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When
the Media Is a Big Part of the Problem
By
Mark Weisbrot
This
column was published by The Guardian Unlimited
on October 23, 2009. If anyone wants to reprint it,
please include a link to the
original.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2009/oct/23/obama-media-afghanistan-healthcare
What
kind of a public debate can we have on the most vital
issues of the day in the United States? A lot
depends on the media, which determines how these
issues are framed for most people.
Take the war in Afghanistan, which has been subject to
major debate here lately, as President Obama has to
decide whether to take the advice of his commanding
officer in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal, to
send tens of thousands more troops there; or whether
to heed public opinion, which actually favors an end
to the war. This month, one of America's most
important and most-watched TV news programs, NBC's Meet
the Press, took up the issue.
The lineup:
Retired General Barry McCaffrey, former Army General
and Drug Czar (under President Clinton) turned defense
industry lobbyist. In a news article on McCaffrey
entitled "One
Man's Military-Industrial-Media Complex," the
New York Times reported that McCaffrey had
"earned at least $500,000 from his work for
Veritas Capital, a private equity firm in New York
that has grown into a defense industry powerhouse by
buying contractors whose profits soared from the wars
in Afghanistan and Iraq." McCaffrey has appeared
on NBC more than 1000 times since 9/11/2001.
Retired General Richard Meyers, former Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff under President Bush
(2002-2005). He is currently on the Board of Directors
of Northrop Grumman Corporation, one of the largest
military contractors in the world, and also of United
Technologies Corporation, another large military
contractor.
Senator Lindsay Graham, Republican from South
Carolina, a pro-war spokesperson that is one of the
most regular guests on the Sunday talk shows.
Senator Carl Levin of Michigan, a Democrat, was
apparently intended to represent the "other
side" of the debate. Here is what he said:
"Clearly we should keep the number of forces that
we have. No one's talking about removing
forces."
"No one," in the above sentence refers to
the American people, whom Levin understandably sees as
nobody in the eyes of the U.S. media and political
leaders. According to the latest (September 24) NYT/CBS
News poll, 32 percent of those polled wanted U.S.
troops out of Afghanistan within one year or right
now. That was the largest group. Another 24 percent
wants the troops "removed within one to two
years." For comparison, the leadership of the
Taliban is willing to grant foreign troops 18 months
to get out of their country.
In other words, a majority of 56 percent of Americans
wants U.S. troops out of Afghanistan about as soon as
is practically feasible or even sooner. Yet Meet
the Press - a mainstream network news talk show
since 1947 -- does not see fit to find one person to
represent that point of view. The other major TV and
radio talk shows that the right also labels
"liberal" in the United States make similar
choices almost every day.
When asked whether the U.S. should set a timeline for
withdrawal, Levin answered "no."
I know, if you have enough time you can still find an
anti-war, public interest viewpoint and the facts to
support it -- on the Internet and even among some of
the news stories in major media publications. But most
Americans have other full-time jobs.
If the media's influence stopped there, the damage
would be limited. After all, Americans can often still
overcome the tutelage of the media's opinion
leaders, as the above poll demonstrates. But the media
also defines the debate for politicians. And that is
where the life-and-death consequences really kick in.
If you want to know why President Obama has not fought
for a public option for health care reform; why he has
caved to Wall Street on financial reform; why he has
been AWOL on the most important labor
law reform legislation in 75 years (despite his
campaign promises) - just look at the major media.
Think for a moment of how they would treat him if he
did what his voters wanted him to do. You can be sure
that Obama has thought it through very carefully.
President Obama's whole political persona is based on
media strategy, and on not taking any risk that the
major media would turn against him. That is how
he got where he is today, and how he hopes to be
re-elected. Many analysts confuse this with a strategy
based on public opinion polling. But as we can see,
these are often two different things.
Seventy-five percent of Americans support a public
option for health care reform. (A majority would
support expanding Medicare to cover everyone, but over
the years the media, insurance, and pharmaceutical
companies made sure that this option didn't make it to
the current debate). President Obama has the bully
pulpit: he could say to the right-wing Democrats in
the Senate: "Look, you can vote against my
proposals, but if you do not allow your president to
even have a vote on this reform, you are not a
Democrat." In other words, you can't join the
Republicans in blocking the vote procedurally. He
could probably force Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
to join him in enforcing this minimal party discipline
that would come naturally to Republicans, which would
allow it to pass the Senate even if conservative
Democrats voted against it.
But to do that would risk losing some of President
Obama's "post-partisan,"
"non-ideological," aura that guarantees his
media support. Of course, the media is not the only
influence that hobbles health care reform. The
insurance, pharmaceutical, and other business lobbies
obviously have more representation in Congress than
does the majority of the electorate. But President
Obama does not feel this direct corporate pressure
nearly as much. After all, he was the first president
in recent decades to get 48 percent of his campaign
contributions from donations of less than $200 - a
very significant change in American politics, made
possible though Internet organizing.
There are other powerful elite groupings, such as the
foreign policy establishment - which is more
ideologically driven, like the medieval Church, than a
collection of lobbying interests - that thwart reform
on issues of war and peace. But the major media remain
one of the biggest challenges to progressive reform in
the 21st century.
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Mark Weisbrot
is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy
Research, in Washington, D.C. He is also president of Just
Foreign Policy.
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