LOOKING AT US FROM "OUT THERE" - Last Thoughts From The Glorious Republic; Heading Back To The USSA
Next, your notion of the important is next to be challenged. In
this larger world, the worst war is not Iraq but the ever escalating
conflict between Ethiopia and Somalia, fed by the Pentagon of course.
The worse election crisis is in Zimbabwe, not Pennsylvania. Few of the
people I spoke to at the Eurasian Media Forum here in Kazakhstan, had
any clue that there were reported electoral irregularities in the home
of the brave, much less what a super delegate or electoral vote is.
Third,
my own critique of the flaws of our media didn't resonate all that well
with folks who are living under state-dominated media and where the
President's travels is always page one.
The Moscow Times
features a report on Putin's trip to Libya on the cover and to Italy on
page 2. A culture section story is called "Rocking the Third Reich ' s
about a first novel by Ogel Nesterov on rock'n' roll in pre-war
Germany,. It reimagines the origins of Rock n' Roll through the life of
legendary German filmmaker Leni Reiftenstahl in the Berlin of the
1930's.
Back in USA Today, there's alarm about food prices
rising-73% are pissed-but the Wall Street Journal reassures with a
report that suburbanites are growing arugla in their back yards. The
International Herald Trib focuses on Farm Fortunates -ie those making
fortunes on food-while the food crisis is being used by food cartels to
press for an easing of rules in many countries against Genetically
modified crops.
STARVATION INCREASING
And behind the scenes once again are the profiteers who hope to benefit again on the misery of the many
By
Richard C. Cook: Crisis in Food Prices Threatens Worldwide Starvation: Is it Genocide?
Faced
with the global financial crisis and the collapse of mortgage-based
securities, investors are flocking to resource-based tangibles as a
hedge against recession and the decline of the U.S. dollar. Hence gold
is at record levels with oil keeping the same pace. How else to
explain, for instance, the doubling of the price of rice in Asian
markets in less than two months?
BUSH TO FAMILES LOOSING THEIR HOMES: TOUGH
A
top housing official said Thursday that the Bush administration
"strongly opposes" Democrats' housing rescue package, calling it a
bailout that would expose taxpayers to excessive risk.
Deputy
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Roy A. Bernardi also
indicated that President Bush would veto a bill sending $15 billion to
states for the purchase and rehabilitation of foreclosed properties.
The
comments, in separate letters to lawmakers, were the most forceful
rejection yet by the Bush administration of Democrats' housing aid
plans. And they were the clearest indication to date that the White
House intends to put up a vigorous fight against a bill to let the
Federal Housing Administration take on as much as $300 billion in new
mortgages for financially strapped homeowners.
They came as the
House Financial Services Committee began work on the bill by Rep.
Barney Frank, D-Mass., the panel chairman. It would substantially relax
the FHA's standards to reach struggling borrowers who otherwise would
be considered ineligible for a government-backed mortgage.
Homeowners
would have to show they could make payments on a refinanced mortgage,
and lenders would have to agree to take hefty losses on the existing
loans.
- "We're not talking here about murderers or muggers or
arsonists. We're talking about people whose misdeeds were to try too
hard to find housing for their family," Frank said. "What we hope to do
today is to diminish the cascade of foreclosures."
WHAT SHOULD BE DONE?
- "Pressure for international action to combat the "silent tsunami" of the global food crisis intensified amid warnings that spiraling prices meant more than 100 million people could be plunged into hunger.
- "A Downing Street food summit called by Gordon Brownheard calls for the World Bank and International Monetary Fund to bring forward aid payments to countries worst hit as the first step towards a co-ordinated action by the G8 industrialized nations to tackle the worst food crisis for a generation."
DEBATING OUR POLITICS
SAM SMITH: ASSESSES OBAMA IN UNDERNEWS
- "Barack
Obama has one overwhelming advantage in the race for the Democratic
nomination: he's not Hillary Clinton. Which means that in some ways -
most uncertain - things will be different than they have been under two
decades of the Bush-Clinton duopoly.
- "The Pennsylvania results,
however, show that Obama still has a long way before he translates his
advantage into a win in November. The exuberant adoration of his core
support has obscured a problem: Obama is a bit like a good opera singer
trying to make it in rock n roll. He's fine behind a podium or on a
pulpit, but give him a Philly cheese steak sandwich and he looks like
he's just been handed a turd.
- "Fact is, Obama is mostly pictured
in the media up on a platform, mostly above his audience, visually and
metaphorically. This is not all his fault but it does reflect a certain
disinterest by his manipulators in risking encounters of a more
personal sort. Obama has on a number of occasions even shown his
discomfort just hanging with the press, let alone ordinary voters. The
other day, he complained because they were asking too many questions
while he was eating a photo op waffle. After all, to do something like
that natural like, a guy's got to concentrate.
- "A black
politician who has done well with white voters recently explained that
his secret was talking with them. Nothing changes views on anything
quicker than personal experience.
- "What might have happened in
Pennsylvania if there had been fewer crowd scenes and more film clips
from conversations with a small group of white voters in ordinary homes?
- "But that isn't in the Obama play book. You can't be a prophet and humble at the same time."
STUDENT AT SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY COVERS STATE OF THE DISSECTOR TALK IN BOSTON
Renowned 'News Dissector' challenges modern reporting
By: Tara Lachapelle
While the media watch the world, people like Danny Schechter watch the media.
"What
I believe today is that our media represents the greatest risk to our
democracy," said Schechter, a two-time Emmy Award-winning television
producer who feels that his own profession is guilty of cheating its
audience.
Last Thursday, Schechter, known as the "News
Dissector," hosted a lecture and debate at the Old South Meeting House
as part of the Ford Hall Forum at Suffolk University. The Ford Hall
Forum is the nation's oldest free public lecture series and is known
for bringing some of the most controversial opinion leaders to its
podium dating as far back as the American Revolution and including
notable speakers like Janet Reno, Jesse Jackson, Alice Walker, Maya
Angelou, Winston Churchill, Thurgood Marshall, and Eleanor Roosevelt.
"I'm
here as a journalist and as a media maker, a media maven," said
Schechter, standing at the old wooden podium below a hovering
chandelier. "I'm here to talk about what I feel are some of the biggest
challenges facing our democracy, and mind you, it is not George W. Bush.
"As
much as I would like to see George W. Bush treated the way the Tories
were treated here in Boston in the aftermath of the Revolution," he
said, his main mission was to discuss the faults of modern media and
the decline in quality news.
"What I'm more concerned about
tonight is an institution, the institution that I've been part of for
many years," said Schechter, citing his work at WBCN Radio where he
launched his career, WGBH, WLVI, WCVB, CNN and ABC News where he won
his two Emmys.
"We're seeing a deterioration of an institution
that is not only in place to amuse, but it has a constitutional
responsibility in terms of a mandate of freedom of the press, a
watchdog for our great country-and that watchdog has become a lapdog,
unfortunately."
Schechter feels that the media is harming
democracy by taking a step back and neglecting to report information
crucial to American citizens.
He said that he has seen a serious tragedy within print media specifically. "Boston Globe used to stand for something," he said.
Throughout
the presentation, Schechter pondered whether major news corporations
are doing more harm than good and whether independent media can do any
better. "I support independent media," he said. "Don't support
progressive media."
According to Schechter, in the recent
democratic debate, the most trivial issues got the most attention. "We
rarely see the housing crash in the media, yet 3.5 million Americans
are facing foreclosures. We have a 50-state Katrina," he said, noting
that the debate failed to address this issue along with many other
pertinent topics that were dismissed due to political drama as Obama
was pressed to defend the words of Rev. Wright and Hillary, her
overstated dangers in her trip to Bosnia.
Schechter feels the
debate, that should have focused on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,
and the healthcare, mortgage and food crises, failed the public
viewership.
According to Schechter, only six media outlets
opposed the war and the media acted as an extension of the Bush
Administration by simply reiterating what was preached to them.
Schechter explores this and the changing ways in which Americans
receive their information in his book The Death of the Media: And the
Fight to Save Democracy.
"We need to make media more responsible and active," he said. "We can't fix America without fixing the media."
I am always pleased when a student, or anyone for that matter, seeks to make sense of my views. So thank you.
Hopefully,
other communities and colleges will be interested in finding a way to
create a forum for me on their campuses. (Admission, I like to speak
and need the money-smile).
I think I may have something to
say-at least folks here in Central Asia seem to think so. Today,
Kazakhstan, maybe tomorrow in Kansas.
Right now, this Forum
which just had a very stimulating panel on China has been having an
intense debate on the role of glamour in politics.
Most of the
discussion was about Sarkosy in France although there's been
discussions also about Putin and Castro. One speaker is saying that
glamour in politics is really about deviating from real issues, but
judging from the intensity of the discussion it is a real issue.
It's
been a very heady affair with participants from Russia, Central Asia,
Afghanistan, China, Europe and from the US of A. It was worth the trek
to discover once again that there is a global community of concerned
journalists.
Tonight, CNN throws the final party for the delegates.
And then I am out of here.