The Liberal Media: Communist News
Networks
by Michael Arvey
Will the liberal media bias ever cease?
It's appalling how the liberal media controls not only
television, but the print media and talk radio as well.
Consider, for example, the liberal
media's refusal to air a MoveOn political advertisement during the
last Super Bowl even though they (CBS) aired Bush's ad. Furthermore,
they refused to air "The Reagans"--the Bush administration
didn't think the movie was flattering enough.
Consider ABC's parent company, Disney,
which refused to allow one of its subsidiaries to release Michael
Moore's new documentary, "Fahrenheit 911", which censures
the Bush family's relations with the royal Saudis and the bin Ladens.
What's up with this communistic media, anyway?
Consider NBC using its copyright control
to block the use of Bush TV footage in a film, "The War on
Iraq", which criticizes Bush's most recent foreign venture. Film
director and producer Robert Greenwald has asked for the footage--a
mere one-minute clip from a Meet the Press interview with Bush. In the
interview, Bush looked less than persuasive or prepared for his
responses. Greenwald's agent was told, "Unofficially, we don't
think it makes the President look good." (Could it possibly
be that the president can't make himself look good no matter how much
coaching he receives?) How do those dastardly liberals get away with
such bias and duplicity, time after time?
If the liberal media refuses to
cooperate, then we'll just have pull the plug.
Consider the 5/16/04 Meet the Press show
with Tim Russert interviewing Secretary of State Colin Powell. In the
satellite interview, Powell's State Department aide, Emily Miller,
took it upon herself to move the camera off Russert and Powell just
when as Russert was asking his final question.
Russert: "In February of 2003,
you put your enormous personal reputation on the line before the
United Nations and said that you had solid sources for the case
against Saddam Hussein...How concerned are you that some of the
information you shared with the world is now inaccurate and
discredited?" (The question is so terrible and embarrassing for
the Bush administration that one of its Meet the Thugs State
department aides takes it upon herself to save the day and shove the
camera away?) Liberal media hacks such as Russert just don't know
when to stop, do they?
Let us not ignore the liberal bias that
pours forth from former conservative, David Brock, author of Blinded
by the Right and more recently of The Republican Noise
Machine: Right-Wing Media and How It Corrupts Democracy. In a May
17, 2004 Buzzflash article, Brock spoke extensively on the media:
"Today, the most important sectors
of the political media -- most of cable TV news, the majority of
popular op-ed columns, almost all of talk radio, a substantial chunk
of the book market, and many of the most highly trafficked Web sites
-- reflect more closely the political and journalistic values of the Washington
Times than those of the New York Times.
"That
is, they are powerful propaganda organs of the Republican Party. For
our politics, this development in the media represents a structural
change: a structural advantage for the GOP and conservatism, and, I
believe, the greatest structural obstacle facing opponents of the
right wing. I therefore think it is one of the most important
political stories of the era. I have sought to tell this story in The
Republican Noise Machine: Right-Wing Media and How It Corrupts
Democracy.
"I
know there is a Republican Noise Machine because I was once part of
it. From the Washington Times, to a stint as a "research
fellow" at the Heritage Foundation (the Rights premier think
tank), to a position as an "investigative writer" at the
muckraking magazine The American Spectator, and as the author
of a best-selling right-wing book, I forwarded the right-wing agenda
not as an open political operative or advocate but under the guise of
journalism and punditry, fueled by huge sums of money from right-wing
billionaires, foundations, and self-interested corporations.
"By
the time I said good-bye to the right wing in 1997, what was once a
voice in the wilderness was drowning out competing voices across all
media channels. The most influential political commentator in America,
Rush Limbaugh, and his hundreds of imitators saturated every media
market in the country, providing 22 percent of Americans -- not only
conservatives but independent swing voters -- with their primary
source of news. Conservatives had changed the face of the cable news
business with the establishment of the top-rated FOX News Channel, a
slicker broadcast version of the Moonie Washington Times.
Pundit Ann Coulter and her fanatical ilk topped the best-seller lists,
becoming superstars in the world of political punditry. The Spectator
juggernaut -- which had a circulation of three hundred thousand per
month at its height in the early 1990s -- had been replaced by
Internet gossip Matt Drudge, who gets more than 6.5 million visitors
to his site every day. Although enormous subsidies were still being
pumped into right-wing media that did not turn a profit, right-wing
media also had become a multibillion-dollar business, a development
that powerfully affected all other commercial media.
"The
lies, smears, and vicious caricatures leveled against Bill and Hillary
Clinton by this right-wing media, and then repeated in virtually every
media venue in the country, have now been well documented, not least
in Blinded by the Right. In that book, I compared the
anti-Clinton propaganda to a virus as it seeped off the pages of the Spectator
into the minds of every sentient American. My memoir ended in 2000;
what I did not fully comprehend then, but what is apparent to me now
as I have watched the politics of the last few years unfold, is that
the virus was not Clinton-specific. In fact, it had nothing to do with
the Clintons per se; rather, in different strains, it would afflict
any and every political opponent of the right wing, including Al Gore,
Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle, and the mourners of Senator Paul
Wellstone, every major Democrat seeking the presidency in 2004, New
York Times columnist Paul Krugman, and the liberal advocacy group
MoveOn.org. What we have here, as a criminal investigator might say,
is a pattern."1
Another dirty, America-hatin',
commie traitor, wouldn't you say?
Michael Arvey (marvey.com) comments from Colorado.