
Synopsis
Can a corporate media system be expected to tell the
truth about a world dominated by corporations? Can
newspapers, including the 'liberal' "Guardian"
and the "Independent," tell the truth about
catastrophic climate change - about its roots in mass
consumerism and corporate obstructionism - when they are
themselves profit-oriented businesses dependent on
advertisers for 75 per cent of their revenues? Can the
BBC tell the truth about UK government crimes in Iraq
when its senior managers are appointed by the government?
Has anything fundamentally changed since BBC founder Lord
Reith wrote of the establishment: "They know they
can trust us not to be really impartial"? Why did
the British and American mass media fail to challenge
even the most obvious government lies on Iraqi weapons of
mass destruction before the invasion in March 2003? Why
did the media ignore the claims of UN weapons inspectors
that Iraq had been 90-95 per cent "fundamentally
disarmed" as early as 1998? This book answers these
questions, and more.
John Pilger says...
The creators and editors of Medialens, David
Edwards and David Cromwell, have had such influence in a
short time that, by holding to account those who, it is
said, write historys draft, they may well have
changed the course of modern historiography. They have
certainly torn up the ethical blank cheque,
which Richard Drayton referred to [in the Guardian], and
have exposed as morally corrupt the right to bomb,
to maim, to imprison without trial.... Without
Medialens during the attack on and occupation of Iraq,
the full gravity of that debacle might have been
consigned to oblivion, and to bad history.
They have not bothered with soft targets, such
as Rupert Murdochs Sun, but have concentrated on
that sector of the media which prides itself on its
objectivity, impartiality and
balance (such as the BBC) and its liberalism
and fairness (such as the Guardian). Not since Noam
Chomskys and Edward Hermans Manufacturing
Consent have we had such an incisive and erudite guide
through the medias thicket of agendas and vested
interests. Indeed, they have done the job of true
journalists: they have set the record straight.
For this reason, Guardians of Power ought to be
required reading in every media college. It is the most
important book about journalism I can remember.
Noam Chomsky says...
"Regular critical analysis of the media, filling
crucial gaps and correcting the distortions of
ideological prisms, has never been more important. Media
Lens has performed a major public service by carrying out
this task with energy, insight, and care."
Edward Herman says...
"Media Lens is doing an outstanding job of
pressing the mainstream media to at least follow their
own stated principles and meet their public service
obligations. It is fun as well as enlightening to watch
their representatives, while sometimes giving
straightforward answers to queries, often getting
flustered, angry, evasive, and sometimes mis-stating the
facts."
Table of Contents:
| |
Acknowledgements |
| |
Foreword by John Pilger |
| 1 |
The Mass Media
Neutral, Honest, Psychopathic |
| 2 |
Iraq The
Sanctions of Mass Destruction |
| 3 |
Iraq Disarmed
Burying the 1991-98 Weapons Inspections |
| 4 |
Iraq Gunning For
War And Burying The Dead |
| 5 |
Afghanistan Let
Them Eat Grass |
| 6 |
Kosovo Real
Bombs, Fictional Genocide |
| 7 |
East Timor The
Practical Limits Of Crusading Humanitarianism |
| 8 |
Haiti The Hidden
Logic Of Exploitation |
| 9 |
Idolatry Ink
Reagan,The Cheerful Conservative And
Chubby Bubba Clinton |
| 10 |
Climate Change
The Ultimate Media Betrayal |
| 11 |
Disciplined Media
Professional Conformity To Power |
| 12 |
Towards A Compassionate
Media |
| 13 |
Full Human Dissent |
| |
Resources |
| |
Index |
Alex Doherty of UKWatch recently asked us about the new
book
(http://www.ukwatch.net/article/1282)
Alex Doherty: Your new book is called 'Guardians of
Power' who are the Guardians of Power? Who are they
protecting
and why?
Media Lens: The guardians are the corporate mass media.
They are protecting the powerful state-corporate
interests on which they depend and of which they are a
part. In this book we specifically focus on the 'liberal'
guardians of power - the Guardian, the Observer, the
Independent, the BBC and so on. They are essentially
protecting their own interests. For example, many people
consider the BBC a bastion of honest reporting. On
December 2, the media reported that Newsnight presenter
Kirsty Wark and her husband Alan Clements netted
£1m each from the sale of IWC Media, the television
production company, to RDF Media, maker of Wife Swap, for
£14m. The other presenters of Newsnight - Jeremy Paxman,
for example - are also millionaires.
Irish billionaire Sir Anthony O'Reilly, who is chief
executive of Independent News & Media Plc, the
multinational company that publishes the Independent and
Independent on Sunday in London, is estimated to be worth
£1.3 billion, making him the richest man in Ireland.
A Guardian Weekend supplement in March 2004 consisted of
128 pages. Of these, 90 were taken up in advertising,
some of it aimed at society's wealthiest elites. The
"chiffon halterneck dress with metal sequin
overlay" advertised on page 74, for example, cost
£5,890. The country's leading liberal newspaper
described this as "absolute glamour".
The Guardian is part of the Guardian Media Group (GMG),
which has only one bottom line - making money. The GMG
website enlightens anyone who thinks the Guardian is a
dauntless liberal force for truth and compassion in a
money-grubbing world:
"Guardian Media Group has a wide portfolio of media
interests. The flagship titles - the Guardian, the
Observer, the Manchester Evening News, and Auto Trader -
are strengthened and supplemented by a range of
successful businesses which together from one of the most
vibrant media organisations in the UK. Our investments in
the Internet, electronic publishing and radio give us a
broad and successful commercial base. Guardian Media
Group is owned by the Scott Trust." (http://www.gmgplc.co.uk)
These are obviously just a few small examples; but this
is an elite media system that has been designed, and has
evolved, over many decades to defend the interests of the
top 5% of the British population who own 45% of the
nation's wealth and who run the country. The idea that
this system reports neutrally between the interests of
corporate titans like O'Reilly and impoverished civilians
in the Third World, for example in Iraq, is just absurd.
AD: The focus of your book is the liberal media. Why have
you chosen this target rather than the right-wing media
which many would consider far worse?
ML: As Joel Bakan notes in his book, The Corporation, the
current status quo is fundamentally psychopathic - it
systematically subordinates people and planet to profit.
Much of the suffering in the Third World is the result of
deliberate military, economic and other interventions to
subordinate the interests of local people to Western
corporate profits. Much of the destruction of the
environment - for example of the climate - is the result
of the same psychopathic set of priorities.
Even now the websites of major business front groups like
the US National Association of Manufacturers and the US
Chamber of Commerce are full of climate scepticism, Kyoto
rejectionism and so on. Unfortunately, a profit-oriented
corporate media system owned by wealthy people and/or
parent companies, dependent on advertisers, linked with
any number of business enterprises, has every interest in
maintaining this psychopathic status quo. Phil Lesley,
author of a handbook on public relations and
communications, advises corporations:
"People generally do not favour action on a
non-alarming situation when arguments seem to be balanced
on both sides and there is a clear doubt. The weight of
impressions on the public must be balanced so people will
have doubts and lack motivation to take action.
Accordingly, means are needed to get balancing
information into the stream from sources that the public
will find credible. There is no need for a clear-cut
'victory'. ... Nurturing public doubts by demonstrating
that this is not a clear-cut situation in support of the
opponents usually is all that is necessary."
This is the main function of 'professional' news
reporting. The main function of the 'liberal' arm of
professional journalism is indicated by Australian media
analyst Alex Carey:
"There is evidence from a major wartime study that,
for the best results, one side only of an issue or
argument should be presented to poorly educated people.
Two-sided presentations, however, are more effective in
influencing better educated people and those initially
opposed to the desired view."
The liberal media tell both sides of the story - kind of.
They emphasise the state-corporate version of the truth,
particularly in news reporting. This is then 'balanced'
by commentary that presents superficial or trivial
counter-arguments that do not seriously challenge the
official view. So, for example, on the issue of Iraqi
WMD, the official view - that Iraq was a threat that had
to be disarmed, by force of necessary - was countered
with a superficial, trivial view - that this may well be
true, but any action should be endorsed by the UN. The
real counter-argument - that Iraq was clearly not a
threat and that any attack on Iraq, with or without UN
approval, would be the supreme war crime - the launching
of a war of aggression - was almost nowhere to be seen.
The result is what Edward Herman describes as
"normalising the unthinkable". The liberal
audience - the section of the population that might be
expected to be most compassionate, most fiercely opposed
to government crimes - was subject to endless liberal
propaganda persuading them of the basic reasonableness
and respectability of the US-UK government position. This
consistently has the effect of pacifying and neutralising
the most concerned and motivated section of society -
people drawn to progressive, liberal ideas. By contrast,
the right-wing press preaches to the converted, people
who are happy with the status quo and keen for it not to
be challenged.
AD: The liberal media do allow some genuine dissenting
voices. The Guardian and the independent for instance
publish articles by principled radicals such as George
Monbiot, Mark Curtis, Naomi Klein, Robert Fisk amongst
others. If the liberal media are truly "Guardians of
Power" why let these dissenting voices be heard at
all?
ML: This is not actually true. The liberal media do +not+
allow genuine dissent when it comes to analysing the
structural corruption of the corporate media system.
Monbiot, Klein and Fisk have written essentially nothing
about this topic in the Guardian and Independent. Last
time we checked, Curtis had not mentioned the role of the
media at all in his Guardian articles. Fisk never
criticises the Independent - in fact he praises it, as he
does the British media generally. He does not focus on
the appalling performance of the liberal media - he seems
to believe that the Independent really is independent; an
astonishingly naïve view. Recall that these are our most
honest writers.
Serious media analysis is a completely taboo subject
within the mainstream. We published one article on the
issue in the Guardian in December 2004 but that was a
one-off gesture in response to intense criticism of the
Guardian from Media Lens readers - it took us four months
to place the article and we haven't been invited back.
The only journalist who has been consistently honest
about the media is John Pilger. It's interesting to
consider how he's treated. In our view he's the country's
most powerful dissident - his writing is superb, and the
depth and breadth of his insight is beyond most of the
other writers you mention. But it seems there's no place
for him in any of the quality papers! People talk about
the Guardian comment editor Seumas Milne as a radical
force - but he won't publish Pilger. We've asked Milne
why and he refuses to answer. So our best living
dissident - obviously one of the all-time greats - is
required to write a fortnightly column in the New
Statesman which reaches a few thousand people. So why is
he treated differently to Klein and Monbiot? Because he's
honest about the media - he criticises the Guardian, he
draws attention to the vital role of the entire liberal
media establishment in crimes against humanity. So he is
persona non grata. The same is true of Chomsky.
American dissidents are traditionally much more honest
about the media - here it's just understood that you
don't talk about it - and so they are not welcome in our
press. It couldn't be more obvious. By the way, the media
in other countries are sometimes far more honest. Papers
in places like South Korea and the United Arab Emirates
publish material that is sometimes far more critical of
the media. It matters more here - we're closer to centres
of real power - so it's more tightly controlled.
Readers are not stupid. In the USSR it was obvious to
much of the public that the media was heavily controlled
and censored. As a result most people realised they were
not free and so they sought out honest sources of
information (like Samizdat) and energetically pushed for
greater political freedom - the clear fact of media
oppression motivated progressive change. By contrast, in
the West, occasional examples of honest commentary and
reporting create the powerful illusion that we have
access to an open, independent press. It is like a
vaccine that inoculates people against the truth of
thought control.
AD: Why do you think the UK media does not behave more
like the United States media where dissenting voices are
almost totally excluded? Which system do you think is
more effective in controlling the domestic population?
ML: Bush and Blair are both currently in office rather
than in jail, so we conclude that both systems must be
extremely effective. The US is an unusual and extreme
case. Historically, US corporate elites have waged a very
intense and conscious kind of class warfare - really
huge, centrally directed campaigns of propaganda
manipulation and political control designed to stifle
opposition. The British public are largely unaware of
this, but the very large and popular socialist movements
in the US in the first half of the 20th century were
deliberately targeted and destroyed by business power.
The propaganda campaigns were like something out of
Stalinism or Maoism (see Elizabeth Fones-Wolf's
remarkable work, Selling Free Enterprise, for details) -
really vast attempts to brainwash society.
Things were initially not that different here. From the
early days of the nineteenth century, business and
government were resolutely determined to stamp out the
free expression of ideas. The first resort were the
seditious libel and blasphemy laws, which essentially
outlawed all challenges to the status quo. When these
failed to have the desired effect, elites turned to
newspaper stamp duty and taxes on paper and
advertisements to price radical journals out of the
market. Between 1789 and 1815, stamp duty was increased
by 266 per cent, helping to ensure, as Lord Castlereagh
put it, that "persons exercising the power of the
press" would be "men of some respectability and
property"; the point being that these more
"respectable" owners of the press "would
conduct them in a more respectable manner than was likely
to be the result of pauper management", as Cresset
Pelham observed at the time.
The rise of a parliamentary socialist opposition - which
was never successful to the same extent in the US -
naturally supported a left-leaning press. This has been
under remorseless attack ever since. With the convergence
of Labour and Tory parties in the style of the US
political system, the pressure on left elements within
the media has increased markedly. There are signs that
the press, too, is converging - the Observer is now
essentially a right-wing propaganda organ. The Guardian
also makes no bones about rejecting radical causes in
favour of "the centre ground". The centre, now,
in fact is the hard, corporate right. It is ruthless
realpolitik dressed as humanitarian intervention. It's
noticeable that, despite being proved right in almost
everything they said, several high-profile anti-war
journalists and politicians have lost their jobs since
2003 - cruise missile columnists like Aaronovitch, Cohen
and Hari have not been touched. That's surely a sign of
the times.
AD: Tell us a bit about Medialens. How did the project
begin? What were your hopes for it?
ML: We had both published books on radical politics/media
analysis. We had also managed to publish a few articles
and book reviews in the mainstream press. But it was
agonising work - it was clear that tests of
servility were being set up, hoops were being held out,
punishment for honesty was being administered. Naturally,
we were expected to play the same game as everyone else -
notably, don't even +dream+ of subjecting the corporate
media system to serious criticism. DC had set up a
website for his book, Private Planet (www.private-planet.com),
and DE suggested a similar website on media analysis. Our
initial thought was to just send out useful analysis and
information to a small circle of interested friends - the
idea of how to reach more people than did not initially
occur to us. We assumed we'd be ignored and blanked, and
remain pretty much unknown.
We thought it would be interesting to conduct an
experiment - what happens if you give no thought to the
sensitivities of mainstream commissioning editors and
just tell the truth, as we see it, about the media? So we
very consciously decided to burn any media career bridges
we might have, to abandon any thought of making money
from writing, and just write what seemed most important.
We consciously set out to reject all forms of compromise.
We are both strongly drawn to the idea that motivation is
crucial - we believe that it is vital that our work
should be rooted in a compassionate motivation rather
than in a personal concern for career security, status,
and so on.
AD: An important part of what you do is getting people to
regularly challenge journalists and editors. Do you think
these challenges have had an impact on the way the news
is reported?
ML: It's very difficult to judge, and maybe we're not the
best people to give an opinion. There have been clear
examples where readers have changed outcomes in the media
- questions have been asked of senior politicians on BBC
radio and TV that otherwise would not have been asked.
AD: Medialens has understandably focussed on the crimes
of the media and on raising consciousness on this issue.
To turn to another side of the problem what kind of media
would you like to see? In what ways should the media
change and how is change to be achieved?
ML: We are an example of the media we would like to see.
Forget for a moment issues of structure and so on - what
is it we really need? We need individuals motivated by
compassion for suffering rather than greed - people who
are willing to write honestly about the causes of that
suffering. We need journalists who are not compromised by
their aspiration for money, status, respectability and
power - people who find the idea of rubbing shoulders
with the rich and famous repulsive if it means they have
to subordinate the interests of the suffering and
defenceless to their own career progression. We need
journalists who understand that personal happiness and
social welfare are ultimately rooted in concern for
others - in personal qualities of kindness, generosity,
compassion, patience and non-violence.
We are not trying to pretend we are exemplars of these
qualities, but we +do+ aspire to be motivated by them,
and we do think they should be at the heart of honest
journalism. It's reasonable to say that one-half of our
focus is on challenging greed, hatred and ignorance with
facts and arguments. The other half is to maintain and
increase a compassionate motivation for what we're doing.
AD: What do you think of the state of alternative media
in this country? Is it capable of ever supplanting the
mainstream?
ML: It already has for some people to some extent. Quite
a few people who want to understand the truth of Haiti,
Colombia, Iraq and so on turn to alternative media rather
than seek confusing, misleading, compromised accounts in
the mainstream. We have written often of how we hope that
increased public awareness of the limits of political and
media freedom will generate truly democratic, alternative
media with the power to impose a news agenda on the
mainstream, or to replace it as source of news. Ideally,
beyond even this, powerful alternative media should
aspire to inform and motivate large popular movements,
and even new, libertarian political parties, which might
then be in a position to reform media structures to limit
the influence of corporate interests.
AD: What are your hopes for the book? What do you want
people will take away from it?
ML: People will never seek liberation from a situation of
oppression if they believe they are already free. The
illusion of media freedom is incredibly potent. It is
backed up by high-tech power, endorsed by endless
celebrities and global heroes telling us, or implying,
that the media system is fundamentally benign, free, open
and honest. It's very difficult to step outside this
propaganda and think for ourselves.
We have collected the most powerful and relevant examples
we can find showing how even the best media
systematically impose a false, controlling, pacifying,
oppressive and lethal version of the world on the public.
Of course, we have read this stuff 100 times, so we
assumed the impact on us personally would be pretty
minimal, even tedious. We were both pleasantly surprised
to find that, after reading the book in proof and final
form, we came away with an unusually clear sense of just
how obviously compromised and destructive the media
system is. It opened our eyes! If the book has a similar
effect on other readers, that would be a positive result.
Readers may also be interested in the following interview
we did with Gabriele Zampirini:
http://www.thecatsdream.com/blog/2005/12/guardians-of-power.htm
RADIO
On April 10, Media Lens co-editor, David Edwards, was
interviewed by France Senecal on the American radio
station KDVS.
In the near hour-long interview, you can hear David
talking about the new Media Lens book, Guardians Of Power
(see below), the BBC, Iraq, the Lancet report, Iraq Body
Count, climate change, compassion, media activism, and
more... including the mysterious genesis of the Media
Lens project in Southampton's Giddy Bridge public house!
Click here:
http://www.asucd.ucdavis.edu/radio/showme.cfm?show=43&title=It\'s%20About%20You&filter=mon
And select 'MP3 Stream (128kbps, dial up)' for broadband.
This link will be available until Monday, April 17. The
interview will soon also be archived on our website.
Best wishes
The Editors
Regret these urls are not working. Trying to correct the
break:
http://www.thehandstand.org/archive/april2006/articles/reviews.php
http://www.thehandstand.org/archive/april2006/articles/interviews.php
http://www.thehandstand.org/archive/april2006/articles/extracts.php
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