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Guardian: Book accuses corporate media of acting as propagandists for capitalist states

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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-27-10 03:18 AM
Original message
Guardian: Book accuses corporate media of acting as propagandists for capitalist states
Book accuses corporate media of acting as propagandists for capitalist states

I have just started reading Dan Hind's book, The return of the public.* According to a quote by Rod Liddle carried in the accompanying publishers' blurb, it is "fine, lucid and sharp... worth reading before the next wave of western tanks crosses a border, somewhere in the Middle East."

I have read enough of Hind's polemic to note his assault on the corporate media for having acted on behalf of political and economic elites (examples: backing the invasion of Iraq and a failure to raise alarms ahead of the 2007 financial crash).

His argument, echoing that of Noam Chomsky, is that the media have both withheld information from the public and acted as propagandists for capitalist (and imperialist) states.

Key quote about the media: "Their failure to challenge state mendacity is as predictable as the mendacity itself."

More:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/greenslade/2010/sep/27/theindependent-financialtimes
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ejpoeta Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-27-10 05:16 AM
Response to Original message
1. the fact that they refuse to actually ask any real questions is maddening.
they let people come on and out and out LIE and they don't even ask them about it or call them on it. unless it's someone they have all decided together it seems to take down or something. they are supposed to expose our leaders and lies, but instead they are complicit.
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Turborama Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-27-10 05:56 AM
Response to Reply #1
3. I wholeheartedly agree. They are supposed to expose our leaders and lies
But instead they espouse them.

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Blue_Tires Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-27-10 02:34 PM
Response to Reply #1
6. +1
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ixion Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-27-10 05:42 AM
Response to Original message
2. The MSM acts as enablers
Edited on Mon Sep-27-10 05:42 AM by ixion
by lending credibility to bogus messaging, and supporting the status quo narrative at all costs.

In short, they are worthless, lying scumbags.
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GliderGuider Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-27-10 06:09 AM
Response to Original message
4. They are part and parcel
of the whole interlocking structure of interests that defends our current power structure. I call them the Guardians of Hierarchy:

Corporations and businesses cooperate with economic and financial institutions to set the value of work and control the money supply. In this role it doesn't make any difference whether an economy is capitalist, socialist or communist. The core beliefs it guards are always the same: ownership and growth. In our Western civilization these institutions are the pumps that move power (transfigured into wealth) away from the powerless and to the powerful.

Political institutions encode, enshrine and manage the application of social power. Politics is the institution that legitimizes all the others. Because of its unique ability to make laws and its access to legalized violence to defend them, politics is the primary self-defense mechanism of the power hierarchy of civilization. In this view it doesn't matter if the political system is democratic or authoritarian, capitalist or socialist, liberal or fascist, feudal, monarchic or dictatorial. As long as the political system can make laws and use institutionalized violence (i.e. police) to enforce them, any political system will fulfill this core function. From this point of view the differences between them are largely cosmetic. Even the differences between parties in a democratic system are a useful irrelevancy – useful to those in power by giving the powerless a calming illusion of control. Politics as a social system invariably works to the benefit of those at the tip of the power pyramid.

Legal institutions enforce the norms of the hierarchy in ways too numerous to count. These range from the protection of privilege (one law for the rich, one for the poor) to the preferential defense of property rights over human rights. Along with the police force it empowers, the legal system is the tip of the spear that keeps the power-holders safe from the powerless. In the terms of our metaphor, legal institutions maintain the integrity of the semi-permeable membrane of social class.

Religious institutions (as distinct from the religions they purport to enshrine) are primarily normative social structures. Many incorporate an overt message that we should be content with things as they are. There are often injunctions against questioning authority, as all authority is seen to devolve from the supernatural – as it has ever since the shamans of the early agricultural era. Like legal institutions, they guard the integrity of social classes, though in our civilization the role of religion has been handed over largely to the legal sphere with its more overt control mechanisms.

Educational institutions teach successive generations how the system works. It gives those at the tip of the pyramid the tools to integrate into it and manipulate it. At the same time it trains everyone involved to see the pyramid of hierarchy as the only possible way the world can work. Those who do not accede to the top of the system learn to be content that the perceived order is natural, inevitable, beneficial, and unquestionable. An interesting twist in modern education is that we are now taught that the rights of the powerful are acquired through merit rather than birth (though many PhDs have learned otherwise).

Communications media reinforce the message of the inevitability and beneficence of our social hierarchy by enlisting people in the power/growth/ownership paradigm. They do this through overt messages like advertising, covert messages embedded in the story lines of entertainment and of course the selective editing and presentation style of news programs. People who are programmed by this constant messaging come to regard any values that challenge the existing structure as incomprehensible, self-evidently absurd, dangerous or even insane.

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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-27-10 08:07 AM
Response to Original message
5. Amazon is showing that it won't be released here until next April.
I WANT THIS BOOK !!!!


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Uncle Joe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-27-10 05:18 PM
Response to Original message
7. Thanks for the tip, Judi Lynn.
I will check it out.
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