June 22, 2007
What LIberal Media?
Let's do something a bit different with
our Media Day entry this week. The following is an article that calls
for re-producing it every so often. Whenever someone hoists the old
canard about the liberal bias of the media, direct them to this
article. Or better yet, to Eric Alterman's book "What Liberal Media?'
Sure, they may choose to continue spouting the tired-and-untrue but it
will then be clear that the individual chooses to ignore reality and is
not just unaware.
What Liberal Media?
Eric Alterman
February 24, 2003
This article was adapted from Eric Alterman's
What Liberal Media? The Truth About Bias and the News (Basic), (
www.whatliberalmedia.com ).
Social scientists talk about "useful myths,"
stories we all know aren't necessarily true, but that we choose to
believe anyway because they seem to offer confirmation of what we
already know (which raises the question, If we already know it, why the
story?). Think of the wholly fictitious but illustrative story about
little George Washington and his inability to lie about that cherry
tree. For conservatives, and even many journalists, the "liberal media"
is just that--a myth, to be sure, but a useful one.
Republicans of all stripes have done quite well
for themselves during the past five decades fulminating about the
liberal cabal/progressive thought police who spin, supplant and
sometimes suppress the news we all consume. (Indeed, it's not only
conservatives who find this whipping boy to be an irresistible target.
In late 1993 Bill Clinton whined to Rolling Stone that he did not get
"one damn bit of credit from the knee-jerk liberal press.") But while
some conservatives actually believe their own grumbles, the smart ones
don't. They know mau-mauing the other side is just a good way to get
their own ideas across--or perhaps prevent the other side from getting
a fair hearing for theirs. On occasion, honest conservatives admit
this. Rich Bond, then chair of the Republican Party, complained during
the 1992 election, "I think we know who the media want to win this
election--and I don't think it's George Bush." The very same Rich Bond,
however, also noted during the very same election, "There is some
strategy to it [bashing the 'liberal' media].... If you watch any great
coach, what they try to do is 'work the refs.' Maybe the ref will cut
you a little slack on the next one."
Bond is hardly alone. That the media were biased
against the Reagan Administration is an article of faith among
Republicans. Yet James Baker, perhaps the most media-savvy of them,
owned up to the fact that any such complaint was decidedly misplaced.
"There were days and times and events we might have had some complaints
[but] on balance I don't think we had anything to complain about," he
explained to one writer. Patrick Buchanan, among the most conservative
pundits and presidential candidates in Republican history, found that
he could not identify any allegedly liberal bias against him during his
presidential candidacies. "I've gotten balanced coverage, and broad
coverage--all we could have asked. For heaven sakes, we kid about the
'liberal media,' but every Republican on earth does that," the aspiring
American ayatollah cheerfully confessed during the 1996 campaign. And
even William Kristol, without a doubt the most influential
Republican/neoconservative publicist in America today, has come clean
on this issue. "I admit it," he told a reporter. "The liberal media
were never that powerful, and the whole thing was often used as an
excuse by conservatives for conservative failures." Nevertheless,
Kristol apparently feels no compunction about exploiting and
reinforcing the ignorant prejudices of his own constituency. In a 2001
pitch to conservative potential subscribers to his Rupert
Murdoch-funded magazine, Kristol complained, "The trouble with politics
and political coverage today is that there's too much liberal bias....
There's too much tilt toward the left-wing agenda. Too much apology for
liberal policy failures. Too much pandering to liberal candidates and
causes." (It's a wonder he left out "Too much hypocrisy.")
In recent times, the right has ginned up its
"liberal media" propaganda machine. Books by both Ann Coulter and
Bernard Goldberg have topped the bestseller lists, stringing together a
series of charges so extreme that, well, it's amazing neither one
thought to accuse "liberals" of using the blood of conservatives'
children for extra flavor in their soy-milk decaf lattes.
Go here for the rest.
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