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The Guards Are Sleeping

By Gael Murphy, AlterNet. Posted May 2, 2005.


White House correspondent Helen Thomas speaks about the herd mentality of mainstream media and challenging the administration on its rationale for the war.
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Editor's Note: This is an excerpt from 'Stop the Next War Now: Effective Responses to Violence and Terrorism (Inner Ocean),' edited by Code Pink co-founders Medea Benjamin and Jodie Evans.

Helen Thomas, known as "the first lady" of the press, was a White House correspondent for four decades, sitting in the front row during presidential press conferences, asking the tough questions. She was the first woman to hold posts in the White House Correspondents' Association and the National Press Club. She now writes a syndicated column twice a week for the Hearst newspapers. She was one of the only "mainstream" journalists who vehemently opposed the invasion of Iraq and challenged the Bush administration on the fabrications and distortions that led the United States to war. The following is a conversation between Helen Thomas and CODEPINK cofounder Gael Murphy.

Gael Murphy: Our so-called independent media, the cornerstone of our democracy, have truly failed us in the most recent events around Iraq. They didn't do the investigations or critical analyses of the administration's policy toward Iraq. They didn't take into account opposing voices, alternative sources, and the millions of protesters. Why do you think the corporate media paid so little attention to exposing the flaws in the Bush administration's justification to go to war?

Helen Thomas: I think that the media really went into a coma and rolled over and played dead, just as Congress did. It was a politics of fear after 9/11. Everybody, even reporters, started wearing flags after 9/11. At these White House briefings there was an atmosphere among the reporters that you would be considered unpatriotic or un-American if you were asking any tough questions. Then it segued into a war where you'd be seen as jeopardizing the troops if you asked certain questions.

And the administration did an amazing job of linking Saddam Hussein and terrorism. In every briefing I attended in the lead-up to the war, the spokespeople would say, "Saddam Hussein, 9/11"--"Saddam Hussein, 9/11" in the same breath. Obviously they had put the two together and wanted the media to as well. Then a week or so before the war they said there was no connection. Well, by this time, the job was done. It was a beautiful propaganda message, and it worked.

Another problem is that there are no investigative reporters anymore. During the unraveling of the Watergate scandal, the Washington Post had eighteen reporters on the story and the New York Times had an equal number, digging in everywhere. In this case, no one was around, really, to challenge the administration.

But there were a lot of alternative sources of news and investigative journalism, and there was also the world press doing its job. Don't mainstream journalists look at these other sources?

We have a herd mentality here. It was groupthink. Nobody wanted to get out of line. Reporters felt that they shouldn't push too hard. I didn't feel that way. I was against this war from day one, and I kept challenging the White House spokesperson, Ari Fleischer. One day, about six months before the U.S. invasion, I said, "Ari, why does the president want to kill thousands of people?" I mean that's about as simplistic as I could put it. And he said, "Why are you saying that, Helen? They have a dictator! They have no say in their country!" I said, "Neither do we." I went up to Condoleezza Rice after the U.S. invasion and said, "Where are the weapons? Where's the smoking gun? Where's the mushroom cloud?" She said, "Saddam used these weapons twelve years ago, he had them. ..." And then she went up in smoke herself. She flew out of there with her eyes blazing, so angry that she should be challenged.

Regarding the White House press corps, is it sort of the cream of the crop of journalists who get to be part of those briefings?


Digg!

Gael Murphy is a cofounder of CODEPINK.

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Coming out of a trance
Posted by: knitter on May 2, 2005 4:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you have heard of Senators, Representatives or media people who now have awakened to the mistake of war and other misdirection of the administration, please share that information with the rest of us.

I am noticing that Richard Cohen's editorials are now asking some hard questions about the war and continued involvement in Iraq.

Katherine Parker wrote a column last week calling for discussion about global warming. She said that the specter of WMD ws the threat that got us into war. Shouldn't the possibility of the mass destruction to be caused by global warming be addressed?

Both of these columnists had been following the herd mentality earlier. I am hoping that their changing is a sign that the trance-like hold of the government over media thinking and questioning is at an end.

I highly recommend reading Crimes Against Nature by Robert Kennedy, Jr. It has considerable information that is helpful to our asking questions that will hold the feet of congress and media to the fire. If the press corps is less than effective, it falls to us to ask the hard questions of them so that they follow the lead of "the aunt in the attic" . In fact, it is time for them to bring her down from the attic to a space of honor where she can lead them in the fine craft of asking tough questions?

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Coming Out of a Trance?
Posted by: nakis on May 2, 2005 9:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Few things are needed more right now that a massive wave of journalistic awakenings. So much propaganda and downright lies come out of Washington that American journalism needs to out them for the public good. I have no doubt it will do much good.
But I have my doubts too. It's been three years since the war started. The situation on the ground is getting worse as the months go by in Iraq. The presidential administration lied repeatedly to scare us to war. Their lies were outed. They passed the buck. They were not held accountable for the unnecessary deaths of over 100,000 men, women and children. If journalism becomes that stereotypical model you see in those old black & white movies from the 30s, 40s and 50s where they will stop at nothing to get to the truth, how much will it really mean? With journalism behind justice would justice be served? This administration is the most secretive, untransparent administation in history. I used to have faith that in time history would show this administration for the criminals they are. If Bush could evade exposure and prosecution as a deserter with all the records, missing and found, what hopes do we have for justice even if all the journalists woke up?

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» RE: Coming Out of a Trance? Posted by: underledge

Posted by: ghoster on May 2, 2005 9:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you think that anyone is going to tell the truth about this war, and admit that it was trumped up and falsely sold as a part of the GWOT you must be smoking something and inhaling it too. Write your representatives and see if you even get a form letter back, try to contact anyone in any position to make changes, give up? You can't, and the opinions expressed here are not only mine, but really of a lot of people that are disturbed by the lack of honesty, integrity, moral forthrightness in our ELECTED representatives. What can we do? Well, there have been other countries that have demonstrated and removed unresponsive administrations, and we do have the right to freedom of assembly and to have our grievances addressed by our ELECTED officials. Will it happen? Not as long as the sheeple of the great amerika continue to guzzle the Kool Aide that is put out by this neo con crowd, sheeple stand up and act like you have a brain!!!

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» RE: Posted by: beans
Where's Main Street?
Posted by: bowriter on May 2, 2005 9:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Where are all those Wal-mart supporters? Where are all those people who watch Fox News and then right on to American Idol? We live in a bread and circus nation: the media is just one of the problems. Sure we have a multitude of news outlets (including opinionated rag blogs--NOT real news, if you ask me) but main street continues to enjoy it's Wal-Mart-Hummer-Credit Card-Entertainment saturated lives. Of course the media doesn't ask real questions: questions don't sell. The good 'ole main street folks (those Christian moralists who have linked arm-in-arm with big buisness and big money--odd, yes?--) stare at Fox news like they shop at Wal Mart: in a vacuous state of non-sense.

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» RE: Where's Main Street? Posted by: Zarquan
» RE: Where's Main Street? Posted by: SteveB
» RE: Where's Main Street? Posted by: spyderbaby
Pathological liars are afraid of truth
Posted by: Iamnotafruittree on May 2, 2005 10:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That is why Condi ran away when confronted with the truth. The good news though is the liars are stupid. They have a mentality of 12 year old children.

Keep telling the truth. Keep asking the hard questions. The day will come when all of this will be behind us just like 9/11. When we can look back at everything that was written about the events leading up to all of this big mess and come to our own conclusions!

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Herd Journalism
Posted by: Bewildered on May 2, 2005 11:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mainstream journalism certainly has defaulted on its responsibilities as the public's agent of questioning the high and mighty, whose geopolitical hubris it condoned and even celebrated in the case of our fraudulent Iraq war. Reporters, like the rest of us, may be herd animals afflicted with undue deference to people with power. Wish they weren't. But it is the corporate media bosses, not the reporters, who squash what they don't want to hear. Feisty reporters, as you have indicated, do not get to ask any questions of the White House--nor do they get hired or keep their jobs for very long if they embarrass the ideological money bags who own their news organizations. I am not holding my breath to see if our consolidated mega media will rehabilitate themselves. I am afraid they have lost their credibility for good. My hope rests with the likes of AlterNet instead. Thank you for being here.

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No Use
Posted by: karmick on May 2, 2005 1:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We are doomed.

Rarely has destiny's terrifying path been more clear and horrifying.

The winds of dynamic, virtuous change cannot help but spring forth almost exclusively from inside people as individuals. It's too late for the kind of change that sweeps across human culture in a spirit of insight, truth and cooperation.

It may well be the evil(controlling, selfish agenda, mildly put) now faced must play itself out before humanity genuinely gains an understanding of the madness of our hatred, ignorance and putrid lies and deceit.

We see BS and idiocy every day yet how often do we call it out? How often do we speak truth to power in our own lives, in the smallness of each and every moment, slaves to polite society and much vaunted rules of petty engagements and social niceties.

We are taught peace, but at the price of the necessary wars everybody must fight every day, no matter how small, to gain both dignity and justice and, when possible, truth, insight and change.

This culture of ours is steeped heavy in the sh*t of disgraceful bindness to the stack, miles high, of injustices of both centuries past as well as daily rituals and conventional wisdom which shortcircuits our very souls and instinct as good humans.

Sex, drugs, love, emotions and truth; just 5 basic things whose unvarnished organic shine we screw up and blur every day.

Looking for answers.

Let yourself be called crazy for pointing out the BS right in front of you.

For even in times when it seems inevitable to see the solutions coming from the top down, reality will never yield to the bottom-up truth of genuine change in the world.

Bottoms up!

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The WH Press CORPS(E)!!!
Posted by: shadow7 on May 2, 2005 1:31 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The lapdog press CORPSE died during the first Bush campaign, and all we see are the remnants of what was once called journalism. For an analysis of the death of these wimps, read
THIS ARTICLE

The stories that remain dead and buried will never be told...

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Helen! You go girl!
Posted by: gdr on May 2, 2005 1:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Keep asking those questions! I am constantly astounded and appalled at the immaturity of (un)responsiveness that members of this administration demonstrate. Or, rather, these pathological liars, as another poster commented. They will not answer the question. Instead, all sound and fury, anger and faked offendedness: "impugn my integrity" indeed. Rip them a new one, Helen!

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» RE: Helen! You go girl! Posted by: nanapantyhead
marrieah
Posted by: marrieah on May 2, 2005 5:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Helen Thomas is right on concerning her assesssment of today's media in the non handling of Geo Bush. I am throughly amazed at the things this guy has been able to get away with, yet no one has called him to task. One thing is clear, even before he stole himself into the presidency, he and his cohorts had already targeted Saddam Hussein. He just need a way to sell it to the American people, when incrediously 9-11 happened. By the way, where is bin Laden?

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» RE: marrieah Posted by: beans
» RE: marrieah Posted by: Scott
Great interview
Posted by: dratman on May 2, 2005 7:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Excellent piece, Code Pink! Keep up the good work.

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In blog we trust
Posted by: commonsense on May 3, 2005 7:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This very forum is the vanguard of the dynamic info-forces that will ultimately, in my view, put an end to the traditional media model, and open up cases and cases of #10 cans of worms for all and sundry to sift through...we truly live in the Information Age, and in that information age the 'dead-tree' publications and high-fee cable TV groups futures' are threatened by open competition from relatively inexpensive websites providing 'on demand' reporting, not to mention news-groups and hyper-text editions hot off the 'press' from around the world, 24/7/365, with no pre-digestion required nor desired. We are actually seeing the 'news' revert back to the 'who, what, when,where, how, and why' of journalism
school yore, and much less opinion injected.

Maybe it was just a matter of time, diverging from one-way
TV format to multimedia-interactive viewer-comment-vision.
Broadband now provides many of the same audio and video clips we're accustomed to getting from radio and television,
and what's best there's no 30-to-90 second advertising interruptions. That last may well be the best part of all.
People aren't stupid, they can figure out whether or not they want to buy soap, eat fried chicken, what kind of car to drive (or not to drive at all), etc. etc. etc., without being incessantly
bombarded by 'in ya face' advertising. I mean, do you
REALLY expect to get a scantily-clad cheerleader with your lite beer, honestly? Madison Avenue's been sorely overdue
for a good swift kick in the backside for decades, I'm glad to see the Broadband Evolution happening, as it will make them
have to sit down and figure out exactly what, if anything, they really do for a living....meanwhile, in other news, people
often know about events BEFORE the commentators find out
about it, preventing a lot of 'yesterdays news, tomorrow!'- type reporting. Dare we dream of Quality Television,
someday?

Essentially, it's win-win-win for the consumer. A sorely
needed step foward, whose time has finally come....

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US corporate opinion and propaganda pretends to be news
Posted by: jreinhart1 on May 3, 2005 12:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Fake news and opinion in the corporate owned media has poisoned public debate on the issues to the point where I no longer watch the television, listen to radio news or read US newspapers. I get unedited news about issues and facts about events in the US from news outlets in Canada, the UK, Australia, Mexico, Israel, Pakistan and other countries. The news is more comprehensive and honest, showing both sides of issues as well as being less edited giving more detail. Coverage available is on MORE as well as more IMPORTANT issues on everything from weather and the affects of drought on the Missouri river basin, money and trade issues and policies, what is really happening in Afghanistan and Iraq with less edited longer clips showing the horrors of war which has given me a better appreciation for life, foreign policy, life sciences ... and the list goes on.

In short, I can learn more about where I live and the country I live in from the foreign press than the Orwellian garbage on America's fake news waves.

When I want opinion, there are news blogs and websites that are much more comprehensive on specific issues from any viewpoint that I read now, just like the newspapers I used to read before they too were bought out by media conglomerates.

A well educated public is necessary for a Republic based on Democratic principles to survive. The news that is being served today by the media use soundbytes, spin, half truths and outright lies which are nothing more than packaged up commercial products for consumer use. In the end, the only thing that matters are the ratings which determines how much time costs on these commercial channels. How patriotic is that?

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hilchris
Posted by: hilchris on May 3, 2005 1:08 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is astonishing to me that no one equates the sudden concern of the president and his administration to the affairs at home - namely the demise of Social Security -

Suddenly, they are bent on turning the heads of everyone from the war and it's miserable situation to the Social Security issue - THAT SHOULDN'T EVEN BE ADDRESSED BY THIS ADMINISTRATION -

Folks, wake up, we'll have another mess here at home!!! The press and WE all need to hold them accountable - for all their mistakes and not add more to the stack!

Helen, you are FANTASTIC!..........keep at em!!

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Reaping the benefits of Hazelwood
Posted by: terihu on May 5, 2005 3:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You know what I find totally bizarre about this whole "what's wrong with the media nowadays" rhetoric?

No one seems to make the connection between what's going on today and what happened in 1988*, when the vast majority of today's journalists were in high school, or younger, and how that influenced their understanding of what journalists DO. You know, that Supreme Court case that basically told high school journalists that their freedom of press ended at the schoolhouse gates?

*(For those who don't keep with these things, it was Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier, where a principal yanked a story from the school newspaper without the editor's knowledge. They took it all the way to the Supreme Court, who said that yes, schools DO have the right to curtail student expression if it caused a "substantial disruption" to their educational goals...you can imagine what fun administrators had with that vague guideline. This ruling reversed the rights of students upheld by the Tinker v. Des Moines case of 1969.)

This is a generation of reporters brought up with the understanding that to preserve their jobs, they had to sacrifice the truth for the story that their superiors wanted to hear. And they learned that lesson all too well. And we're seeing the results of that indoctrination in the media today.

Thanks a lot, SC, justice has been well served.

It seems very shortsighted for media analysts to ignore this, to me, very critical factor in our current situation. Yeah, sure it was 18 years ago...that's just long enough for someone to graduate from high school (say, 2 years, if s/he was a fledging hs reporter when Hazelwood came down), go to college (4 more), journalism school (2 more), work their way up some newspaper staff rungs (7-8 years) to an assistant editorship and then some real decision-making power. If this person's first taste of journalism was in an atmosphere of repression, then doesn't that explain a LOT of the decisions that the mainstream media has been making regarding coverage of Republican shenanigans?

Please, if someone else has noticed this, and commented on it, let me know, because I haven't seen it.

Teri

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Helen Thomas Interview
Posted by: jimp1947 on May 5, 2005 8:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I dearly love Helen -- she is one of the few remaining journalists with cajones. But I fear that she has more confidence in her peers than do I. Had they any integrity, if they did not wish to directly contront the Bushies as does Helen, they could at least have turned their backs on them, revealed the press briefings for the farce that they are.

Instead, they prostituted themselves, became bitches for Bush. Now they have no one but themselves to blame for their perfidy. One day respect for truth may return to the fourth estate. In the meantime, it is only such exemplars as Helen that remind us of what once was.

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Reaping the Limbaugh Influence
Posted by: thirdmg on May 7, 2005 8:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Although the Hazlewood argument offered above makes sense, it is likely to be only part of the answer to how our news media have been de-fanged and corrupted. It seems to me just as likely that we are seeing the influence of Rush Limbaugh, and his like, on younger generations of reporters. NBC news anchor Brian Williams, for example, is an open admirer of Limbaugh. If Williams can't see Limbaugh for what he is - a blatant purveyer of disinformation and propaganda - then how can he be trusted to see and expose right-wing disinformation anywhere else?

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Dutch foreign minister hints at new course for Bush
Posted by: Boronia on May 7, 2005 4:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dutch Foreign Minister Ben Bot says US President George W. Bush has distanced himself from the neo-conservatives in his administration since his re-election.

Speaking after talks with his US counterpart Condoleezza Rice near the city of Maastricht in the south of the Netherlands, Mr Bot said President Bush has also abandoned the idea that the United States should police the world. As a result, the US is listening to Europe and wants to undertake more joint action to realise ideals such as democracy.

Mr Bot described the Netherlands' relationship with the Bush administration as "honest, critical and loyal", adding they did not skirt around difficult issues like Guantanamo Bay.

His 45-minute meeting with the US Secretary of State covered relations with Russia and Iran, and the US treatment of terrorist suspects.

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Tom Degan
Posted by: Tom Degan on May 8, 2005 1:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Four years ago when this country foolishly sent a corrupt, hideous, half-witted fratboy by the name of George W. Bush to the Oval Office - TO THE WHITE HOUSE! - we effectively pointed the proverbial loaded pistol at our own collective head. On election night 2004, make no mistake about it, we pulled the trigger.
Tom Degan
Goshen, NY

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Tom Degan
Posted by: Tom Degan on May 8, 2005 1:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Four years ago when this country stupidly sent a corrupt, hideous, half-witted fratboy by the name of George W. Bush to the Oval Office - TO THE WHITE HOUSE! - we effectively pointed the proverbial loaded pistol at our own collective head. On election night 2004, make no mistake about it, we pulled the trigger.
Tom Degan
Goshen, NY

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