Sunday, January 05, 2014

Is Media Just Another World for Control?

Is media just another word for control?

January 6, 2014 Opinion & Analysis

Often referred to as the Fourth Estate, there is no doubt that if caution is not exercised, the media can work as a flaming sword capable of cutting through any political armour

John Pilger

A recent poll asked people in Britain how many Iraqis had been killed as a result of the invasion of Iraq in 2003. The answers they gave were shocking. A majority said that fewer than 10 000 had been killed. Scientific studies report that up to a million Iraqi men, women and children died in an inferno lit by the British government and its ally in Washington. That’s the equivalent of the genocide in Rwanda.

And the carnage goes on. Relentlessly. What this reveals is how we in Britain have been misled by those whose job is to keep the record straight. The American writer and academic Edward Herman calls this “normalising the unthinkable”.

He describes two types of victims in the world of news: “worthy victims” and “unworthy victims”.

“Worthy victims” are those who suffer at the hands of our enemies: the likes of Assad, Gaddafi, Saddam Hussein. “Worthy victims” qualify for what we call “humanitarian intervention”.

“Unworthy victims” are those who get in the way of our punitive might and that of the “good dictators” we employ. Saddam Hussein was once a “good dictator”, but he got uppity and disobedient and was relegated to “bad dictator”.

In Indonesia, General Suharto was a “good dictator”, regardless of his slaughter of perhaps a million people, aided by the governments of Britain and America. He also wiped out a third of the population of East Timor with the help of British.

Suharto was even welcomed to London by the Queen and when he died peacefully in his bed, he was lauded as enlightened, a moderniser, one of us. Unlike Saddam Hussein, he never got uppity.

When I travelled in Iraq in the 1990s, the two principal Muslim groups, the Shia and Sunni, had their differences, but they lived side by side, even intermarried and regarded themselves with pride as Iraqis.

There was no Al-Qaeda, there were no jihadists. We blew all that to bits in 2003 with “shock and awe”.

And today Sunni and Shia are fighting each other right across the Middle East. This mass murder is being funded by the regime in Saudi Arabia which beheads people and discriminates against women.

Most of the 9 /11 hijackers came from Saudi Arabia.

In 2010, Wikileaks released a cable sent to US embassies by then Secretary of State Hilary Clinton. She wrote this: “Saudi Arabia remains a critical financial support for Al-Qaeda, the Taliban, al-Nusra and other terrorist groups . . . worldwide.”

And yet the Saudis are our valued allies. They’re good dictators. The British royals visit them often. We sell them all the weapons they want.

I use the first person “we” and “our” in line with newsreaders and commentators who often say “we”, preferring not to distinguish between the criminal power of our governments and us, the public.

We are all assumed to be part of a consensus: Tory and Labour, Obama’s White House too. When Nelson Mandela died, the BBC went straight to David Cameron, then to Obama.

Cameron who went to South Africa during Mandela’s 25th year of imprisonment on a trip that was tantamount to support for the apartheid regime, and Obama who recently shed a tear in Mandela’s cell on Robben Island — he who presides over the cages of Guantanamo.

What were they mourning about Mandela? Clearly not his extraordinary will to resist an oppressive system whose depravity the US and British backed year after year.

Rather they were grateful for the crucial role Mandela had played in quelling an uprising in black South Africa against the injustice of white political and economic power.

This was surely the only reason he was released. Today the same ruthless economic power is apartheid in another form, making South Africa the most unequal society on Earth. Some call this “reconciliation”.

We all live in an information age —or so we tell each other as we caress our smartphones like rosary beads, heads down, checking, monitoring, tweeting. We’re wired; we’re on message and the dominant theme of the message is ourselves. Identity is the zeitgeist.

A lifetime ago in “Brave New World”, Aldous Huxley predicted this as the ultimate means of social control because it was voluntary, addictive and shrouded in illusions of personal freedom.

Perhaps the truth is that we live not in an information age, but a media age. Like the memory of Mandela, the media’s wondrous technology has been hijacked. From the BBC to CNN, the echo chamber is vast.

The great reporter Claud Cockburn put it well: “Never believe anything until it’s officially denied.”

Imagine if the lies of governments had been properly challenged and exposed as they secretly prepared to invade Iraq — perhaps a million people would be alive. — johnpilger.com.

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