JOURNALISTIC
INTEGRITY OR CLEVER DECEPTION
The following was quoted (November 4, 2003) in a Web log by Danny
Schechter, who refers to himself as news dissector, executive editor of MediaChannel.org,
"Bill Rigby writes from Fountain Hills, Arizona:"
For anyone who has studied
the various resistance movements in Europe during WW2, the current situation
in Iraq offers amazing similarities.
The resistance fighters are labeled variously "terrorists" and
"criminals" - "bandit" will probably appear sooner or
later. The civilian population suffers for the resistance insofar as many
innocent victims are killed and injured in the repression and seeking out of
the "terrorists."
As in France and other occupied countries in WW2, there are Iraqi
"collaborators" who received the ire of the resistance. A further
parallel comes from the Bush "New World Order" as first enunciated
by Bush I that sounds ominously similar to the Hitlerian "New World
Order."
Perhaps the next measure will be the taking of hostages and shooting them
"pour encourager les autres."
What is the solution? Bush must admit the problem is beyond US capabilities
to solve short of wiping Iraq and Iraqis off the face of the earth (a
solution apparently favored to some extent by Tom DeLay whose historical
senses seems to extend to the week before last). At this point, he should
ask the Security Council to propose a solution. It is the only way out of
the morass he got the nation into. Unfortunately, Bush is a small mind in an
arrogant personality and the likelihood is virtually zero. (Incidentally, I
too missed the daily reports...)
Not "terrorists" or
"criminals" but "resistance fighters". Astute but
not too difficult an observation to make.
NOT ONCE since the intifada started in occupied Palestine has an American
journalist made a similar observation! Come now: convince me that every
American journalist has been unaware of the similarity.
What have journalists been afraid of? Certainly not Mahathir's recent
claim that "Jews control the world"! What, then, explains the
blindness of professional journalists to a "resistance movement" in
Palestine when they can see one perfectly clearly in Iraq? Could it be
that they're secretly afraid of some conspiracy to silence them even though it
doesn't exist?
Schecter's Media Channel claims to be "a media issues supersite,
featuring criticism, breaking news, and investigative reporting from hundreds
of organizations worldwide. As the media watch the world, we watch the
media." In an FAQ, Media Channel says that it "offers a
platform for provocative voices often unavailable through the mainstream
media." That suggests to me that they haven't got a political bias
and that they're aiming for journalistic integrity.
How, I wondered could they miss the reports from the Arab media that have
referred to Palestinian resistance? Which Arab media have they included
in their "hundreds of national and international affiliated sites"?
"Does MediaChannel have a political agenda?" they ask. Their answer:
"No. MediaChannel is home for a wide variety of international
perspectives. There is no unanimity of opinion among the Affiliated Sites,
though many tend to agree on two broad positions: support for freedom of
expression and the belief that media consumers are better served by a diverse
array of media outlets than by a few."
I'm meant to believe that Media Channel not only represents fair and
even-handed reporting, but that they are exemplars for the field of
journalism. I wondered what Arab media sources they were drawing from?
They have a list of "a global Internet community of 1067
organizations focused on media issues."
One of their lists features "affiliated sites" based in countries.
When I looked at the list, I found that in the Middle East, the
only country represented is Israel! Israel has four sites. They
have one site in Egypt, but that's in Africa. Nothing from Arabia!
No Palestinian media sources. Not a single media site from Jordan,
Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Oman, the UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Yemen or
Iran!
I'm going to resist the temptation to accuse Schecter and his Media Channel of
bias, but it would be interesting to see how he reconciles his stated
journalistic objectives for Media Channel with the nitty gritty of his
practical application. In short, either the objectives are a load of
hogwash or Schecter should be included in Victor Ostrovsky's* next book
on deception. Perhaps both.
*Victor Ostrovsky, ex-Mossad agent and author of two books
revealing the deceptions (By
Way of Deception
and The Other Side of Deception) practiced by Israel's intelligence
agency Mossad.
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