[NYTr] More on the MoveOn Sideshow Date: Tue, 25 Sep 2007 16:58:29 -0500 (CDT) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit [Yesterday's (Sep 24, 2007) reactionary Murdoch-owned NY Post displayed a screaming headline about the Iranian President's arrived in New York for the UN sessions. "EVIL! Comes to New York" it said ("Evil" underlined in red.) Maybe this yesar Venezuela will get a break and they won't stop and search Venezuelan diplomats and force them to miss their planes.-NYTr] Says Parry: "The New York Times has joined in pummeling MoveOn.org, with a top editor faulting his newspaper for violating a ban on negative personal attack ads. The editor says, too, MoveOn should have paid more than double for the "General Betray Us" ad. In response, MoveOn is writing a check for another $77,000 to the Times in a perverse case of negative bang for the buck. Plus, in a show of double standards, the Times runs a right-wing ad entitled 'Amadinejad Is a Terrorist.'"] Consortium News - Sep 24, 2007 http://www.consortiumnews.com/2007/092407.html MoveOn & Media Double Standards By Robert Parry September 24, 2007 MoveOn.orgbs bGeneral Betray Usb ad may have gotten more attention than it deserved, but it also has underscored several important points: the foolishness of MoveOnbs ad-buying strategy, the cringing hypocrisy of the mainstream U.S. news media when attacked by the Right, and the pressing need to build independent news outlets. Ironically, MoveOn has long resisted using its fund-raising capability on the Internet to support an independent news infrastructure, favoring instead the idea of making expensive ad buys in the New York Times and other Big Media outlets. So, MoveOn initially spent $64,575 for its Sept. 10 full-page ad questioning Gen. David Petraeusbs honesty. Then, because of MoveOnbs juvenile pun played on Petraeusbs name, the Bush administration and its right-wing allies exploited the ad to divert the debate on the Iraq War into an argument over the propriety of the ad's language. The right-wing media b making full use of its extraordinary reach through newspapers, TV, talk radio and the Internet b also spread the word that the Times showed its "liberal bias" by giving MoveOn a favorable bdiscountb ad rate. More than 4,000 furious e-mails poured in to the Times. Not only were congressional Democrats soon in full retreat but so were Timesb editors. On Sept. 23, the Timesb public editor, Clark Hoyt, concluded that the Times had violated its policies both on ad rates and on rejecting ads that are boutside the bounds of acceptable political discourse.b In an article critical of the Times' actions, entitled bBetraying Its Own Best Interests,b Hoyt wrote, bthe ad appears to fly in the face of an internal advertising acceptability manual that says, bWe do not accept opinion advertisements that are attacks of a personal nature.bb Hoyt also reported that the Times should have charged MoveOn $142,083 for a full-page ad when a client is guaranteed that an ad will run on a specific day. (The discount rate should apply if the ad were treated as a stand-by that could be bumped.) As it turned out, the Times also had agreed to run an ad from Republican presidential candidate Rudolph Giuliani on Sept. 14, attacking both the MoveOn ad and Democratic contender Hillary Clinton. Giuliani was given the $64,575 discount rate, although that also would appear to have violated the Timesb ad-rate policies. For its part, MoveOn now has volunteered to pay the Times the full ad rate, sending a check for an additional $77,000, a sum that presumably comes from donations that anti-war activists made to MoveOn, partly in defense of its Petraeus ad. In other words, MoveOn has taken $142,083 from American donors and given it to the New York Times for the privilege of running an ad that served to undermine the goal of reining in President Bushbs Iraq War. Talk about getting a reverse bang for your buck. (By contrast, for many independent media outlets, the cost of that one ad would cover all their expenses for a year or more. In 2006, the entire budget of our Web site, Consortiumnews.com, was $109,000.) Double Standard Another negative lesson that the Times appears to have learned is that it must apply a double standard when accepting ads. If you are a Bush favorite, such as Gen. Petraeus, public editor Hoyt thinks you should be granted immunity from harsh criticism. However, if youbre a Bush enemy, the Times is still happy to run ads condemning you in the nastiest possible terms. Just one day after Hoyt objected to battacks of a personal nature,b the Time ran a full-page ad from a pro-Bush advocacy group, Freedomswatch.org, with the headline bAhmandinejad Is a Terrorist.b The ad also denounced Columbia University for allowing the Iranian president to give a speech. bIranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad threatens our nation and the freedoms we value,b the ad reads. bHe has supported attacks on our soldiers and our allies. He should be treated as the terrorist that he is.b [NYT, Sept. 24, 2007] Presumably, in green-lighting this ad, the Times editors feared a hostile right-wing reaction if they had said no or demanded softer language. While few Americans would defend Ahmadinejad or even note that many of these harsh statements have not been proven, it is this double standard b one set of rules for Bushbs enemies and another for Bushbs friends b that guided the U.S. march to war against Saddam Husseinbs Iraq in 2002-03. Yet, the only real hope against a repeat stampede b this time into an attack on Iran b is a principled stand by the American news media for a single standard of fairness. But that isnbt going to happen as long as editors and ad executives see their careers threatened when they allow something like the MoveOn ad. Mainstream journalists and news executive know they will get pounded if they act in a way offensive to the Right, but they realize that the Left in America lacks anything close to a comparable ability to inflict pain. To change that dynamic would require Americabs Left to build a media infrastructure that can begin to match up with what the Right has created over the past three decades. MoveOnbs Mistake MoveOn has been one of the bprogressiveb organizations that has rejected the need for building a media infrastructure that can restore some balance to the U.S. political process. In spring 2005, near the start of Bushbs second term, media activist Carolyn Kay presented a comprehensive media reform strategy to MoveOn founder Wes Boyd. Boyd responded with an e-mail on April 24, 2005, saying, bJust to be direct and frank, we have no immediate plans to pursue funding for media b& Our efforts are focused on a few big fights right now, because this is the key legislative season. Later in the year and next year I expect there will [be] more time to look further afield.b Kay e-mailed Boyd back, saying, bFor five years people have been telling me that in just a couple of months, webll start addressing the long-term problems. But the day never comes. b& Today itbs Social Security and the filibuster. Tomorrow it will be something else. And in a couple of months it will be something else again. Therebs never a right time to address the media issue. Thatbs why the right time is now.b Boydbs April 24 e-mail b calling the idea of addressing the nationbs media crisis as wandering bafieldb b is typical of the views held by many leaders in the bprogressive establishment.b There is no sense of urgency about media. [For more details, see Consortiumnews.combs bThe Leftbs Media Miscalculation.b] Instead, MoveOn continues to rely on ad buys in mainstream news outlets to get out its message, a strategy that now has proved both expensive and counter-productive. *** Consortium News - Sep 25, 2007 http://www.consortiumnews.com/2007/092507a.html The Left's Media Miscalculation (Redux) By Robert Parry (Originally published April 29, 2005) [Editorbs Note: Two-and-a-half years ago, we published a special report on Americabs dangerous media imbalance. At the time, there was the Rightbs loud and intimidating media machine, a complicit or intimidated mainstream media, and a skimpy messaging apparatus on the Left. Since then, there have been a few grains of hope sprinkled on the Left side of the scale b Keith Olbermannbs successful MSNBC bCountdownb show, the combination of Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert on Comedy Central, the growth of Internet blogs, and a struggling Air America Radio b but overall the imbalance remains substantially the same. As MoveOnbs bGeneral Betray Usb ad debacle revealed, the Right can still make small mistakes by their opponents big and big mistakes by their allies small. To defend Gen. David Petraeusbs honor, the Senate rushed through a bipartisan condemnation of MoveOn, while a serious debate over George W. Bushbs Iraq War was derailed. Then, the New York Times public editor chastised both MoveOn and his own newspaper for running the ad and not charging MoveOn a higher ad rate. To add injury to insult, MoveOn agreed to send the Times an additional $77,000 on top of the $65,000 that the activist group had already paid, meaning that the anti-Iraq War movement spent $142,000 on a largely counterproductive ad. In view of the MoveOn fiasco, we are republishing our April 29, 2005, report, entitled bThe Leftbs Media Miscalculation,b which explains how this media asymmetry developed: To understand how the United States got into todaybs political predicament b where even fundamental principles like the separation of church and state are under attack b one has to look back at strategic choices made by the Right and the Left three decades ago.] In the mid-1970s, after the U.S. defeat in Vietnam and President Richard Nixonbs resignation over the Watergate scandal, American progressives held the upper-hand on media. Not only had the mainstream press exposed Nixonbs dirty tricks and published the Pentagon Papers secrets of the Vietnam War, but a vibrant leftist bundergroundb press informed and inspired a new generation of citizens. Besides well-known anti-war magazines, such as Ramparts, and investigative outlets, like Seymour Hershbs Dispatch News, hundreds of smaller publications had emerged across the country in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Though some quickly disappeared, their influence shocked conservatives who saw the publications as a grave political threat. [For details, see Angus Mackenziebs Secrets: The CIAbs War at Home.] Conservatives felt out-muscled on a wide range of public-policy fronts, blaming the media not only for the twin debacles of Watergate and Vietnam but also for contributing to the Rightbs defeat on issues such as civil rights and the environment. Fateful Choices At this key juncture, leaders of the Right and the Left made fateful choices that have shaped todaybs political world. Though both sides had access to similar amounts of money from wealthy individuals and like-minded foundations, the two sides chose to invest that money in very different ways. The Right concentrated on gaining control of the information flows in Washington and on building a media infrastructure that would put out a consistent conservative message across the country. As part of this strategy, the Right also funded attack groups to target mainstream journalists who got in the way of the conservative agenda. The Left largely forsook media in favor of bgrassroots organizing.b As many of the Leftbs flagship media outlets foundered, the bprogressive communityb reorganized under the slogan b bthink globally, act locallyb b and increasingly put its available money into well-intentioned projects, such as buying endangered wetlands or feeding the poor. So, while the Right waged what it called bthe war of ideasb and expanded the reach of conservative media to every corner of the nation, the Left trusted that local political action would reenergize American democracy. Some wealthy progressives also apparently bought into the conservative notion of a bliberal biasb in the media and thus saw no real need to invest significantly in information or to defend embattled journalists under conservative attack. After all, over the years, many mainstream journalists did appear allied with liberal priorities. In the 1950s, for instance, northern reporters wrote sympathetically about the plight of African-Americans in the Jim Crow South. The anger of white segregationists toward that press coverage was the grievance that sparked the first complaints about media bliberal bias.b In one 1955 case, negative national coverage followed the acquittal of two white men for murdering black teenager Emmett Till, who supposedly had whistled at a white woman. Reacting to the critical reporting on the Till case, angry whites plastered their cars with bumper stickers reading, bMississippi: The Most Lied About State in the Union.b War Over Journalism The conservative refrain about bliberal biasb grew in volume as mainstream journalists reported critically about the U.S. military strategy in Vietnam and then exposed President Nixonbs spying on his political enemies. The fact that reporters essentially got those stories right didnbt spare them from conservative ire. Progressives apparently trusted that professional journalists would continue standing up to conservative pressure, even in the 1980s as well-funded right-wing groups targeted individual reporters and Reagan-Bush bpublic diplomacyb teams went into news bureaus to lobby against troublesome journalists. [For details on this strategy, see Robert Parrybs Secrecy & Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq.] As those conservative pressures began to take a toll on reporters at the national level, the progressives still emphasized bgrassroots organizingb and focused on more immediate priorities, such as filling gaps in the social safety net opened by Reagan-Bush policies. With the numbers of homeless swelling and the AIDS epidemic spreading, the idea of diverting money to an information infrastructure seemed coldhearted. After all, the social problems were visible; the significance of the information battle was more theoretical. In the early 1990s, when I first began approaching major liberal foundations about the need to counter right-wing pressure on journalism (which I had seen first-hand at the Associated Press and Newsweek), I received dismissive or bemused responses. One foundation executive smiled and said, bwe donbt do media.b Another foundation simply barred media proposals outright. On occasion, when a few center-left foundations did approve media-related grants, they generally went for non-controversial projects, such as polling public attitudes or tracking money in politics, which condemned Democrats and Republicans about equally. Brock/Coulter Meanwhile, through the 1990s, the conservatives poured billions of dollars into their media apparatus, which rose like a vertically integrated machine incorporating newspapers, magazines, book publishing, radio stations, TV networks and Internet sites. Young conservative writers b such as David Brock and Ann Coulter b soon found they could make fortunes working within this structure. Magazine articles by star conservatives earned top dollar. Their books b promoted on conservative talk radio and favorably reviewed in right-wing publications b jumped to the top of the best-seller lists. While progressives starved freelancers who wrote for left-of-center publications like The Nation or In These Times, conservatives made sure that writers for the American Spectator or the Wall Street Journalbs editorial page had plenty of money to dine at Washingtonbs finest restaurants. (Brock broke away from this right-wing apparatus in the late 1990s and described its inner workings in his book, Blinded by the Right. By then, however, Brock had gotten rich writing hit pieces against people who interfered with the conservative agenda, from law professor Anita Hill, who accused Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas of sexual harassment, to President Bill Clinton, whose impeachment troubles were touched off by one of Brockbs articles in 1993.) As the 1990s wore on, mainstream journalists adapted to the new media environment by trying not to offend the conservatives. Working journalists knew that the Right could damage or destroy their careers by attaching the bliberalb label. There was no comparable danger from the Left. So, many Americans journalists b whether consciously or not b protected themselves by being harder on Democrats in the Clinton administration than they were on Republicans during the Reagan-Bush years. Indeed, through much of the 1990s, there was little to distinguish the hostile scandal coverage of Clinton in the Washington Post and the New York Times from what was appearing in the New York Post and the Washington Times. Slamming Gore The animus toward Clinton then spilled over into Campaign 2000 when the major media b both mainstream and right-wing b jumped all over Al Gore, freely misquoting him and subjecting him to almost unparalleled political ridicule. By contrast, George W. Bush b while viewed as slightly dimwitted b got the benefit of nearly every doubt. [See Consortiumnews.combs bAl Gore v. the Mediab or bProtecting Bush-Cheney.b] During the Florida recount battle, liberals watched as even the Washington Postbs center-left columnist Richard Cohen sided with Bush. There was only muted coverage when conservative activists from Washington staged a riot outside the Miami-Dade canvassing board, and scant mention was made of Bushbs phone call to joke with and congratulate the rioters. [See Consortiumnews.combs bBush's Conspiracy to Riot.b] Then, once five Republicans on the U.S. Supreme Court blocked a state-court-ordered recount and handed Bush the White House, both mainstream and conservative news outlets acted as if it were their patriotic duty to rally around the legitimacy of the new President. [For more on this phenomenon, see Parrybs Secrecy & Privilege.] The protect-Bush consensus deepened after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks as the national news media b almost across the board b transformed itself into a conveyor belt for White House propaganda. When the Bush administration put out dubious claims about Iraqbs supposed weapons of mass destruction, the major newspapers rushed the information into print. Many of the most egregious WMD stories appeared in the most prestigious establishment newspapers, the New York Times and the Washington Post. The New York Times fronted bogus assertions about the nuclear-weapons capabilities of aluminum tubes that were really for conventional weapons. Washington Post editorials reported Bushbs allegations about Iraqi WMD as fact, not a point in dispute. Anti-war protests involving millions of American citizens received largely dismissive coverage. Critics of the administrationbs WMD claims, such as former weapons inspector Scott Ritter and actor/activist Sean Penn, were ignored or derided. When Al Gore offered thoughtful critiques of Bushbs preemptive-war strategy at rallies organized by MoveOn.org, he got savaged in the national media. [See Consortiumnews.com bPolitics of Preemption.b] Smart Investment Over those three decades, by investing smartly in media infrastructure, the Right had succeeded in reversing the media dynamic of the Watergate-Vietnam era. Instead of a tough skeptical press corps challenging war claims on Iraq and exposing political dirty tricks in Florida, most national journalists knew better than to risk losing their careers. Many on the Left began acknowledging the danger caused by this media imbalance. But even as the Iraq War disaster worsened, the bprogressive establishmentb continued spurning proposals for building a media counter-infrastructure that could challenge the bgroup thinkb of Washington journalism. One of the new excuses became that the task was too daunting. When proposals were on the table in 2003 for a progressive AM talk radio network, for example, many wealthy liberals shunned the plan as certain to fail, an attitude that nearly became a self-fulfilling prophecy as an under-funded Air America Radio almost crashed and burned on take-off in March 2004. Later, the argument was that a media infrastructure would take too long to build and that all available resources should go to oust Bush in Election 2004. To that end, hundreds of millions of dollars were poured into voter registration drives and into campaign commercials. But the consequences of the Leftbs longtime media disarmament continued to plague its preferred policies and candidates. When the pro-Bush Swift Boat Veterans for Truth sandbagged Kerry over his Vietnam War record, the conservative media infrastructure made the anti-Kerry attacks big news, joined by mainstream outlets such as CNN. But liberals lacked the media capacity to counter the charges. By the time the major newspapers got around to examining the Swift Boat allegations and judged many to be spurious, Kerrybs campaign was in freefall. Similarly, there was no significant independent media capability to quickly investigate and publicize voting irregularities on Election Day 2004. Ad hoc citizens groups and Internet bloggers tried to fill the void but lacked the necessary resources. Post-Mortem Once Election 2004 was over, many progressive funders found a new reason to put off action on a media infrastructure. They said they were financially strapped from the campaign. Though media issues were part of the post-election post-mortem, actual media plans made little progress. The main activities on the Left centered around arranging more conferences on media and holding more discussions, not implementing concrete proposals to actually do journalism and build new outlets. There also was a new variation on the Leftbs three-decade-old emphasis on bgrassroots organizing.b MoveOn.org postponed action on media infrastructure in favor of rallying political activists in support of Democratic legislative goals. When media activist Carolyn Kay presented a comprehensive media reform strategy, MoveOn.orgbs founder Wes Boyd responded with an e-mail on April 24, 2005, saying, bJust to be direct and frank, we have no immediate plans to pursue funding for media b& bOur efforts are focused on a few big fights right now, because this is the key legislative season. Later in the year and next year I expect there will [be] more time to look further afield.b Kay e-mailed Boyd back, saying, bFor five years people have been telling me that in just a couple of months, webll start addressing the long-term problems. But the day never comes. b& Today itbs Social Security and the filibuster. Tomorrow it will be something else. And in a couple of months it will be something else again. Therebs never a right time to address the media issue. Thatbs why the right time is now.b Boydbs April 24 e-mail b calling the idea of addressing the nationbs media crisis as wandering bafieldb b is typical of the views held by many leaders in the bprogressive establishment.b There is no sense of urgency about media. Still, MoveOnbs blasC) attitude may be even more surprising since the organization emerged as a political force during the media-driven impeachment of President Clinton. It also watched as Gorebs MoveOn-sponsored, pre-Iraq-War speeches were trashed by the national news media, reinforcing his decision to forego a second race against Bush. Indeed, one point many on the Left still fail to appreciate is how much easier it would be to convince a politician to take a courageous stand b as Gore did in those speeches b if the politician didnbt have to face such a hostile media reaction. Already the growth of bprogressive talk radiob b on the AM dial in more than 50 cities b appears to have boosted the fighting spirit of some congressional Democrats. [See Consortiumnews.combs bMystery of the Democratsb New Spine.b] Investigative Journalism At Consortiumnews.com over the past year [2004-05], we have approached more than 100 potential funders about supporting an investigative journalism project modeled after the Vietnam-era Dispatch News, where Sy Hersh exposed the My Lai massacre story. Our idea was to hire a team of experienced investigative journalists who would dig into important stories that are receiving little or no attention from the mainstream news media. While nearly everyone we have approached agrees on the need for this kind of journalism and most praised the plan, no one has yet stepped forward with financial support. Indeed, the expenses of contacting these potential funders b though relatively modest b have put the survival of our decade-old Web site at risk. Which leads to another myth among some on the Left: that the media problem will somehow solve itself, that the pendulum will swing back when the national crisis gets worse and the conservatives finally go too far. But there is really no reason to think that some imaginary mechanism will reverse the trends. Indeed, the opposite seems more likely. The gravitational pull of the Rightbs expanding media galaxy keeps dragging the mainstream press in that direction. Look whatbs happening at major news outlets from CBS to PBS, all are drifting to the right. As the Right keeps plugging away at its media infrastructure, the pervasiveness of the conservative message also continues to recruit more Americans to the fold. Ironically, the conservative media clout has had the secondary effect of helping the Rightbs grassroots organizing, especially among Christian fundamentalists. Simultaneously, the progressivesb weakness in media has undercut the Leftbs grassroots organizing because few Americans regularly hear explanations of liberal goals. But they do hear b endlessly b the Rightbs political storyline. Many progressives miss this media point when they cite the rise of Christian Right churches as validation of a grassroots organizing strategy. What that analysis leaves out is the fact that the Christian Right originally built its strength through media, particularly the work of televangelists Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell. What the Right has demonstrated is that media is not the enemy of grassroots organizing but its ally. Bright Spots & Dangers Though there have been some recent bright spots for the Left's media b the fledgling progressive talk radio, new techniques for distributing documentaries on DVD, and hard-hitting Internet blogs b there are also more danger signs. As the Left postpones media investments, some struggling progressive news outlets b which could provide the framework for a counter-infrastructure b may be headed toward extinction. Just as the echo chamber of the Rightbs infrastructure makes conservative media increasingly profitable, the lack of a Left infrastructure dooms many promising media endeavors to failure. The hard truth for the Left is that the media imbalance in the United States could very easily get much worse. The difficult answer for the progressive community is to come to grips with this major strategic weakness, apply the Leftbs organizing talents, and finally make a balanced national media a top priority. Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Neck Deep: The Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush, was written with two of his sons, Sam and Nat, and can be ordered at neckdeepbook.com * ================================================================= NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us Our main website: http://www.blythe.org List Archives: http://blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ Subscribe: http://blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr =================================================================