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Ethel the Blog
Observations (and occasional brash opining) on science, computers, books, music and other shiny things that catch my mind's eye. There's a home page with ostensibly more permanent stuff. This is intended to be more functional than decorative. I neither intend nor want to surf on the bleeding edge, keep it real, redefine journalism or attract nyphomaniacal groupies (well, maybe a wee bit of the latter). The occasional cheap laugh, raised eyebrow or provocation of interest are all I'll plead guilty to in the matter of intent. Bene qui latuit bene vixit.

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Thursday, October 30, 2003

THE DAILY MEMO
While
a letter from Charlie Reina to Poynter Online just repeats the obvious to the sentient, it is useful as a weapon against the deliberate and pathological liars who claim otherwise. So what will the next memo say about this, if anything? All together now: DISGRUNTLED FORMER EMPLOYEE.
So Chris Wallace says Fox News Channel really is fair and balanced. Well, I guess that settles it. We can all go home now. I mean, so what if Wallace's salary as Fox's newest big-name anchor ends with a whole lot of zeroes? So what if he hasn't spent a day in the FNC newsroom yet?

My advice to the pundits: If you really want to know about bias at Fox, talk to the grunts who work there - the desk assistants, tape editors, writers, researchers and assorted producers who have to deal with it every day. Ask enough of them what goes on, promise them anonymity, and you'll get the real story.

The fact is, daily life at FNC is all about management politics. I say this having served six years there - as producer of the media criticism show, News Watch, as a writer/producer of specials and (for the last year of my stay) as a newsroom copy editor. Not once in the 20+ years I had worked in broadcast journalism prior to Fox - including lengthy stays at The Associated Press, CBS Radio and ABC/Good Morning America - did I feel any pressure to toe a management line. But at Fox, if my boss wasn't warning me to "be careful" how I handled the writing of a special about Ronald Reagan ("You know how Roger [Fox News Chairman Ailes] feels about him."), he was telling me how the environmental special I was to produce should lean ("You can give both sides, but make sure the pro-environmentalists don't get the last word.")

Editorially, the FNC newsroom is under the constant control and vigilance of management. The pressure ranges from subtle to direct. First of all, it's a news network run by one of the most high-profile political operatives of recent times. Everyone there understands that FNC is, to a large extent, "Roger's Revenge" - against what he considers a liberal, pro-Democrat media establishment that has shunned him for decades. For the staffers, many of whom are too young to have come up through the ranks of objective journalism, and all of whom are non-union, with no protections regarding what they can be made to do, there is undue motivation to please the big boss.

Sometimes, this eagerness to serve Fox's ideological interests goes even beyond what management expects. For example, in June of last year, when a California judge ruled the Pledge of Allegiance's "Under God" wording unconstitutional, FNC's newsroom chief ordered the judge's mailing address and phone number put on the screen. The anchor, reading from the Teleprompter, found himself explaining that Fox was taking this unusual step so viewers could go directly to the judge and get "as much information as possible" about his decision. To their credit, the big bosses recognized that their underling's transparent attempt to serve their political interests might well threaten the judge's physical safety and ordered the offending information removed from the screen as soon as they saw it. A few months later, this same eager-to-please newsroom chief ordered the removal of a graphic quoting UN weapons inspector Hans Blix as saying his team had not yet found WMDs in Iraq. Fortunately, the electronic equipment was quicker on the uptake (and less susceptible to office politics) than the toady and displayed the graphic before his order could be obeyed.

But the roots of FNC's day-to-day on-air bias are actual and direct. They come in the form of an executive memo distributed electronically each morning, addressing what stories will be covered and, often, suggesting how they should be covered. To the newsroom personnel responsible for the channel's daytime programming, The Memo is the bible. If, on any given day, you notice that the Fox anchors seem to be trying to drive a particular point home, you can bet The Memo is behind it.

The Memo was born with the Bush administration, early in 2001, and, intentionally or not, has ensured that the administration's point of view consistently comes across on FNC. This year, of course, the war in Iraq became a constant subject of The Memo. But along with the obvious - information on who is where and what they'll be covering - there have been subtle hints as to the tone of the anchors' copy. For instance, from the March 20th memo: "There is something utterly incomprehensible about Kofi Annan's remarks in which he allows that his thoughts are 'with the Iraqi people.' One could ask where those thoughts were during the 23 years Saddam Hussein was brutalizing those same Iraqis. Food for thought." Can there be any doubt that the memo was offering not only "food for thought," but a direction for the FNC writers and anchors to go? Especially after describing the U.N. Secretary General's remarks as "utterly incomprehensible"?

The sad truth is, such subtlety is often all it takes to send Fox's newsroom personnel into action - or inaction, as the case may be. One day this past spring, just after the U.S. invaded Iraq, The Memo warned us that anti-war protesters would be "whining" about U.S. bombs killing Iraqi civilians, and suggested they could tell that to the families of American soldiers dying there. Editing copy that morning, I was not surprised when an eager young producer killed a correspondent's report on the day's fighting - simply because it included a brief shot of children in an Iraqi hospital.

These are not isolated incidents at Fox News Channel, where virtually no one of authority in the newsroom makes a move unmeasured against management's politics, actual or perceived. At the Fair and Balanced network, everyone knows management's point of view, and, in case they're not sure how to get it on air, The Memo is there to remind them.


posted by Steven Baum 10/30/2003 11:01:26 AM | link

SHELL GAMES TO COME
An
Atrios reader predicts how the cabal will make it appear that the troops have come home while leaving well over 100,000 in Iraq.
If you want to know how Bush will make it look like they're pulling the troops out of Iraq, but not actually do it, read what I wrote to a friend on Oct 9, 2003:

I strongly suspect that Bush's recent move to bring "control" of the whole Iraq mess into the White House and give it to the clearly less than capable and very un-military Condi Rice is the first shot in a one year plan that will go something like this: they'll pressure the Iraq Governing Council to spit out a "constitution" by early next spring. They will hold some sort of fake "election" in the early summer. Along about August, Bush will declare that our forces have been "victorious" against the forces of evil, that Iraq is "stable," and that "our troops are coming home." TV screens beginning the week before the Republican convention until November will be filled with shots of returning troops being welcomed by loved ones. Sometime in October, they’ll bring back the remnants of an actual division or brigade – civilians don’t know the difference and couldn’t care less -- and Bush will be head cheerleader for a parade in some state he’s behind in. By the end of October, there will be a far more sober "mission accomplished" photo op, maybe at Arlington, “honoring the brave” who gave their lives, and Bush will gravely announce that our job is done and our troops are continuing to return home, and the TV screens will show yet even more teary-eyed wives being hugged by returning troops...

Meanwhile, since no one will be doing an actual, on-the-ground count, there wil still be 100,000 or so troops in Iraq and another 25,000 or so parked in Kuwait and another 15,000 or so in the region stationed at Air Force bases and on ships in the Gulf.

The whole thing will be a “reality” TV show scripted by Rove – “Survivor” for the political classes, “Fear Factor” for the troops hired as extras still facing daily attacks.


posted by Steven Baum 10/30/2003 10:56:52 AM | link

Wednesday, October 29, 2003

HOSTLAND
PR Watch points out a 1968 psyops film about a fictional place called Hostland.
posted by Steven Baum 10/29/2003 11:28:05 AM | link

THE GOOD BRUTAL DICTATOR
George Monbiot writes of a vicious, brutal dictator who regularly tortures his own people, but who hasn't yet been invaded by a cabal whose only remaining excuse for invading Iraq is to tearfully recount Saddam's human rights abuses.
...
There are over 6,000 political and religious prisoners in Uzbekistan. Every year, some of them are tortured to death. Sometimes the policemen or intelligence agents simply break their fingers, their ribs and then their skulls with hammers, or stab them with screwdrivers, or rip off bits of skin and flesh with pliers, or drive needles under their fingernails, or leave them standing for a fortnight, up to their knees in freezing water. Sometimes they are a little more inventive. The body of one prisoner was delivered to his relatives last year, with a curious red tidemark around the middle of his torso. He had been boiled to death.

His crime, like that of many of the country's prisoners, was practising his religion. Islam Karimov, the president of Uzbekistan, learned his politics in the Soviet Union. He was appointed under the old system, and its collapse in 1991 did not interrupt his rule. An Islamist terrorist network has been operating there, but Karimov makes no distinction between peaceful Muslims and terrorists: anyone who worships privately, who does not praise the president during his prayers or who joins an organisation which has not been approved by the state can be imprisoned. Political dissidents, human rights activists and homosexuals receive the same treatment. Some of them, like in the old Soviet Union, are sent to psychiatric hospitals.
...

And as to WMD, there's no doubt he has quite a few of those.
...
So, far from seeking to isolate his regime, the US government has tripled its aid to Karimov. Last year, he received $500m (£300m), of which $79m went to the police and intelligence services, who are responsible for most of the torture.
...
If he's getting that much official aid for supposedly humanitarian purposes, you can bet the black ops ghouls are also arming him to the teeth. Hell, they're even officially admitting to training his gestapo.
...
But Uzbekistan is seen by the US government as a key western asset, as Saddam Hussein's Iraq once was. Since 1999, US special forces have been training Karimov's soldiers.
...

posted by Steven Baum 10/29/2003 11:00:56 AM | link

THE SAINT LOSES HER SHINE
We learn that
our newest manufactured saint ain't.
A journey to the home town of Jessica Lynch by the Iraqi lawyer who helped to free the young American soldier ended in embarrassment for all concerned when she snubbed him.

Miss Lynch, portrayed as a heroine of our times for her courage while a prisoner of war, was too busy to receive the visitor, her family's lawyer said. Her saviour, Mohammed al-Rehaief, was outwardly understanding of her failure to appear during his trip. "I know she had a very difficult time in Iraq and she takes rest," he said.

However, Mr al-Rehaief, who has been granted asylum in the United States for fear of revenge attacks in Iraq, was reported to be disappointed by her failure to meet him on his visit to Palestine, West Virginia.
...

The gratitude doth flow like tar from Saint Jessie to her ostensible savior. To be generous, she might be rejecting al-Rehaief because she knows her whole story is a load of bollocks manufactured by the cabal's PR hacks, and she's just too embarassed to live a big, stinking lie. To be less generous, we'll let what's probably the real reason be revealed in the usual way.
...
The Lynchs' lawyer, Stephen Goodwin, denied that rivalry between the 20-year-old former soldier and her Iraqi benefactor over competing media projects was to blame for her absence. "Absolutely not," he said.
...

posted by Steven Baum 10/29/2003 10:49:38 AM | link

SEE NO PROTEST
The
St. Petersburg Times offers an editorial about a nasty policy wherein the cabal munificently "allows" those who protest the emperor to do so, albeit from a significant distance. They might also want to say a thing or two about the cabal's increasing attempts to have protesters labelled terrorists, i.e. enemies of the state.
The White House apparently believes members of the public who disagree with President Bush should be neither seen nor heard. Protesters, rather than being allowed to line the presidential motorcade route, are routinely corraled into areas known as "protest zones" or the euphemistically named "free speech zones" - fenced-in areas well out of view of the president and his entourage. Supporters of the president in many cases are free to stand much closer with their friendly signs.

The Secret Service claims it moves all people carrying signs into protest zones, regardless of their political leanings, as a necessary precaution to protect the president. However, a federal lawsuit recently filed by the American Civil Liberties Union challenging the use of these zones nationwide documents numerous cases where only critics of the president have been herded into protest zones.

But even if the Secret Service policy treated supporters and protesters the same, it is still constitutionally unacceptable. Since when is someone carrying a sign a presumptive threat? Certainly the president needs to be protected from crowds of people, but there is no valid security reason for keep protesters out of the president's sight and hearing.

The Tampa Bay area has had its own experiences with this. At a Bush rally at Legends Field in 2001, three demonstrators - two of whom were grandmothers - were arrested for holding up small handwritten protest signs outside the designated zone. And last year, seven protesters were arrested when Bush came to a rally at the USF Sun Dome. They had refused to be cordoned off into a protest zone hundreds of yards from the entrance to the Dome.

As much as the Bush administration dislikes dissent, Americans have the absolute right to express it. Protest zones need to be zoned out of existence.


posted by Steven Baum 10/29/2003 10:41:27 AM | link

DVDS FROM THE BEEB
Limey Bob sends along a thumbs-up for the
BBC America Shop, where you can find DVDs containing episodes of something other than teenybopper fodder from UPN and WB. Highlights from the Bobster:
There's the Alec Guiness Collection - his old classic comedies such as "Kind Hearts and Coronets", "The Lady Killers" etc all for $60.

The Peter Sellers Collection - including "Carlton Browne of the FO", "Heavens Above", "I'm Alright Jack" for $90.

"Wodehouse Playhouse" series 1 and 2.

"Beckett on film", all 19 of his plays.

Oh my, I'm going to be spending lots of bucks here. In the late 70's and early 80's, Auntie set to recording large chunks of Shakespeare with some Shakepearian and some non-Shakesperian actors. The results were remarkable and astounding. For example, Hamlet stars Derek Jacobi and PAtrick Stewart, Romeo and Juliet stars Sir John Guilgud, Othello starts Anthony Hopkins and Bob Hoskins, Taming of the Shrew has John Cleese as Petrucio - a role that was very highly critically acclaimed.

BTW, I also came across the ORIGINAL "I CLaudius" with Derek Jacobi on this site - by original I mean the uncut, British verion and not the watered down one shown on PBS.

As I recall, Jonathan Miller directed quite a few of the plays in that Shakespeare series. And speaking of whom, I wonder if they've got his marvelous "The Body in Question" series on DVD yet?
posted by Steven Baum 10/29/2003 10:27:32 AM | link

WOULD YOU BUY IT?
The Canuck sends along some marvelous
stock market and investor bashing from Derek DeCloet of the Globe and Mail.
Psychologists at a British university last month divulged new research that shatters a widely held myth about one of the lowest forms of aquatic life. The humble goldfish, long believed to have a memory of only a few seconds, is not as forgetful as we thought. Using an experiment that forced the fish to press a lever at a specific time every day to get food, researchers discovered they can actually remember things for up to three months.

So it's official: Goldfish have better memories than investors.

Not content for their portfolios to be crushed once by hyper-valued technology stocks, money managers and retail investors seem content to make the same mistakes all over again.

We could point to the statistics -- that the top 100 Nasdaq-listed companies are valued at 42 times operating profit; that their measly dividends yield all of 0.2 per cent; and so on.

But perhaps the best way to look at it is the way Warren Buffett might. Ask yourself: If money were no object, would I buy the entire company at this price, or find a better place to spend the cash?

Exhibit A: Nortel Networks. No longer a money-losing company with a $300-billion price tag, Nortel is modestly back in the black again and has a market capitalization of a little more than $23-billion. For this, you get a large telecommunications equipment maker that might be turning a corner, but which (a) has a history of turning shareholders' equity into sawdust, (b) hasn't produced a penny of free cash flow since Moses was a kid, and (c) is in the process of restating 3½ years of financial statements, which will only slightly alter its record of $34-billion (U.S.) in losses during that period of time.
...


posted by Steven Baum 10/29/2003 10:23:05 AM | link

Tuesday, October 28, 2003

TEARS FOR THE OLIGARCH
Al Giordano writes of the reaction of those with ill-gotten money and power to the "oppression" of another with ill-gotten money and power.
Is this weekend's arrest of Russian oil oligarch Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky the end of "reform" in the land of the former Soviet Union, or is it the beginning?

If this had happened anywhere in the Western Hemisphere, I'd probably be able to tell you with authority. In this case, I don't know.

But I can say that the Commercial Media spin so far is entirely one-sided, and near-hysterical. And that causes me to disbelieve the Chicken Littles who say the arrest of one rich guy is the end of civilization as we know it.
...
How to read between the lines: Anything, kind readers, any little ol' thing at all in this big world of ours that suggests that the class struggle is not extinguished is met immediately by the yellowest of reporting masquerading as journalism. And, of course, the oligarch himself has had many months since the July 2nd arrest of one of his assistant oligarchs to spread his money around the media, too, and get ready for the great spin campaign.
...
Not just the U.S. State Department and Commercial Media are knee-deep in the spin campaign, but also Liliya Shevtsova, senior associate of the Carnegie Endowment, an institution that no doubt has the interests of the common Russian working man and woman at heart, according to today's Guardian of London:

"Mr Putin has unleashed his dogs...The question is, to what extent does the affair now have a life of its own, or can Mr Putin stop it? My hunch is that he cannot, because saying 'stop' will be seen by his people, and the Russian electorate, as a sign of weakness."

Lots of tears are being cried for the poor little rich guy, who, according to AP, is now being held in "Moscow's Matrosskaya Tishina, one of the detention units regarded as often worse than the prisons to which convicts are sent." AP also notes that 8,500 prisoners have been held there in the past year. I must not have noticed the concern over any of them by the Commercial Media, the State Department, or the Carnegie Endowment.
...
Back by popular demand: Class War. And the Commercial Media hasn't a clue of how to deal with it honestly. The wound-up mechanical roustabout linebacking clones of the deteriorating Fourth Estate no longer report... they just screech... While taking dictation from the side with money.


posted by Steven Baum 10/28/2003 02:46:08 PM | link

GRASSO'S WALTZ WITH THE SYNDICATE
Catherine Austin Fitts supplies us with the following interesting photo of former NYSE Chairman Richard Grasso firmly embracing a Colombian FARC commander.

Grasso's Waltz

Fitts sums up the relevance of the photo vis a vis her 2001 article Narco Dollars for Beginners (Part 1):

The recent departure of New York Stock Exchange Chairman Richard Grasso makes this article, first published in 2001, very prescient, especially in the light of Mr. Grasso's trip to Colombia where he met FARC commanders responsible for providing security for narco-traffickers. Was Grasso making an in person sales call to negotiate with the drug cartel which was threatening to pull their investments from the stock exchange? That might be worth a $140 million pay package.
As we've mentioned hereabouts from time to time, if the numbers thrown around by the eternal drug warriors are even partially true, there are hundreds of billions of narco-dollars out there that need laundering, and that kind of scratch ain't gonna be laundered down at the local laundromat. This picture further solidifies Grasso's position relative to the wall come the revolution.
posted by Steven Baum 10/28/2003 02:07:02 PM | link

ANOTHER MYTH WOUNDED
John Mauldin writes of the myth of the stock market growing 6.7 to 9% per year over the long run.
...
Our whole view of the value of the market and predicted future growth has been colored dramatically by the recent bull market, and even now has yet to be materially altered. I once again ask a familiar question to long time readers: How many times have you had a stock broker quote you the Ibbotson Survey or something similar which shows the stock market growing 6.7% or 9% or more per year over long periods of time? All you have to do is just keep the faith and buy and hold. You should especially never sell their funds.

Peter Bernstein and Robert Arnott, in a very thoughtful article in the Financial Analysts Journal show that this number is VERY misleading. If you break it down, it shows you something entirely different.

First, the largest component of stock market return, up until 1982, was inflation. From 1802 to present, $100 would have grown to $700 million if you assumed all dividends re-invested. If you take out inflation, we are left with a still impressive $37 million. If you take out dividends, however, you find that your $100 is only worth $2,099!

Here's the kicker: in 1982, the stock portfolio would have been worth only $400. The bulk of the growth, over 80% of current value, came in the last 20 years.

This data simply says that conventional wisdom, which says equities get most of their value from capital appreciation, is false. It is based upon recent experience, and a bubble mentality.
...


posted by Steven Baum 10/28/2003 01:54:22 PM | link

AUTHORITARIAN NARCISSISM
Via
abuddhas memes, we find Analyzing Authoritarian Narcissism by William Manson at Infoshop.
...
Reich's 1933 opus, The Mass Psychology of Fascism, is an attempt to explain how sexual repression leads to dictatorships, and why authoritarianism holds such a popular appeal for those who are most likely to be oppressed by it. Much more than a study of Nazi Germany, Reich's book is a chilling look far beyond the standard interpretations of fascism which centered around any one leader's demagogic charisma or the nefarious plots hatched by the politico-economic elites of the military and the capitalist classes. Such explanations were too superficial for Reich, and he offered instead an analysis of fascism rooted in social psychology. He felt that there were certain sets of character structures in modern life that were responsible for making the prospect of living under ruthless authority mystically attractive.

The key to this, wrote Reich, was the power dynamics of the typical lower middle-class family. The neurotically tyrannical patriarch controlled economic and political power within the family, and he demanded obedience and stiff emotional restraint. He was also responsible for fiercely repressing the sexual life of his children, a repression that extended to the quelling of curiosity, rebellion, and the faculties needed for critical thinking.

Reich found that the mechanisms for sexual repression in the psyche were also responsible for social and political submissiveness; as a "factory for authoritarian ideologies and conservative [character] structures", the patriarchal family (and later the school) reinforced the behavioral norms, forms, and attitudes that were most appropriate for perpetuating a repressive social order founded upon exploitation.4

Sexually repressed and psychologically scarred children inevitably extended their unquestioning subordination to parents and teachers into an "emotional identification with every kind of authority" later in life. Fear of sexuality and the fear of revolt were "anchored" in the character structures of the masses as mutually disturbing phenomena that one could avoid by clinging to "traditional values". Those who felt the most choked in an atmosphere of guilt and anxiety over sex and rebellion tended toward dogmatic, moralistic religions which, not coincidentally, served the authoritarian impulses of the ruling class.

Subsequently, the existing systems of authority worked hard to protect and preserve the primacy of the patriarchal family in the social realm. Once internalized, these authoritarian constraints became "character armor", a rigid psychical shell that blocks the flow of intense, spontaneous feeling and distorted natural impulses into secondary, sadistic behaviors.5 According to Reich, the armored individuals who felt the most torn between the desire for freedom and the fear of freedom reveled in the obvious contradictions spouted by fascist leaders.
...


posted by Steven Baum 10/28/2003 01:33:25 PM | link


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