When I was growing up, my teenage mind needed to find the pieces to the
confusing, chaotic puzzle that was reality. How to make sense of all this
information that constantly was coming at me?
Part of my solution was to become a journalist, getting
right into the heart of the information barrage so that maybe I could more
easily sort it all out. The result was a love-affair with, and long career
in, journalism. Even today, I still use reporting and analyzing to help me
make my way through the world's seeming chaos.
These thoughts came to me the other day as I was reading the morning
paper. If I were a visitor from another planet, I imagined, what sense
could I make of earthling, especially American, society from what one
could read on this single day, November 11, 2005, in one hometown
newspaper -- in this case, the San Francisco Chronicle? Were there
connections, larger lessons, hidden clues that would help it all make
sense?
So here goes, one morning's newspaper seen as a political jigsaw puzzle.
Here are the pieces; let's see how they fit together with each other, and
with the information from television and the internet.
THE FRONT PAGE
The two large-headline, above-the-fold stories involved California's Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger and Fox News' larger-than-life personality Bill
O'Reilly.
A. Story: Virtually everyone, including his wife, had warned
Schwarzenegger not to call a special election, but he bulled on through,
at a cost to the state and counties of nearly $45 million. But
Schwarzenegger, having run into a brick wall with all of his
special-election measures ignominiously going down to defeat across the
state, took personal responsibility for the fiasco.
Analysis: Schwarzenegger didn't try to shift the blame and said
he'd learned valuable lessons, the main one being that the voters clearly
wanted these issues settled by the legislators and governor working
together, not by the costly initiative process outside the usual lawmaking
channels. He promised he'd work more closely with Democrats and labor
unions (nurses, teachers, firefighters, police, et al.) -- all of whom he
grievously insulted time and time again in the run-up to the election --
in solving the state's many economic and social problems. The governor
hadn't kept many of his previous commitments -- he promised not to be
beholden to special interests, not to take money from the state's
education fund without paying it back, etc. -- so we shall have to wait
and see if he keeps these new promises. But at least he owned up to his
folly.
RECKLESS HARD RIGHT IDIOCY
B. Story: Bill O'Reilly more or less encouraged Al Qaida terrorists
to attack San Francisco, because the voters last week approved
sense-of-the-city resolutions disapproving of military recruiters on
public school campuses, and against handgun ownership by civilians. Now
one can agree or disagree with the wisdom of one or both of those
measures, and of the intelligence of voters in approving them, but that's
not what O'Reilly did. He favored a more extreme option. Here's what he
said to San Franciscans on his show the other night:
"You want to be your own country? Go right ahead. And
if Al Qaida comes in here and blows you up, we're not going to do
anything about it. We're going to say, look, every other place in
America is off limits to you except San Francisco. You want to blow up
the Coit Tower? Go ahead."
Analysis: To O'Reilly, free speech, where voters
express themselves at the polls, is somehow totally illegitimate when
O'Reilly doesn't like the way they voted. Therefore and ergo, it follows
in O'Reilly's perfect logic that the city in which such thoughts are
expressed should be blown up, in this case by terrorists. The rest of
America will then turn its back on a sinful place that received its just
desserts.
And O'Reilly isn't the only HardRight conservative to express such radical
views.
Story: On Page 16, Pat Robertson, the Christian evangelical preacher,
expressed pretty much the same feelings about the voters of Dover, PA.,
who basically fired their entire board of education because they had
ordered science instructors to teach theological speculation rather than
science. The issue, of course, was whether something called "intelligent
design" theory should be taught in science classes along with Darwin's
evolutionary findings. (Teaching I.D. in philosophy or theology classes
was fine.) Here is what preacher Robertson said after the voters acted:
"I'd like to say to the good citizens of Dover: If
there is a disaster in your area, don't turn to God. You just rejected
him from your city."
Analysis: Robertson, you see, believes he speaks
for God; if you don't agree with the preacher, then clearly you're in need
of some serious Biblical smiting. If a tornado strikes Dover or if there
should be a terrorist attack on that town, you're on your own. You've
rejected The Lord. Tough love, brother.
These kinds of dumb verbal attacks -- and others like them, including
rightwing radical Ann Coulter calling liberals "traitors" who should be
taken out and shot -- normally would be ignored as the mad ravings of
political idiots. But such extreme behavior and commentary reminds us too
easily of what Nazi propagandists were saying about Jews and others in
'30s Germany, that those citizens were "vermin" or "cockroaches" who
deserved to be rounded up and slaughtered. The Nazi propagandists were
laughed at, weren't taken seriously, regarded as nutcases to be ignored.
But the laughing stopped suddenly when those making such outrageous
comments assumed power and actually were able to put into effect what they
had only talked about doing in their wild fantasies.
ON PAGE 3
Story: In China, a Beijing Communist Party official who rose to
fame last year by denouncing official corruption in a letter on the
internet was sentenced to life in prison on trumped-up corruption charges,
after a year-long campaign to silence and discredit him.
Analysis: In America, when an ambassador criticizes the regime
currently in power, he is the object of vicious political sliming and his
wife, a covert intelligence officer, has her identity revealed, thus
putting her out of work and at physical risk, along with anyone else with
whom she'd worked undercover for the past decade. Chinese communist
hardliners, Stalinist bureaucrats, Nazi tyrants, Bush&Co. bullies -- what
did we do to deserve such abominations?
ON PAGE 4
Story: Moderates in the Republican-dominated House were able to
cancel an immediate vote on the Bush Administration's budget plan, because
it included oil-drilling in the pristine Alaskan wilderness and draconian
cuts in such important safety-net social programs as Medicaid, Medicare,
food stamps, student loans, foster care, child-support enforcement and
other federal programs.
Analysis: Given the political weakness of Bush (down into the
mid-30s in recent polls), the absence of former Majority Leader Tom DeLay
(under indictment in Texas), and the gains by Democrats in last week's
elections around the country, the moderates apparently feel strong enough
to stand up to their party leaders on crucial issues. Needless to say, the
HardRight Republican leadership is not amused, and is threatening and
twisting arms big time.
ON PAGE 8
A. Story: The U.S. Supreme Court in June 2004, noting the
Constitutional requirement for habeas corpus rights for all defendants,
ruled that "enemy combatants" held by the federal government at Guantanamo
have a right to challenge their detentions in court. For a year and a
half, the Bush Administration has refused to fully enforce that ruling,
taking appeals to one court or another. A few days ago, the
Republican-dominated U.S. Senate voted to make the Supreme Court
irrelevant; if the House agrees, the time-honored concept of habeas corpus
-- which is designed so that those accused have the right to a speedy
hearing on the merits of their incarceration -- will be null and void.
Analysis: Welcome to the world of American jurisprudence in the
post-9/11 era, the operating Bush&Co. principle of which seems to be that
since "they hate us for our freedoms," we'll just eliminate the freedoms.
B. Story: Someone in the government leaked the fact that the CIA
has a series of secret prisons (so-called "black sites") in eight
countries around the world, where presumably many high-value terrorist
suspects and others are sent for, how shall we put it?, "special
processing" and somewhat "harsh" interrogations.
Analysis: Rather than investigate those revelations and the damage
those secret jails and tortures do to American prestige and national
interests around the globe -- and to our own sense of ourselves as a moral
people -- the Senate Intelligence Committee is going to investigate who
leaked the information. The usual: deflect attention away from the message
by going after the messenger.
After the Democrats closed down the Senate the other day, the Intelligence
Committee supposedly finally agreed to investigate how the Bush
Administration used the faulty intelligence provided it in taking the
country to war with Iraq -- in other words, whether Bush&Co. lied and/or
deceived us all in order to gain popular support for the upcoming war. But
committee chairman Pat Roberts (Republican), who managed to delay the
promised investigation past the 2004 election, feels OK about another
delay while they look for the leaker of the CIA secret prisons.
On Page B8, a Chronicle editorial questions not only the politically
motivated hunt for the leaker, but also the reasons for setting up secret
CIA prisons in the first place; doing so "begs the question of why our
government feels compelled to hold suspects outside the U.S. legal system
and beyond the reach of independent oversight."
Meanwhile, Dick Cheney is fighting like crazy to permit the CIA to
continue to torture suspects in U.S. custody. (This in addition to the
"black-site" gulags in Eastern Europe and elsewhere and the "extraordinary
rendition" of key suspects to countries in the Middle East and elsewhere
where the police are less squeamish about interrogation methods.) What is
it in the neo-con mind that cannot understand that torture does damage to
America's longterm national interests, alienates many populations we
should be cultivating, puts our own captured troops at added risk -- and
doesn't work anyway, since prisoners being tortured will say anything to
stop the pain and terror, including outright lies?
ON PAGE 14
Story: Ayman Nour, a leading foe of Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak, has lost his legislative seat after he and his supporters were
harassed and intimidated by Mubarak agents. Human rights groups monitoring
the recent Egyptian elections said the vote in Nour's district was marred
by vote-rigging, ballot-box stuffing and intimidation at the polls.
Analysis: In this country, there has been virtually no mainstream
media coverage of the General Accounting Office's recent report verifying
that voting anomalies in the 2004 presidential election in Ohio raise
serious concerns about the likelihood of fraud, meaning that Bush probably
didn't actually win the 2004 election.
Readers may remember when "people power" demonstrations brought down
governments in the Ukraine, Philippines and elsewhere that had assumed
power after fraudulent elections; the U.S. media, especially television,
was all over those foreign miscarriages of electoral justice. Apparently,
the U.S. media assumes that fraudulent elections never happen in America,
and reporting on the possibility of rigged vote-tallies is simply not done
by mainstream media outlets.
ON PAGE C1
Story: In California, and no doubt in other states as well, about
21% of private health-care spending goes to insurance paperwork -- close
to $26 billion per year in California alone.
Analysis: In contrast, administrative costs for our country's one
national-insurance program, Medicare, are estimated at around 2%. In other
words, if our country had some variant of Medicare as a safety-net base
for all citizens -- a national health-care system, along with your right
to see your own private physicians if you chose to -- it would be
infinitely cheaper and perhaps even better-run than most folks' current
HMOs.
ON PAGE C3
Story: Halliburton, the giant conglomerate formerly run by Dick
Cheney that has received all those no-bid government contracts in Iraq and
New Orleans, had to pay $8.6 million in fines because of violations in its
pension-plan program, including charging some costs of the company's
executive pension and bonus plans to the workers' pension fund.
Analysis: In other words, they apparently were doing some
skimming-type accounting, for which their $8.6M fine is little more than
chump change. Such is life in the corporate fast-lane.
This kind of story helps explain why large corporations -- the Enrons, the
Halliburtons, the tobacco giants, the big pharmaceuticals, the energy
industry, et al. -- are seen by many average, middle-class citizens as
gouging and greedy, not terribly interested in the welfare of ordinary
people.
Well, I could go on to stories on other pages, trenchant columns and angry
letters to the editor, further tales of outrage regarding the Bush
Administration, the revived Taliban in Afghanistan, the deteriorating
situation in Iraq and elsewhere -- but you get the idea:
There is hypocrisy, mendacity, deception, corruption at all levels of
public life -- in our business (and labor) and religious sectors, and
certainly in the Bush White House. Most of the time, government scandals
involve either money or sex. But the current scandals of our federal
government, as evidenced by just this one day's worth of news stories, are
much more serious.
In what ways are they more serious? Because tens of thousands of people
are dying or being maimed because of the lies underpinning Bush's war
policies; because a significant number of detainees in our care (and in
our name) are being humiliated, beaten, "water-boarded" and sometimes
killed as torture under Bush is now enshrined as official state policy;
because the Constitutional protections of citizens' rights, which our
genius Founding Fathers worked out carefully several hundred years ago and
which have stood us in good stead until now, have been shredded and
ignored by Bush&Co.
"ALL GOVERNMENTS LIE"
I.F. Stone's famous truism that "all governments lie," and that it's the
journalist's job to ferret out those falsehoods and alert the public, is
all the more potent today -- and, in some ways, more tragic, since the
corporate mainstream press does such a poor job of getting the facts out.
To get a better sense of how the puzzle pieces fit together, one usually
has to go not only to the "official" corporate-owned media but also to the
foreign media and to our generation's "alternative press," the internet.
Just think of major stories that probably would have continued to be
buried by the corporate media had not the progressive websites and
bloggers and alternative-media reporters not raised a hue and cry: the
Iraq-war revelations of the Downing Street Memos, Bush going AWOL from the
Air National Guard during the Vietnam War, the Government Accounting
Office's findings of electoral fraud in the 2004 election, the presence of
a non-reporter GOP shill posing as a legitimate journalist in the White
House press corps -- all of these stories were unearthed or kept alive by
internet writers and editors.
But even if you live in a small city or town -- away from the large-city
Blue states on both coasts -- I think it's still possible to glean the
truth of what's going on by learning how to properly deconstruct and
decipher the daily newspaper and TV news broadcasts. The news often is
delivered in a kind of elitist code, but it can be broken. And foreign
media and the internet are great aids in this endeavor.
If we proceed to ignore the news-behind-the-news that's out there, we wind
up as sheeple, all too willing to accept the lies, deceptions, corruptions
and incompetencies of the government temporarily in power, and letting
zealot-like rulers enact, in our case, their ruinous rightwing agendas.
Can it happen here? Not if you and I prevent it. Let's get to work.
Copyright 2005, by Bernard Weiner
Bernard Weiner, Ph.D., worked as a writer/editor with the
San Francisco Chronicle for 19 years, has taught politics and
international relations at various universities, and currently co-edits
The Crisis Papers (www.crisispapers.org). To comment, write
crisispapers@comcast.net .