---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: MJ <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Jun 27, 2013 at 10:07 AM
Subject: Big Brother, not Snowden and Greenwald, Is the Story
To: [email protected]



*Big Brother, not Snowden and Greenwald, Is the Story
*by Sheldon Richman <http://fff.org/author/sheldon-richman/> June 27, 2013

“Instead of being adversaries to government power … [the media of
Washington, D.C., are] … servants to it and mouthpieces for it.”

So said the *Guardian*’s* *Glenn Greenwald, who broke the story of Edward
Snowden’s disclosure of NSA spying on the American people, after
Greenwald’s confrontation with *Meet the Press*’s* *David Gregory.
Greenwald needn’t have limited his observation to the D.C. media. Plenty of
reporters and cable-news talking heads are playing the same role in the NSA
drama.

Indeed, if they spent half the time investigating Obama’s Big Brother
operations that they spend sneering at Snowden and Greenwald, Americans
might demand that the government stop spying on them.

But to much of the mainstream (and not-so-mainstream) media, Snowden and
Greenwald -- not the NSA, the Obama administration, and the supine Congress
-- are the story -- a story of villainy.

The examples are endless. The day after Snowden revealed himself as the
whistleblower, Joe Scarborough, the former Republican congressman and host
of MSNBC’s *Morning Joe*, ordered his director to take the image of “that
weasel” off the screen. The other day, his sidekick, Mika Brzezinski,
asked, “Is there anything *we* can do to track him down?” (Emphasis added.)
She meant the government.

Brzezinski went on to accuse Snowden of taking the job with NSA contractor
Booz Allen Hamilton “to screw over our government.” That’s how one who
speaks power to truth spins it. Snowden’s service to the American people is
hardly undercut by his having taken the job intending to expose government
violations of the Fourth Amendment.

MSNBC’s self-identification as a progressive network is hard to square with
its unrelenting assaults on Snowden and Greenwald, and its de-emphasis of
NSA surveillance. Andrea Mitchell, who functions as the network’s chief
diplomatic stenographer, wondered why the NSA was hiring contractors when
it could be recruiting people with the “right value system” from the
military. (She’s forgotten that whistleblower Bradley Manning is in the
military.) Chris Matthews of *Hardball* says that any foreign government
that won’t turn Snowden over to the U.S. government is “no buddy of ours.”

MSNBC personnel routinely describe Greenwald as “defensive,” which
apparently is their code word for people who push back at stupid questions.
For example, when Gregory asked Greenwald if he could be indicted for
“aiding and abetting” Snowden, and Greenwald asked in return how a
journalist could equate reporting with criminal activity, he was treated
with disdain. Gregory even questioned Greenwald’s journalistic credentials,
as did Paul Farhi of the *Washington Post*.

I’ve focused on MSNBC because it has so egregiously and persistently
circled the wagons around the government. It’s an old story: TV hosts and
reporters need access to government officials, but access is jeopardized if
they antagonize those officials. Better to play it safe and sneer at
Snowden and Greenwald.

You don’t have to work for MSNBC to suck up to power. Op-ed writers from
conservative David Brooks to progressive Richard Cohen have tried to
portray Snowden as an alienated oddball, as though no one could have a
legitimate purpose in unmasking government surveillance. (Brooks thought it
relevant to write that Snowden “has not been a regular presence around his
mother’s house for years.” Really!) Pundits repeatedly refer to Snowden’s
having dropped out of high school, which apparently signals some serious
moral or mental defect in the young man. More likely he was bored with the
dull and regimented curriculum so typical of government high schools.

Others have tried to read much into Snowden’s stops in Hong Kong and
Moscow. He might be a spy, they suggest. But wouldn’t a spy have kept his
identity secret while selling his information to “the enemy”? It doesn’t
occur to the pundits that Snowden’s priority right now is to stay out of
the clutches of the U.S. government. Snowden has no moral obligation to be
a martyr. Let’s not forget how Bradley Manning has been treated for his
disclosures of government wrongdoing. He faces life imprisonment.

Snowden and Greenwald have not “aided the enemy” ­ unless the American
people are the government’s enemy. What they have done is embarrass the
Obama administration by exposing criminal activity.

For the media’s defenders of power against truth, that’s inexcusable.

 http://fff.org/explore-freedom/article/big-brother-is-the-story/

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