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Most people would agree that our world has changed
dramatically over the past year. In the eye of our immediate political
tornado is a growing drum beat for an invasion of Iraq, rampant corporate
corruption, the erosion of civil liberties, a crashing stock market, pedophile
priests and the anniversary of 9/11, the most traumatic American news
event in at least 50 years.
Into this twister drops Project Censoreds
picks for news stories most ignored in 2001. These stories, most from
a year or more ago, would have seemed more relevant if the juggernaut
of recent history had not transformed our political landscape. And what
seemed undercovered in 2001 is, in many cases, front and center today.
Still, the Project Censored list released in
late August from its headquarters in Northern Californias Sonoma
State University campus, serves as a fascinating chronicle of recent political
history. The stories the students and faculty have put forward (ranked
by a team of progressive celebrity judges who read the top 25) certainly
have the ring of familiarity media ownership concentration, the
privatization of water, death squads in Columbia, the Bush family and
bin Laden, inhumane sanctions in Iraq, the return of nukes, the privatization
of education, the negative effects of NAFTA, the housing crisis in the
U.S. and CIA shenanigans in Macedonia.
One might ask, would any well-informed person
consider these stories in any way "censored"? But that would
be missing Project Censoreds point, says project director Peter
Phillips: "We define censorship as any interference with the free
flow of information in American Society," he says. "Corporate
media in the United States is interested primarily in entertainment news
to feed their bottom-line priorities. Very important news stories that
should reach the American public often fall on the cutting room floor
to be replaced by sex scandals and celebrity updates."
Phillips broad definition of censorship
includes the fact that these stories often emerge and disappear only to
lurk below the surface, often for months or years, before being noticed
by our less-than-fearless corporate media. Today, in 2002, some of the
stories that made it onto Project Censoreds list are getting a lot
of exposure: The topic of the No. 2 story by Maude Barlow, the chilling
trend toward the privatization of global water resources, was recently
featured in a four-part series in The New York Times.
A striking feature of this years lineup
is that several of the inclusions come from British sources, including
The Guardian of London, and The Ecologist, where Barlows
story appeared. Over the years, but particularly since 9/11, many domestic
media mavens know that they cant get a full picture of international
news without regularly reading the Guardian, the Independent
and checking in with BBC radio and TV. In fact, one of the media success
stories of 2002 is Greg Palasts book, The Best Democracy Money
Can Buy, which is selling briskly in the United States. Palast, an
American writing in Britain, is one of the authors of the No. 4 story
(also from the Guardian), about the Bush administrations
ties to the Saudis and the bin Laden family.
Its useful to keep in mind that the media,
as much as any other institution, reflects a certain reality of the public.
A University of Washington report cited by A. Clay Thompson found that
post-9/11 media coverage became a virtual showcase for traditional American
values and overwhelmingly "shifted blame away from the U.S., emphasized
the U.S. role as the only superpower on the international stage and demonized
the enemy."
But lately, the media has established a toehold
in maturity, energetically covering corporate scandals, the atrocities
in Afghanistan and the failures of health care. The corporatized media
industry is no monolith; it swings and sways to myriad pressures, with
journalists often trying hard to get their stories out while lobbyists
and corporate owners push to shape the stories in their interests. Journalism
is in many ways a combat zone.
But no matter whether the media is acting as
a lapdog or a watchdog, one story that virtually never gets any coverage
is the massive concentration of media ownership and the effect that media
lobbyists from the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) have on
the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and by extension what consumers
of U.S. media read, watch and listen to.
When Bush appointed Michael Powell to be head
of the FCC, broadcasters must have thought they died and went to heaven.
Powell, the son of Secretary of State Colin, seems intent on deregulating
the media system as much as humanly possible.
This
is the theme of Project Censoreds No. 1 story: Corporate takeover
of the airwaves. Certainly given the stakes and the medias inability
to cover itself, one cant quarrel with the choice. Media ownership
and deregulation could rank as the No. 1 ignored story every year.
Project Censored focused its beam on the narrow
issue of the radio spectrum, the subject of Jeremy Rifkins story
in The Guardian. Brendan Koerners Mother Jones story
was a comprehensive overview on the entire picture of media deregulation,
and San Franciscos feisty Media Alliance publication Media File
also weighed in on the subject.
Jeffrey Chester, director of the Center for Digital
Democracy and arguably the nations most knowledgeable person on
media reform, commends Project Censored for putting communications policy
at the top of its list, but still suggests that the public would be better
served with a sense of the bigger picture.
"Its not just the proposed privatization
of radio (wireless) spectrum," Chester says. "The FCC is now
engaged in several interrelated efforts that will harm communities and
our democracy. They include new proposed policies that extend the monopoly
power of cable and telephone companies onto the Internet itself. Soon
the Net will be operated like any cable system, with the pipe owner determining
every Web sites digital destiny. Proposals to commercially annex
the wireless spectrum are a part of a corporate strategy to monopolize
as much of the digital age as possible."
Sources: Jeremy Rifkin, The Guardian,
April 28, 2001; Brendan Koerner, Mother Jones, September 2001;
Dorothy Kidd, Media File, May 2001.
No. 2 GATS for-profit model threatens to gobble up worlds
water
The world is under attack, and not in the most
conventional modes. A little-known agreement called the General Agreement
on Trade in Services, or GATS, a byproduct of the World Trade Organization
(WTO), threatens to open the worlds public services to corporate
takeover. That means community services such as water, health care, education,
libraries, museums and much more, turned into lucrative investments in
the hands of global corporations.
Think it cant happen? It already has. In
the spring of 2000, the Bolivian government sold off the city of Cochabambas
public water system to San Francisco-based Bechtel "in the name of
economic efficiency," writes author Maude Barlow. Several furious
protests ensued until finally the government agreed to return the water
supply to public control.
If you think the United States is immune to such
episodes, youre mistaken. In New Orleans, negotiations are underway
to privatize the citys water supply. The $1 billion deal would be
the largest private water contract in U.S. history. And Barlow writes
that Rick Scott, president of Columbia, the worlds largest for-profit
hospital corporation, "has publicly vowed to destroy every public
hospital in North America," saying doctors "are not good
corporate citizens." Merrill Lynch has already predicted public
education will be privatized.
Source: Maude Barlow, The Ecologist,
February 2001.
No. 3 U.S. policy funds human rights abuses in Colombia
In October 2001, Human Rights Watch released
a report revealing the ugly truth about U.S. involvement in Colombia.
The report contained evidence that the Colombian military was working
closely with right-wing paramilitary death squads such as the United Self
Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC). In other words, the third largest recipient
of U.S. aid and a close ally in the war on drugs was using American dollars
to fund groups known to be responsible for more than 70 percent of human
rights abuses in Colombias civil war.
It was a startling revelation that would have
made news on most days, especially since the State Department had designated
the AUC as a "foreign terrorist organization," charged with
kidnapping, pillaging and the massacre of hundreds of civilians. But few
media outlets covered the report at the time. The headlines were focused
instead on the global war on terror and the imminent war on Afghanistan.
The lack of media attention became less excusable
in February, when the Bush administration announced its plans to expand
its cooperation with Colombia. The White House requested $98 million in
new Pentagon training and equipment for the Colombian military, in a new
initiative to recruit Colombia as an ally in the global war on terror.
Jim Lobe, one of the journalists who covered
the story, says the war on terrorism has "conspired to substantially
reduce attention to paramilitary, as opposed to guerrilla abuses."
FARC and other leftist guerrillas are labeled "terrorist" groups
within this global us vs. them narrative, while crimes committed by government-sponsored
death squads are brushed aside. According to Lobe, journalists have bought
into this flawed narrative mainly due to their own view of Latin American
nations as inherently violent.
Sources: Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St.
Clair, Counterpunch, July 1, 2001; Jim Lobe, Asheville Global
Report, Oct. 4, 2001; Dan Kovalik and Gerald Dickey, Steelabor,
May 2001; Rachel Massey, Rachels Environment & Health News,
Dec. 7, 2001.
No. 4 Bush administration ordered FBI off bin Laden trail
Shielding the Saudi royal family and their friends
from bad press is a veritable presidential tradition, as Greg Palast learned
when he launched an investigation into why the FBI took its agents off
the trail of bin Laden family members residing in the U.S. Drawing on
information he uncovered in classified FBI documents, Palast reported
that bin Ladens brother, Abdullah bin Laden, who lived in Washington,
was a suspect in terrorist activities as long ago as 1996, but high-up
intelligence officials pressured the FBI to discontinue its surveillance.
"There were always constraints on investigating the Saudis,"
an intelligence source told Palast, who broke the story just two months
after 9/11. Those restrictions were tightened considerably when George
W. Bush took office.
Both the Bush and the bin Laden families have
significant holdings in the Carlyle Group, the enormous private investment
firm that has grown bloated off U.S. defense contracts. It seems as if
the U.S. government is more in the business of protecting the Saudis and
its own oil interests than of finding the perpetrators of 9/11. Change
is in the wind, however; recent public opinion polls show that Americans
are growing increasingly disenchanted with Saudi policy and perhaps,
by extension, Bushs financial ties to the royal family.
Sources: Greg Palast and David Pallister,
The Guardian, Nov. 7, 2001; Rashmee Z. Ahmed, Times of India,
Nov. 8, 2001; Amanda Luker, Pulse, Jan. 16, 2002.
No. 5 U.S. destruction of Iraqi water supply
The Persian Gulf War ended more than a decade
ago, but for many Iraqi citizens, the real misery had just begun. Thomas
J. Nagy uncovered documents of the Defense Intelligence Agency proving
beyond a doubt that the United States government, after destroying the
Iraqi water system, sanctioned the country from improving their water
with purification equipment and importing chlorine.
The six documents Nagy discovered confirm that
the Pentagon and the U.S. government fully understood the consequences
of their decision to degrade the water supply. One document plainly states,
"conditions in Baghdad remain favorable for communicable disease
outbreaks," and another says, "the main causes of infectious
diseases, particularly diarrhea, dysentery and upper respiratory problems,
are poor sanitation and unclean water. These diseases primarily afflict
the old and young children." This blatant act of inhumanity is in
direct violation of the Geneva Convention, which expressly prohibits destroying
the source of a civilian populations ultimate survival.
While spotlighting a critical issue, Nagys
story illustrates an area in which Project Censored could stand improvement,
which is the potential for piggybacking off its selected stories to related
topics currently in the news. Surfacing a story about Iraqs tainted
water supply at the same time that Bushs planned attack on Iraq
is in the news almost daily, seems like a missed opportunity to create
some journalistic synergy. Besides, Iraqs water woes pale by comparison
to the damage an invasion could do to the country.
Source: Thomas J. Nagy, The Progressive, September 2001.
No. 6 Renewed threat of nuclear warfare
In the summer of 2001, Stephen Schwartz, publisher
of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, warned his readers that
an influential group of right-wing analysts, scientists and members of
Congress were "quietly paving the way for a nuclear revival."
Schwartz wrote: "They want to build a variety of new and improved
warheads, including a new generation of highly accurate, ground-penetrating,
bunker-busting beauties."
Few reporters paid attention at the time. But
the following year, when the Los Angeles Times leaked the details
of the Pentagons plans to revamp its nuclear policy, it became apparent
that the threat of nuclear war was more serious than ever. The Nuclear
Posture Review (NPR) emphasized developing "usable" lower-yield
weapons and expanding the number of scenarios under which the United States
might use or threaten to use nuclear arms.
Over the past six months, the threat of nuclear
warfare has received far greater attention. The mainstream media has paid
close attention to the Bush administrations decision to pull out
of the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and has attacked the Bush-Putin missile
accord as dangerous and ineffective. But as Schwartz points out, this
attention has been "episodic" rather than sustained, primarily
due to the lack of controversy. "There has been no sense in the public
or Congress that this is wrong," he says. "What is required
is a massive reeducation effort."
Source: Stephen I. Schwartz, Bulletin
of the Atomic Scientists, July 2001.
No. 7 Public schools become guinea pigs for HMO model
Public schools aint so public anymore.
For over a decade, private, for-profit educational management (EMO) companies
have billed themselves as the saving grace for Americas failing
school systems by promising to cut costs and raise standards. All this
while padding shareholders wallets.
But EMOs like Edison Schools have proved unsuccessful
thus far. Studies cited by Barbara Miner in her Multinational Monitor
article, "Business Goes to School," found that EMO schools
are not besting traditional public schools. And return on private investment
has been nonexistent.
The business media has followed the ups and downs
of EMOs closely over the years. Edison made Wall Street Journal
headlines this summer for losing its $39 million contract with the Dallas
school board. Some investors have even sued Edison for misreporting revenue.
Vanishing hopes of profitability may now be scaring away some investors
who once thought EMOs would do for schools what HMOs did for health care.
Sources: Barbara Miner, Multinational
Monitor, January 2002; Frosty Troy, Progressive Populist, Nov.
15, 2000; Dennis Fox, North Coast Xpress, Winter 2000; Linda Lutton,
In These Times, June 2001.
No. 8 NAFTA impoverishes small family farmers
In June of 2001, Public Citizen released
a report graphically illustrating the failure of NAFTA to increase the
income of farmers. Not only did American farms lose nearly $18 billion
in annual revenue, but Mexican farmers income fell 17 percent. Canadian
farmers, who were told to expect a $1.4 billion increase in income, found
their bank accounts $600 million emptier. The NAFTA/Farm report perfectly
represents the larger goal of NAFTA, the transfer of wealth from small,
independent operators to multinational conglomerates. As over 33,000 small
American farms went out of business, agribusiness giants such as ConAgra
and Archer Daniels Midland had significant earnings gains. From 1993 to
2000, ConAgras profits grew 189 percent from $143 million to $413
million; and Archer Daniels Midlands profits nearly tripled, from
$110 million to $301 million. Small wonder the multinational media conglomerates
failed to report on the death of free trade.
Sources: Anita Martin, Fellowship of Reconciliation,
December 2000; Jim Hightower, Hightower Lowdown, September 2001.
No. 9 Housing crisis in the U.S.
Six million Americans currently have no place
to call home, as affordable low-cost housing continues to waste away in
a silent, even hostile political climate. In recent years around 1.5 million
units of housing have disappeared which means millions of children
growing up homeless or in housing that is substandard and potentially
hazardous.
Randy Shaw, director of Housing America, a San
Francisco-based housing rights organization, reported in In These Times
that Americas housing situation is dire and only getting worse.
Shaw reports that the silence that surrounds the issue in both the political
sphere and mass media is confounded by the vast institutional problems
of corruption and limited budgets faced by the federal Department of Housing
and Urban Development. With the new downturn in the economy, this is a
story that continues to unfold and continues to get little notice in the
mainstream press.
Source: Randy Shaw, In These Times,
November 2000.
No. 10 CIA spooks destabilize Macedonia
Look at the front page of your newspaper any
time in the last few months and youve seen a story about the U.S.
protecting its interests abroad, usually in the form of discussions about
the once and future war on Iraq. But one story you probably havent
seen is about the U.S. using NATO forces and CIA money to promote an alliance
with Macedonia, in hopes of controlling that countrys oil supply.
Control and ownership of the AMBO project (Albanian-Macedonian-Bulgarian
Oil), which centers around a proposed pipeline that traverses the three
Balkan nations, has been exclusively granted to a consortium of American-led
interests, notably Vice President Dick Cheneys Halliburton Energy.
Michel Chossudovsky, director of the Centre for Research on Globalisation,
contends that U.S.-controlled interests in Macedonia are disrupting peace
talks in order to justify NATO intervention and secure an American and
British affiliation for the controlling forces, rather than ties to UN
interests. As A.C. Thompson points out, the hypothesis is credible and
merits further exploration, although Chossudovskys story is ultimately
"more of a starting point than a smoking gun."
Source: Michel Chossudovsky, GlobalResearch.com,
June 14, 2001, and July 26, 2001.
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