President Obama suffered a large, embarrassing loss in the Senate on
a slew of gun-control bills. If this were a Republican president,
they'd be sounding the lame-duck alarms on the nightly newscasts. But
most media outlets can't do this. They were fully vested in this
campaign alongside Obama, and to underscore his weakness is to
acknowledge their own.
Since mid-December, the broadcast
networks and cable news hosts like Piers Morgan and Joe Scarborough have
relentlessly lobbied for gun control. On how many occasions did they
completely shred the notion of objectivity -- of journalism itself --
and boldly engage in lobbying for gun control, using their networks as
megaphones? Let's consider a few recent moments.
1. On April 11,
"Morning Joe" hosted Vice President Biden for about an hour-long
interview -- yes, most people get 5-6-7 minutes, but if you're the Veep
and want to promote gun control, you get an hour. It was an embarrassing
hour of kissy-face that ended like this: Biden says, "Joe, thank you."
Scarborough laughs. Biden: " No, no, no, no, no. You have changed the
debate in America. You."
Scarborough replies, "Thank you so much."
Biden insists, "The two guys that deserve -- if anything gets done --
an award here are you and Michael Bloomberg." Awwww, shucks.
"We
are the 90%," Joe Scarborough tweeted after the defeat. "And 90% will
not be ignored." (I just love macho chest-thumping declarations of war
in tweets.
It's unsurprising that 90 percent have no
objections to background checks in a vague polling question.
But a new
AP poll shows how "passionate" the public is on this issue. They asked:
"What do you think the President and Congress should do about gun
control? Do you think they should keep working to pass the changes to
the nation's gun laws that are currently being negotiated, scrap the
current negotiations and start over from scratch, or leave the nation's
gun laws as they are now?"
It was very split: Thirty-nine percent
said leave the laws as they are, 38 percent said keep working to pass
changes and 20 percent said start over from scratch. Scarborough can't
brag. "We are the 38 percent," he said.
2. On that same morning,
in an interview on CNN, Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, a
co-author of the background-checks crackdown, said to anchor John
Berman: "We appreciate your support, too. This is very, very important."
Berman didn't take exception when his objectivity was presumed to be
lacking. He just replied, "Thank you, sir."
3. CNN put out a
corporate press release headlined, "If 90 Percent of Americans Support
New Background Checks, How Can Congress Do Nothing?"
They
announced two days of special journalism devoted to underlining one side
of the debate and undermining the other: "CNN takes an in-depth look at
the national conversation and the debate over new background checks
with Guns Under Fire: A CNN Special Report on Background Checks."
4.
On several nights of "Hardball," MSNBC's Chris Matthews offered up the
number of the Capitol switchboard. "You can get a hold of your Senator
by calling, as I said last night, 202-224-3121. If you don't know your
senator or member of Congress, fine, you just go to www.house.gov and
enter your zip code to find out who your Congressman is. And
www.Senate.Gov to find your Senator."
Can't this be simply
acknowledged as corporate lobbying by Comcast, the owners of MSNBC? It
certainly can't be described as something a "news" channel does.
5.
Over at taxpayer-funded television, PBS omnipresence Bill Moyers posted
a "Take Action" item on his "Moyers and Company" website. The Moyers
staff told viewers how they can "Take A Stand Against Gun Violence," and
be complete Bloomberg robots:
"Call your senator: After you've
read up on the legislation, give your senator a call. If you don't have
the number, (Bloomberg's group) Mayors Against Illegal Guns will look it
up for you (follow the link and hit "Call Congress"). The group also
offers to call you first and walk you through critical talking points."
They
also pushed viewers to "Tell your friends" to "demand a plan" for gun
control on Facebook and Twitter and "recruit your mayor" to join
Bloomberg's group.
Whether it's guns, gays or global warming, the
"objective" media all too often decide that there's one side that
deserves to win and one side that needs to be crushed or ignored. The
first journalistic principle seems to be arrogance.
The news
reports after Obama's loss were overwhelmingly composed of Obama yelling
at Congress and Newtown relatives near tears. Actual sound bites or
arguments from the gun-rights advocates were either submerged or
forbidden.
As usual, liberal TV networks thrive on emotional
manipulation, and when that fails, they hyperventilate in disbelief that
anyone would dare to make Obama declare it had been a "really shameful
day in Washington."
No comments:
Post a Comment