Wednesday, March 15, 2006

A game without referees

By Anonymous Liberal

Yesterday I observed that "[t]he reason the John Cornyns and Bill Frists of the world are so sure [Feingold's censure resolution] will backfire on the Democrats is because they know the Democratic party, true to form, will not stand together. They're confident they can bluff their way into another disjointed, fractured vote." This is true, but there is another factor that contributes to their confidence, one that is not the fault of the Democratic party.

The other day Glenn highlighted a particularly outrageous quote from White House press secretary Scott McClellan, who--in responding to Sen. Feingold's resolution--said: "I think it does raise the question, how do you fight and win the war on terrorism? And if Democrats want to argue that we shouldn't be listening to al Qaeda communications, it's their right and we welcome the debate. We are a nation at war." This quote was included, without comment, in a Reuters article that was picked up by numerous publications. It also found its way into an article in the USA Today, the nation's most widely-read newspaper. Why is this important? Well, as Glenn points out:

This is not advocacy. This is just lying. No Democrats are advocating that we not listen to Al Qaeda communications, and Scott McClellan knows that. And no journalist ought to pass along this falsehood without pointing out that it is factually false.

What Glenn puts his finger on here is the X factor in modern politics: the sorry state of modern political reporting. The problem, as many others have pointed out before me, is that political reporters at all the major news outlets (except, of course, Fox News) rigidly adhere to what has become a painfully formulaic "balanced narrative" style of journalism. All issues are presented in a 'Republicans say X, Democrats say Y' format. This is true even when X or Y is patently absurd, or when anyone of even moderate intelligence can see right through the claims being made by one side or the other.

Journalists today are more like play-by-play announcers than referees. They no longer see it as their job to step in and call fouls, i.e., to call a lie a lie. As a result, modern politics operates more or less on the honor system, which, needless to say, only invites the dishonest and unscrupulous to make a mockery of our political discourse. When all that readers are presented with is dueling narratives, suddenly even the facts are up for grabs; the very concept of objective truth becomes increasingly elusive.

This is why Republicans believe they can frame the NSA controversy as a story about Democratic opposition to the surveillance of terrorists. They know that even blatant lies like McClellan's will be repeated by the mainstream press and, at worst, balanced by a competing quote from a leading Democrat. They know that the national media no longer has any interest in refereeing these political debates. They're content to sit back and do the play-by-play.

How did things come to be like this? Well, over the last two decades, the Republican political machine has engaged in a relentless and systematic assault on all of the institutions in our society that have traditionally served as checks on excessive partisanship. They have attacked the press, the judiciary, academia, even the very concepts of science and empiricism. Their goal has been to discredit and disable the referees, to politicize, marginalize, and co-opt any and all non-political institutions, and thereby eliminate any meaningful policing of political debate.

And they have been remarkably successful. In a relatively short period of time, conservatives have managed to convince a large segment of the population that the media, the judiciary, and even science itself cannot be trusted (often with an assist from these institutions themselves). Beyond damaging the credibility of these institutions in the eyes of many Americans, this withering assault has actually transformed the institutions themselves.

Fear of the "liberal bias" charge has effectively emasculated much of the press corps. The federal judiciary has been disproportionately stacked with conservatives and Federalist Society-types, and Republicans have repeatedly attempted to bully and intimidate the judiciary as a whole. Even our scientific and empirical knowledge has been diluted and corrupted by the spread of pseudo-science and ideologically-driven research. We've reached a point where nearly all truth is politicized. The line separating facts from spin has been hopelessly blurred, and political debate has, all too often, become a joke.

The ability of the national media (and other institutions) to act as effective referees of political discourse has been further eroded by the advent of alternative media outlets like the internet, talk radio, and cable television. As I noted in a recent post, for a talking point to gain traction and attain an aura of reasonability, it has to be repeated by a sufficient number of people, a critical mass.

In the old days, the establishment media had a virtual monopoly on political journalists and talking heads. This made it easier for the media to serve as a referee and to prevent the dissemination of patently false talking points. In the era of alternative media, however, talking points can be circulated and gain some (modest) traction without any assistance from the traditional media. And when a story gains momentum in this alternative sphere, the mainstream media outlets often feel obliged to "cover the controversy" and, in doing so, give added publicity to what are often meritless claims or spurious allegations.

Indeed, it is through this very process that conservatives introduced their most powerful idea: that the mainstream media has a consistently liberal bias. "Liberal bias" quickly became the rallying cry of the new conservative alternative media, and before long it gained significant traction. Reacting to this pressure, the mainstream media fundamentally changed the way it reported political news. Reporters were suddenly hesitant to discredit even the most bogus of conservative claims for fear of being accused of bias. This has led to an almost religious adherence to a reporting style in which accuracy is routinely sacrificed in the name of "balance," and neutrality is valued above even truth.

The Karl Roves and Scott McClellans of the world can count on almost any talking point, no matter how ludicrous, being presented to the public in a dueling narrative format--free from any independent editorial judgment. And the beauty of this strategy for conservatives is that it is self-reinforcing: the more conservatives yell "liberal bias," the more rigid the balanced format becomes.

Now, don't get me wrong; balance and neutrality are important to political reporting, particularly in a two party system like our own. But they should always be subordinate to truth.

When either side says something that is demonstrably false, journalists have an obligation to point this out and not simply leave their readers to sort through the mess on their own. The only way people are going to know which side is telling the truth is if reporters take this obligation more seriously. A demonstrably false statement should not simply be repeated without comment or balanced only by a partisan source. If journalists are uncomfortable calling a lie a lie, they should at least find neutral or non-partisan sources who are willing to do so. Citing only partisan sources all too often creates the impression that there is serious disagreement when, in reality, the facts are quite clear.

Journalists often protest that this sort lying and misdirection is "just politics as usual." But this profoundly misconceives the role that the media plays in enabling this sort of behavior. On many levels, politics is a game, and like any game, the players will adjust to the level of officiating. If the refs are unwilling to blow the whistle, the game is going to get pretty rough and dirty. But if the refs step in and start calling some fouls, the players will react accordingly, and the level of our political discourse will improve overnight.

Until that happens, however, the Scott McClellans of the world are going to continue to lie right to our faces, and unscrupulous politicians will continue to be confident that they can deflect serious allegations by baldly mischaracterizing the positions of their opponents.

20 comments:

  1. Anonymous8:55 AM

    Mr. Glenn Greenwald:

    This is the single best assessment of the state of our fourth estate I have ever read. I intend to copy it and send to my local newspaper, newspapers throughout my state, to my local television stations, to my friends and to national outlets that provide for comments. This is truth.

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  2. Anonymous8:56 AM

    Opps, sorry Anon Liberal, gave Glenn the credit but the comment stands

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  3. Anonymous9:46 AM

    I have given up on the MSM. There is more truth on this blog daily than you see in the MSM in a week.

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  4. What makes this tactic work is the diminishing capacity of the American public to follow an argument, as Paul Craig Roberts pointed out recently in Counterpunch.
    http://counterpunch.org/roberts01292006.html
    The article asks a rhetorical question:
    Why does the media enable the Bush administration to escape accountability for illegal behavior by putting false and misleading choices before the people?
    And later, gives the answer:
    What does it say for democracy that half of the American population is unable to draw a rational conclusion from unambiguous facts?
    Part of the problem is that the 30-something percent of US voters who still cling to the Bush agenda share with him a tragic intellectual trait. They egregiously make their minds up on an issue without regard for facts or logic, then assiduously filter out any truth that might contradict their preconceived opinion. Many of them were taught to think that way by their fundamentalist church leadership.

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  5. Anonymous9:58 AM

    You only left out one thing that I would like to add. What has happened in addition to all that you said is that journalists (and I use the term loosely) have traded the abililty to report honestly and point out factual lies for access. Once the WH admins figured out they could control access they had journalists by the short hairs. A journalist cannot survive without access to the source of news and WH knows it.

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  6. Anonymous10:41 AM

    I think the issue has an even more basic problem. We need to answer the question:

    Why is it, that the MSM players are all competing for a share of the 51% that voted this administration ignoring the potential to be a play maker with less effort by going after the un-serviced 49%?

    The MSM is a money machine. Supposedly in this country, it is all about the money. Yet, in this instance, the companies are ignoring that force which seems so dominate in every other decision made in this country.

    Not one news organization has gone after 49% of the population (and 60+% depending on the issue) that is not serviced. Is it really that they are afraid? I don't think so.

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  7. Anonymous10:44 AM

    Correction, for those who follow the id's of who comment here.
    xpcapmp is me.

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  8. Anonymous11:25 AM

    Keith Olbermann has pointed out, though, that MSNBC would probably be fine with his criticisms of Bush if it improved ratings. We must show the MSM that is to their advantage to court the 49%.

    Let's follow Mo's example and start bombarding the MSM with examples of true journalism while calling for honest coverage.

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  9. Anonymous11:42 AM

    A mostly true story, well worth telling again and again. That said, I think you overemphasize the role of "balance." The media are biased in favor of the Republican party. The Democrats are not given the opportunity to game the system by just making things up.

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  10. Anonymous11:45 AM

    Fantastic assessment and really nicely put. I'm sure you've seen it, but Peter Daou discusses the issue vis a vis Democratic strategy: http://daoureport.salon.com/synopsis.aspx?synopsisId=59f92c44-e7ec-48c4-91c7-b51768df79a3

    Great post.

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  11. xpcapmp:

    Not one news organization has gone after 49% of the population (and 60+% depending on the issue) that is not serviced. Is it really that they are afraid? I don't think so.

    You have to remember that most of the news organisations are just a small cog in the wheels of a big industrial machine (GE, M$, etc.). The news organisations are hardly the big money-makers, and if the operations of the news group can help the rest of the company even if "losing" money taken by themselves, the big bosses are smiling. Olberman points out the bigwigs don't like criticism of the preznit, but it wouldn't be wise to assume they would go for policies that boosted news ratings and incomes ... if the results were negative for their other operations. They think "the bottom line", not line 34 of page 3 of a spreadsheet.

    That's the base of the evil here; the conglomerates that own the media. We need new rules to make sure that the news media's only business interest is the news business. While requirign full disclosure might help, rules on ownership would do a lot more.

    Cheers,

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  12. Good analysis. The fourth estate has accepted the role of reducing reporting to a "he said, she said" by acknowledging truth does not exist, they write "stories".

    The paternalistic media monopoly days of yore are gone and have been replaced by what we see today. To discover factual reporting is a very difficult task, like trying to discover fly shit in black pepper. People really don't have that kind of time, and it becomes increasingly difficult to recognize the "truth" when you find it. Who can one trust?

    This makes the American people either apathetically cynical or divided, both of which is a win for Republicans.

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  13. Anonymous2:22 PM

    I agree with greg: it's not a simple balance where Dems could get away with lying like the rethugs do. Clinton wasn't able to get away with it. And Gore, who didn't even lie, was trashed by the MSM for any little ambiguous statement he ever made. It's very one-sided and I don't see any real solution.

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  14. quit making excuses. Wake up and call deliberate bias what it is.

    David, respectfully, it's not that simple. While there may be a few mainstream journalists who are actively trying to advance a conservative agenda, I think the number is small. I think many journalists do have personal biases that show through in their news coverage. For instance, I think many prominent journalists know politicians personally, they rub elbows on the same cocktail party circuit, and this influences their reporting. They are harsh to politicians they don't like personally (Al Gore) and easier on those they do (John McCain). This has less to do with political agendas and more to do with human pettiness.

    Second, reporters have a bias toward the sensionalistic scandals(sexual affairs) and away from the dry and complicated ones (NSA spying).

    Third, reporters are increasingly addicted to access, which makes them pull their punches sometimes. Given that all the most important people in government are Republicans at the moment, this further skews things to the right.

    And finally, I think you misundertand how "balanced" reporting works. The fact is, Republicans have shown a greater willingness in recent times to offer untrue or misleading talking points. When right-wing lies are balanced against left-wing spin, the result is a story that is heavily skewed toward the right.

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  15. Karp's code of objective journalism: "Thou shall not think for thyself, seek instead a high-ranking source."

    Aldous Huxley recognized all this almost 70 years ago.

    Mass communication, in a word, is neither good nor bad; it is simply a force and, like any other force, it can be used either well or ill. Used in one way, the press, the radio and the cinema are indispensible to the survival of democracy. Used in another way, they are among the most powerful weapons in the dictator's armory. In the field of mass communications as in almost every other field of enterprise, technological progress has hurt the Little Man and helped the Big Man. As lately as fifty years ago, every democratic country could boast a great number of small journals and local newspapers. Thousands of country editors expressed thousands of independent opinions. Somewhere or other almost anybody could get almost anything printed,. Today the press is still legally free; but most of the little papers have disappeared. The cost of wood pulp, of modern printing machinery and of syndicated news is too high for the Little Man. In the totalitarian East there is political censorship, and the media of mass communication are controlled by the State. In the democratic West there is economic censorship and the media of mass communication are controlled by members of the Power Elite. Censorship by rising costs and the concentration of communication power in the hands of a few big concerns is less objectionable than State ownership and government propaganda; but certainly it is not something of which a Jeffersonian democrat could possibly approve.

    In regard to propaganda the early advocates of universal literacy and a free press envisaged only two possibilities: the propaganda might be true, or it might be false. They did not forsee what in fact has happened, above all in our Western capitalist democracies - the development of a vast mass communications industry, concerned in the main neither with the true nor the false, but with the unreal, the more or less totally irrelevant. In a word, they failed to take into account man's almost infinite appetite for distractions.


    And twenty years before that, Upton Sinclair, in a radical critique of the press, had identified the structural problems with threaten the democratic function of the press.

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  16. Anonymous5:18 PM

    But the Rove's have figured out something that we haven't - the truth simply doesn't matter any more. What was it Macluhan said about tv as a medium? The medium is the message. People get their national news from tv. TV cannot be used to deliver a reasoned critique or message. TV delivers blinking lights and images that trigger purely emotional responses. So now you can lie with impunity because it is impossible to respond coherently with reason in a video format. That requires the written word. Thats why all the best debate is on the internet today. The problem is, we secular humanists have a problem with lying about facts. Damn.

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  17. Anonymous5:37 PM

    What we miss with the MSM is perspective. I know I sound like a broken record but we have no, no, no, no, no, international news coverage in America. We are trapped in a bubble of corporate misinformation intended to encourage consumerism. This accounts for idiots like O'Reilly and some of the "bad hair and dimples" TV preachers getting away with convincing the religious wingers that they are the victims of Christian persecution. Would that sell if Americans were able to see pictures coming out of Iraq's war torn streets, or the torture at Gitmo, or the suffering in Darfur, or the deplorable conditions in Palestine?

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  18. Anonymous8:02 PM

    What the Repulicans and the media are doing is called brainwashing. It's that simple.

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  19. Anonymous9:44 PM

    Lewis Lapham of Harper's Magazine made a similar and very cogent point on the impeachment panel discussion a couple weeks ago. He observed that the press acts as though the "separate branches of government" are the Democratic and Republican Parties, as opposed to the executive, legislative and judiciary.

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  20. Anonymous1:12 AM

    We've reached 93% of our NEW goal of 350,000 signers! (328,276)

    That is from moveon.com. I do not support this group or not support it, as I know nothing about it. However I do very much support this petition they are circulating to support Feingold's censure motion. It would seem to me that collecting 350,000 signatures in two days is reflective of a great amount of grassroots support for Feingold. I wonder how many signatures they got, over what period of time, on their Alito petition. And this present support would appear to be coming from individuals, as opposed to groups.

    I urge everyone to go there are sign the petition. It's likely that this outpouring of support as evidenced in this MoveOn petition will have to be covered by the MSM, which will be the first time stories appear that show this issue has touched a very raw nerve in the general public, even if it has not in the Democratic leadership.

    There is also a link where you can send the petition to your email lists.

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