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Democracy Now: A Relief From Corporate News B.S.

By Thomas Boothe and Danielle Follett, Le Monde diplomatique. Posted January 16, 2008.


How one of the country's most fiercely independent news programs is surviving -- and thriving -- in the Republican-controlled heartland.
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A small group of activists in the rural northeastern corner of Tennessee in the United States persuaded their local public radio station, WETS, to start broadcasting the progressive news-hour Democracy Now two years ago. This pocket of Appalachia would seem to be unwelcoming territory for such an endeavor since the economically depressed farming and mining region votes overwhelmingly Republican -- by as much as 75 percent in the last presidential election -- and is, according to Joseph Fitsanakis, organizer of Democracy Now Tri-Cities (DNTC), "the kind of place where 30 years ago you couldn't really do anything politically unless you were a Klan member."

And there was an immediate response; some donors to the mostly listener-supported radio station, which is a partnership between East Tennessee State University and the listeners, warned that continued donations would depend on Democracy Now being taken off the air. It could have been much worse; Fitsanakis points out that in this part of the country, political activism has sometimes been met with personal attacks, including bullets through windows and dog poisonings. "People that got involved in organizing mining, the unionists, have a lot of that kind of story to tell you."

One of DNTC's main objectives is to have a network of vocal supporters in place in case a campaign is launched against the program. But Democracy Now seems to have a good chance of surviving on its own merits. Despite the early objectors, overall reaction has been, according to WETS director Wayne Winkler, "most gratifying ... The positive response has far outweighed the negative." Although there has been some backlash against the program, "we lost track of the numbers of people calling in to say they became first-time contributors because of Democracy Now." It is now one of the most successful fund-raisers for the station.

Thanks to such grassroots organizations, the broadcast reach of Democracy Now's "War and Peace Report" has been expanding in the United States at a remarkable rate: An average of two radio or television stations now add the show to their lineup each week. Its informal network combines university, listener-supported National Public Radio (NPR) and low power radio stations; with satellite and public-access cable television stations; as well as the internet, where it is offered in video, audio and text format. When the show began broadcasting out of New York 12 years ago, it was aired on about 30 stations; today that is approaching 700. Some of the program is translated into Spanish and aired on 150 stations, mostly in Latin America.

This rapid growth is a testament to a widespread desire for the critical journalism and extended, banter-free discussion that characterizes its broadcasts. Like mainstream morning or evening news programs, the show can be relied upon for a summary of the day's events. But unlike them, Democracy Now takes a critical stance toward its subjects, interrogating the policies and statements of those in power, regardless of party affiliation. Amy Goodman, the executive producer and primary host, is fond of quoting a comment by reporter I.F. Stone to a group of journalism students: "If you're going to remember two words, remember these: Governments lie."

The heterogeneity and financial autonomy of the outlets offers the world a model of broad-based and independent media networking. Bill Moyers, perhaps the only critical journalist on U.S. broadcast television, recently praised the program's "network that is not an institution." But contrary to many recent independent media endeavors, it is not merely internet-based. Robert McChesney, media scholar and founder of the reform organization Free Press, argues: "What really distinguishes Democracy Now ... has been the success of their enterprise in the last 10 years, going from being a program on a few community stations in the U.S. to having now an enormous audience on a network they've cobbled together."

Still, Democracy Now remains at the margins of media because its coverage is routinely dismissed as partisan, despite being the sole focus of a not-for-profit organization that is not affiliated with any political party or organization and that receives no financing from advertisers, corporations or the government. Before moving to rural Tennessee, Fitsanakis worked with a group in Nashville trying to bring the program to the airwaves there. "We organized a huge petition drive, we got 3,000 to 4,000 signatures ... and the station just basically told us, 'We don't care how many signatures you get, this is too partisan for our area, end of story.'"

Alternative top stories
The accusation of partisanship is best understood in the context of the ongoing consolidation of U.S. media into the hands of a few large corporations, which spend millions lobbying the five members of the Federal Communications Commission, upon whom they rely for friendly regulatory policies. This process intensified in the 1990s with measures enacted under President Bill Clinton. According to Eric Klinenberg, professor of sociology at New York University, "the government did not so much deregulate the market as reregulate it," allowing "big media companies [to] expand and consolidate ownership across outlets." The Telecommunications Act of 1996 had especially dramatic effects on radio, allowing a single media company to own eight or more radio stations in a community.

Given the resulting streamlining of editorial stances and nationwide reductions in news-gathering staff, large media corporations have a stake in maintaining the illusion of the neutrality of their coverage. This illusion is reinforced when an independent news source is stigmatised as partisan. McChesney says: "Democracy Now is as much or more committed to factual accuracy than the commercial news media. So much of our political journalism has been so warped to suit the agendas of those in power, and so uncritical of those agendas. What Democracy Now does is that it regards everyone in power with tremendous skepticism, not just Republicans and not just Democrats."

Goodman has credited the professional failings caused by the corporate media climate for her program's success. The mainstream media "just mine this small circle of blowhards who know so little about so much. And yet, it's just the basic tenets of good journalism that ... you talk to people who live at the target end of policy." This dereliction of duty, she believes, has created "a hunger out there for an alternative. It's almost explosive."

Working with modest resources, Democracy Now does not maintain a staff of story-breaking investigative journalists or cultivate inside sources. While many among its staff of 25 are experienced journalists, the demands of producing a daily news broadcast prevent them from full-time reporting. The show's effectiveness lies in its choice of guests and its ability to contextualize events to reflect a different set of priorities. The pool of information theoretically available to everyone allows the producers to choose subjects and approaches that do not get aired elsewhere. According to Klinenberg, "because there's so much information online, I think their editing function really does matter. They select a different set of stories than typical news organizations select."

The 10 to 15 minutes of headline briefs are the long day's work of a single producer and a laptop. Democracy Now uses wire services but also scours international (mostly English-language) online news sources, blogs and reports from NGOs. Of the 15 or so daily headlines, three or four will not be found on mainstream broadcast sources. Widely covered headlines are often presented in a different way. When President Gerald Ford died in 2006, the U.S. press eulogized him as the man who, after Watergate, "healed a nation." Democracy Now was alone in pointing out his role in the massacres in East Timor: "Ford gave Indonesian dictator Gen. Suharto explicit approval to launch the invasion."

Interviews are conducted without trivial banter, and unlike most news programs, guests are invited to speak at length. Interviewees range from investigative reporters to noncelebrities at the target end of policy, to public officials, activists, politically engaged artists and representatives of NGOs, who are rarely, if ever, invited onto mainstream shows, including Hugo Chávez, Evo Morales, Noam Chomsky, Naomi Klein, Ralph Nader, Robert Fisk, Edward Said, Arundhati Roy and Cuban National Assembly president Ricardo Alarcón. While it is the intention to bring marginalized voices to the airwaves, the aim is not to establish a left-wing echo chamber. Representatives of the government agency or corporation under discussion are invited, although they often decline. Recent participants have included former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan and the president of a trade association for private mercenary companies.

One uninvited guest was then-President Bill Clinton, who called into the show on Election Day in 2000 as part of an effort to encourage radio listeners to vote for Democratic candidate Al Gore. Goodman seized the opportunity and asked: "You are calling radio stations to tell people to get out and vote. What do you say to people who feel that the two parties are bought by corporations and that ... their vote doesn't make a difference?" From there, he was quizzed for 30 minutes on issues such as sanctions on Iraq and Democratic Party members' support for the death penalty. An exasperated Clinton finally lashed out at Goodman for asking "hostile and combative" questions. "They've been critical," she replied.

Goodman says that the following day a staffer from the White House Press Office called and berated her for violating the ground rules. "What ground rules?" she asked. It had been an impromptu call, and no rules had been discussed. Goodman's transgression was to stray to topics beyond getting the voters out -- and to keep Clinton on the phone too long. She told the staffer: "President Clinton is the most powerful person in the world; he can hang up if he wants to." She added: "I don't treat those in power as royalty. They are employees of the people of this country."

Democracy Now opts out of the role usually taken by the media during presidential elections. Campaigns count on mainstream outlets to treat their tactical decisions as breaking news. When, during the current race for the Democratic Party nomination, the Hillary Clinton campaign was faced with falling poll numbers, the decision to have the candidate get aggressive in a debate left the mainstream press abuzz. Pieces slightly varying the theme "Clinton comes out swinging" appeared, and she was given ample airtime to explain her new persona. Democracy Now didn't cover it.

During the 2004 race between George Bush and John Kerry, although the show provided its audience with regular updates about poll results, its energies were devoted to larger, systemic problems. Then, as now, it refused to spend time helping candidates shape their images, focusing instead on the ostracism of third-party candidates, police crackdowns on election-related protests, and the danger (and ultimately the reality) of widespread disenfranchisement. Treatment of campaign issues was compensatory: most often Democracy Now discussed what was not being addressed by press and politicians, rather than what was. On Oct. 14, 2004, a story was headlined "Million worker march to address labor issues ignored by both major candidates."

By late 2001, many mainstream news sources were preparing public opinion to accept an attack on Iraq. When, citing federal officials, these outlets began to weave in information suggesting that "Bin Laden's evil pal Saddam" was behind postal anthrax attacks on press and politicians, Democracy Now called attention to the fact that "Bush administration officials and the media have persistently tried to link Iraq either to the Sept. 11 attacks or to the anthrax attacks" and that the FBI was following leads in other directions.

Closer to the time of the invasion, when the British press reported that the U.S. government was tapping the phones of Security Council members at U.N. headquarters, Democracy Now was almost alone in reporting this news in the United States. It was also unique in its in-depth coverage of domestic anti-war activities. Audiences of mainstream news programs were not told about the occupation of Sen. Hillary Clinton's office following her vote in favor of the Iraq War Resolution, nor were they privy to dozens of stories similar to "Man arrested in shopping mall for wearing a 'Give Peace a Chance' T-shirt: over 150 respond by showing up in similar shirts" (Democracy Now, March 6, 2003).

Democracy Now's scrutiny of the official line and use of wider sources gave listeners a more lucid narrative of what was brewing in Iraq and the United States. Such a critical approach would perhaps seem a journalistic obligation, but at the time in the United States it was a minority position. During the war's first three weeks, the six major U.S. television news programs did not have a single at-length interview with an American opposed to the invasion, and with few foreigners or Iraqis. Democracy Now conducted 30.

It has had occasional success in influencing corporate news coverage. In March 2004, while the mainstream press was dismissing the coup in Haiti as a popular uprising against a corrupt dictator, it pursued the matter further. In an exclusive interview with exiled Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, it discovered that the U.S. military had forced his resignation at gunpoint and kidnapped him. The extensive coverage obliged mainstream sources to come back to the situation with new questions. Goodman said: "I call this trickle-up journalism."

When Democracy Now interviewed BBC investigative reporter Greg Palast in February 2007 and aired part of his exposé on vulture funds, showing the role of the White House in allowing debt relief funding to be used to pay the exploitative private creditors of developing countries, two members of Congress brought the issue to President Bush the next day, pressuring him to address the issue at June's G8 summit. Palast later said: "Until they heard the Democracy Now report -- a lot of members of Congress listened to this program -- they had no idea that the money was being sucked up."

A huge amount of space to occupy
Because Democracy Now reaches its audience through such a heterogeneous network, it is difficult to ascertain the size of the audience, let alone its political beliefs. "But it's not the stereotypical version of the left -- latte-drinking San Franciscans or Bostonians," McChesney says. "There are people from diverse branches of society and absolutely from middle America as well."

One reason for Democracy Now's vigour in Republican-controlled northeastern Tennessee may be that many on the left and right share an anger over the corporate and government control of news sources. "The corporate media leaves a huge amount of space to occupy," says Goodman. Elements within the Republican camp are disillusioned with the Bush government's lies, scandals, military failures and profligate spending, and this sentiment often extends to the media. According to Fitsanakis, a few Republican voters have joined DNTC because of their concerns over the increasing curtailment of civil liberties and freedom of speech, a recurring topic on the show. Three conservative voters have written to DNTC to support the program, saying that, although they have trouble digesting elements of the show, "they are so frustrated with the current government that it's the only program that they can find that has a semireasonable, critical approach to the administration."

Goodman argues that the media overplay the differences between right and left. "I think a lot of concerns are shared," she said. "Conservatives are concerned about corporate control and privacy issues, just like progressives. Military families are enraged over what has happened to their sons and daughters, while the children of the powerful do not go off to war." In an area like his, where the internet is not a major source of news, said Fitsanakis, people "turn on the radio and hear a program that talks about those concerns that they have."

Some core supporters regularly volunteer time to help the show, which inherits from its parent network, Pacifica Radio, an operational structure that counts on volunteer labor. When it was created in 1996 by Amy Goodman and the Pacifica Radio Network to cover midterm elections, it quickly became a flagship news program. But in 1999 a two-year internal power struggle began at Pacifica during which Democracy Now was at risk. Although parties hostile to the show were ultimately forced out, Goodman and her colleagues decided in 2002 to incorporate as an independent not-for-profit organization to safeguard their autonomy. The two organizations maintain close ties and Democracy Now is still broadcast over Pacifica's network.

A coast-to-coast broadcast network would be impossible without regular contributions of money and man-hours from its audience. Democracy Now's transition to video was made possible by unpaid workers and, for many years, the transcripts of the broadcasts on the show's website were assembled by volunteers from around the world. The organization draws on a database of 8,000 volunteers, with 1,700 in New York City, who are contacted to work for a few hours or a day, often handling administrative tasks. Those outside New York help in outreach, coordinating events such as Goodman's regular speaking engagements. Supporters promote the show as well, distributing flyers and bumper stickers. A West Coast group raised money to put up a Democracy Now billboard: "The corporate media got it wrong on Iraq. Support the show that got it right."

Other volunteers work to ensure that the program reaches as wide an audience as possible. In Japan, a group offers a website with translations of news, while in Phoenix and Buffalo, groups frustrated with unresponsive management at their public radio stations have raised money and temporarily bought air time for the show on commercial AM stations. In Baltimore, a volunteer with access to satellite television videotapes the show every day, then bicycles it to the local public access station for broadcasting. In Massachusetts, where a group failed to convince the local public radio station to broadcast the program, octogenarian Frances Crowe set up a pirate radio transmitter in her backyard. "Volunteers will always be with Democracy Now," said the organization's general manager Karen Ranucci. "Now we're at a point where we could still produce a show without volunteers, but we would never have gotten this far without them."

In Tennessee, DNTC takes its activism a step further by trying to build on local support to mobilize the community. "The way it works," said Fitsanakis, "is we just figure that the people who listen to Democracy Now must be the kind of people we want to approach to begin with. Since the program is being heard all across the area, with a potential listenership of a million people, some of whom are isolated, physically, in mountains and all kinds of weird terrain, why not use it to bring them together?" In its first six months, DNTC recruited 150 members and organized several events: It rallied hundreds of demonstrators in eight anti-war protests on the fourth anniversary of the invasion of Iraq and coordinated Earth Day events. A protest outside a local munitions factory that manufactures depleted uranium shells was an attempt to connect with miners' union activists. But this last action had, according to Fitsanakis, limited success: "There were a few unionists that joined us in picketing, but when it came to our folks, they were a little timid, a little shy about having to face the police ... but there's potential there."

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See more stories tagged with: journalism, democracy now, mainstream media, independent news, alternative news

Danielle Follett teaches at Paris-VIII university, and Thomas Boothe is a photographer and film director; they would like to thank David Ramm for his help in researching this article.

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Yay capitalism!
Posted by: PaladinQB on Jan 16, 2008 5:07 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm pretty conservative; I would find this channel obnoxious. But what this story tells me is that the market works. If there is a point of view that the "corporate media" is ignoring, and people want to hear it, then there is an opportunity for somebody else to establish their own channel and tell their story. People with something to say can say it, "corporate media" and all. The process works, how about that?

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

» Rubbish! Posted by: leafsong1
» RE: Yay capitalism! Posted by: Old Cowboy
» Capitalism my ass Posted by: newtype_alpha
» RE: FAscist! Posted by: zorro
Encouraging
Posted by: dmaciewski on Jan 16, 2008 5:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've had a long time familiarity with Amy Goodman, and am a more recent listener of "Democracy Now." Not to take this movement for granted, whereas over a decade ago I would have to hunt for an alternative news program(such as Atlernet too!), on small community radio or find limited news magazine stacks in the library, I was very heartened to see "Democracy Now" on the mainstream cable Dish Network a couple of years back. It brings to mind Arundhati Roy's words, "Not only is another world possible, on a quiet day I can hear her breathing." Thank you Amy and all of your colleagues for your efforts.

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Majority rules ?
Posted by: BeyondBeliefs on Jan 16, 2008 5:36 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The chemical / biological / military monopoly that OWNS our nation's ONCE FREE press, now feed THIER VIEW , for THIER GOALS to the current generation.

The RATIO of ''left'' and ''right'' views is CONTROLLED, and SUPPIED, by these deregulated military corporate OWNERS of our ONCE FREE press, to produce the ILLUSION that the people are making choices using all the information that can be known.

The result is the production of a population of patriots and followers.

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D. NOW!
Posted by: williameon on Jan 16, 2008 5:52 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The FAUX ‘GRE’EDIA!

If you want to see the real extent of Cor‘pirate’
Control of the Media.
Look at the annual Washington Press Club Diner.
Especially when Colbert roasted the Kings nuts.
The are so afraid to laugh at King George the II that
They all swallowed their tongues.
They know better than most:
Big Brother is watching.
Because they are part and parcel of the problem.
Hired shills.
Corpirate Attack Dogs!
Attacking everyone and anyone speaking the Truth.
Corpirate control of the media is essential to their control.
They use the most sophisticated hypnotic propaganda techniques know to man.
Repetitive bullhorn conditioning.
They hold the keys that unlock your subconscious mind
They know how to dive right into your subconscious and plant lies.
Why do you think they all say 911 a thousand times?
It opens a door directly into your psyche.
No one says a word,
Yet everyone knows about it.
It is their bread and better.
They get rich while everyone suffers.
They create the Grand Delusion!
That we live in a free country governed by laws.
But, we really live in
BushZarro America
Where everything is done backwards.
Where politicians lie to, spy on and terrorize
there constituents.
Where The Resident loots the Treasury
And the Military bombs their own Country.
While the people are ignorant and stupefied!
Poor sick and in debt.
They sit in front of their Conditioning sets
Watching Britney dance
All over their graves.
A free diverse locally owned media is essential for any Democracy to flourish!
D.NOW!

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Many thanks to Amy Goodman
Posted by: marxalot on Jan 16, 2008 6:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I owe my own political awakening to Amy's reporting during Clinton's bombing of Kosovo. I listened to her reports on the radio at noon, and went home to compare with the evening news on TV. That was on WMNF in Tampa/St. Pete, a great listener sponsored station. I even went out and joined a protest at the gates of Macdill AFB. Before Democracy Now I had no idea the extent to which the MSM feeds us BS.

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DN Rocks
Posted by: wagadog on Jan 16, 2008 6:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
DN, KO, The Good Doctor Maddow and...what about Naomi? Klein or Wolfe? Both!

We'd be completely buffalloed by the MSM without 'em.

While NPR parrots the line "video recordings of interrogations of al-quaida terrorist suspects" over and over to refer to the torture tapes -- DN interviews some of the innocents who have been tortured (some of them for years) and their families. And keeps the focus on the fact that none of these people have been charged with any crime, and no evidence has been offered to support these non-existent charges.

It is quite a contrast.

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Democracy Now gives Kucinich a debate voice after NBC banned him on the 15th
Posted by: Earthian on Jan 16, 2008 6:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Democracy Now on Wednesday today interviews Dennis Kucinich to allow him to respond to the debate last night from which he was banned. If you want to watch or listen or read the transcript go to http://www.democracynow.org for January 16.

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Is Democracy Now partisan on some issues? Sure it is!
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Jan 16, 2008 7:42 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And guess what? So is the rest of the corporate media.

Everyone knows that's true for FOX News and right-wing radio talk shows - even people who like that stuff will admit that it's entirely slanted in a certain direction.

It's equally obvious that Democracy Now has a partisan viewpoint. For example, Amy Goodman asks Clinton the tough questions and then holds multiple feel-good session with Ralph Nader - why no questions about Republican funding for Green candidates, for example?

Democracy Now has also attempted to but issues of black-white racial tension on the front burner. Personally, I think a focus on poverty and education is more important today, but hey.

However, the rest of the corporate media is also entirely partisan, even thought they pretend to be "impartial". There are people who believe that NPR and CNN are "neutral, objective news sources" - which just goes to show how effective propaganda can be. Amy Goodman has even referred to NPR as an objective news source - hardly.

CNN, ABC, NPR, CBS, NBC and FOX all serve the same set of corporate shareholders, more or less. That's their basic agenda.

So, don't even bother with those news sources. There are still some reliable news agencies (AP is going downhill), but they are mostly outside the country - try Agencie France Press and Al Jazeera.

By the way, it's pointless to try and compare Amy Goodman and Democracy Now to large news organizations like the New York Times or the wire services, who keep hundreds of people on staff. Amy Goodman is a morning talk show that brings on more diverse viewpoints than the corporate press does. Good stuff, certainly, but they have a small staff and aren't really capable of covering the news in depth, or of doing much investigative reporting.

Don't try and make heros out of news reporters. We don't need heros, we need individuals. We already have to much celebrity culture in the U.S. as it is.

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the average Joe WANTS Fox!
Posted by: zooeyhall on Jan 16, 2008 10:37 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think it is great that Democracy Now! is available. However at least where I live (rural Nebraska) I don't think it is necessarily a sign that people are "going progressive". People out here don't listen to Fox news because an alternative isn't availble. They do it because they WANT to listen to Fox's crap! It chimes just perfectly with their redneck dumb ass knee jerk patriotism and view of the world.

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» RE: the average Joe WANTS Fox! Posted by: willymack
Best news menu--recommendations?
Posted by: zooeyhall on Jan 16, 2008 1:27 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a Progressive who is stuck out in a rural area, in the middle of one of the reddest states in the nation, I would like to ask:

Would someone recommend a "menu" of news sources and media that are unbiased and informative? Which sources (print, internet, or video) are the best? Someone mentioned Agency French Press. Are there any others out there for someone like me with an "inquiring mind"?

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» RE: Best news menu--recommendations? Posted by: ProgressiveManiac
Democracy now, the lasso, yay! [heavy irony]
Posted by: nigelbest on Jan 16, 2008 1:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You are humanity.
You have erected injustice, and it stalks the earth, devouring who it will, devouring 1 in 50 people every year.
Pay justice: equal pay for equal *work*.
You pay for natural gifts, business risk, landownership, skill, experience, having studied, scarcity, luck, 'responsibility', having money, none of which things is work. [But you don't pay for studying and for housewifery, which are work, which create wealth.] At 10%, a billion pulls $100 million worth of goods a year from the pool of workproducts for no work at all. Legal theft.
Individual contribution to wealth by work is necessarily limited, but you allow unlimited fortunes. You allow overpay, legal theft.
You pay for these things out of your own pockets, out of your work. 50% of people in the first world have negative net assets.
There is enough to pay every worker *in the world*, including housewives and students, US$40 an hour. Plenty, and peace. No starvation, no war, no crime, no corruption, no brutality, no illiteracy, no fanaticism, no anger, no arrogance, no terrorism, no state terrorism, no nuclear winter coming. No inquisitions, no death camps, no people-burning, no torture, no genocide. No warmongering and cannonfoddering. 100 times faster progress, with 90% of the scientists we have not tied up in inequality, in military-industrial complex, business, government, universities, legal system, hospitals, and 90% of the scientists we could have not too poor to become scientists.
Instead, you have pay up to 100,000 times average, and down to 10,000th of average, you have 1% getting 98% of world income, you have 99% underpaid, 90% paid between 100th and 10,000th of average pay per hour. If equality, pay justice, was a swimming pool one metre deep, your pool is 98% up in a thin needle going up 100 kilometres, and 90% of the pool is between 1cm and 0.1mm deep.
Wealth is power, the second greatest power, so you have giants up to 100,000 times more powerful than the average, 1,000,000,000 times more powerful than the weakest. People with a billion can hire a million soldiers for 1000 days at $1 a day, and they are. With equality, one person would be hardput to maintain one soldier. The third world, at 51% of world wealth now, is rising 10% every 30 years.
You grow these giants and then try to lasso them. They murder a million children. You don't run, with police and mayors among you, to drag them from their beds and tear them limb from limb. [You would if they were children of your own country.] Occasionally, you tear them down in brutefests [revolutions] and let new ones grow. They are now, thanks to chainsaws, tractors and underpaid people, destroying 1% of world topsoil a year, 100% a century.
Fine. Whatever you choose. There's no arguing taste.

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A REAL Relief From Corporate News B.S.
Posted by: leecv on Jan 16, 2008 2:13 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While I don't listen to Democracy Now on a regular basis I do think Amy Goodman does a decent job of countering the corporate B.S. Having said this anyone who is REALLY interested in hearing excellent guests and even better questions tune in to WNUR Chicago on Saturdays for This Is Hell. I myself don't listen live, but I listen to the Podcasts over and over. The host, Chuck Mertz, asks the most probing questions ever and get this... he lets the interviewee answer. This Is Hell is the best radio show I've ever listened to, actually they are the best interviews I ever heard.

Check it out!!!

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Amy Doesn't Touch Hell!
Posted by: hines997 on Jan 16, 2008 3:36 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I listen to Democracy Now every day. Thanks to Podcasting I never miss a show and I'm always glad I listened.

Amy does a very good job - good guests, good questions, and never dull.

I have heard people say that we need more shows like Democracy Now and I'm always excited to get to tell them that there's not only another one, there's one no one should miss: THIS IS HELL.

Every Saturday Chuck Mertz manages to get on a great group of guests from all over the world. It just seems impossible that we get to hear people talking from the Middle East, England, Eastern Europe, and Chicago. WNUR does us all a favor by broadcasting this show and once again Podcasting makes it possible to listen to him - and listen again!

Chuck always does his homework. He reads the books, does the research, and puts together a big stack of questions that his guests really appreciate. "That's a great question," is said by many guests - and I always agree with them.

So, listen to Amy as often as you can, but NEVER miss This Is Hell. Chuck is amazing - four hours pass way too quickly!

Thanks Amy and a special thanks to Chuck!

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» RE: Amy Doesn't Touch Hell! Posted by: revgorgo
DN Rocks!
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Jan 16, 2008 3:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I watch that show whenever I can. I even like those breaks with the weird music.

Too bad I missed the time when Goodman ripped into Hillary's husband. It sounds like a classic.

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chalice
Posted by: chalice on Jan 16, 2008 5:23 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have to recommend Chicago's Chuck Mertz and company who broadcast "This is Hell' every Saturday [also podcast available]. On a small budget they manage to have in-depth interviews with experts on political issues of interest. For us, the show is like hanging out with some well-informed, witty, and irreverent friends. The show is relevant and enlightening as are the topics but the crew refuses to adopt the unnecesssary pretension in order to be considered 'serious'.

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DN vs. Fox
Posted by: undrgrndgirl on Jan 16, 2008 6:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the thing is DN is preaching to its proverbial choir...in so-called "blue" states...like air america it (probably) will never be readily available in red states like oklahoma - the people who REALLY need to hear the message...and even if it were available DN does not employ the loud, fast paced "mtv" style "reporting" that fox news does...amy may be spot on but she's dull as dirt.

(i lived in oklahoma for the last 10 years and it is extremely difficult to find "left-wing" media)

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Fans of “Democracy Now!” would appreciate another program “This is Hell”.
Posted by: delf on Jan 16, 2008 7:06 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Fans of “Democracy Now!” would appreciate another program “This is Hell”, which has more of a talk show format. Amy Goodman asks the questions I want answered, but nobody else asks. Chuck Mertz, the host of “This is Hell”, WNUR 89.3 FM Evanston/Chicago, 9:00 am-1:00 pm, asks the questions I never would of thought of asking. but think "Good question!" He gets incredible guests considering his show is completely volunteer and independent. There are multiple guests during the four hour show. It’s edgy and cool, too!

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Fact-based and fair
Posted by: halrivers on Jan 16, 2008 7:22 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sure, Amy Goodman asks the anointed critical questions, but unlike her counterparts in the MSM, she lets them answer at length, trusting them to either justify themselves if they can or to hoist themselves higher and higher on their own petards. For example, New York Times stenographer Michael Gordon tried to tell Amy she just didn't know how reporting works, as a lame excuse for his falsehoods. It was almost painful to see this self-important prig brought down.
Amy and Juan deserve a Pulitzer!

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"Democracy Now" is a Thumb in the Dike?
Posted by: mcartri on Jan 16, 2008 7:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Democracy in America ended in December 2000. After the American people elected Al Gore president with both electoral and popular vote majorities, a junta, calling itself the U.S. Supreme Court, appointed by a 5-4 vote a monarch, named George W. Bush. This man and his fellow conspirators rule this country today. The dike broke over 8-years ago. This entire nation drowned as surely as New Orleans. This is a disgrace to the Founding Fathers, who foresaw just this sort of evil invading their grand vision of the 1770's. Shame on America.

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rexae
Posted by: Rex on Jan 16, 2008 9:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article, appreciated finding out more about one of my favorite shows. Don't want to leave impression that DN is all that's out there. I am fortunate to live in northern Chicago were we get 3 college stations giving non-MSM viewpoints like Free Speech Radio News and especially Chuck Mertz on This Is Hell live Saturdays on WNUR, an indispensible part of my week. A true gem with interview guests & discussion that show he has read & studied their work and gives us in depth understanding about what's going on all over the planet, plus fun to listen to. Would be worth the cost of high speed internet if I was outside broadcast area.

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Partisan for the people and for Freedom
Posted by: drblack on Jan 16, 2008 10:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All news should be partisan to the interests of the American people and Freedom. This is what Democracy Now Does and most traditional, corporate owned media does not do.

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Democracy now is great, This is Hell is also great
Posted by: GraemeA on Jan 16, 2008 10:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I love Democracy now. One complaint I have is Amy and Juan partaking in "gotcha" journalism when they interviewed Lou Dobbs. It was embarrassing.

Anyway, the guys on This is Hell bring issues like that up (constructive criticism of course) and they get interviews from many people that are not always the obvious left-leaning talking heads.

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This is Hell
Posted by: nRkiSt on Jan 17, 2008 4:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I first discovered Amy and DN! it was like seeing a candle at the far end of a dark room. The same thing happened when I first heard THIS IS HELL on the web at THIS IS HELL out of WNUR in Chicago on Saturday mornings. Definitely worth checking out! You won't be disappointed!

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Smelt Jr
Posted by: Smelt on Jan 17, 2008 11:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is great to hear positive attention being given to Amy's program.

Another vital independent radio program to consider is This Is Hell which broadcasts live most Saturday mornings out of Chicago, IL. It is also available as a podcast.

Since I began listening to This Is Hell I can't get over the fact that what sounds like a college radio studio full of friends can articulate live interview questions and get to the meat of a story better than any other radio or television news outlet I've ever heard. Show host Chuck Mertz must spend most of his free time preparing for the interviews because the questions rarely miss the mark and often succinctly define character of the guest of issue. You are often left with the impression at the end of an interview that the guests were as pleasantly surprised with the interview as you were.

The show is also fun. Regardless of the quality of the interviews, the guys take plenty of time to make fun of each other and themselves.

Try it out some time!

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» RE: Smelt Jr Posted by: delf
Grateful
Posted by: dontbugme on Jan 17, 2008 11:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm grateful that there are media people doing things that need to be done. I have listened to Amy and DN! for many years, and also This is Hell!

There is no question that there is an agenda driving the journalism on DN!, but at least they are honest about it, so it is easy to kind of filter out the little bit of baloney that shows up in there sometimes. 95% of what they put out is good info, and that is what is important.

If the left could organize its way out of a wet paper bag, that would be interesting in the political sphere, but they are very good and putting out news, and DN! is the best example.

I like This is Hell a lot too. These guys do a lot with the few resources they have, and I am always impressed with that kind of miserliness. They never ask for money or equipment, they just do an honest show that is not afraid to be a devils advocate for the sake of really fleshing out an issue from time to time, and they really give their guests time to process and deconstruct the issues. Unlike Amy, Chuck very seldom leads the discussion.

This is Hell! could have another woman or two involved in the show. Any women out there who have a hankering for radio and have a concept should think about contacting them and getting on them about that.

There is a segment called "The Moment of Truth" which is always good and challenging, sometimes outright hilarious even if that commentator has a tendency to be just a tad bit Limbaughesque every once in a blue moon. That goes to show you that they are not averse to being edgy and vulnerable, and allowing for a little freedom of speech.

I big strength of This is Hell! is that they have several contributors, it is a lot more free form, 100% volunteer. It makes them less likely to have conflicts of interest or political agendas.

It's also always nice to laugh with their corny humor, and get a few good hangover recipes.

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John Potamites
Posted by: John Potamites on Jan 17, 2008 5:56 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Both Democracy Now and This Is Hell are needed presentations in the same way that baseball teams need first basemen and shortstops.

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fascism
Posted by: zorro on Jan 19, 2008 2:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mainstream government officials and poiticians decline invitations because they are fascist and by doing so they would give credit to democracy. And any argument they have will look extremely foolish because its based on stupidity, and lies--that would allow the public to see through them--and their fascist plot will crumble. As Clinton said--you're not playing by the ground rules--scripted rules of engagement to bouy the fascists! Under our constitution we have a right , a privelige, a duty to areest them and remove them from power, and incarcerate them--none are innocent. They are criminals against the state, against the people, against humanity--that includes mainstream fascist controlled media.

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tyrrany
Posted by: zorro on Jan 19, 2008 2:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
'In an exclusive interview with exiled Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, it discovered that the U.S. military had forced his resignation at gunpoint and kidnapped him.'

This normal for the American Fascist government controlled by mutli-national companies--fascists all! Does this sound lke the Democracy you thought you gre up with! And yet it seems to bother nobody in mainstrem culture. So far gone. The rise of the reichand a thousand shining points of light is here. What will you do about it?

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Not Just Democracy Now
Posted by: ProgressiveManiac on Jan 19, 2008 6:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Although Democracy Now is the only show on television produced by the Pacifica network, Democracy Now survived as a low circulation radio program for years before being brought to television. If you appreciate Democracy Now, you should not ignore several other great shows that are produced by stations in the Pacifica network. These are all available as free podcasts.

The article mentions the good work done at Democracy Now concerning the coup in Haiti and kidnapping of Aristide. However, another Pacifica program, Flashpoints did much more thorough reporting on this topic starting weeks earlier as the coup was being organized and to this day, Flashpoints continues to report on the aftermath of that event. Of course Flashpoints is more of a news magazine and is structured more to be able to give this kind of detailed attention to a single topic.

The Pacifica station KPFT in Houston produces some very good shows (Progressive Forum and The Monitor) devoted to interesting speeches and interviews. Ian Masters has a quite interesting and thoughtful interview program that plays on Pacifica stations and these programs have been recorded both at KPFK and KPFT.

None of this is to take away from Democracy Now. It is a great news program that lets us get beyond the filters that the corporate media and PBS set up to restrict our understanding and our discourse.

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To East Tennessee and Beyond
Posted by: Urstrly on Jan 27, 2008 7:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm delighted to hear that Democracy Now is available in East Tennessee. A few years ago, I spent a month in Northeast Georgia, which borders this region, and no one told me I needed a special antenna to get public radio. Every (Clear) channel was filled with hate-mongering preachers and even the MSM stations of Atlanta were out of reach.

I don't agree with the previous poster that the average person wants Fox. I think many people sense they are being lied to and being unsophisticated (schools in these areas are shamefully underfunded) they are vulnerable to the slick propaganda in which Fox traffics.

I grew up in rural America and I am drawn to the wild and beautiful parts of this country like Appalachia. I just returned from Southeast Utah, where the people I spoke with seemed clueless that Martin Luther King Day had any meaning for them. Scanning the radio there usually turns up a lot of country music, but as we drove toward Cortez, CO, suddenly there was the voice of MLK Jr. giving his last speech to the sanitation workers of Memphis. Not just excerpts either. We listened to the whole thing, and at the end, there was the reassuring voice of Amy Goodman signing off.

I couldn't help but wonder who else was listening.

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