Beyond Boston and Media Reform for 2012:  Supposed “End of Times”  
Should Marshal a New Beginning for Media Democracy in Action
By Mickey Huff

        “Reformers who are always compromising, have not yet grasped the idea  
that truth is the only safe ground to stand upon.” –Elizabeth Cady  
Stanton


As we approach the prophetic and supposed media hyped end-of-times  
year of 2012, hysterical speculation will abound.  But the ubiquitous  
corporate media don’t seem to notice that We the People of these  
United States already stand at our own precipice– the potential end of  
what has been deemed the Great American Experiment, the institutional  
embodiment of human freedom protected by government of, by, and for  
the people.
        Of course, for many, the promises of equality and democracy that lie  
therein may never have existed in the history of the United States.   
Certainly, racism, sexism, classism, and imperialism, have all played  
the role of antagonist to said promises.  However, America’s founding  
documents were particularly rife with rhetorical flourishes that were  
supportive of liberty, freedom of expression, the pursuit of  
happiness– all of which actually sprouted many social and political  
movements that changed American culture by striving toward those  
founding principles, achieving them in varying degrees.  In this  
regard, America has succeeded in realizing the essence of some of its  
promises.  But in reality, the US, in historical terms, has fallen  
short in myriad ways across the demographic spectrum and that trend is  
not abating.  This is in large part due to American’s reliance on  
reform over revolutionary ideals and action as tools for change.
        Arguably, the root of these aforementioned problems within democracy,  
beyond exclusion or manipulation of the franchise, chiefly resides in  
the controlling of public information and education, and access to it.  
Thomas Jefferson once offered a possible solution to these issues when  
he wrote, “The functionaries of every government have propensities to  
command at will the liberty and property of their constituents. There  
is no safe deposit for these but with the people themselves, nor can  
they be safe with them without information. Where the press is free,  
and every man able to read, all is safe.”  The focus then is to  
achieve a truly free press and a literate citizenry in maintenance of  
democratic government.  More timely, this was purportedly the focus of  
the organizers and A-list participants of the National Conference on  
Media Reform this past weekend in the historic (once revolutionary?)  
city of Boston.  However, these reformers have also fallen short of  
achieving this goal.
        We the people should go straight to the root of our problems with  
media, which means taking a radical approach in dealing with the  
current problems of our supposed free press to ensure that all are, as  
Jefferson put it, safe.  For starters, we should move well beyond  
reformist calls for attenuating institutional dials, changing a few  
metaphorical channels, or appointing new FCC commissioners.  This has  
not worked.  The root of democracy is with the people, in education,  
in literacy, in media awareness, and the path to change comes from the  
people, not the president.  That we move beyond a reform ethos  
concentrated on elite media control must be agreed upon by all those  
aware of the problem in order for real change to take place.  And  
while moving beyond reform, we cannot succumb to “hope and change we  
can believe in,” which was promised, yet never delivered after the  
2008 election where many reformers focused great efforts to no avail.  
These eventual outcomes of reform serve to create a subculture of  
acceptance in defeat, living to fight again…in another four years.   
That is a long game.  And we have played it for a long time.  It is  
true that reforms play a role in radical changes, though they are  
stepladders to paradigmatic changes. The time to unite, face reality,  
and act to rebuild a new and relevant democracy on the foundation of a  
truly free press is upon us as we are in dire straights as a country,  
as a world.
        Like falling empires of old, the US today is mired in multi-front,  
unilateral wars and is engaging in new ones ongoing while living well  
beyond its means at home; ignoring domestic affairs when not outright  
waging internal wars against those who actually expect elected and  
appointed officials to live up to our founding Enlightenment  
principles.   These current so-called “wars on terror” have cost over  
$3 trillion to date and occupy a great deal of time of political  
leaders.  All the while, the US boasts record declines in middle and  
working class incomes and opportunities; a jobless “recovery” in the  
wake of the economic collapse of 2008 (caused in large part by the  
biggest banks on Wall Street which subsequently were not held  
accountable and instead bailed out at taxpayer expense); a crumbling  
infrastructure; failing schools (including public and private  
charter); abysmal records on access and quality of healthcare given  
the overall wealth and technological prowess of the country; rising  
infant mortality rates; increasing homelessness; skyrocketing  
foreclosures; collapse of community development and non-profit support  
systems; faulty elections procedures; the use of torture abroad and at  
home; the list goes on and on.
        Last but not least, we suffer a hyperreal condition as a society,  
spurred on by fearful, factless, and feckless news programming by the  
nation’s supposed leading journalistic outlets.  This is why most  
people in America do not seem to notice the inevitable descent.   
America is so disconnected that even while individuals may suffer in  
large numbers they lack a collective adhesive in a modern media  
landscape.  They erroneously believe they suffer alone, and thanks to  
corporate media propaganda, are often afraid of the wrong things.   
Yet, a truly free press should help build and protect democracy for  
the people, not destroy it.
        All this is taking place in what appears to be absolute decline  
across the board for most Americans as the upper few percent of the  
population control most of the nation’s wealth.  A real free press  
would tell us to forget the GDP and focus on community building and  
works programs, not abstract market fluctuations.  America is a debtor  
nation and has not made much outside of weapons and related  
technologies accompanied by military industrial media complex  
propaganda/advertising for years– all masquerading as official foreign  
policy and the “news.”  The US government, along with this massive  
military industrial complex, has now armed the world to the teeth to  
justify a permanent warfare state.      
        America, its government of and by corporations over the people, is  
now locked in a self-created, last-ditch effort to occupy the nether  
regions of oil, industrial capitalism’s dwindling lifeblood.  The US  
forces the rest of the world to trade on the dollar to maintain global  
hegemony, funding its expansion of over a thousand military bases in  
over 130 countries.  Meanwhile, China, Russia, and several South  
American countries, are already operating outside this monetary  
imposition, which as the late scholar and author of the Blowback  
trilogy Chalmers Johnson argued, is what would spell the end of  
American empire– fiscal bankruptcy.  The collapse of the dollar would  
hasten that.  Indeed, that time draws nigh as the cry for austerity  
from ostentatious leaders rings hollow across the land.
        But again, don’t expect the so-called mainstream media to explain all  
this to the public.  After all, according to the mainstream media in  
the US (in actuality, it is the corporate media, but the term  
“mainstream” is used so often people tend to forget it is not so  
mainstream) there are teachers to blame and public workers to vilify,  
and there is an ever ready supply of immigrant populations to enslave  
or deport as well as exotic lands Americans can’t find on a map to  
invade in efforts to rout evildoers that supposedly cause our current  
calamities.  And if that’s too much to handle, big media in the US can  
intersperse a steady diet of junk food news where Americans can  
vicariously feast on celebrity gossip and sport spectacles ranging  
from Charlie Sheen and Dancing With the Stars to the Super Bowl and  
March Madness in hopes that the problems we all face in the real world  
will simply just go away.
        These are the same issues many in the media reform movement also  
decry, and rightfully so.  Reform efforts have been laudable.  But the  
solutions reformers offer mostly seem to involve “fixing the system”  
by focusing on influence of advertisers or regulating ownership (which  
to date have not achieved reformer objectives).  Other reformers want  
the government to step in to “fix the system” by creating a public  
media, without noting government has played a big role in the current  
problem and even while public media is under attack by Congress, PBS  
and NPR have hardly stood out in major ways to challenge the  
plutocracy in the name of the people.
        These reform notions do not go to the root of the problem, they do  
not map out a radical solution.  And, despite reformers’ benevolent  
instincts and intentions, don’t always expect reformers that criticize  
the big media messengers’ behaviors to realize that the system they  
spend so much time trying to repair is now defunct, if it ever existed  
in any democratically functional means in the first place.  This is  
why we, the media literate citizens of this dying republic, must now  
move beyond reform to create a new way.
        We need to be the media in word and deed, not lobby those in power to  
reform their own current establishment megaphones for their own power  
elite agendas, as that will not happen, and indeed, it has not in the  
past.  In order to achieve real change, we need not have elaborate  
conferences that rely on power elite voices, their foundation monies,  
and their apologetic reformist rhetoric.  In the words of 19th century  
American activist Elizabeth Cady Stanton, we need to embody the true  
change she channeled when she said, “Reformers who are always  
compromising have not yet grasped the idea that truth is the only safe  
ground to stand upon.”  Indeed.
        The time to speak truth to power, to media power elites and their  
political allies, is now.  Media reform is an important movement, but  
it should not be seen as the only path to create a more just and  
democratic media system.  More radical approaches are needed at this  
point.  So just say no to reform driven agendas delivered as so much  
managed news propaganda and embrace the possibilities of a radical  
media democracy in action, of, by, and for the people.  Show it with  
actions through citizen journalism and support of local and  
independent, non-corporate, community media.   Do it after the reform  
spectacle of vicarious deference to power and celebrity is over in  
Boston this year, as the real change only begins with true, radical  
action at home.  That’s the only way a truly free press can be  
created, preserved, and grown to be a tool of the people and not the  
reformers with their unrequited overtures to the media power elite.   
The time to act is now.  We may not have time enough for the next  
reform conference to save us.

Mickey Huff is Director of Project Censored, on the board of directors  
for the Media Freedom Foundation, and Associate Professor of History  
at Diablo Valley College in the San Francisco Bay Area.  Contact: 
mic...@projectcensored.org 
  and pe...@projectcensored.org

===========================
Suggested Reading:

See “Truth Emergency Meets Media Reform” by Peter Phillips, Mickey  
Huff, et al, in chapter 11 of Peter Phillips and Andrew Roth, eds,  
Censored 2009, NY, Seven Stories Press, 2008, pp. 281-295.





[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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