Media Fundamentalism (awesome article)

Madina Archives


Madinat al-Muslimeen Islamic Message Board

Media Fundamentalism (awesome article)
se7en
09/25/01 at 23:40:38

Media Fundamentalism
by John Powers

http://www.laweekly.com/ink/01/44/on-powers.shtml

Late Saturday night, CNN carried a report from Pakistan, which
was being dragooned into helping the United States hunt down the
terrorists. A snippet of footage showed a band of students in the
streets of Islamabad raising a banner written in English for
international cameras.

“America,” it read, “think why you are hated the world over.”

This sign could have been a direct riposte to how millions of
Americans are reacting to the murderous assaults. On radio and
TV, everyone from nurses to pro athletes keep saying they are
trying to “understand” what happened on September 11. And the
refrain is nearly always the same. How could they do this to
innocent people? Why do they hate us so much?

One simple answer is this. They hate us because we don’t even
know why they hate us.

It’s been our luxury to be so rich and powerful that we haven’t
needed to care about what America’s dominance means to the rest
of the world — even to the many countries that like us. We take
pride in our well-meaning optimism, but this innocence is often
another name for willful ignorance. When George W. Bush ran for
president, it was a joke that he couldn’t name the president of
Pakistan, Pervez Musharraf. Well, he knows it now. And so, at
long last, will we. After all, it is one thing for a poor,
uneducated Afghan peasant to know nothing about the ordinary
people lost in the World Trade Center. It’s quite another for an
American, who can tap into the world’s storehouse of information
with a mouse-click, to be unable to find the Persian Gulf on a
map or to be unaware that our government backs brutal,
undemocratic Middle Eastern regimes. The faceless coward who did
the drive-by shooting of an Indian Sikh in Mesa, Arizona —
because to him, a turban’s a turban — is also a terrorist, one of
an equally uncivilized kind.

When you hear Americans talking of the need to “understand,” it’s
spooky to realize what many of them mean. As I write this, three
of the six best-selling books at Amazon.com are about
Nostradamus, and e-mails zip around the country explaining that
the attacks were mystically linked to the number 11. So much for
the belief that being “Western” automatically protects you from
being steeped in medieval stupefaction.

Thirty years ago, the major networks all boasted foreign bureaus
— international news was a vaunted part of the nightly broadcast.
Now, to save money, they devote more network time to the likes of
Gary Condit (a cheap story in every sense) than to covering the
rest of the planet. Even after the attacks, to find out what’s
going on beyond our borders, you must turn on the BBC, CNN
International or one of the financial networks, where they know
that history, like capital, is global. If you were looking for
the single word that best explains why America is so tragically
enmeshed in Middle Eastern politics, that word would be oil — but
of the major network commentators I’ve seen, only CNN’s
Christiane Amanpour says this. To judge from the other coverage,
you might foolishly think that the U.S. got involved in this
region because of Israel, and that we’ve made it a client state
not out of geopolitical interest, but from our nation’s famed
sympathy for the Jewish people.

Ever since that deadly morning, we’ve heard that America will
never be the same. But one thing didn’t change at all: In the
media, everything is eventually reduced to format and branding.
Perhaps the eeriest feature of this media blitzkrieg was watching
the coverage morph from honest shock to the higher brainwashing —
Media Fundamentalism.

Suddenly, we were being told how to be patriotic and how to
mourn. CNN shifted its slogan from “America Attacked” to
“America’s New War.” CBS’s became “America Rising.” ABC’s Web
site offered downloadable American flags, while Kmart printed a
full-page version of Old Glory in Sunday’s New York Times. When
volunteers did something to help a victim, the TV story was
accompanied by an explanatory logo: “Quiet Acts of Heroism.” And
President Bush began being propped up with headlines hailing his
newfound legitimacy and triumphant trip to New York, although Tim
Russert’s interview made it clear that Dick Cheney thinks he’s
running the country. While we were ceaselessly bombarded with
poll numbers announcing ä 23 Americans’ approval of a war effort
— and The Daily News’ Saturday headline called up “Grief,
Revenge” — not a soul commented on the tin ear displayed by the
term “Operation Noble Eagle,” which sounds less like a call to
battle than the badly translated title of an early Sammo Hung
movie.

It would be dishonest to claim that we heard no astringent
voices, though they did sound frustrated that nobody’d been
listening to what they’d been saying all along. The FAA’s
ex–security chief Billie Vincent told ABC that the airlines have
cared more about their bottom lines than the safety of their
passengers. And over on CNN’s Capital Gang, mad dog Robert Novak
wiped away his mouth-foam long enough to ask Amanpour if she was
“optimistic” that Bush could put together a coalition like the
one his father had. “Well, I’m not optimistic or pessimistic,”
she replied wearily. “I’m just looking at what is coming out of
the capitals since President Bush and Secretary of State Colin
Powell have been talking about this coalition.” That is, she was
being a reporter, not a propagandist.

You can’t just watch or read the news — you have to look through
it. On September 15, the L.A. Times’ huge piece on Osama bin
Laden managed to avoid spelling out his CIA connections, although
the story’s so familiar that it had made the front page of Le
Monde a day earlier. One afternoon I was listening to a radio
interview with journalist Robert Fisk, the last Westerner to
interview bin Laden, who was explaining that the terrorist
financier comes across as neither mad nor demonic. Abruptly, the
interview was cut off from the studio with the sentence “As
important as it is to understand those who may have perpetrated
these attacks, it’s equally important to remember the victims.”
The station then began talking to a guy whose wife was killed in
the attack. And this was on NPR.

Although rhetorical excess is normal and probably necessary for a
country that’s been savagely attacked, one longed for some
thoughtful debate. But far from encouraging open discussion of
what happened and how the country should deal with it — you could
search in vain for anybody from the left — the media pushed the
idea that a national consensus already exists. There was no
serious argument about whether Afghanistan might prove to be a
quagmire or whether we really should flatten Kabul, a city that
already looks like a sand-wrapped village from the original Star
Wars. In fact, the most passionate arguments I heard came on ESPN
Radio, whose guests had strong feelings about whether the NFL
should cancel its games or fill stadiums with people chanting
“USA! USA! USA!”

But then, we live in what the situationist philosopher Guy Debord
famously dubbed the Society of the Spectacle, where “everything
that was directly lived has moved away into a representation.”
Until last week, our recent wars have been fought from high in
the sky, their bomb-glare shown on TV. Our airport security
focuses less on human contact than on electronic screeners. Our
international espionage makes a fetish of high-tech snooping —
although our spies can’t speak Arabic. And when it comes to
mourning the dead, many of us no longer feel comfortable with the
old rituals. We tend to transform genuine grief, too, into
televised spectacle. As soon as the exhausted Dan Rather broke
into tears on Letterman, it instantly became part of the news.

People have always turned to religion for consolation,
understanding and guidance. This is especially true in times of
great suffering, which is why our media coverage has taken on a
quasi-religious aspect. Nearly all of us experienced the horror
of the attacks through television, the national altar. On it was
enacted our postmodern liturgy, with its theme music and
computer-generated logos, its solemnly intoned litany: “our
national tragedy,” “show of support,” “worst crisis in our
history,” “hunt ’em down” and, of course, “Western values.” The
airwaves were filled with illustrative tales of evildoers and of
hijacked martyrs who kept the White House from destruction by
downing United Airlines Flight 93. Did your son save the White
House? Jane Pauley asked the family of victim Jeremy Glick, who
were patently unnerved by her scoop-seeking pushiness.

Although none of this gave me any succor, that didn’t stop me
from watching. Even as I obsessively read the papers or surfed
the Net, I kept an eye free for the TV coverage, desperately
sifting through all the data, somehow feeling that if I paid
close enough attention, the next piece of information would
surely bring “understanding” — what some call revelation. So I
stared at each new shot of planes hitting the towers, and watched
them crumble over and over, like burning sticks of incense. I
scrutinized bin Laden’s fuzzy training videos and pondered the
theological significance of jihad-inspired pilots running up tabs
in a Florida strip bar. And each time a new factual shard was
uncovered — some of the bombers came from San Diego! Bin Laden
has a limp! — I’d file it away in my head, building my shield
against mortality, as if knowing everything would somehow protect
me and those I love, would magically restore the world to
September 10, when I didn’t have to worry about my airplane being
turned into a missile or that my government might be about to
make a ghastly mistake. And each time I clicked off the set deep
into the night, I, like millions of others, was startled by the
silent darkness.
interesting
se7en
09/27/01 at 14:56:19
[center][img]http://www.minimumsecurity.net/toons/137.gif[/img]






[img]http://www.minimumsecurity.net/toons/138.gif[/img]

[/center]
Re: Media Fundamentalism (awesome article)
jannah
09/27/01 at 16:56:23
I put a whole bunch of editorial cartoons on the front page. check em out


Individual posts do not necessarily reflect the views of Jannah.org, Islam, or all Muslims. All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners. Comments are owned by the poster and may not be used without consent of the author.
The rest © Jannah.Org