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I saw and heard the whole speech on the Internet and it is so dead on!
Don't miss this!

Subject: Fw: Bill Moyers slams right-wing takeover of public broadcasting


> The slam is well deserved.

>
http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/stlouiscitycounty/story/BBB15FFD38DCFFFB86257003001B326B?OpenDocument
>
> Speech at conference assails right wing
> By Michael D. Sorkin
> Of the Post-Dispatch
> 05/15/2005
>
> Bill Moyers denounced on Sunday the right wing and top officials at the
White House, saying they are trying to silence their critics by controlling
the news media.
>
> He also took aim at reporters who become little more than willing
government "stenographers." And he said the public increasingly is content
with just enough news to confirm its own biases.
>
> Moyers spoke in St. Louis at a conference on media reform. His reports
have appeared on the Public Broadcasting System since the 1970s. He was an
aide to President Lyndon Johnson and is a former newspaper publisher.
>
> Moyers said those in power - government officials and their allies in the
media - mean to stay there by punishing journalists "who tell the stories
that make princes and priests uncomfortable."
>
> Moyers described those officials as "obsessed with control" of the media.
He said they are using the government "to threaten and intimidate."
>
> Moyers answered for the first time recent charges that public television
in general and he in particular have become too liberal.
>
> Those charges are from Kenneth Tomlinson, chairman of the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting, and, in effect, Moyers' boss at the network.
>
> Tomlinson, a Republican, paid an outside consultant $10,000 to keep track
of the political leanings of guests on Moyers' show, "Now." Moyers left the
show last year but is back on public television as host of the series "Wide
Angle."
>
> Tomlinson, on the recommendation of administration officials, hired a
senior White House aide to draw up guidelines to review the content of
public radio and television broadcasts, according to a report in The New
York Times on May 2.
>
> Tomlinson has denied that he was carrying out a White House mandate.
>
> Tomlinson complained that Moyers' show was consistently critical of
Republicans and the Bush administration. He said there was a "tone deafness"
at PBS headquarters on issues of "tone and balance."
>
> Moyers said he knew his broadcasts have created a backlash in Washington.
>
> "The more compelling our journalism, the angrier became the radical right
of the Republican Party," he said.
>
> "That's because the one thing they loath more than liberals is the truth.
And the quickest way to be damned by them as liberal is to tell the truth."
>
> Moyers' speech was interrupted by standing ovations at the Conference for
Media Reform here over the weekend. More than 2,500 people attended the
three-day conference.
>
> Ernest Wilson III serves with Tomlinson on the board that oversees public
broadcasting. He said PBS outranks the Fox News Channel, CNN and all the
broadcast news networks in a survey that asked whom the public trusts.
>
> "We are, by far, the most 'fair and balanced,'" he said, a reference to
the motto of Fox News.
>
> Moyers complained that PBS' "liberal" label is undeserved.
>
> "In contrast to the conservative mantra that public television routinely
features the voices of establishment critics," he said, alternative voices
on public television are rare and usually drowned out by government and
corporate views.
>
> Moyers said that's exactly what the right wing wants.
>
> "They want your reporting to validate their belief system, and when it
doesn't God forbid."
>
> He said he always thought that the American eagle needed both a left wing
and a right wing. "But with two right wings, or two left wings, it's no
longer an eagle, and it's going to crash."
>
> Moyers said right wingers had attacked him after he closed a broadcast by
placing a flag in his lapel.
>
> It was the first time that he had worn a flag. He said he put it on to
remind himself that "not every patriot thinks we should do to the people of
Baghdad what bin Laden did to us."
>
> "The flag has been hijacked and turned into a logo, a trademark of a
monopoly on patriotism," Moyers said.
>
> Moyers had harsh words for reporters who simply recount what officials
say, without scrutinizing what they say and do.
>
> He said New York Times correspondent Judith Miller, among other reporters,
had relied on official but unnamed sources "when she served essentially as
the government's stenographer for claims that Iraq possessed weapons of mass
destruction."
>
> Moyers said he has come to understand that "news is what people want to
keep hidden and everything else is publicity."
>
> He said that kind of reporting has never been tougher to do:
>
> "Without a trace of irony, the powers that be have appropriated the news
speak vernacular of George Orwell's '1984,' giving us a program, no child
will be left behind, while cutting funds for educating disadvantaged
children.
>
> "They give us legislation calling for clear skies and healthy forests"
while "turning over public lands to the energy industry."
>
> He said the public shares the blame:
>
> "An unconscious people, an indoctrinated people, a people fed only
partisan information and opinion that confirm their own bias, a people made
morbidly obese in mind and spirit by the junk food of propaganda is less
inclined to put up a fight - ask questions and be skeptical."
>
> Moyers compared Tomlinson and other conservatives to Richard Nixon, who he
said was another president who tried to take control of public television.
>
> "I always knew Nixon would be back," Moyers said. "I just didn't know that
this time he would ask to be chairman of the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting."
>
> Moyers was a last-minute addition to the conference. He finished writing
his hourlong speech 20 minutes before he spoke. His ending was nearly
drowned out by a blaring fire alarm that went off by mistake.
>
> The conference ended Sunday, and some who attended said they were still
unsure what reforming the media means. Others said they were energized to go
home and give it a try.
>
> "It's true that no one laid out a battle plan," said Mercedes Lynn
DeUriarte, an associate journalism professor from the University of Texas at
Austin. "But everybody left understanding that we're at a critical point,
where we must find a way to protect a democratic press or risk democracy."
>
>
>
>




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