Has the right propaganda machine won?

It is a little difficult for me to believe. It is even harder for me to stomach. But it seems the Republicans have won or are winning the propaganda war in their fight against health care reform. What really upsets me is that the national media, not all, but specifically the cable news networks, have helped deliver the public opinion against the Obama administration’s attempts.

The cable news managers and other media jumping like trained dogs whenever a disruptive town hall is near will repeat that old journalistic saw: “If we piss off the right and the left, we must be doing something right.”

Well in this particular instance, you aren’t really pissing off the right.

The “Washington Post’s” E.J. Dionne, a liberal leaning columnist, reports a particularly telling encounter with a network TV stringer at a recent town hall. The freelancer tells Dionne quite frankly that if the meeting doesn’t “blow up,” then their piece doesn’t see the air.

So, if the Republican minority defeats health care reform or forces a “reform lite,” then the party can sit back and celebrate. Perhaps the GOP can then go forward with a bit more confidence and calmly plan a takeover of Congress during the midterms. Right?

Oh they will go forward. But calm doesn’t seem like the strategy.

One goes with what works. The screaming and anger and incoherence which makes people hate the thought of government health care while loving their Medicare, all of which has been accomplished through millions in Republican money and clever brainwashing will not stop.

And as long as the media — cable news especially — have what they believe to be a simple crowd pleaser such as screaming, angry, incoherent and often ignorant citizens riled up against a cause, that too will continue. Remember car chases covered by helicopters?

Where will it all end or will it end? Maybe it won’t. Perhaps it is just beginning or has been under way for some time. Think back to the previous administration and some of the techniques used today by those pulling strings behind the health care opposition.
One may see certain characteristics which were similar in style to those of a infamous autocratic leader. That leader’s psychological profile by an early U.S. intelligence agency reported:

“His primary rules were: never allow the public to cool off; never admit a fault or wrong; never concede that there may be some good in your enemy; never leave room for alternatives; never accept blame; concentrate on one enemy at a time and blame him for everything that goes wrong; people will believe a big lie sooner than a little one; and if you repeat it frequently enough people will sooner or later believe it.”

The leader, of course, was Adolf Hitler. Yes, say the right-wingers, it always comes down to Hitler. Well, yes, or Joseph Goebbels. Remember the book burning, or Kristallnacht? Such incredible media manipulation by very inferior little men.

What one sees in all the screaming and hate, besides the ignorance and the failure of some the American education system, is people with gigantic chips on their shoulders. Some may have material wealth. Some may even claim spiritual wealth.  But somewhere in that same American system that many of us so cherish, that is so cherishable, is left a gap.

It is a gap where humility is missing as is understanding. Sure, we help our neighbor when their house burns down. But if that neighbor looks a little differerent or has a little different lifestyle, well, sorry we have things to do this weekend. We can’t rebuild your house.

Wealth has made our nation great. But prosperity has also poisoned some with greed.

In the end, what do we have? We have ignorance, anger, a lack of humility and greed. We don’t want to pay taxes. We want a strong military that will nuke every little tinhorn country at the drop of a hat. We don’t want to pay taxes. We have compassion, unless it is for someone whom we think based on a whim doesn’t deserve it. We don’t want to pay taxes. We hate government, especially the federal government. But we want our military marching down the street looking sharp, shooting at any illegal coming across the border. We hate the government. We like our military pensions and VA pensions and benefits. We don’t want to pay taxes.

So perhaps I have strayed from my original thesis that the Republicans have developed a well-oiled propaganda machine that in some respects reflect those from Germany in the 1940s.

More important is to recognize that some of our quirks and characteristics are ripe for carrying that propaganda machine way beyond defeating “Obama Care.”

If that happens, can anyone say: Goebbels?

See the USA as a small-town journalist.

Sometimes I like to head for places I never been or never even heard of and see what’s making the news there. It’s not that I like to make fun of small-town news. As I have mentioned here before I was a small-town newsman. Some people might call all the papers at which I once worked small-town newspapers. Most were, although three were dailies and the last one I worked for on a full-time basis was a medium-sized newspaper. My first job, though was editor of a daily that had a circulation of about 1,200. I was chief cook and bottlewasher, as my Dad used to say.

Reporters and editors, sales people, printers, circulation managers, delivery folks, all those good salt o’ the Earth people who ply their trade for newspapers in small towns see news up close and personal. The people who are victims of car wrecks are their neighbors, people in their churches, the water rates raised by the town council affect the reporter and the editor, and of course, football ties the town together until a losing coach tears the town apart. So off we go to the hinterland and see what is happening among the salt o’ the Earth:

It’s probably not a mountain lion in Nebraska. Chris Dunker, staff writer of the “Beatrice Daily Sun” in Nebraska, gives a pretty extensive look at whether a big animal people have seen around those parts is a mountain lion, coyote or just your run-of-the-mill unidentified big-ass animal. (UBAA, I guess.)

It ain’t heavy, it’s our neighborhood moose calf. Another animal story. This you have to expect in Alaska, unless Sarah Palin is around. Then you have to expect a dead animal story. Some neighbors in Mud Bay got together to rescue a moose calf from a pond, according to the “Chilkat Valley News.” Their motto is: “Serving Haines and Klukwan since 1966.” And now the can add the lower Sabine-Neches Valley of Southeast Texas. Or not.

This might sound obscene but it’s not. You expect the quaint from Vermont. But somehow this headline from an article written by Stephanie M. Peters in the “Rutland Herald” (Oh stop it! We haven’t even made it to the headline yet,) which is: “County philatelists pull out of state fair.” Rutland was the only place I visited in Vermont. Nice place, but I wonder if the stamp enthusiasts will go to a place more hospitable to their philateling. Maybe Albany or Stockbridge.

Oh no! It’s a … it’s a … empty box. The Hoover (Alabama) police bomb squad was called to investigate a suspicious container that two men in an SUV dropped off in a Food World grocery store parking lot in Pelham, Ala. Food World employees thought the men’s activities were suspicious, as did the Pelham police chief, thus the bomb experts from the nearby bigger city (Hoover, about 70,000 people) were summoned. It turned out to be an empty storage box. There was no indication, according to the “Shelby County Reporter” in Columbiana, whether any littering charges are pending.

Finally, the police beat or blotter or whatever has long been a high-interest section of many newspapers. The little briefs vary from place-to-place. I wrote the briefs at several newspapers and I can attest to the fact they are well read. Some places, where they are still able to pull it off, have a rather humorous take on the police beat or at least a funny headline or two. People seem to get ticked off about the least little thing and since humor seems lost among the righteous bastards more and more funny will likely disappear. But as long as we can still enjoy it, have fun with the Cops brief headlines from one of my favorite newspapers (or at least with a few of my favorite newspaper folks) “The Daily Sentinel” in Nacogdoches, Texas. I will let you read the briefs your ownself.

“How is this my fault? I didn’t put the road here?”

“How I am I going to get extra mints on my pillow now?”

“Fine you can play through.”

Ah such fun. But I don’t miss counting headlines, hot wax, car wrecks at 2 p.m.  on the road next to the big oak by the Johnson’s in Podunk, writing 15 stories a week, election night pizza, school board executive sessions until 2 a.m., “Grip and Grin,” and finally, “Oh, I think I know a little about journalism. I took a journalism class in 1) high school 2) college 3) high school and college.”

But I tell you young whippah snappahs out there who aspire to greatness in journalism, think big by thinking little. If you want to learn about journalism, learn about people. If you want to learn about people, go get yourself down to Podunk, get a job as a reporter or editor of the weekly, and learn journalism. And don’t worry, you won’t starve, the Lion’s Club always got good food as does most Rotary Clubs. Conflict of Interest? Ethics violations? If you can be bought off with a chicken-fried steak, you certainly don’t need to be a journalist.

Advertisers just say no to Glenn Beck

 It is nice to see that some large corporations still respond to the wishes of the consumer.

 Several sponsors of the Fox News show “Glenn Beck” have announced they are pulling their advertisements in the wake of the host’s remarks that President Obama is racist.

 Beck, not to be confused with the one-named singer Beck, said on another Fox show that Obama is a “racist” and has a “deep-seated hatred for white people.” Obama, not be confused with an Irish bartender, replied that Beck was a “horrible basketball player” and “can’t dance for diddly.”  

  The advertisers which include Geico, Sargento, Proctor and Gamble, the Phizer pharmaceutical company, Kraft Foods and Progressive Insurance did not remove their commercials from the Fox News network. Thus the Rupert Murdoch Republican Party’s Right Wing Hate Machine network as it is also known stands to lose no money from sponsors.

 A black political coalition, ColorofChange.org, launched the drive for sponsors yanking their ads from Beck’s show. The linked “The New York Times” article describes Beck also as a “conservative radio host and comedian.” That description is itself funny because Beck has all the humor of Heinrich Himmler on a bad day.

 Speaking of concentration camps, Beck said in recent months that FEMA was building concentration camps for Republicans and other Obama opponents. The rumor was later debunked on his own show. Too bad the same can’t be done for Sarah Palin’s “Death Panels.”

"And that's the way it is."

Walter_Cronkite

Walter Leland Cronkite Jr.

           1916-2009

Legendary news broadcaster Walter Cronkite died today at the age of 92.

I have spent most of my life as a news junkie and part of that time as a journalist. Walter was perhaps one of the ultimate news people during my lifetime.

He was Uncle Walter. The “most trusted voice in America” as President Obama has just now called him in a statement.

Cronkite is another one of those folks who was born elsewhere but had the fortune to have grown up in Texas.

So many important moments of the world and of my life that I remember were reported by Walter’s authoritative voice: The killing of John F. Kennedy, Armstrong and Aldrin being the first to land on the moon, and his summary of how Vietnam was a failed American policy.

Walter was obviously no blow-dried airhead that has given TV news such a bad rep in recent years. Hopefully some day, we will be given real reporters again who also anchor the news like Walter. Some are getting there. All should strive to do better.

Did News Corp. inspire Bushies?

Here is a theory and it’s just a theory. Perhaps all the secret squirrel shenanigans perpetrated by the former Bush administration – assassination squads, wiretapping and the like – were inspired by the journalistic practices of newspapers headed by the man who exemplified that administration’s propaganda program. I’m talking about Rupert Murdoch, whose media empire News Corp. includes Fox News and the Wall Street Journal.

399px-Rupert_Murdoch_-_WEF_Davos_2007

News Corp. now finds itself in a bit of a pickle. Due to some rather aggressive and, even in the jolly old United Kingdom, somewhat illegal practices.

Britain’s The Guardian newspaper recently broke a huge scoop that News Corp’s tabloids paid out an estimated $1.6 million to settle lawsuits alleging the tabloids’ reporters used private investigators to access phone records of various English public figures. One editor was imprisoned a couple of years back, convicted of paying a private investigator to tap the phones of the royals.

British police have said they will not reopen the case. However, a review of evidence is taking place and more lawsuits against Rupert and his merry men and women are a distinct possibility.

Is it going too far to see a possible link between the Big Brother actions of Murdoch’s tabloids and the alleged illegal activity undertaken by spy agencies in the United States under the Bush administration? Perhaps. But who is to say the cheerleaders for that administration and the right wing – that being Murdoch and Fox News – didn’t inspire some ideas among Dick Cheney and the boys. Such revelations also kind of makes one wonder just how fictitious is Fox TV’s thriller “24?”