swift Boat Liar's allegations was? Do you remember what any Kerry supporters' responses were? Me neither.

So what's to be done? First, we have to make the media's bias a progressive talking point. I know...I know. Progressives hate to repeat talking points. We all want to come up with the next big idea that becomes everyone else's talking point. But here's one we do need to repeat: "The media are biased against liberals and can't be trusted to present our views and positions fairly and accurately." A little wordy I know, but you get the idea.

Second, we've got to get our candidates to have some spine with respect to the media and with respect to attacks from the right. (As the article pointed out, the two are related.) How might the election have changed if Kerry had said something like, "The Swiftboat Liars are just that. They are a bunch of cowards and liars whose only intent is to smear me and the brave sailors that served with me. And all you folks in the media who are spreading their stinking lies are complicit in their cowardly smear campaign. " Would the media have tucked tail and run? Well, we don't know because Dems didn't show much spine. But I'm guessing at first they wouldn't. That's why we have to take a page from the GOP playbook and be relentless. Say it over and over..."People like the Swiftboat Liars engage in nasty, dishonest smear campaigns and the media help them."

OK, I've rambled long enough. Again, thanks for the article and fellow progressives...let's get some spine and go after these slanted media.

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» count me in Posted by: mokidugway
BIG MEDIA OWNED BY REPUBLICANS
Posted by: resistance6 on Jun 8, 2006 5:45 AM   
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Most of the media is owned by Republicans. Not that you can tell really except that the media usually endorses Republicans over Dems in our so-called "elections."

Both parties are wicked. The Democrats are a bunch of COMMIES and the Republicans are a bunch of FASCISTS.

Last time they gave us a choice between two Skull and Bonesmen. You really see that much of a difference between the two parties?

Then we have the Constitution Party which is owned and managed by Moon (who is also Illuminati).

The other parties are just variations of the Republicans and Democrats. All the parties are controlled by the Illuminati.

No party is going to save us. The people must rise up in a movement to IMPEACH BUSH and hold ALL POLITICIANS ACCOUNTABLE. That includes JUDGES.

South Dakota is trying to pass an initiative for just that very thing. The lawyers, judges and politicians are SCARED TO DEATH.

It's only a matter of time before the dollar crashes completely and the middle class can't support the bloated government any more. Perhaps people will form small communities where they can help each other, grow their own food, build their own schools as in our early days before we had BIG GOVERNMENT, BIG PHARMA, BIG EDUCRATS, BIG MEDIA and BIG EVERYTHING ELSE.

All these BIGS care about is POWER AND MONEY. If some poor bloke is naive enough to invent a car that runs on water, he will be murdered. If you try to avoid their processed food, their drugs (whose side effects are worse than the disease), their government propaganda schools they will use their brownshirts to make you submit.

When there's no more money, maybe the BIGS will leave us alone. We will all get along much better without them and their lies, their regulations, their pornography, and their pills and food that kills.

But unfortunately when there's no more money, they (ie the BIGS/Illuminati) will probably just kill us all, or most of us. The only ones they are interested in keeping around are the Mexicans and others who can cook and garden for them.

They are starting WWIII right now, just for an excuse to wipe most of us out. They all have bunkers and underground cities and they own islands and mansions all over the world. After they thin the planet down a bit, (i.e. total population down to 500 million according to the Georgia Guidestones) they will come out and enjoy their New World Order.

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» totally agree Posted by: nor cal surfer
POOR HILLARY
Posted by: resistance6 on Jun 8, 2006 5:50 AM   
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Who in their right mind wants Hillary ruling.

She is a high priestess in the Slice and Dice Division of the Illuminati. She will be a crueler tyrant (if possible) than GWB.

We don't need anymore sex perverts who get off on torture, death and mayhem running our country.

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» RE: POOR HILLARY Posted by: dangerouslysane
Mainstream Media? Hardly Mainstream
Posted by: kooz on Jun 8, 2006 5:58 AM   
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Corpprate media is NOT mainstream. A large majority of Americans know that corporate media is totally slanted against Democrats left of Joe's Lieberbush and BitemeBiden. The Nazi-like propaganda machine leading the way with the drug addict Rush Limbaugh and the sex perverted giant talking head (thanks Keith Olberman) Bill O'BlowmeReilly in collusion with Nazi loving Conservatives like Cheney and Rove and in further collusion with Russert, Matthews, Blitzer, Shiffer and FoxNews/CNN (Christian News Network)/Sinclear/Cleachannel and on and on, have completely blocked Democratic ideas, which are the mainstream of contemprary American thought, from getting any traction on T.V. I mean, how in the world does a thoughtless used cotex transsexual like Ann Couter get on the cover of Time magazine? She represents mainstream media? No. She represents mainstream Conservatves. Not to mention that like asian biting blow up doll Michelle Malkin. There is nothing mainstream about Corporate media. Most of us know the truth about the vast right-wingnut conspiracy. Unfortunately, they own T.V. But not for much longer - I hope.

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MR.
Posted by: derfb1 on Jun 8, 2006 6:21 AM   
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Get real--the media love the Demos. Harry Reid is a jerk and they print nothing but good things about the man. He became a Demo. here in NV to get elected and to make sure, he joined the Mormon Church. What a sleaze bag.
D

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Good point
Posted by: DaveB on Jun 8, 2006 6:24 AM   
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"Progressives hate to repeat talking points. We all want to come up with the next big idea that becomes everyone else's talking point. "

I agree. Too many want to be the star quarterback, not enough want to do the blocking and tackling and all that other boring, hard stuff that wins games.

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» RE: Good point Posted by: kooz
» RE: Good point Posted by: dikaiosyne
This is the Alternative
Posted by: nickprogresss on Jun 8, 2006 6:58 AM   
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The Internet is the medium that can help us bypass "traditional" reporting and it's prejudice against progressive issues and politicians.

Check out this short video explaining how the Internet may soon be much more like the medium of TV!

Spread the word - use the Internet to save the Internet.

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It was Gore's fault
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Jun 8, 2006 7:24 AM   
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...for not attacking the press. He should have been relentless with his criticism of the media. He should have had 100 people in his campaign whose sole purpose were to find more examples of distortions.

Chomsky's "Manufacturing Consent" had been around for years. He could have told people to read or watch that and they would have at least a basic understanding of the media.

But then again, back in 2000, few knew how deep this rabbit hole really went. I suppose we should thank Bush for illuminating this dreadful problem.

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bashing left wingers?
Posted by: dikaiosyne on Jun 8, 2006 7:40 AM   
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I encounter and read few articles as disengenuous as this one seems to be. Anyone with half a brain or less (meaning liberal) should be able to see that the mainstream drive-by media is dominated by hard lefties that routinely bash anyone or anything center-right politically. The problem for the drive-by media is that they are becoming more diminished with each passing year as primary news and opinion sources. I fully expect some of the smaller market left wing newspaper rags to go out of business in the coming years as their circulation continue to plummet. The TV BIG 3 media continue to experience lower ratings with each passing year with more and more folks opting to watch the more conservative FOX NEWS channel and (more importantly) listen to talk radio. This article in my humble opinion is either a mis-read of media influence or an attempt at deception as to how they wish average joe to see the news media. I'm betting its the latter and that the continued left wing slant of the drive-by media is going to be their eventual ruin.

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» RE: bashing left wingers? Posted by: OligarchyNot
» Examples? Posted by: VisionQuest
It's the boundaries, stupid...
Posted by: Beagle17 on Jun 8, 2006 7:51 AM   
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It is basically an axiom that a progressive idea/model/theory or whatever must be argued and supported ten times more thoroughly than one that merely "sounds" conservative. The right-wing experts who manipulate popular opinion to deliver amazingly high levels of support to programs that most characteristically lead to death, environmental destruction and expansion of class differences (surely not things the founding fathers had in mind), never have credibility issues it seems. Funny how the word sucks so.

The left will have to work even harder than the right currently does to recapture any light of fairness in the media. It is interesting to note that few other words can invoke a hissing and spitting reaction in a right-wing personality disciple than the name, Chomsky. I think this is because Chomsky hits the nail on the head when he explains how the forces of power manipulate public opinion quite simply by defining the boundaries of debate. The above article gives many cases in point, such as the Clinton marriage being public business simply because it is public business.

Currently, discussion of the media's right-wing bias is treated as laughable, because, after all, everybody knows the media is constituted by hoards of fawning liberals, right? I'm sure the neo-cons and the expert right-wing media homunculi who are winning the day right now took great note of Chomsky's key ideas when formulting their strategy.

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» RE: It's the boundaries, stupid... Posted by: inanaturallight
» RE: It's the boundaries, stupid... Posted by: dangerouslysane
IN THE MIDST OF ALL THE CABLE RIGHT-WING B.S.
Posted by: krose on Jun 8, 2006 8:01 AM   
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THERE ARE 2 "BEACONS OF TRUTH!"

And I salute them, and watch them every day.

1. Keith Olberman, 8PM, (EST) MSNBC
2. Lou Dobbs, 6PM (EST) CNN

For those of you who have not watched Lou Dobbs recently, you should. He is our strongest advocate for speaking "truth to power." For five hours a week, he tells it "like it is," and that is giving the Bush administration a LASHING, the likes of which is not heard over the media anywhere else, except AIR AMERICA RADIO!

I should also add a third person to this list, and that is Jack Cafferty. I would not always have said this about Jack, because he used to call himself an "equal opportunity offender." He is of late, however, offending the Bush administration quite passionately, on a routine basis, in his short spots on CNN's Situation Room, (hosted unfortunately by that idiot, Wolf Blitzer). Jack needs to be given his own program to be able to spout off some of his plain spoken "truths!" We need to write to these networks on a constant basis, as part of an organized effort, to tell them how we feel about these programs and anchors. This is one of the things we can do for our "cause" from the comfort of our own homes, with little effort on our part.

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» RE: Lou Dobbs Posted by: CatDad
» RE: Lou Dobbs Posted by: krose
Can you hear me now?
Posted by: pellegrini1@prexar.com on Jun 8, 2006 8:09 AM   
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Just for fun and to make a point, I e-mailed this article to hardball@msnbc.com. How about flooding their mailbox with more?

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» RE: Can you hear me now? Posted by: krose
» RE: Can you hear me now? Posted by: krose
» RE: Can you hear me now? Posted by: Jessie
The down and dirty details of media manipulation
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Jun 8, 2006 8:14 AM   
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Nice article, but you leave out the actual mechanisms of control; this has been spelled out by many but here it is again:

The big five media owners are:
TimeWarner, WaltDisney, Murdoch, Viacom, Bertelsmann

So - who owns a controlling interest in these media organizations? The answer is a relatively small group of institutional holders - Barclays, Fidelity, Vanguard, etc - look up WaltDisney on yahoo finance, for example. Disney institutional holders.

Now, take a look at ExxonMobile institutional holders. Again, you see a similar grouping of holders. Barclays of the UK holds $14 billion in Exxon, and about $2 billion in Disney, for example.

Now consider Exxons record profits - who got those profits? Why, Barclays and the unknown individuals that they represent. Do you think that Barclays would encourage Disney to spin the news to promote Republican candidates who will then ensure that Exxon gets all the tax breaks and government handouts and 'freedom from Justice Dept. investigations' possible?

How exactly do you think Exxon managed to post world-record profits every quarter this past year?

Every single media organization has these kind of links to the wealthiest sectors of global economy - and these sectors are who the Republicans work for. Oh, some give lip service to 'social conservatism' but essentially all Republicans and a good chunk of the Democrats can be classified as "Rockefeller Republicans".

Consider gas prices - the head of the Federal Trade Commission is Deborah P. Majoras, who recently assured the nation that gas price fixing via monopoly was not happening. If you check the link, you'll see that she was the anti-anti-trust counsel for ChevronTexaco before she joined the Bush Administration - a pro-monopoly lawyer in other words.

Did the corporate media report on this? NO! They simply said "FTC chairwoman says no price fixing is happening - what a relief!".

If editors (who typically start out as reporters) try and challenge this system, they are fired or retired or sent off to the entertainment sections (recall Edward Murrow's reassignment?).

You really have to understand these dirty details; once you do it's pretty easy to see why Democratic candidates are always sidelined by the "liberal corporate press". You also have to realize that different media outlets serve different interests, with some having more oil ties, some having more pharmaceutical ties, etc. - and this influences the stories they run. It's a huge mess of conflicting interests, with just one group excluded: the American public.

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» Just a couple questions. Posted by: Sojourner
It's a matter of values
Posted by: mirimac on Jun 8, 2006 8:28 AM   
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I've been around since Truman. That being said - some of you may remember that famous photo of Truman holding up a newspaper with Dewey's photo on it. In big, bold, all caps print it proclaimed "DEWEY WINS!!" Of course, that was the early edition printed before all the votes were counted - back in the good ole days before Diebold 'counted' the votes.

This is certainly not to excuse the media but during and after the McCarthy hearings, I think the media tried to walk the thin and narrow middle ground of fairness and I think they succeeded rather well. But the gloves started coming off back in the Reagan days and by the time GW came along, the majority of the media had chosen sides and it wasn't the left.

Could it be they were told to favor the Right? After all, their bosses' bosses' bosses are right up there in the economic stratasphere with other Republicans and have benefitted greatly by the Bush Presidency. Given the choice of reporting honestly and losing my job vs not....well, I hope I'd choose wisely but frankly I don't know how I'd choose.

The Christian Right and Radical Republicans have placed much emphasis on American values. I've seen books, essays, etc., trying to define what these values are and mean. And as someone pointed out somewhere on the blogs yesterday, these "values" the Right purportd to represent are really nothing more than mere "opinions."

So where does truth, fairness, and balance enter in to the mix?One person's truth is another person's lie. How does one decide?

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The Media sucks, but so do most of those candidates
Posted by: SufiLizard on Jun 8, 2006 10:50 AM   
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While I agree there is clearly a pro-corporate, pro-Republican bias in the media, most of the candidates mentioned also suck.

With the exception of Dean (who was sabatoged by his own party - as mentioned above) all of the candidates brought up in this article are pro-war, pro-corporate Republicrats. They have a vested interest in oligarchy.

The media actually loved Bill Clinton when he first ran against Bush Sr. It was clear he was getting the more favorable coverage of the MSM. Mainly because they don't care a lick about abortion or gay rights or any of those wedge issues. They just care about corporate profits and getting richer -- and they knew they had a friend in Clinton.

So why did Republicans attack so viciously when Clinton was pushing their own agenda? Because they saw a tremendous opportunity. While Clinton was accomplishing many Republican goals, he was also turning on the working class, which Republicans were quick to exploit.

The working class is the key demographic that Democrats had relied on for the entire 20th century. Once the working class felt alienated from the Democrats - Republicans knew they could win them over with the wedge issues. Sure Republicans are even more hostile to the bread-and-butter interests of the working class, but you can't underestimate the power of feeling betrayed.

Like the Nazis, Republicans realized when you have a disillusioned working class you just have to play on fears and prejudice to give people one or two reasons to vote against their long-term interests.

Republicans have been chipping away at the Democratic base for years and had a surge of success under Reagan, but it was the DLC Democrats who held the door open for them under Clinton.

We are now racing toward a neo-feudalism at a pace that would not have been possible if not for the complicity of the DLC Democrats.

As awful as Reagan was, he couldn't hold a candle to Dubya. And if you look at his record, Richard Nixon would have been branded a lefty-liberal on today's political continuum.

It's uncanny how quickly nearly a century of progress was demolished.

Democracy demands vigilance! Thanks to a severe lack of vigilance, I'm afraid we are going to have to re-fight many of last century's battles again this century.

We have essentially returned to The Gilded Age and the working class will need to rise up again. The wealthy have virtually unchecked power and the rest of us remain divided thanks to fears and prejudices.

It's sad that all the sacrifices and even deaths of a previous generation of activists will now have to be repeated. At least women's sufferage won't have to be re-won and though the civil rights movement is far from completed, we're still better off than 50 years ago.

I think that's where our hope lies. For the most part, African Americans have not been fooled by the political shenanigans of the Right and there are many still living who experienced first-hand the early, violent days of the political movement.

It will not be so easy to divide the working class along color lines now - thanks to the success of the civil rights movement. If we can find a way to get the same unity with the Latin population (the Right is working hard to create division) we will achieve a strength that will make the oligarchs tremble.

And to all of you who's personal issues are things like the environment, gay rights, animal rights etc. please realize that we need to get our democracy fixed before we can even hope to adequately address your issues.

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rjs
Posted by: rjs on Jun 8, 2006 11:59 AM   
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Honestly, While I can appreciate the article, it seems lame to assert the ideas that were discribed. If Democrats want to rule the roost and help this country get back on it's feet, and I believe you do, get off your arse and do something about the current agenda and messes Americans see as wrongful. This includes pretty much every agenda.

You like to throw blame out of fear of never making it again while the American people suffer your ignorance. If you can't do it, elect me. American's are tired of the mud throwing and want something done about the issues.

--rjs

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Get active!
Posted by: harpy on Jun 8, 2006 12:17 PM   
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Right now, the only thing we can do, and we must do it, is to get active. Start with writing e-mails and letters to every one of these MSM organizations. Don't just write once. Do it often, protest and SCREAM about their actions. Write to the advertisers protesting their bias, nothing gets the attention like complaints to advertisers. The wing nuts have been doing this for a while. Write to every show, not just one. Get your facts straight and confront the "reporters" with them. Write to editors, write to publishers, write to owners. Call them. Nothing's gonna change if we sit here and preach to the choir. Get busy. It takes effort for the long haul.

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I'm not being an apologist, but I think there's a small concept missing in this article.
Posted by: peritonlogon on Jun 8, 2006 1:52 PM   
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Our politicians all embody resonating tales, some of which date back thousands of years, and the media, being enherently entertainment based, picks up on these tales and runs with them, delivering the fitting turn for the character.

Right now, almost all Democrats carry with them the tale of a pretender, someone who holds others to a higher standard than they do themselves. Now, whether or not this is actually true doesn't matter. What matters is that people enjoy it when others who claim a high standard are exposed as hypocrits.

The tale that Bush II carries with him, for most people is (mostly was) an average jo who, despite his disabilities, can succeed. Whether this was true doesn't matter, what matters is that people like to see the guy with flaws succeed because they identify with him. Now, during the 2000 election, Democrats and Liberal reporters (those people who might start stories that expand to the mainstream print news and network/cable news) did NOT attack Bush for being a rich kid, who has the world handed to him (someone people like to see fail) rather, they attacked him for being inarticulate and 'not smart enough to govern,' ie, someone people want to see succeed, because they identify with him.

This will simply be the way things go untill Television ceases to be the dominant media and ceases to define the concept of truth.


My personal remedy for Democrats... identify that narrative that your opponenet is trying to embody, try to replace it with one more usefull to you, also, identify a narrative that will be usefull and beneficial to you and try to embody it....( This is what John Edwards did, and the reason that he would have beaten Bush Handily in '04 had he won the primary, he was a gentle unassuming guy who wanted to do good but didn't ask much of others, you know, the teddy bear-sort-of-a-guy we all know and respect, and for whom we like to see good things). Repeat process for entire party and, as far as publicity is concerned, focus more on this and less on issues.

My personal remedy for Citizens- Turn off your TV, put down the national paper, and turn on your computer and take part online... but that's what you people are doing already, so get a friend to.

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» To clarify my meaning Posted by: peritonlogon
You have to be kidding me.
Posted by: popsicle67 on Jun 8, 2006 2:06 PM   
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Media types abusing politicos is news? Nobody thinks the press gets it right, if they did would Rush be around? Go back to your typewriter and first write an apology for foisting this crap on us and calling it journalism. After that find something to write about that really is journalism. Your Alma Mater must be considering revoking your degree, I would

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Where is?
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Jun 8, 2006 4:38 PM   
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Where is The Lincoln Initiative when we need it? Click on The Lincoln Initiative

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In the case of Jack Murtha
Posted by: KUCING on Jun 8, 2006 5:05 PM   
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... it is completely clear to me why he has to be smeared. I quote: Murtha remained in the Marine Corps Reserves. In 1959, then Captain Murtha took command of the 34th Special Infantry Company, Marine Corps Reserves, in Johnstown. He remained in the Reserves after his discharge from active duty until he volunteered for service in Vietnam in 1966-67, serving as a battalion staff officer(S-2 Intelligence Section), receiving the Bronze Star with Combat "V" for valor in combat, two Purple Hearts and the Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry. He retired from the Reserves as a colonel in 1990, receiving the Navy Distinguished Service Medal. end quote

More than anyone in the present administration can say, isn't it?

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Failure
Posted by: fifthworld on Jun 8, 2006 5:20 PM   
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The failure of Dems to speak radically truthfully about current crises is why the press persists in ignoring our 'heroes'. The truths are horrific and if failed characters like Kerry and Clinton, and a single-issue rebel like Murtha, can't really raise their fists in outrage, for whatever reasons, and make it, yes, senstational, we won't see them much. More coverage will be given to the Radical Cheerleaders at protests. Which is fine as it is, but, you know.

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"Alternative" Outreach
Posted by: Steven Wanzell on Jun 8, 2006 6:05 PM   
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I think one way to fight the compromised mainstream media is for sites like Alternet to become more widely read, by smart promotion.

Steven Wanzell
artist/activist/ex-American
www.wanzellarts.com.ar

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One Party System?
Posted by: RON_KING on Jun 8, 2006 6:41 PM   
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Right now, as this article shows, you cannot get good press unless you belong to the favored Party. So how long before essential services are restricted to members of the favored Party? Legal disputes decided by Party affiliation? Housing, medical services and even employment deterimined by Party affiliation?

1984 didn't go far enough...

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Both Sides Accuse the other of "Media Support"
Posted by: tanstaafl28 on Jun 8, 2006 10:50 PM   
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I see two ways to look at this issue, one would be to completely agree with the idea that the news/press media is actually downplaying the left in favor of the right, but the truth is that both sides are constantly pushing the perception that the press treats them poorly. It is easy to look at most major media outlets and see their ties to major parent corporations, and it isn't terribly difficult to imagine them liking the status quo enough to support it, whether openly or subtly, but political loyalties are a fickle beast, even in the best of times.

If the corporations behind the major news outlets are distributing their "infotainment" for a profit, then they would do better in the long run to know and market to their audience. Politics is the show produced by economics. No matter how much we may want to claim otherwise, money is power. Political climates change constantly, money remains the name of the game. After all, politics is merely the show produced by economics.

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Of course...but
Posted by: RobRoy on Jun 9, 2006 6:26 AM   
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Dems on the whole are overcautious, relying too much on "focus groups", polsters, and campaign managers. They paint themselves into a corner by pandering to the right's agenda out of fear. They don't do their homework when it comes to gauging the public mood, instead getting their information from "beltway" sources. When one or two come along that challenge the status quo (Russ Feingold), the rest distance themselves from obvious stated truths, appearing more than ever to their base as craven opportunists.

The media is of course partial to the Republican party, or more accurately put, conservative values. Of course, it has something to do with ownership of media outlets and their hiring policies. But more deeply, it has to do with fear of offending a powerful cultural force that can seriously affect ratings (insert family values organization of choice) and the bottom line.

So what is it that the left needs to do in order to get their message across. Simple, actually. Organize and take over the Democratic party. The dems as they stand now are not the answer. Rather, it's up to individual progressive candidates to buck their conservative doubles in the democratic ranks.

And mainstream media is not entirely useless to progressives. "Conservative values" really means protecting what you already have. Progressives can argue very effectively that the "reactionary values" of the right will lead to the collapse of the American way of life. Flashy talking points are tailor made for TV, combining name-calling, jingoism, and fear mongering to get the attention and respect of a viewing audience currently hooked on self-righteousness and combative discourse.

Winning over the media will not be a short-term thing. Legitimacy must be won by taking over the Democratic party one candidate at a time. Also essential is a strategy of framing progressive ideas in ways which will appeal to social conservatives. Finally what is needed is the stomach for battle. Republicans aren't going to give up without a fight.

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» RE: Of course...but Posted by: krose
Suicidal Dems?
Posted by: mrtshw on Jun 10, 2006 10:14 AM   
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In 2000, the dems nominated the only person in the known universe who was so personally unappealing; Dumbya would have a chance to steal the election. In 2004, the dems were so suicidal they nominated the only other person (besides Gore) who was so personally unappealing; Dumbya would have a chance to steal the election. In 2008, the dems seem hell-bent to nominate a candidate even more unattractive than either Gore or Kerry! You Can't Make This Stuff Up!! This scenario cannot be circumstance!
The dems have an opportunity to nominate a winner, but they don't get a sniff of either MSM and/or dem support. I'm talking about Governors Bill Richardson and/or Brian Schweitzer. Biden, Dodd, Clinton, etc are losers, although they do qualify as corporate whores.... and that seems to be the only qualification that counts nowadays! Roy

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» RE: Suicidal Dems? Posted by: krose
Most Democrats SHOULD Be Hated
Posted by: InfoShopDotOrg on Jun 10, 2006 3:32 PM   
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It's laughable to call Hillary Clinton a progressive leader. There's nothing progressive about her. People like Clinton, Barak Obama, and John Kerry, among other Democrats, SHOULD be hated by ordinary Americans (but loved by the corporate media), because they all support the war & occupation of Iraq, they all support "free trade" policies that destroy workers rights and the environment, and are constantly trying to out-right-wing the right-wing. It was 27 Democrats in the House who sided with the Right-Wing last year to pass CAFTA, which passed by only ONE vote. Most Democrats voted for the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, and also for the PATRIOT Act. Most Democrats got info office on contributions from large corporations. And most Democrats will refuse to impeach George W. Bush.

So, really I can't feel too sorry for these Dems being treated so harshly by the Right-Wing, when they're trying SO HARD to be just like them.

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Why do they rig the S-election if everything is the same???
Posted by: williameon on Jun 11, 2006 6:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Because they can!
Because we let them!
Because we enable them!
The Faux press is a tool used to condition the people.
Very rudimentary hypnotic techniques are used to program you,
Repetitive Hypnotic Conditioning.
How else would you be able to get: herds of Sheeple to go kill and torture Iraqis?
Then come back here in a state of amnesia: to live in poverty with their minds and bodies blow to bits!
Never asking why?
Never holding the talking heads and politicians accountable for their:
Lies, TREASON and Crimes against Humanity.
Divide and conquer.
That is how they control you.
Black/White
Red and Blue
All conditioning;
To control you.
We all are part of the Human family.
These common positive goals and ideals are our strength.
Brotherhood, Patience, Cooperation, Peace, and TRUE Compassion.
They control you.
For the benefit of the few.
Billionaires-R-Us.
They are doing very good!
Yes Billionaires are doing very well!
With their cheerleader:
The Golden Child:
With George (Bultowski, Animal House) Bush
Leading the charge!!
Against your: Rights, Liberty and pursuit of Happiness!!!
Greed is driving him.
He is a curse on Mankind.
The Anti-Christ!
There is nothing, Christ like about him.
He is an embodiment of Evil.
He controls your TV set.
He Controls all of the Newspapers.
Limitless WEALTH and greed has begotten an illegitimate child:
An abomination!!!
The Corp-Pirate State.
Bush wants to cut Taxes on the Rich.
His family!!
His constituency!
While increasing yours!!
He is stealing your:
Jobs, Education, Health Care and Social Security.
Robbing you blind.
Looting the Treasury!
He’s building concentration camps!
He’s building fences.
To keep you in.
So much for a Free Country!
Only in the words!
It’s all lip service.
Only in the BU__! SH__!
Only in some:
Weird Reptilian Nightmare.
Does America exist.

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On Hating the Dems
Posted by: resistance6 on Jun 11, 2006 10:32 AM   
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InfoShop -- You hit the nail on the head. The Dems are trying to out neoCON the GOPs, and the GOPs are tryign to out-liberal, outspend and out-regulate the Dems.

I think both have succeeded.

The homos have their best friend in GWB, who is one himself. GWB has expanded the beurocracy beyond the wildest dreams of any Democrat, and outspent them all.

The Dems as you say are just rubber-stamping the Nazis.

Nazis and Communists both agree on one thing -- tyranny. And the neoCons agree 100 percent with the Dems on BIG GOVERNMENT.

So Hillary can step back and appear reasonable and even CONSERVATIVE, which is why Rupert Murdoch is working to get her elected the next president.

A Slice and Dice High Priestess of the Illuminati as our president? Maybe she'll appoint Bill O'Reilly as her press spokesman to take Tony Snow's place.

As Alex Jones says, but she's so CONSERVATIVE!

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