Tim Russert vs. Harry Browne
by Johnny Kramer
by Johnny Kramer
DIGG THIS
Like everyone
else, I was shocked and saddened by the sudden, unexpected death
of Tim Russert, moderator of NBC’s Meet the Press program
since 1991, last Friday at the too-young age of 58. Meet the Press
is television’s longest-running show, having debuted in 1947, and
Russert was its longest-serving host.
He was cut
down far too soon by the same insidious, previously-asymptomatic,
sudden cardiac death that was at least similar to what also claimed,
among others, Bing Crosby in 1977; our own Murray Rothbard in 1995;
and John Ritter in 2003. According to coverage of Russert’s passing,
three-hundred thousand Americans suffer sudden cardiac death each
year, taken from their loved ones with no warning and no previous
signs or symptoms.
While it’s
a terrible shock for the family and friends, apparently it’s an
ideal way to go for the person who dies. On the June 16 episode
of CNN’s Larry King Live, Dr. Mehmet Oz, New York cardiac
thoracic surgeon, responded to the question of whether Russert suffered
with, "I suspect he did not have much pain because as soon
as you develop fibrillation, within seconds you pass out. From that
perspective, it's the way I'd like to pass away, but I would rather
do it when I'm 90."
Symbiosis
Predictably,
Russert was lauded by the entire political and media establishment
for his career: for being an icon; for being impartial; for not
being afraid to ask tough questions.
In my last
column,
I wrote that politics at high levels of government basically consists
of a symbiotic relationship between politicians, bureaucrats, and
journalists and the ruling elite, where the politicians, bureaucrats,
and journalists earn higher incomes than they could elsewhere on
the market through voluntary trade (and receive other perks which,
depending on what they’re after, include things like celebrity;
prestige; influence; and indulging their control-freak personalities
by forcibly running others’ lives), in exchange for perpetuating
the system (such as the military-industrial complex, the pharmaceutical-industrial
complex, and the Federal Reserve) by which the elite profit at the
expense of the average person.
Perhaps nobody
profited from that relationship more than Tim Russert. The very
fact that the establishment media is praising him – and that he
reigned over a mainstream, influential program like Meet the
Press for 17 years, is proof that the praise of what a great
journalist he was is false. As Lew Rockwell quipped, rather than
asking tough questions of politicians, Russert acted more like their
butler or valet.
Any LRC reader
who’s been around since last year remembers how Russert treated
Ron Paul last Dec., when he had him as a guest, after ignoring him
all year, only when Ron’s popularity grew to the point that he could
no longer be ignored. Instead of mixing in the usual softball questions,
he pelted Ron with rapid-fire questions for 30 straight minutes,
sometimes not even letting Ron finish answering one question before
interrupting him with the next. He rarely (if ever) looked Ron in
the eye. He cast Ron’s advocacy for amending the constitution as
being inconsistent for a constitutionalist. When Ron called the
so-called Civil War unnecessary, Russert claimed we’d still have
slavery without it. In short, Ron was treated quite differently
than most of Russert’s guests.
What some newer
LRC readers may not know is that something like that happened before.
"I
resent the question."
Harry Browne,
nominee of the Libertarian Party in 2000, was (also reluctantly)
invited by Russert to be on Meet the Press that year – which,
to the best of my knowledge, is the first time, before or since,
that the LP candidate has appeared on the program.
With all of
this talk about Russert the past few days, I couldn't resist digging
up my tape and revisiting what happened.
First, the
background information: Russert gave third-party candidates Ralph
Nader of the Green Party and Pat Buchanan of the Reform Party each
an entire half-hour segment on Meet the Press earlier in
2000.
Like Ron Paul
in 2007–2008, Harry had received literally 12% as much mainstream
media coverage in 19992000 as the major candidates, and Lexxus-Nexxus
reported at one point late in 2000 that Buchanan had received 60
times more coverage than Browne that year, and Nader had received
80 times more. Browne also had about $2 million to spend, while
Buchanan had $12 million – partially because Buchanan accepted the
federal matching funds the party had earned from Perot’s 1996 showing,
while Browne refused what he had earned from 1996, although it was
significantly less than Buchanan’s amount.
Despite all
of those disadvantages, Harry was the most popular candidate on
the Internet that year (which admittedly meant less in 2000 than
it does now) and – more importantly – was tied or above Buchanan
(who always polled lower than Nader) in almost every major poll
all year. By Sept., Harry was not only at least tied with Buchanan
nationwide (depending on the poll), but he was out-polling both
Nader and Buchanan in several states, and was also polling higher
than the margin of error between Bush and Gore in several states.
During an Oct.
edition of Meet the Press, Russert announced that he was
holding a third-party debate on the program the following Sunday
between Nader and Buchanan.
Given his accomplishments
that year, Harry set out to discover why he hadn’t been invited
too, which he described thusly in his campaign
journal, which was sent regularly throughout the year to about
30,000 subscribers, "This morning the campaign released an
email on LibertyWire, telling supporters that we've been rebuffed
by Meet the Press. The program has scheduled a debate for
this Sunday between Ralph Nader and Pat Buchanan, and didn't include
me. When Jim Babka, our very able press secretary, called Meet
the Press to plead our case, he was rebuffed by the show's producer
– who said it just wasn't ‘in the cards’ that I would ever be on
the show, even though I'm running even with Buchanan in the polls.
When Jim asked what we had to do to qualify to be on the show, she
said she resented the question.
"Our email
message asked people to blitz the show with emails and phone calls,
requesting my presence. The first day at least 600 emails reached
the show, and the phone calls overloaded the voice mail system.
"On top of
that, a week ago Tim Russert was on C-SPAN's Washington Journal.
During the show, Brian Lamb mentioned that C-SPAN had received over
150 emails from viewers wanting to ask Tim Russert why he didn't
have me on his show. He gave the usual lame explanation that they
couldn't have all 255 registered presidential candidates on, and
so they focused on the two with the most support. Then a caller
pointed out that only seven candidates were on enough state ballots
to win, and that I had as much support as Buchanan does."
That was a
shockingly dishonest answer by Russert, and no one in his position
could possibly be that stupid: Yes, there were about 250 presidential
candidates officially recognized by the FEC in 2000, which meant
only that they had filed the necessary paperwork. But only 15 of
those were on the ballot in even one state; only five besides Bush
and Gore were on enough ballots to mathematically be able to win
the Electoral College; and Browne was on 49 state ballots – more
than any other third-party candidate.
Harry continued,
"Apparently, the powers-that-be decided to throw in the towel –
sort of. Two days later, the producer called Jim Babka and invited
me on the show. But instead of having a half-hour to myself, as
Nader and Buchanan have each had during the campaign, and instead
of being on with Nader and/or Buchanan, I would be on with Howard
Phillips and John Hagelin. This allows Meet the Press to
say they've given me a platform, while at the same time making the
point that I'm in the bottom tier of candidates – making their decision
to have Buchanan and Nader on alone seem justified.
"So here I
am. Although I've done two debates with Hagelin and Phillips this
year, this is the first show that's treated me as one of three lower-level
candidates – something that happened regularly in 1996."
Harry didn’t
mention that Hagelin and Phillips, with whom he was forced to share
his time, were each polling at 0.1–0.2%, while, again, he was polling
1–2% nationally – at least tied with Buchanan, and 3–5% – in third
place behind Bush and Gore, in some individual states. (I’m not
arguing against Russert having Hagelin and Phillips as guests; in
fact, as presidential candidates who were on enough state ballots
to mathematically be able to win the Electoral College, he should
have. The point is that Browne clearly had much more support than
them, and if he was going to be lumped together with anyone, it
should’ve been with Nader and Buchanan.)
What follows
is a transcript of Harry’s appearance on Meet the Press on
Oct. 22, 2000. While not all of Russert’s questions were hostile
or misleading, some of the questions show how misleading he could
be, and I’ve included them all for completeness and because Harry
was so magnificent. The segment was 19 minutes; as with Ron Paul
last year, there were no commercials. I didn’t watch it with a stopwatch,
but it seemed like the time was roughly divided equally between
the three candidates. If that’s accurate, then Harry got less than
seven minutes – about one-third of what Buchanan and Nader got if
their segments had commercials and less than one-fourth if theirs
didn’t (which is more likely).
RUSSERT: "This
is from your party brochure: ' . . . widespread gun ownership will
make neighborhoods safer.'
'It's time
to re-legalize drugs and let people take responsibility for themselves.'
"Some Americans
watching that will step back and say, 'Is he really for gun-toting
people roaming the streets providing free drugs for everyone?' "
BROWNE: "Well,
we have gun-toting people roaming the streets; they're called criminals.
They have no regard for gun laws whatsoever. They don't buy their
guns in ways that involve background checks, or registration, or
licensing, or any of these things. Those gun laws apply only to
you, and me, and to other innocent citizens. I want to live in a
neighborhood where a criminal has to fear that somebody in the neighborhood
owns a gun when he starts deciding which house he's going to break
into.
"As far as
the drug laws are concerned, before we had drug laws in America,
we didn't have the widespread drug problems we have today, because
the pharmaceutical companies ran the drug business – not criminal
gangs in the inner cities. All the Drug War has brought us is widespread
drug use, with gangs preying upon children at schools; all the Drug
War has brought us is a hundred or two-hundred thousand innocent
people in prison who have no business there, making it impossible
to keep the murders, rapists and child-molesters in prison, so they
get out on early release and plea-bargains."
RUSSERT (interrupting):
"So if anybody wanted heroin, or speed, or marijuana, they could
have it?"
BROWNE: "When
it was perfectly legal for a child to walk into a store and buy
heroin, children didn't walk into stores and buy heroin, because
number one: it wasn't forbidden fruit; and number two: nobody was
preying upon them in schools; they no interest in it whatsoever.
Bayer sold heroin in this country as a pain-reliever and sedative.
It was perfectly safe. But once it was turned over to criminals,
it became a very dangerous drug – just as bathtub gin was a very
dangerous drug in the 1920s, when gin was illegal. Prohibition doesn't
work, it has never worked; all it does is tear our country apart,
and we have got to end it. If I'm elected president somehow, on
my first day in office, I will pardon unconditionally everyone who's
in federal prison on a non-violent drug offense."
RUSSERT: "The
defense budget is about $290 billion a year. How much would you
spend?"
BROWNE: "About
$50 billion a year could defend this country better than it does
now. But we would not have the gigantic national offense. We would
not have the ability to annihilate other countries. We would not
have the ability to meddle in other countries' affairs, and we would
not be putting your children at risk of fighting and dying in a
foreign war, or terrorists attacking your city. We would be the
beacon of liberty for the entire world, and not the world's policeman."
"We have a
$1.8 trillion government. Government at all levels is taking nearly
half the national income. It's meddling in your bank account. It's
monitoring your e-mail. And the question people need to ask is,
'Do you want smaller government?' And if you want smaller government,
all of these grand proposals to reform our schools, to reform our
healthcare system, are not going to work, and you know they're not
going to work. And you know that we're not going to be able to close
the borders, that people are going to get into this country no matter
what the government does; the government hasn't kept drugs out,
it hasn't stamped out poverty – "
RUSSERT (interrupting):
"So open up the borders to immigration completely?"
BROWNE: "The
borders are open! Why is it so hard for people to understand
that anyone who wants to get into this country today gets into this
country?"
RUSSERT (interrupting
again): "And anyone who is here illegally you would make a citizen?"
BROWNE: "I
don't care whether or not they're citizens; what I care about is
that, if we do have programs to close the borders, once again it
will affect you more than it will affect the immigrants.
They will make you carry an identity card. You will
be stopped by policemen and asked to prove that you are a citizen.
Your employer will be sanctioned for inadvertently letting
an illegal immigrant go to work in your company. It will not keep
the immigrants out, but it will be one more nail in the coffin of
freedom in the United States for American citizens."
"The answer
is to shut down the welfare state. Shut down the welfare state,
and people will filter themselves out. They will only come here
for the land of opportunity. If we leave the welfare state intact
but close the borders, then we're going to have less freedoms in
the United States, and we're still going to have a welfare state,
and we're still going to have big government, and were still going
to have government prying into every aspect of our lives, as we
do now. The answer is to reduce government. We never solve problems
through government. We haven't solved the education problem. We
haven't solved the healthcare problem. We haven't solved the drug
problem. We haven't solved the poverty problem. We haven't solved
any of these problems. What makes anybody think that now we're going
to close the borders and we're going to solve the immigration problem?"
RUSSERT: "Mr.
Browne, abortion?"
BROWNE: "I
want to abide by the constitution. The federal government has no
business legislating on common crimes of any kind; there should
be no federal laws against murder, rape, hate crimes, discrimination,
any of these things, because law enforcement was meant to be a state
and local function. And what we need to do is to get the federal
government completely out of this question; it should not subsidize
abortions; it should not outlaw abortions; this should be left to
the states, and people can gravitate to the states that they find
most compatible."
RUSSERT (addressing
the wasted vote question): "Mr. Browne, would it make a difference
to a libertarian if either George Bush or Al Gore was president?"
BROWNE: "No.
You know, I know, everybody watching this show knows that four years
from today, whichever of them is elected, government will be bigger,
more expensive, more obtrusive, and more oppressive. If you vote
Republican or Democrat, you are giving up. You’re saying ‘I’m never
going to be free. America will never be a free country again. I
will never get smaller government. So I’m just going to vote for
the one I think will take me to hell at the slowest-possible rate.’"
It’s perfectly
legitimate for Russert to challenge anyone, including Harry, on
his views – although, had Harry been on for 30 minutes, Russert
would’ve had time to engage in more of a conversation and make sure
none of his questions sounded too hostile or one-sided – had Russert
wanted to do that.
But to be the
great journalist his memorials purport him to be, he would’ve had
to similarly play Devil’s Advocate with all of his guests. When
does anyone remember Russert ever challenging a statist, establishment
politician not on their personal inconsistencies; nor with trivial,
contradictory evidence to their views; but with fundamental questions
about their support for, and the legitimacy of, things like the
Drug War; the income tax (or having a federal government the size
it was at the time he was conducting the interview, regardless of
how it was funded); Social Security; the military-industrial complex;
the pharmaceutical-industrial complex; the Federal Reserve; etc.?
To ask the question is to answer it.
The assertions
about Russert doing thorough homework on each guest, looking for
inconsistencies; and about him not appearing partisan in favor of
either Republicans or Democrats, are true to the best of my knowledge.
But they’re also not very important; the appearance of two parties
is an illusion, and grilling a certain candidate or politician on
previous inconsistencies may call into question the integrity or
consistency of that particular person, but it doesn’t raise fundamental
questions about the system. That allowed Russert to maintain the
illusion of being a "tough interviewer" while no more
fundamentally challenging the system, which his career was built
on perpetuating, than any other journalist.
Harry wrote
about his appearance in his campaign journal, "When the show
ends, for some reason all four of us remain seated at the table
on the set. A waiter brings in orange juice and several selections
of food. Russert starts eating and there's some small talk. I decide
to light into Russert, asking him ‘So why didn't you have me on
with Nader and Buchanan – knowing that I had as much support as
Buchanan?’
"In the
give and take that follows, I get the expected responses from Russert:
‘You're here now, aren't you?’ ‘We can't have five guests on at
once.’ (Courtesy restrains me from saying that he knows and I know
that Phillips and Hagelin don't count.) ‘I'm the only Sunday host
who's given any attention to third parties.’ And so on.
"I say
he's overlooking the one authentic man-bites-dog story of this campaign.
A celebrity candidate, Pat Buchanan, has received $16 million in
taxpayer money and wide press coverage, while a complete unknown
who turned down federal money and has about 1/50 the press coverage
is running even with him in the polls. Isn't that news? Russert
says it is, and that's why I'm here. (It isn't why I'm here; if
it were, he would have said something about it on the air.)
"Finally,
I ask him why he doesn't point out publicly that the only reason
America seems to be a two-party country is because the two parties
in power have maintained that power by using the force of government
to impose ballot-access laws, limit campaign donations, raid the
government treasury to run their campaigns, and exempt the Debate
Commission from campaign and income-tax laws so it can promote the
politics of the two main parties. Russert agrees whole-heartedly
but doesn't answer my question as to why he never points this out
on the air.
"I tell
him that I bear no hard feelings but that I'm baffled as to how
Meet the Press makes its decisions regarding what is news."
I’m not: Harry
Browne raised fundamental questions about the system. Russert’s
job as an establishment gatekeeper was to distract people with trivialities;
personal foibles of individual candidates; and the phony right-left,
Republican-Democrat paradigm; and to make sure that views like Browne’s
never got a mainstream hearing. When, as happened with Ron Paul
last year, Harry proved to have enough support to cajole Russert
into having him as a guest, Russert’s job then was to give him as
little time as possible, make him seem as fringe as possible, and
make him and his views seem as nutty and disreputable as possible.
Tim Russert:
1950–2008
Personally,
Tim Russert seemed like a genuinely good guy. Numerous anecdotes
poured in about how often he would call or send a card to someone
he barely knew, just because he heard they were having problems.
He undoubtedly did much good in his personal life, and he sounds
like the kind of person I would’ve liked to have as a friend. He
seemed to care a lot about his family, and especially seemed to
watch closely day-to-day over his elderly father, "Big Russ,"
of whom he wrote and spoke frequently and fondly. My heart aches
for his friends, co-workers, and especially his family, who had
their loved one snatched from them with no warning, far too young,
and without a chance to say goodbye.
But
professionally, he was not a "great journalist," because
a great journalist searches for the truth and asks fundamental questions
about the status-quo. He was successful at rebuilding Meet the
Press into the highest-rated Sunday morning news program. He
was successful at becoming a celebrity and making a lot of money.
In short, he was a successful media animal. But his very tenure
at an establishment mouthpiece like Meet the Press is
de facto evidence of his real professional legacy, of which this
article’s transcript, and the gushing tributes this week from establishment
politicians and journalists, are further proof: Tim Russert was
a shill for the state and the power elite who control it.
Even so, all
condolences to everyone who knew and cared about him, and may his
soul rest in peace.
June
19, 2008
Johnny Kramer
[send him mail]
holds a BA in journalism from Wichita State University. He is one
of the authors of the first-ever biography of Ron Paul, Ron
Paul: A Better Way, which will be released in Fall 2008 by Variant
Press. For more information on his work, or to hire him as a writer,
editor, or to speak at your next event, please visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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