home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: news.demon.co.uk!dispatch.news.demon.net!demon!netcom.net.uk!news2.noc.netcom.net!noc.netcom.net!ixnews1.ix.netcom.com!ix.netcom.com!ix.netcom.com!news-res.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!nntp.coast.net!chi-news.cic.net!newsxfer2.itd.umich.edu!agate!boulder!hugger
- From: hugger@gonzo.Colorado.EDU ()
- Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo
- Subject: Mind Control and the Growing Media Monopolies
- Date: 22 Jun 1996 21:45:44 GMT
- Organization: ACRONYM Enterprises
- Lines: 149
- Message-ID: <4qhpi8$25i@lace.colorado.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: gonzo.colorado.edu
-
- Found at: http://boulder.earthnet.net:80/~bweditor/060696/coverst.html
-
- MIND CONTROL,
- THE OCTOPUS' TENTACLES.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- by JOEL DYER
-
- It's estimated that by the time a child in the U.S. has reached the age of
- six, he will have spent more time watching TV, movies and video games than
- he'll spend interacting with his father during a lifetime. In other words,
- the way we think is shaped more by the creators and dispensers of such
- information than by our system of education or even by our families.
-
- We now know that a wide range of behaviors - from how we vote to how we
- treat each other (i.e., violence, racism, discrimination) - are greatly
- influenced, and thereby at least partially determined, by these streams of
- information.
-
- It was with this in mind that I and 700-plus members of the alternative
- media gathered at the first Media & Democracy Congress last March in San
- Francisco. It was the consensus of those in attendance that the ongoing
- consolidation of media ownership is the greatest current threat to democracy
- and culture.
-
- Media have always had a substantial influence on our society. But in the
- past we were exposed to an unlimited variety of views. For every big-money
- corporate influence that entered our lives there was a blue-collar version
- to provide at least some balance. This is no longer the case. Take for
- instance the nightly news.
-
- Reporters, including TV newscasters, were once our first line of defense
- against those who sought to limit, control or manipulate our freedoms. When
- the Standard Oils of the world monopolized an area of commerce, journalists
- were there to expose them - consequently bringing about antitrust actions
- that benefited all of us. When corporate giants bought too much power over
- our elected officials, we read and heard about it in the news. When we went
- to war the news media questioned why and aided society in counting the
- costs. Not so today.
-
- These days the news media are just another tool used by powerful
- corporations to circumvent the laws designed to protect the citizenry from
- the hardships we experience when monopolies go unchecked.
-
- Even now our food supply is virtually controlled by only eight companies and
- that number grows smaller every year. But don't expect to hear about it in
- the mainstream press. How could NBC, a mere cog in the General Electric
- machine, or CBS, the house organ for parent company Westinghouse, point a
- finger at other monopolies without drawing attention to themselves? Now that
- Disney has bought ABC we've seen a drop in stories that could cause negative
- publicity for the entertainment giant. However, the positive news coverage
- of Disney ventures, such as its theme parks, has skyrocketed. Even CNN, the
- most powerful news network in the world, became nothing more than a monopoly
- patsy after Turner Broadcasting was purchased by Time Warner.
-
- How can journalists at these major news networks be watchdogs over the
- defense industry that now signs their million dollar paychecks? How can they
- report effectively on influence peddling and politics when they are
- subsidiaries of the largest participants in the ongoing fire sale of
- American government?
-
- There are countless examples of our decaying media infrastructure. For
- instance, where has our national skepticism and fear of the nuclear industry
- gone? It's just another casualty of the sin of omission. We don't hear about
- the nuclear industry because it's controlled by the owners of the network
- news - primarily General Electric and Westinghouse.
-
- So why aren't today's "watchdogs for the people" up in arms - those supposed
- caretakers of the common man like Rush Limbaugh and Pat Robertson? Simple.
- Limbaugh's TV show belongs to Gannet/Multimedia, and Robertson's Family
- Channel is partly owned by TCI.
-
- This is nothing new. Our current antitrust laws only came into being because
- they were championed by reformist monthlies such as McClure's at the turn of
- the century. The industrialists of that day handled those pesky muckraking
- magazines the same way today's corporate giants handle media; they bought
- them and forced them to stop reporting on monopolies.
-
- In 1994, Advertising Age reported that corporations spent a staggering $150
- billion on national advertising. So how much influence does that buy?
- Hopefully, for corporations, enough to destroy the validity of mainstream
- journalism. What the corporate monopolies have forgotten is that we, the
- public, aren't stupid.
-
- When Disney forced the journalists of ABC's Day One to apologize to major
- advertiser Phillip Morris - which buys its TV influence through its
- subsidiary, Kraft Foods - Americans knew that the show's report about the
- tobacco giant's manipulation of nicotine in cigarettes was accurate and were
- outraged by Disney's kowtowing.
-
- Again, when Westinghouse forced the CBS journalists at 60 Minutes to kill an
- interview with Jeffrey Wigand - the former employee of tobacco manipulators
- Brown & Williamson - we were further angered.
-
- Unfortunately, this buying and destroying of the press isn't limited to the
- news networks. Daily newspapers have fallen prey to the trusts of Gannett,
- E.W. Scripps, Times Mirror and Knight-Ridder. Just ask the striking (not to
- be confused with scab) reporters at the once highly regarded Detroit Free
- Press what they think of being owned by Knight-Ridder. They'll tell you
- tales of a paper concerned only with profit and appeasing advertisers. And
- why not? Knight-Ridder isn't a part of any community. They have no
- obligation to anything except the bottom line. They, like the other chains,
- are a profit-driven venture whose only loyalty is to the stockholder.
- Newsroom cutbacks remain a top priority for Knight-Ridder Chairman & CEO P.
- Anthony Ridder. As a reward for turning good papers into highly profitable,
- low budget, wire service dailies, CEO Ridder made $1.1 million in total
- compensation last year according to American Journalism Review's June issue.
- So how does this affect communities with chained-owned papers, communities
- like Boulder? It's not so much what you read, but rather what you never see.
- Hard to do, and therefore expensive, investigative stories simply don't get
- done. And negative coverage of large advertisers is rare if at all. The
- profits go up as the news goes down. First rate reporters are relegated to
- the role of glorified typist. Communities with chain-owned papers have lost
- their best defense against government bureaucracies, corporate polluters and
- the like.
-
- But perhaps there's a silver lining to all this tainted monopoly news. In
- this month's The Nation, Johns Hopkins University's Mark Crispin Miller
- speculates that "some good seems also to have come out of this annus
- horribilis of big waivers, big mergers, big layoffs and big lies. Suddenly
- the risks of media monopoly are now apparent not just to the usual uptight
- minority of activists and scholars but, more and more, to everyone. People
- want to know what's going on, and what to do about it. The time has
- therefore come to free the media by creating a new, broad-based movement
- dedicated to this all important mission: antitrust."
-
- It was with the hope of helping to strengthen this "all important mission"
- that I and other editors at the Media & Democracy Congress decided to share
- our research in order to provide as much information on this subject as
- possible to our readers.
-
- I still remember the disbelief I felt in March when Miller handed me a copy
- of his media consolidation maps for the first time. They were roughly drawn
- on copy paper and they were, without a doubt, one of the most terrifying
- things I had ever seen. There were no words of explanation on the paper,
- they weren't needed. It was clear from the diagrams what was at stake -
- everything.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- for information on page sponsorships of the Boulder Weekly site, e-mail:
- bweditor@tesser.com
-
- Boulder Weekly home page
- Dear Weekly, mail to: bweditor@tesser.com
- Back Issues
- About Boulder Weekly
- Altnews home page
- Boulder Community Net
- copyright 1996 Boulder Weekly, Inc.
-