-Caveat Lector-

It is, by now, pretty much common knowledge among most of us that the
major news media can't be relied upon to keep us properly informed. This
article is primarily directed to those who are still operating under the
false belief that these sources can be trusted to tell us what is truly
happening and why. Feel free to pass this on to those who fit that
description! It is obviously not just an American malady, though we seem
to have set the standard for others to follow, not something to brag
about by any means...

goldi


How press barons, governments silence dissent


BY JOHN PILGER

10/19/03: Australian novelist Richard Flanagan was recently asked by the
Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) to read a favourite piece of
fiction on national radio and explain his reasons for the choice.

“I was unsure what fiction to read to you this morning”, he said. “If we
take the work of our most successful spinner of fictions in recent
times, [Prime Minister] John Howard, I could have read from the varied
and splendid tall tales he and his fellow storytellers have concocted ...”

Flanagan listed Howard's most famous fictions: that desperate refugees
trying to reach Australia had wilfully thrown their children overboard,
and that faraway Australia was endangered by Iraq's “weapons of
hysterical distraction”, as he put it. He followed this with part of
Molly Bloom's soliloquy from James Joyce's Ulysses, “because in our time
of lies and hate it seems appropriate to be reminded of the beauty of
saying yes to the chaos of truth”. This was duly recorded; but when the
program was broadcast, the entire preface about Howard was missing.

Flanagan accused the ABC of rank censorship. No, was the response; the
producer just didn't want “anything political”. This was followed, he
wrote, by “a moment of high comedy: would I, the producer asked, be
interested in coming on a program to discuss disillusionment in
contemporary Australia?”

In a society that once prided itself on its laconic sense of irony,
there was not a hint of it, just a managerial silence. “All around me”,
Flanagan later wrote, “I see avenues for expression closing, an odd
collusion of an ever-more cowed media and the way in which the powerful
seek to dictate what is and what isn't read and heard.”

He may well be speaking for the rest of us. The censorship in Australia
that he describes is especially virulent because Australia is a small
media pond inhabited by large sharks: a microcosm of what the British
people might expect if the current assault there on free journalism is
not challenged.

The leader of this assault is, of course, Rupert Murdoch, whose
dominance in the land of his birth is now symptomatic of his worldwide
grip. Of 12 daily newspapers in Australian capital cities, Murdoch
controls seven. Of the 10 Sunday newspapers, Murdoch has seven. In
Adelaide, he has a complete monopoly. He owns everything, including all
the printing presses. It is almost impossible to escape his augmented
team of “Pravdas”.

Like all Murdoch's newspapers, they follow the path paved with his
“interests” and his extremism. They echo the tycoon's description of US
President George Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair as “heroes”
of the Iraq invasion, and his dismissal of the blood they spilt. For
good measure, his Melbourne tabloid, the Herald Sun, invented an al
Qaeda terrorist training camp near the Victorian capital; and all his
papers promote Howard's parrot-like obsequiousness to Bush, just as they
laud Howard's racist campaign against a few thousand asylum-seekers
locked away in outback concentration camps.

Murdochism, disguised or not, is standard throughout the media he does
not control. The Melbourne Age, once a great liberal newspaper whose
journalists produced a pioneering charter of editorial independence, is
often just another purveyor of what George Orwell called “smelly little
orthodoxies”, wrapped in lifestyle supplements. Flickering beacons are
the eternally battered ABC and the visionary Special Broadcasting
Service (SBS), which was set up to serve Australia's multi-ethnic society.

The ABC is different from the BBC, its model, in one crucial respect. It
has no independent source of income but must rely on government
handouts. In Australia, political intimidation of the national
broadcaster makes Downing Street's campaign against the BBC seem almost
genteel. Howard's minister for communications, a far-right dullard
called Richard Alston, recently demanded that the ABC reply to 68 counts
of “anti-Americanism”.

Charges of “left-wing bias”, familiar in Britain and just as ridiculous,
drone out of both the Murdoch and non-Murdoch press. A Sydney Morning
Herald commentator, a local echo of the far right's “monitoring” of the
media in America, has attacked the ABC for years. With no guarantee of
financial independence, the ABC has bent to the pressure; the censorship
experienced by Flanagan is not unusual. More seriously, current affairs
investigations that might be construed as “left wing” are not
commissioned. As one well-known journalist told me: “We have a state of
fear. If you're a dissenter, you're out.”

The despair felt by many Australians about this, and the cosmetic
democracy in Canberra that it reflects, expresses itself in huge
turnouts at public meetings. More than 34,000 people attended the recent
Melbourne Writers' Festival, where, said the director, “anything
political” and “any session that allowed people to express a view” was
sold-out.

The global model for censorship by omission is the United States, which
constitutionally has the freest press in the world. In Washington,
Charles Lewis, the former CBS 60 Minutes producer who runs the Centre
for Public Integrity, told me: “Under Bush, the silence among
journalists is worse than in the 1950s. Murdoch is the most influential
media mogul in America; he sets the standard, and there is no public
discussion about it. Why do 70% of the American public believe Saddam
Hussein was behind the attacks of 9/11? Because the media's constant
echoing of the government guarantees it. Without the complicity of
journalists, Bush would never have attacked Iraq.”

Harnessing journalism and reducing it to the “spokesman's spokesman”, a
branch of corporate and government public relations, is the hidden
agenda of the new media deregulators. In the US, the Federal
Communications Commission (run by US Secretary of State Colin Powell's
son) is finally to deregulate television so that Murdoch's Fox Channel
and four other conglomerates can control 90% of the terrestrial and
cable audience. That is the spectre in Britain too, with a Blairite
placeman now overseeing public service broadcasting in the new
commercial deregulator, Oftel, which has a remit to follow the US
“market” path. The next step is to end the television licence fee that
funds the BBC and reduce it to a version of its Australian prodigy. That
is Blair's agenda.

The genesis for this — and for the current Blair-Murdoch campaign
against the BBC's independence — can be traced back to 1995, when
Murdoch flew the Blairs first-class to Hayman Island, off the Queensland
coast. In the tropical sunshine and standing at the blue News Corp
lectern, the future British prime minister waxed lyrical about his “new
moral purpose in politics” and pledged himself to hand over the media to
the “enterprise” of those like his host, who applauded him warmly.

The next day, satire died again when Murdoch's British Sun commented:
“Mr Blair has vision, he has purpose and he speaks our language on
morality and family life.”

[From http://www.johnpilger.com]

Reposted at http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article5013.htm

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