Glenn Greenwald tweeted: 'Who needs the government to try to criminalize
journalism when you have David Gregory to do it?' (photo: NBC)
The Treason of the Mainstream Media
By Steve Weissman, Reader Supported News
23 July 13
For those who came of age politically with the Supreme Court's election of
George W. Bush, disdain for the mainstream media remains severe. Watching all
but a brave handful of the media fall into line to sell the Patriot Act, the
War on Terror, and Weapons of Mass destruction has left an open wound. It has
also left an entire generation with a keen understanding of how government
honchos like Dick Cheney or Barack Obama use the media to spread the leaks they
want to spread while decrying all others.
Forgive the personal comparison, but my own loss of virginity came in the
early 1960s and was far less dramatic. A former high school journalist with the
cherished nickname "Scoop," I slowly came to see The New York Times,
our national newspaper of record, systematically ignore much of the civil
rights struggle in the South, especially when it involved the more radical
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. I saw the liberal San Francisco
Chronicle lead the redbaiting attacks against our Free Speech Movement at
Berkeley. And I discovered that my family icon, the American Civil Liberties
Union, cared more about the freedom of those who owned presses than of those
pressing for social change.
Don't get me wrong. My generation saw the heroic and inspiring as well. We
watched CBS anchorman Walter Cronkite question the Vietnam War, however
belatedly he dared to do it. We read "The Pentagon Papers" and
applauded The New York Times for publishing them. We followed Woodward and
Bernstein reporting on Watergate in The Washington Post. We saw the media
challenge the power of the FBI and the CIA. We saw the good. We saw the bad. We
developed "a balanced view" of the media, and by the time of the War
on Terror , most of us did not expect anything better - or anything worse.
How wrong we were! Never in our lifetime has most of the mainstream media
sunk as low as their concerted attacks against Julian Assange and WikiLeaks,
the whistleblowers Bradley Manning and Edward Snowden, journalist Glenn
Greenwald, and the continuing revelations of our country's imperial brutality
and global surveillance. Shamelessly, the media giants have further embedded
themselves as lickspittles to those in power. Even more treacherous, they have
blatantly betrayed the most basic precepts of our profession and put our
freedom at risk.
Professor Yochai Benkler provided the details in his testimony at the
court-martial of Bradley Manning. The Israeli-born Benkler heads the Berkman
Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School and is a widely cited
expert on WikiLeaks and its evolving relationship with the mainstream media.
You can read him on our website here and here.
From early 2008, Benkler told the military tribunal, the mainstream media
portrayed WikiLeaks in a favorable light as "a new online journalistic
organization." Leading media groups went to court to defend it against an
injunction from the Swiss investment bank Julius Baer that would have shut it
down. Various newspapers publicly praised WikiLeaks for its professionalism and
its efforts to verify and authenticate the leaked documents that it published.
The highly respected Index on Censorship and Amnesty International both gave
WikiLeaks their "New Media Award."
Benkler traced this positive attitude into 2010, the year WikiLeaks and
mainstream media partners began publishing the revelations that Bradley Manning
admits to leaking. These included the horrifying video of a U.S. Apache
helicopter firing down on a Reuters camera team and nearby children in the
heart of Baghdad, military logs of the U.S. wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and
exceedingly frank U.S. diplomatic cables from all over the world.
During this period, relations began to fray as journalists at The New York
Times and The Guardian fell out with Assange, who can be an extremely difficult
person. But the big change came only after the release of the diplomatic
cables, when U.S. government officials turned their big guns on WikiLeaks.
"The response is hard to define as anything but shrill," Benkler
testified. Secretary of State Clinton described the release (in Benkler's
words) as an attack on the international community. Vice President Biden called
Assange a high tech terrorist. Congressman Steve King, the incoming chairman of
the Homeland Security Committee, called for Washington to define WikiLeaks as a
foreign terrorist organization. Senator Diane Feinstein, chair of the Senate
Intelligence Committee, called for prosecution under the Espionage Act of 1917.
And Senator Joseph Lieberman, chair of the Senate Committee on Homeland
Security, called for companies to stop providing services to WikiLeaks.
How did the mainstream media respond? According to Benkler, they joined the
government's campaign to delegitimize WikiLeaks. Bob Beckel, on Fox News,
called Assange "a traitor" and told the government to illegally shoot
the son of a bitch. William Kristol, editor of the neocon flagship The Weekly
Standard, called for a serious effort to degrade and destroy WikiLeaks. Tom
Friedman, the star columnist of The New York Times, called WikiLeaks a major threat
to the world. Bill Keller, the managing editor of the NYT who had profitably
published the news that WikiLeaks gave him, now wrote an 8,000 word essay in
which he described WikiLeaks as a secretive cabal of anti-secrecy vigilantes
and attacked Assange as badly smelling as though he hadn't bathed.
Could the tonal shift have been colder? The government wanted to make
Assange and WikiLeaks public enemy number one, and our supposedly independent
press freely produced the propaganda that Washington wanted. The Nazi Party's
Der Stürmer or the Soviet Union's Pravda and Izvestiya could not have been
slimier, more disgusting, or less professional as journalists.
We have now seen similar mainstream media sleaze against the NSA
whistleblower Edward Snowden and relative silence on the trial of Bradley
Manning. We have also seen personal
attacks on journalist Glenn Greenwald,
notably from NBC's David Gregory, The Washington Post's Walter Pincus, and even an aging Carl Bernstein, who appears to have made his peace with the dark side.
No doubt, the mainstreamers think they can maintain their access to
official newsmakers - and win official protection - by separating themselves
from those who are providing real news about the real world. But, as Benkler
shows, the government has already announced in Manning's court-martial that
they would consider an unauthorized leak to The New York Times exactly the same
as one to WikiLeaks. The Obama administration, and no doubt its successors,
Democratic or Republican, will treat all unauthorized leaks as providing
information to the enemy.
Without leakers, the prime sources on national security scoops, the
mainstream media will shrivel. But I'm willing to bet that courageous truth
tellers will continue to provide information to Internet sites willing to risk
publishing it. That's what journalists do, even if most of the mainstream media
would rather grovel for whatever scraps their masters are willing to hand them.
A veteran of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement and the New Left monthly
Ramparts, Steve Weissman lived for many years in London, working as a magazine
writer and television producer. He now lives and works in France, where he is
researching a new book, "Big Money: How Global Banks, Corporations, and
Speculators Rule and How To Break Their Hold."
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