The Duplicity of the Media
Iraq vs. Tsunami
By MIKE WHITNEY
The American media has descended on the Asian tsunami with all the fervor of
feral animals in a meat locker. The newspapers and TV's are plastered with
bodies drifting out to sea, battered carcasses strewn along the beach and
bloated babies lying in rows. Every aspect of the suffering is being
scrutinized with microscopic intensity by the predatory lens of the media.
This is where the western press really excels; in the celebratory atmosphere
of human catastrophe. Their penchant for misery is only surpassed by their
appetite for profits.
Where was this "free press" in Iraq when the death toll was skyrocketing
towards 100,000? So far, we we,ve seen nothing of the devastation in Falluja
where more than 6,000 were killed and where corpses were lined along the
city's streets for weeks on end. Is death less photogenic in Iraq? Or, are
there political motives behind the coverage?
Wasn't Ted Koppel commenting just days ago, that the media was restricting
its coverage of Iraq to show sensitivity for the squeamishness of its
audience? He reiterated the mantra that filming dead Iraqis was "in bad
taste" and that his American audience would be repelled by such images? How
many times have we heard the same rubbish from Brokaw, Jennings and the rest
of their ilk?
Well, it looks like Koppel and the others have quickly switched directions.
The tsunami has turned into a 24 hour-a-day media frenzy of carnage and
ruin; exploring every facet of human misery in agonizing detail. The
festival of bloodshed is chugging ahead at full-throttle and it's bumping up
ratings in the process.
Corporate media never fails to astound even the most jaded viewer. Just when
it appears that they,ve hit rock-bottom, they manage to slip even deeper
into the morass of sensationalism. The manipulation of calamity is
particularly disturbing, especially when disaster is translated into a
revenue windfall. Koppel may disparage "bad taste", but his boardroom bosses
are more focused on the bottom line. Simply put, tragedy is good for
business.
When it comes to Iraq, however, the whole paradigm shifts to the right. The
dead and maimed are faithfully hidden from view. No station would dare show
a dead Marine or even an Iraqi national mutilated by an errant American
bomb. That might undermine the patriotic objectives of our mission; to
democratize the natives and enter them into the global economic system.
Besides, if Iraq was covered like the tsunami, public support would erode
more quickly than the Thai coastline, and Americans would have to buy their
oil rather than extracting it at gunpoint. What good would that do?
Looks like the media's got it right; carnage IS different in Iraq than
Thailand, Indonesia or India. The Iraqi butchery is part of a much grander
schema; a plan for conquest, subjugation and the theft of vital resources,
the foundation blocks for maintaining white privilege into the next century.
The Iraq conflict is an illustration of how the media is governed by the
political agenda of ownership. The media cherry-picks the news according to
the requirements of the investor class; dumping footage (like dead American
soldiers) that doesn't support their policies. That way, information can be
fit into the appropriate doctrinal package; one that serves corporate
interests. It's a matter of selectively excluding anything that compromises
the broader, imperial objectives. Alternatively, the coverage of the Asian
tsunami allows the media to whet the public's appetite for tragedy and feed
the macabre preoccupation with misfortune. Both tendencies are an affront to
honest journalism and to any reasonable commitment to an informed citizenry.
The uneven coverage (of Iraq and the tsunami) highlights an industry in
meltdown.
Today's privately owned media may bury one story, and yet, manipulate
another to boost ratings. They are just as likely to exploit the suffering
of Asians, while ignoring the pain of Iraqis. Neither brings us closer to
the truth. It's simply impossible to derive a coherent world view from the
purveyors of soap suds and dog food. They,re more devoted to creating a
compatible atmosphere for consumerism than conveying an objective account of
events.
We need a media that is dedicated to straightforward standards of
impartiality and excellence, not one that's rooted in commercialism,
exploitation and hyperbole.
Mike Whitney lives in Washington state. He can be reached at:
fergiewhitney@msn.com
http://www.counterpunch.com/whitney12312004.html
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