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Playing The Game - The New Statesman Editor And Blair's 'Mistake'

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Wed, 27 Jul 2005 15:30:58 UT

" Medialens Media Alerts " <noreply

Playing The Game - The New Statesman Editor And Blair's 'Mistake'

 

 

 

 

 

MEDIA LENS: Correcting for the distorted vision of the corporate media

 

July 27, 2005

 

 

MEDIA ALERT: PLAYING THE GAME

 

The New Statesman Editor And Blair's " Mistake "

 

 

In The Service Of A Machine

 

The American philosopher Henry David Thoreau once wrote:

 

" Rather than love, than money, than fame, give me truth. I sat at a

table where were rich food and wine in abundance, and obsequious

attendance, but sincerity and truth were not; and I went away hungry

from the

inhospitable board. " (Thoreau, Walden And Civil Disobedience, Penguin,

1986, p.379)

 

How often, dear reader, do we go away hungry from the media board, and

for the same reasons? What a dismal experience it is to spend twenty

minutes leafing through a two-inch wedge of newsprint on a Saturday

morning, finding almost nothing of human interest but plenty that offends

and grates.

 

Why is the media, for all its high-tech sophistication, wealth and

power, +so+ bland, so empty, so dull?

 

The answer is that its capacity for sincerity and truth is

fundamentally compromised by the profit motive at its heart. What can

a system

based on unrestrained greed possibly have to say about a world

crucified by

greed? How can it afford to make sense, to talk about what really

matters? Does the corporate system want us inspired, enlivened,

mobilised?

Or does it want us trudging around in the same old circles of relentless

production and consumption, with the promise of satisfaction always

just up ahead, just one more purchase away?

 

The average journalist may mean well. But the average journalist is

inevitably diminished by the profit-making media Moloch, as Norman Mailer

has observed:

 

" There is an odour to any Press Headquarters that is unmistakeable...

The unavoidable smell of flesh burning quietly and slowly in the service

of a machine. " (Norman Mailer, The Time Of Our Time, Little Brown,

1998, p.457)

 

Newly retired CBS news anchor Dan Rather can now talk openly about this

moronic inferno:

 

" It's fear that keeps journalists from asking the toughest of the tough

questions. One finds oneself saying: `I know the right question, but

you know what, this is not exactly the right time to ask it.' " (Greg

Palast, `Dan Rather conks out,' Noseweek, April 2005)

 

Alas, while still inside the system, Rather infamously declared:

 

" George Bush is the president, he makes the decisions, and, you know,

as just one American, he wants me to line up, just tell me where. "

(Quoted, Howard Zinn, Terrorism and War, Seven Stories Press, 2002, p.58)

 

Anyone writing for the mainstream simply knows that certain things are

not allowed. It is as though an invisible force were cramping the mind

- we know we +can+ write this or that if we like, but we know what the

consequences will be. It takes one slip to be labelled `extreme` and

written off. A journalist friend wrote to us recently:

 

" You must see the reaction in a newsroom when one mentions Chomsky or

Pilger. They run the other way, and I can see they are afraid by the

look on their faces. Fact is that once you understand and admit what you

are doing, you can't continue with it. When I mentioned Chomsky, one

person commented, `Oh, he's way out there.' `Way out where?' I asked. "

(Email to Media Lens, July 8, 2005)

 

And there is always a long line of people willing to take our place and

to respect the boundaries ('What nonsense! No one has ever told me what

to write!'). And remember, leading commentators are paid vast sums for

doing very little. How else are they to make this kind of money? How

much better to let someone else ask the tough questions and instead seek

job security in bland observations, trivia and obfuscation.

 

Senior media figures on the mainstream `left' are where they are

because they know how to play this game. The idea is to talk a good

fight, to

elicit applause from the `left', but also quiet nods of acceptance from

the media gatekeepers, the people they are supposed to be challenging.

A key talent is to appear passionately radical while subtly indicating

that one is not 'extreme', that the rules of the media club are

accepted. The first rule of media club is: Don't talk about the inherent

contradiction of a corporate `free press'. The second rule: Rule one does

not exist. The third rule: Do not discuss the existence or non-existence

of rules one and two.

 

Our society often has minimal respect for systems of thought produced

by much older, non-Western cultures. But these philosophies often

provide acute insights into the art of being honest. How many modern

professional journalists would recognise the crucial importance of the

following advice?:

 

" As if they were stones on a narrow slippery path, you should clear

away all ideas of gain and respect, for they are the rope of the devil.

Like snot in your nose, blow out all thoughts of fame and praise, for

they serve only to beguile and confuse. " (Geshe Wangyal, The Door of

Liberation, Wisdom Books, 1995, p.88)

 

 

Signalling The Gatekeepers

 

In a high profile piece for the Guardian`s comment section, John

Kampfner, recently appointed editor of the New Statesman, sends all

the right

signals:

 

" Shortly after 9/11, I laid a wager with a colleague about when the

serious media would tire of the new seriousness. It did not take long - I

think it was a couple of weeks before the broadsheets (or whatever they

are called now) were publishing in-depth pieces about Nigella Lawson

and domestic deification. The national conversation had resumed. "

(Kampfner, `Challenge, don't emote,' The Guardian, July 26, 2005)

 

This is the kind of banter that normally fills the media sections of

newspapers, being written primarily for fellow journalists. It is

critical of the media, but not in any serious way. Poking gentle fun

at the

broadsheets as loveable rogues signals that Kampfner is `nuanced`,

`measured`, `balanced`. To focus on the tired old complaint that even the

broadsheets like to wallow in trivia is an alternative to focusing on

real

issues - the fact that the corporate media system is inherently

corrupt, irresponsible and dangerous. After all, Noam Chomsky's opening

comments on the same theme might be along these lines:

 

" A properly functioning system of indoctrination has a variety of

tasks, some rather delicate. One of its targets is the stupid and

ignorant

masses. They must be kept that way, diverted with emotionally potent

oversimplifications, marginalised and isolated. " (Chomsky, Deterring

Democracy, Hill and Wang, 1992, p.369)

 

But then Chomsky (here paraphrasing comments made by elite

intellectuals) is describing exactly the effect of Kampfner's article,

the opening

paragraph included.

 

Equally vital for success on the mainstream 'left', Kampfner declares a

passionate commitment to truth, radical challenge and change:

 

" One of the great challenges of anyone who seeks change - journalist,

politician or other - is to deal with anger and frustration, to know

when to turn up the temperature and when not... good journalism of the

left (I apply the definition in its widest `liberal' context) must always

challenge. It should never accept the status quo or take answers from

officialdom at face value. "

 

Is dealing with anger really one of the " great challenges " of anyone

seeking political change today? Or is this a banal diversion, a liberal

herring to replace serious analysis of concentrated power and the

problems it creates?

 

Kampfner insists the status quo should never be accepted at face value.

But he presents this as a kind of clarion call to " good journalism " ,

with the implicit suggestion that it might be heeded. There is no sense

whatever that Kampfner is writing about and from a fundamentally

mendacious system of media power that has evolved precisely to filter

+out+

serious challenges and good journalism. Imagine if a Soviet journalist

had written in the newspaper Pravda under Stalin: " Soviet journalism must

always challenge. It should never accept the status quo or take answers

from officialdom at face value. "

 

Would we not have considered this a sham, at best an irrelevant denial

of reality?

 

Kampfner explains the kind of challenges he has in mind:

 

" At a time of high anxiety, how should the less pliant end of the media

behave? It is easiest to define first what its role should not be -

bland reassurance. My impression of the past couple of weeks is that some

newspapers have adopted several of the characteristics of the prime

minister himself. They have known when and how to emote, to good effect.

They have allowed a combination of hubris and naivety to get the better

of rational judgment... "

 

Anyone looking for coherent argument flowing from the need to challenge

the status quo now finds themselves lost in trivia:

 

" Public transport-using readers and listeners are more open about

expressing their fears than car-driving media commentators. The stoicism

that was largely a media-political construct is already turning to

frustration. "

 

Kampfner recognises some of the achievements of the New Statesman under

his predecessor, Peter Wilby:

 

" We reported before, during and after the war the misgivings of the

senior intelligence operatives, police chiefs, military chiefs, diplomats

and politicians. This was based on evidence, not on the

anti-Americanism of which we were accused. "

 

This was mostly down to the articles written by John Pilger -

courageous and honest work surrounded on every side by media title-tattle.

 

Having declared his radical credentials, while instantly muddying the

waters, Kampfner now sends the all-important signals to the gatekeepers.

Blair's refusal to engage in a serious debate about " what went wrong in

Iraq " has prolonged the problem, he insists:

 

" Voters were not as ready to `move on' as he claimed. And yet both

sides bear their responsibilities for the dialogue of the deaf. "

 

This again communicates `nuanced' and `measured' to the people that

matter. What could be more 'balanced' than recognising the `failings' on

both sides - that is, on the side of war criminals responsible for mass

killing, and of the anti-war opponents who tried to stop them?

 

Last August, Kampfner went further still, writing in the Guardian that

" a truce " should be called over Blair's " botched war " :

 

" Blair has belatedly to acknowledge some mistakes over Iraq. His

critics should then agree, as the boss would say, to `move on`. "

(Kampfner,

`Brown blew it. So stop moaning and start talking,' The Guardian, August

23, 2004)

 

In his latest article, Kampfner says of Blair:

 

" Sure, most level-headed people around him would now privately accept

that the Iraq war was a terrible mistake, but they would ask, quite

reasonably, in which circumstances it would be justified in the future to

take military action against a sovereign state either for humanitarian

or security reasons. These debates have yet to be engaged in properly. "

 

After all the lies, all the cynicism, all the unrelenting misery and

carnage, the invasion of Iraq was a " mistake " . Not a vast crime, not an

atrocity, but a mistake. As Chomsky observed many years ago: " +their+

terror and violence are crimes, +ours+ are statecraft or understandable

error " . (Chomsky, op. cit, p.380)

 

The real issue, then, is not how on earth Blair can still be in office

rather than in jail, or what this tells us about our `democracy'. It is

not how to stop the diabolic slaughter in Iraq, how to replace the

illegal US-UK occupation with a solution acceptable to Iraqis.

Instead, the

" level-headed people " around Blair - state officials also complicit in

major war crimes - ask, " quite reasonably " , when it might be proper for

them to launch another attack in the future.

 

What could be more vital than a debate of this kind, when popular

opinion has so recently and so casually been dismissed as utterly

irrelevant

by our political masters? This from the editor of the country's premier

`left' magazine.

 

All around the country the gatekeepers will have received Kampfner's

message loud and clear.

 

 

 

SUGGESTED ACTION

 

The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and

respect for others. When writing emails to journalists, we strongly urge

readers to maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.

 

Write to John Kampfner, editor of the New Statesman

Email: john

 

Ask him why he wrote that Blair's war on Iraq is a " terrible mistake " ,

rather than a terrible crime, or a terrible atrocity.

 

Please send copies of all emails to us at:

Email: editor

 

Please send copies of all emails to us at: editor

 

This is a free service. However, financial support is vital. Please

consider donating to Media Lens: http://www.medialens.org/donate.html

 

A printer-friendly version of this alert can be found here for

approximately one week after the date at the top:

http://www.medialens.org/alerts/index.php

and then, thereafter, in our archive at:

http://www.medialens.org/alerts/archive.php

 

Visit the Media Lens website: www.medialens.org

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