Watchdogs and Lapdogs
Advocacy in defense of democracy is no vice
by Greg Guma
Toward Freedom magazine, December 1997/January
1998
About 29 years ago, shortly after I started reporting for
the Bennington Banner in Vermont, an angry reader complained about
my bias in a letter to the editor "I strongly doubt that
he could cover the proceedings of a dog show without incorporating
a message," he wrote. I took it as a compliment then-and
still do.
That's why I was eager to join about 1000 other progressive
media-makers in October for the second Media and Democracy Congress.
For three clays, journalists and activists from across the US
gathered in New York to talk about problems-concentration of ownership,
the relentless slide into infotainment, an avalanche of gossip
and "news" people don't need-and share some potential
solutions. It was truly inspiring to be among colleagues and old
friends who aren't afraid of the A-word-advocacy.
Twenty years back, in the post-Watergate era, advocacy journalists
were often our heroes. Even mass media, although already well
on the way to their current degeneration, were still considered
by many to be a potential part of the solution. Today, however,
most people don't trust reporters any more than politicians. In
a recent Roper poll, 88 percent said corporate owners and advertisers
improperly influence the press.
Of course, most journalists will deny this, a lack of self-knowledge
(or candor) that makes matters worse. The fact that getting ahead
too often means going along remains one of this profession's most
debilitating little secrets.
The issue today isn't just that ten media giants may soon
control the origination of most content, national distribution,
and transmission into our homes, or that we're being set up for
a pay-per-view world that will make notions about the Intemet's
liberatory potential sound like science fiction-though much more
should be said about both developments. The problem is also how
the conversation about issues is defined by our media gatekeepers.
During a lively panel at the Congress, Nation columnist Christopher
Hitchens noted that, for example, the word partisan is always
used in a negative context, while bipartisan is offered as a positive
solution. If that isn't an endorsement of the one-party state,
what is? Reporters don't say Ronald Reagan or Bill Clinton are
liars, although these are verifiable facts. But they do say the
two are great communicators, which is merely subjective opinion.
The issue, Hitchens suggested, isn't a lack of information-it's
all out there somewhere-but how most reporters think and how the
news is constructed.
Which brings us to free markets and competition, the basic
tenets of the new corporate religion. Unfortunately, most journalists
are its faithful missionaries. For example, utility deregulation
is commonly described in the so-called "straight" press
as a "movement to bring competition to the electric industry."
But that's a corporate sermon, not a fact. Sure, competition now,
oligopoly later The same kind of thing was said-when anything
was mentioned at all-about the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
But the actual result of that legislation was to reduce competition
and sweep away consumer protections.
The "straight" media also haven't said much about
the $70 billion giveaway of the digital TV spectrum, a prime example
of corporate welfare. Yet, that gold rush began in April. Making
the giants pay for this enormous new public resource could dramatically
reduce the deficit, or easily fund public broadcasting and children's
TV. But, instead, spectrum rights that will allow broadcasters
to launch up to six new channels each are being handed out for
free. The only "string" is some vague contribution to
be determined at a later date.
Fortunately, there are still some real heroes in the press,
reporters and others who insist on being watchdogs rather than
lapdogs. At a ceremony in the Great Hall of NYU's historic Cooper
Union, a dozen were honored during a lively final gathering of
the Congress. Among the recipients were Karl Grossman who brought
the dangers of nukes in space to public attention; Amy Goodman,
producer of Pacifica Radio's groundbreaking news magazine, Democracy
Now; writers Jim Ridgeway, Gary Webb (who broke the CIA-cocaine
story last year), and New York Times columnist Bob Herbert; and
In These Times publisher James Weinstein.
Workers at the feisty Detroit Sunday Journal received a "media
hero" award for standing up to Gannett and Knight-Ridder,
which locked out 2000 union workers over two years ago. When was
the last time you read about that continuing epic struggle? And
journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal, who sits on death row in Pennsylvania
despite evidence of his innocence, was given a standing ovation
for his courage and compassion.
The Congress also looked at solutions: new anti-trust laws
to deal with the world of global media, a tax on advertising-including
the millions in political contributions that mainly end up in
the coffers of media corporations-to adequately fund public broadcasting
and public access, corporate divestment of news divisions, and
a ban on children's advertising, to name a few. But such changes
will take time, plus a public groundswell that is sure to be resisted
(largely through omission) by the media giants. Meanwhile, at
least we have journalists who go beyond official doublespeak,
bringing us what mainstream sources don't see fit to broadcast
or print. To paraphrase an old conservative motto, advocacy in
defense of democracy is no vice, and objectivity in the face of
corporate tyranny is no virtue. Or, as one of my favorite muckrakers,
Lincoln Steffens, once put it, "This is all very unscientific,
but then, I am not a scientist. I am a journalist."
Greg Guma is the editor of TF.
*****
Reprinted from Toward Freedom, a progressive world affairs
magazine, August 1997
Subscriptions for the complete print edition are $22.50 annually
from TF, Box 468, Burlington, VT 05402-0468.
Or visit the TF website at www.towardfreedom.com.
Media
Control and Propaganda