Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The site is a sister to Atlantic Free Press and Brick Ogden an American Expatriate in Amsterdam has been a key supporter of this project.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
Has Mao Become A Role Model For Our Media?
by Danny Schechter When that bible of business, the Economist magazine, put Mao Zedong on their cover in a red Santa Hat, I thought it was their way of suggesting that the Chinese Communist Party had become the new stabilizer and bearer of gifts for a western-capitalist system in distress.
Mao fought a revolution for independence from the West, which now seems to have become dependent on loans and finance from his Peoples Republic.
Mao had always preached, no investigation, no right to speak, so I investigated further to find an article inside the issue suggesting that for all his flaws like maybe 60 Million or more deaths, 30 million from famine alone Mao was inspiring.
An article on Mao and the Art of Management calls him a role model, of sorts. In
what could be read as grudging testimonial to Maos revolution, the
Economist lauds his strengths including ruthless Media manipulation.
Mao
knew not just how to make a point but how to get it out his message
was constantly reinforced its hard to distinguish from the modern
business practice of building brand value.
What? Has the Great Helmsman returned from the other side to guide us?
This
Economist article suggests that Maos media practices have also been
adopted in the US and Britain through the use of sycophantic
reporters, media management strategies and repetition.
Have
the Chicom-commisars been watching Fox News to see how Rupert Murdoch,
a big fave of the politbureau there, has marketed his own party-line
news?
And what about CNN?
Similar propaganda techniques
are driving news presentation here and there. Yes, alas, we too have
ideological correctness and sloganeering all over the media spectrum.
Consider the coverage of the Iraq warwhat there is left of it. We have all seen how it has mostly disappeared.
I
was watching CNNs Wolf Blitzer report on all the progress being made
in Iraq. No, he didnt go to a reporter in Iraq or seek out critics,
but turned instead to the CNNs Pentagon correspondent who relayed the
official view.
CNN noted (how surprising!) that the Generals
are glad the war is no longer a key issue in Presidential politics. Yet
no assessment is offered on how a fall-off in coverage is letting
politicians off the hook.
CNN reported - for the upteenth time -
that the surge is working. How many times have you heard that? This
focus assumes that the main problem is military, when everyone one who
has looked closely recognizes that stability requires an equitable
political settlement and the withdrawal of US forces.
Yes,
casualties may be down but the Washington Post reports that Iranian
influence may be more responsible than US military patrols. That story
has not seeped into much TV coverage because like Iraq before it, Iran
is now the boogie man and a target in the crosshairs of neo-cons urging
a military attack. Balanced coverage is as rare on that front as it is
from Iraq.
Conn Hallinan writes:
The narrative in the media
these days is the success of the U.S. surge, which has poured an
additional 30,000 U.S. troops into Iraq. Last month, war critic and
close ally of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, U.S. Rep. John Murtha (D-Pa),
said, I think the surge is working.
Polls indicate that
concern over the economy has replaced the war as the major issue for
voters, and, that while a majority of Americans want the troops out,
those saying that things are going better jumped from 33 percent to
just under 50 percent.
Are they going better?
Car bombings, sectarian
violence and attacks on U.S. troops are down, although 2007 has been
the deadliest year of the war for the Americans. But does the reduced
violence have anything to do with the surge?
As Patrick Cockburn
of The Independent points out, Americans and the U.S. media tend to
exaggerate the extent to which the U.S. is making the political
weather and is in control of events there.
Even as voters
express concerns about the economy, is economic coverage getting any
better? The Economist says that laudatory reporting is still the norm
here as in China.
Our media is barely keeping up with the
economys free fall. We were told Christmas shopping was setting new
records. Now we learn that it was a dud, the worst in five years. Many
business programs seem more concerned with whether CEOs will lose
their jobs than exposing the fraudulent practices they encouraged.
One
day, the Treasury Department makes news by encouraging big banks to put
up money to bail each other out. A week later, we learn that the banks
are about to chip in billions to form something called M-LEC (Master
Liquidity Enhancement Conduit). And then, as more banks take bigger
losses, the Fund is dissolved. Poof. Gone! At least thats one acronym
we can forget about.
One person wins a $151.9 million Powerball
ticket in Rhode Island and that is big news. Tens of thousands lose
their homes and its a footnote
The crisis may now be on the
radar screen of big media but the reporting remains superficial and
managed. How different is all this from the way Chinas CCTV covers
scandals involving their government?
The major media was late in
covering the mortgage crisis and let the government off the hook,
writes Dean Starkman in the Columbia Journalism Review:
it failed to
understand the crisis for what I think it really is: a regulatory
failure of mammoth proportions.
What should readers and media
consumers do to read between the often fuzzy lines between hype and
journalism? Journalist Pepe Escobar has some suggestions:
First,
he says, read the news from the bottom up and from the back of the
paper to the front, the crucial info most of the time is in the next
to last paragraph, and the story is buried in the bottom half of page
A-21.
Next, he says, seek out alternatives: My suggestion is
that readers forget about reading serious news on mainstream/corporate
media: stick to the sports and entertainment pages . In the case of
weeklies, stick to the actual reporting and forget about editorials
(well sometimes even that is impossible; in Time magazine ideology
drips from every report). The Wall Street Journal or The Economist may
carry excellent reportage, but frankly no one has to swallow as fact
Wall Street and the City of Londons wishful thinking.
In a
season when people ask, What would Jesus think? we might wonder: how
would Mao react to his new acolytes in the western press?
News
Dissector/filmmaker Danny Schechter of MediaChannel.org has written
SQUEEZED, an e-book on the economic crisis. (Download from
coldtype.net)