By Norman Solomon
Alice climbed out of the news hole. She seemed badly
shaken. "I thought Wonderland was curious indeed," she
said, "but Medialand is even more peculiar."
Responding to my quizzical look, she quickly added:
"Don't worry, I stayed away from the hookah-smoking
caterpillar, the 'Drink Me' bottle and the 'Eat Me'
cake. I did not converse with a single playing card,
dormouse or mock turtle. I was simply observant."
Alice's sudden appearance in the sunlit meadow gave me
an idea. No longer a girl, she was clearly an
intelligent woman. "Here," I said, pulling a laptop
from my briefcase, "please write about your latest
adventures." And before she could decline, I ran off.
Returning hours later, I found these words:
Oh dear, how to begin? The Hatter and the March Hare
could never match the lunacy I've just seen in
Medialand. I'd heard of people subsisting on treacle,
but the current media diet is rather more grim. I've
got half a mind to write a poem: "The Walrus and the
Journalist wondered where they'd been. / They wept
like anything to see such quantities of spin..."
It was a Friday (April 12) when the military in
Venezuela pushed out the president. On Saturday, a New
York Times front-page headline said "Venezuela's Chief
Forced to Resign," and the first of more than 30
paragraphs referred to "a sudden end to the turbulent
three-year reign of a mercurial strongman." The entire
article used the word "coup" only once -- reporting
that "Cuba called the change-over a coup."
Meanwhile, also declining to call the coup a coup, the
Times lead editorial used upbeat euphemisms to hail
it: "With yesterday's resignation of President Hugo
Chavez, Venezuelan democracy is no longer threatened
by a would-be dictator. Mr. Chavez, a ruinous
demagogue, stepped down after the military intervened
and handed power to a respected business leader." But
many Venezuelans were less pleased to see the ditching
of their constitution. In less than 48 hours, Chavez
returned to office.
The Saturday editorial by the New York Times had
asserted that the move against Venezuela's
twice-elected president was strictly an internal
matter: "Rightly, his removal was a purely Venezuelan
affair." But on Tuesday, the newspaper reported:
"Senior members of the Bush administration met several
times in recent months with leaders of a coalition
that ousted the Venezuelan president ... and agreed
with them that he should be removed from office."
In a Tuesday editorial, the Times indicated that three
days earlier it had suffered from temporary amnesia,
forgetting the transcendent virtues of democracy. Now,
in the wake of the coup's failure, the new editorial
was a bit contrite: "Mr. Chavez has been such a
divisive and demagogic leader that his forced
departure last week drew applause at home and in
Washington. That reaction, which we shared, overlooked
the undemocratic manner in which he was removed.
Forcibly unseating a democratically elected leader, no
matter how badly he has performed, is never something
to cheer."
But in Medialand, how does a democratically elected
president become a "strongman"? And when is a coup not
a coup but a "change-over"?
Well, through the looking-glass, Humpty Dumpty
provided an explanation. "When I use a word," he said,
"it means just what I choose it to mean -- neither
more nor less." When I objected that "the question is
whether you can make words mean so many different
things," his retort was brusque. "The question is," he
replied, "which is to be master -- that's all."
That perverse outlook seems to be axiomatic in
Medialand's biggest recent story. Amid all the
coverage of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, I wonder
about remarkable inconsistencies of media interest and
moral indignation.
For instance, in contrast to the highly publicized
case of John Walker Lindh, what about other Americans
who also have been moved by religious fervor to go
abroad and take up arms for a foreign government?
Relocating from homes in such areas as Brooklyn, N.Y.,
quite a few Americans went to Israel and now serve
that country's military.
This spring, no doubt, some of them have been part of
the Israeli offensive in the West Bank. It is curious
indeed that the same U.S. news outlets fascinated with
the "American Taliban" are so uninterested in
scrutinizing those Americans, who strengthen the ranks
of the Israeli armed forces as they participate in the
killing of Palestinian men and women and children.
The similarities are glaring enough to make the media
avoidance notable. Apparently certain of a supreme
being's approval, Lindh chose to enlist in holy
warfare that included the frequent taking of civilian
lives. The same is true of the numerous Americans who
now carry machine guns for Israel in the occupied
territories.
Sitting in a beautiful meadow, I wish these events
were all a fantasy, from which I might awake, with my
sister gently brushing dead leaves that had fluttered
down from the trees upon my face. But this is no
dream.
From FAIR's Media Beat
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Terbitan : 25 April 2002
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