The Media As Enablers of Government Lies
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
Recently
by James Bovard: Eight
Years of Big Lies on Afghanistan
Why do politicians
so easily get away with telling lies? In large part, because the
news media are more interested in bonding with politicians than
in exposing them. Americans are encouraged to believe that the media
will serve as a check and a balance on the government. Instead,
the press too often volunteer as unpaid pimps, helping politicians
deceive the public.
In 1936, New
York Times White House correspondent Turner Catledge said that
President Roosevelts first instinct was always to lie.
But the Washington press corps covered up Roosevelts dishonesty
almost as thoroughly as they hid his use of a wheelchair in daily
life.
President Bill
Clinton benefited from a press corps that often treated his falsehoods
as nonevents or even petty triumphs. Newsweek White House
correspondent Howard Fineman commented that Clintons great
strength is his insincerity.... Ive decided Bill Clinton is
at his most genuine when hes the most phony.... We know he
doesnt mean what he says.
Flora Lewis,
a New York Times columnist, writing three weeks before 9/11,
commented in a review of a book on U.S. government lies on the Vietnam
War, There will probably never be a return to the discretion,
really collusion, with which the media used to treat presidents,
and it is just as well. But within months of her comment,
the media had proven itself as craven as ever. The Washington Posts
Dana Milbank, who did some of the best exposés of George
W. Bushs falsehoods in his first term, noted that it was not
until July 2002 that the White House press corps showed its
teeth in response to administration deceptions. Even the exposés
of FBI and CIA intelligence failures in May 2002 did not end the
phase of alliance between the White House and the press,
as political scientist Martha Kumar observed.
Deference to
the government is now the trademark of the American media
at least at times when the truth could have the greatest impact.
The media were grossly negligent in failing to question or examine
Bushs claims on the road to war. When journalists dug up the
truth, editors sometimes ignored or buried their reports. Washington
Post Pentagon correspondent Thomas Ricks complained that, in
the lead-up to the U.S. invasion of Iraq, There was an attitude
among editors: Look, were going to war; why do we even
worry about all this contrary stuff? New York Times
White House correspondent Elisabeth Bumiller explained the presss
conduct at a Bush press conference just before he invaded Iraq:
I think we were very deferential because ... nobody wanted
to get into an argument with the president at this very serious
time.
After the war
started, the falsehood of Bushs claims was often treated as
a one-day story, buried in the back of the front section or on the
editorial page. Afterward, most papers quickly returned to printing
the presidents proclamations as gospel. Eric Alterman, author
of When
Presidents Lie, observed,
Virtually
every major news media outlet devoted more attention to the lies
and dissimulations of one New York Times reporter, Jayson
Blair, than to those of the president and vice president of the
United States regarding Iraq. Given that these two deceptions
took place virtually simultaneously, they demonstrate that while
some forms of deliberate deception remain intolerable in public
life, those of the U.S. commander in chief are not among them.
Docility
The medias
docility to the Bush administration repeated the pattern established
during the first Gulf War (and during much of the Vietnam War).
Chris Hedges, who covered the 199091 Gulf War for the New
York Times, later explained, The notion that the press
was used in the war is incorrect. The press wanted to be used. It
saw itself as part of the war effort. Hedges noted that journalists
were eager to be of service to the State, which made
it easier to do what governments do in wartime, indeed what governments
do much of the time, and that is lie.
Far from being
irate about presidential lies, the media often enjoy sharing a laugh
with the commander in chief over such technical inaccuracies. On
March 24, 2004, President Bush performed a skit for those attending
the Radio and Television Correspondents annual dinner in which
he showed slides of himself crawling around his office peaking behind
curtains while he quipped to the crowd, Those weapons of mass
destruction have got to be somewhere.... Nope, no weapons over there
.
Maybe under here?
Bushs
comic bit got one of the biggest laughs of the night. The Washington
Post Style section hailed the evenings performance with
a headline George Bush, Entertainer in Chief.
The media dignitaries made no fuss over the comments until
a mini-firestorm erupted a few days later, spurred by criticism
by Democrats and soldiers who had fought in Iraq. Greg Mitchell,
the editor of Editor and Publisher, labeled the presss
reaction as one of the most shameful episodes in the recent
history of the American media, and presidency.
The character
of the Washington press corps also shone bright in its nonresponse
to the Downing Street Memo. On May 1, 2005, the London Times
printed a memo from a British cabinet meeting on July 23, 2002,
that reported the findings of the visit by Britains intelligence
chief to Washington to confer with CIA chief George Tenet and other
top Bush administration officials. The memo quoted the intelligence
chief:
Military
action was now seen as inevitable. Bush wanted to remove Saddam,
through military action, justified by the conjunction of terrorism
and WMD. But the intelligence and facts were being fixed around
the policy.
The fact that
the top level of the British government was aware that the Bush
administration was fixing i.e., manipulating and contriving
intelligence and facts to justify going to war was a bombshell
in the United Kingdom. The decision to fix facts was
illustrated by the torrent of false accusations and statements that
Bush and his top officials made against Iraq in the following months.
Throughout 2002, Bush continued to say that he had hoped to avoid
going to war with Saddam. In his State of the Union address in late
January 2003 and in his subsequent speeches, he talked about the
United States as a victim, repeatedly asserting that if war
is forced upon us, we will fight. Bush had long since decided
to attack, regardless of how many UN weapons inspectors Saddam permitted
to roam Iraq.
Yet the memo
was almost completely ignored by the American mainstream media for
the first month after its publication in Britain. As Salon columnist
Joe Conason commented, To judge by their responses, the leading
lights of the Washington press corps are more embarrassed than the
White House is by the revelations in the Downing Street memo.
Deceit has
become ritualized in U.S. foreign policy. From 2002 onwards, the
White House Iraq Group spewed out false information that the New
York Times and other prominent media outlets routinely accepted
without criticism or verification. After many of the assertions
were later discovered to be false, the White House and much of the
media treated the falsehoods as irrelevant to the legitimacy of
the U.S. invasion. The lack of attention paid to political lies
is itself symptomatic of the bias in favor of submitting to rulers
regardless of how much people are defrauded.
Katrina
Hurricane Katrina
provided an opportunity for the media to ritually renounce their
own servility. As the nonresponse and pervasive debacle became undeniable
and the death count soared to more than a thousand, many talking
heads pointed out the governments failures and
proudly showed their indignation. A New York Times headline
summed up the broadcast medias change in tone: Reporters
Turn From Deference to Outrage. One BBC commentator observed,
Amidst the horror, American broadcast journalism just might
have grown its spine back, thanks to Katrina, which he suggested
could provide an antidote to the timid and self-censoring
journalistic culture that is no match for the masterfully aggressive
spin-surgeons of the Bush administration. NBC Nightly News
anchor Brian Williams explained, By dint of the fact that
our country was hit [in 2001] weve offered a preponderance
of the benefit of the doubt [to the government] over the past couple
[sic] of years. Perhaps ... this is the story that brings a healthy
amount of cynicism back to a news media known for it. But
such periodic affirmations of independence are as credible as an
alcoholic who, regaining consciousness after tumbling down the stairs,
piously announces the end of his boozing days. There will be other
bottles and other stairs.
The pursuit
of respectability in Washington usually entails acquiescing to government
lies. Many if not most members of the Washington press corps are
government dependents. Few Washington journalists have the will
to expose government lies. That would require placing one in an
explicitly adversarial position to the government. It is not that
the typical journalist is intentionally covering up government lies,
but that his radar is not set to detect such occurrences. Lies rarely
register in Washington journalists minds because they are
usually supplicants for government information, not dogged pursuers
of the truth. Raising troublesome questions will not help you get
any silver platter stories.
The
vast majority of the media docilely repeated Bushs claims
through most of his presidency. Television networks very likely
devoted a hundred times as much air time to peddling government
falsehoods as they did to exposing them. The constant barrage of
falsehood drowns out the occasional blips of truth. The government
only needs the number of people who recognize its lies to be small
enough that its latest power play will not be thwarted. The goal
is not to prevent well-informed citizens from being nauseated or
disgusted by the presidents lies. Instead, it is to neutralize
the mass reaction to presidential falsehoods, even those that have
catastrophic consequences.
If Americans
wish to retain the remnants of their liberty, they cannot trust
the media to warn them about government tyranny. In order to recognize
government deceit, there is no substitute for more citizens to make
more effort to find the truth for themselves.
November
6, 2009
James Bovard
[send him mail] is the author
of the just-released Attention
Deficit Democracy, The
Bush Betrayal, and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil. He serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2009 Future of Freedom Foundation
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