From: Travis
Subject: What the CIA's Censors Can Teach Us about Plans to Muzzle Talk
Radio
Date: Sunday, February 1, 2009,

 *Comment from my friend*: *This leads me to believe that elements at the
CIA and the FCC are behind the gag orders/blackouts concerning Obama's
eligibility to be POTUS. Both local and syndicated radio networks were
surely threatened with loss of their licenses, if any of their talk show
hosts mentioned this issue. There can be no other explanation for why our
most courageous conservative lions refuse to discuss the topic.*

http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/01/what_the_cias_censors_can_teac.html


  January 29, 2009 What the CIA's Censors Can Teach Us about Plans to Muzzle
Talk Radio*By* *Ishmael Jones*<http://www.americanthinker.com/ishmael_jones/>
The Central Intelligence Agency runs a small bureau that censors books and
articles written by current and former CIA employees. As the only official
censorship bureau in America, its operation provides insights on how
attempts to muzzle conservative talk radio through a renewed Fairness
Doctrine or FCC "localism" may work. It also provides reasons for optimism
about the eventual outcome.

CIA censorship seems to make sense at first glance - shouldn't there be a
bureau that ensures secrets are not revealed? But CIA censors routinely
approve books that contain classified material - especially those critical
of the Bush administration - so long as they are not critical of the CIA
itself. Memoirs by former CIA Director George Tenet and other top
bureaucrats contain startling amounts of classified information. The CIA
must use secrecy to hide the identities of agents and operations, of course,
but separate laws have always covered that. The CIA has taken its unique
ability to void the First Amendment, awarded by a judge in the late 1970's,
and used it for its own agenda.

Either information is secret or it isn't. If America's only censorship
bureau cannot handle the simple task of determining whether something is
classified or unclassified, then we should be wary of creating multiple FCC
censorship bureaus to handle far more complex and subjective issues. How can
Americans possibly rely on government bureaucrats to decide what is fair and
balanced?

The Fairness Doctrine may seem to make sense at a superficial glance -
shouldn't all viewpoints be heard, shouldn't the media be fair? But the
purpose of a renewed Fairness Doctrine appears to be simply to attack
conservative talk radio. The political left's free speech is not constrained
by talk radio, because it dominates most other media.

Just as open criticism of the CIA is vital because it can lead to repair of
the intelligence gaps that expose Americans to great risk, uncensored talk
radio is vital for American freedom because it allows free speech to be
heard.

The Founders understood the evil of censorship and knew that censors would
never be a panel of wise graybeards issuing Solomonic decisions. CIA censors
are ordinary humans who weigh decisions based upon what is in their own
interest. They ask themselves, "What decision can I make that will please my
boss? What decision will improve my job security, my chances for advancement
in the organization?" Censors employed under the Fairness Doctrine would
likewise make decisions Chicago-style, decisions meant to serve the people
who created their jobs and control their promotions.

Fortunately, the Fairness Doctrine is so obviously unconstitutional in the
eyes of most Americans, so blatantly an attempt to block free speech, that
it should be easy to defeat. Respect for the First Amendment is broad in
American society - American soldiers fight to defend it, schoolchildren
understand its importance. Happy warriors like Rush and Sean are already
taking on the Fairness Doctrine with full confidence.

Smart politicians on the left know this and it's unlikely that a Rahm
Emanuel, for example, would recommend support for heavy-handed attempts to
censor conservative radio via a renewed Fairness Doctrine.

More likely is that the left will use the subtle, silent, and creeping tool
of government bureaucracy to strangle conservative talk radio. The
enforcement of "localism" regulations, as described in a 17 November 2008
American Thinker article by Jim Boulet, would use a system of complaints to
the FCC and community advisory boards to attack conservative radio. A few
tweaks in FCC regulations can require radio stations to submit time-wasting
and expensive reports, hold public meetings, and create panels of local
residents, led by community organizers, to evaluate programming. If the
bureaucrats and peoples' panels are not pleased with a radio station's
compliance, they'll be able to take away the station's license. The goal
would be to attack conservative radio in obscurity, without an open
showdown.

The behavior of CIA censors may be helpful in predicting that of FCC
bureaucrats. Moving with the speed of an old oak tree, CIA censors respond
months later to queries, if at all. A book I wrote as a tool in intelligence
reform took CIA censors a year to read, and after lots of evasive
conversations suggesting they might approve it, in the end came back as a
stack of blank pages. It contained no classified information, but was
critical of the CIA. Books go from censor to censor, each of whom wields a
black magic marker. Free speech entering one end of a censorship process,
like hay through a horse, comes out unrecognizable at the other end.

New FCC offices may sprout up throughout the United States in response to
new FCC localism or Fairness Doctrine authority. It will be fascinating to
see if they come to resemble CIA domestic offices. A peculiarity of many CIA
offices within the US is that they have television sets on, providing a
busy, newsroom atmosphere. Since FCC offices would be monitoring media, it's
possible they too may run radio and television sets in each room. Like the
CIA, the FCC may argue that ever-greater amounts of money and employees are
necessary to achieve its new mission, and as the money flows, and the number
of employees grows, the FCC may become a constituent group of its own, with
lobbying power, difficult to dislodge.

Censors are creative in inventing new reasons for delay. Although none of
the CIA censors have actually served their country in a covert capacity,
they injected spycraft into their communications by operating from anonymous
post office boxes and phone numbers, and using false names, which added
delay because of the infrequent checking of these P.O. boxes and answering
machines.

Money can trump principles. CIA employees may choose not to speak out about
fraud and corruption at the CIA simply because it is lucrative to co-exist
within the CIA, whether as a contractor on $250,000 a year plus another
contract for the spouse, or becoming rich through the CIA's contracting
system. Radio stations must also look out for their own financial interests.
Advocates of FCC localism will hope the cost of compliance with bureaucracy
forces stations to take conservative talk radio off the air.

Conservative talk radio should not expect help from the legions of First
Amendment Scholars in universities or the organizations which grandly claim,
and seek donations, to fight for First Amendment rights. These people seem
to favor the defense of the kind of free speech which doesn't require much
bravery, speech such as profanity, or insulting Christianity or Judaism,
speech that doesn't pose the risk of loss of property or imprisonment.
Although the CIA runs the only official censorship bureau in America which
can theoretically throw people in the slammer and confiscate property, I'm
aware of no First Amendment Scholar who has written about it. These
organizations may likewise find that conservative radio does not serve their
agenda, and choose not to defend it.

But in spite of these gloomy predictions, the behavior of the CIA's
censorship bureau suggests that the outcome for conservative talk radio is
optimistic. The flaw in censors' strategy is that while they seek to stifle
free speech, they are also reluctant to take steps that might draw more
attention to it.

CIA censors have proven to be toothless when their bluff is called. They did
not follow through on threats to prosecute because they fear prosecution
would only bring more attention to the organization's corruption. Likewise,
prosecution of conservative talk radio would only bring more attention to
the views of conservative talk radio hosts. If censors decide to prosecute,
they have to go to court, and censorship cannot win in open daylight, not in
America.

The gatekeepers, the people who work as censors, didn't choose that line of
work because they like to fight. They want to leave the office at five
o'clock and get home. Go right at them and they'll fold.

When in the course of human events it becomes necessary to defy government,
conservative talk radio is in an excellent position to fight back, raising
the voices of free speech, bringing even more attention to the vitality of
the American experiment, and defending American freedom.

*Ishmael Jones, a former officer in the CIA's clandestine service, is the
author of The Human Factor: Inside the CIA's Dysfunctional Intelligence
Culture.*
48 Comments on "*What the CIA's Censors Can Teach Us about Plans to Muzzle
Talk Radio*"
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