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Sapphire Blue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 10:23 AM
Original message
Jeff Cohen: Are Media Out to Get John Edwards?
Jeff Cohen: Are Media Out to Get John Edwards?
Submitted by BuzzFlash on Thu, 05/31/2007 - 2:09pm. Guest Contribution
A BUZZFLASH GUEST CONTRIBUTION
by Jeff Cohen

Give me a break about John Edwards' pricey haircut, mansion, lecture fees, and the rest. The focus on these topics tells us two things about corporate media. One we've long known -- that they elevate personal stuff above issues. The other is now becoming clear -- that they have a special animosity toward Edwards.

Is it hypocritical for the former Senator to base a presidential campaign on alleviating poverty while building himself a sprawling mansion? Perhaps. But isn't that preferable to all the millionaire candidates who neither talk about nor care about the poor? Elite media seem more comfortable with millionaire politicians who identify with their class - and half of all U.S. senators are millionaires.

(snip)

But I'm growing quite suspicious about the media barrage against Edwards, who got his wealth as a trial lawyer suing hospitals and corporations. Among "top-tier" presidential candidates, Edwards is alone in convincingly criticizing corporate-drafted trade treaties and talking about workers' rights and the poor and higher taxes on the rich. He's the candidate who set up a university research center on poverty. Of the front-runners in presidential polls, he's pushing the hardest to withdraw from Iraq, and pushing the hardest on Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama to follow suit.

(snip)

One of the wise men of mainstream punditry, Stuart Rothenberg, said it clearest in a Roll Call column complaining of Edwards' "class warfare message" and his "seeming insatiable desire to run to the left"; the column pointed fingers of blame at Edwards' progressive campaign co-chair David Bonior; consultant Joe Trippi; groups such as Democrats.com and Democracy for America; and a bring-our-troops-home message "imitating either Jimmy Stewart or Cindy Sheehan."

(snip)

Today, elite media are doing their best to raise Edwards' unfavorable rating. But the independent media and the Netroots are four years stronger -- and have more clout vis-a-vis corporate media -- than during Dean's rise and fall.

And it's hard for mainstream pundits to paint Edwards as "unelectable." Polls suggest he has wide appeal to non-liberals and swing voters.

After years of pontificating about how Southern white candidates are the most electable Democrats for president, it'd be ironic for even nimble Beltway pundits to flip-flop and declare that this particular white Southerner is a bad bet simply because he talks about class issues.


http://www.buzzflash.com:80/articles/contributors/1056



Transformational Change For America And The World - JOHN EDWARDS for PRESIDENT 2008

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rainy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 10:31 AM
Response to Original message
1. They are out to get him and every other dem. nt
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JNelson6563 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 03:27 PM
Response to Reply #1
17. Yes they are
Dirty bastards that they are.
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Blackhatjack Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 10:41 AM
Response to Original message
2. It is apparent that Edwards' does not place loyalty to the MSM over loyalty to the people...
... and that is driving the agenda to 'marginalize' Edwards.

Why give 'air time' to someone who is not beholding to the MSM, and in fact would be most likely to reinstitute the 'old rules' by which media used to operate?

Good Post Sapphire -- K & R
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Lobster Martini Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 10:45 AM
Response to Original message
3. Hate to bash the media, but there has been some really poor reporting recently
Case in point: Barack Obama releases a healthcare plan, and Michelle Obama resigns from the board of Wal-Mart. Guess which one receives more attention.

Hillary Clinton was on Wal-Mart's board! Resigned 15 years ago, but it's still news.

Edwards: Still Rich! (Note that when the possibility of Bloomberg running as an independent is discussed, the fact that he has more money than Europe isn't seen as a sign of moral decay and hypocrisy.)

And finally, Cindy Sheehan. Notice that every article emphasizes that she's been criticized by the left? Not that that's where the majority of criticism has been coming from.
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Catchawave Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 11:58 AM
Response to Reply #3
8. USA Today was caught by Media Matters
leaving out pertinent facts in an OP about Edwards and Obama. They were non-issues, but it was a good exercise in catching media bias.
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ultraist Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 10:59 AM
Response to Original message
4. The "elite media are doing their best to raise Edwards' unfavorable rating."
Because the corporate MSM fears John Edwards! They know that Edwards, the number one netroots candidate, supports empowering the netroots, the MSM's direct competitor, who calls the MSM to the table for their lies; this is just one of many reasons the corporate MSM fears Edwards, who is fighting FOR the people!
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Sapphire Blue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 01:58 PM
Response to Reply #4
14. There are others outside of the media doing the very same thing.
You can find them posting repetitive attacks & smears on internet discussion forums.

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Rydz777 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 11:07 AM
Response to Original message
5. I take it all with a grain. I watched Russert play "gotcha" with
Bill Richardson, and I thought, two weeks from now no one who is watching this show (and a "show" is exactly what it was) will remember a single thing that Russert has said. Of course, it was designed to leave a negative aura over Richardson's head, and the same goes for the carping about John Edwards.

And it does do damage, not just to the targets but to the whole political process. The media are basically ignorant about the issues, but they know about haircuts,so they are reduced to playing gotcha.
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venable Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 11:20 AM
Response to Original message
6. agree. absolutely

look at the appearance on Stephanopolous a few weeks ago, or even more egregiously, the Couric interview with John and Elizabeth right after the cancer was discovered.

The tone is "You are not fit", thus rendering whatever they say irrelevant.

Making the unwanted candidate seem irrelevant, the modus operandi of the MSM

at the moment, the MSM is drooling over Obama. He excites them, fair enough. But there needs to be some equity in the way candidates are treated. I certainly don't want them to start marginalilzing Obama. I want them to look at all the candidates clearly and objectively. Let's the candidates speak for themselves, on a level playing field. The people's wisdom will take over from there.

I think of Kucinich, who has perennially been treated as if he's some sort of joke. This, the guy who has been right about the war long before anyone else. Why is he, then, a joke?

Edwards clearly unnerves some people in the media, and here's my theory - he is absolutely about rearranging the power structure in this country. It is a corporate structure, and he is a dyed-in-the-wool populist.

The MSM are a central part of the power structure.

He threatens them.

Obama, for all his obvious abilities, is not threatening. Odd that this is the case for the most serious African-American candidate ever, just as it's odd the the first serious female candidate is not threatening the power structure.

It's the Edwards, the Deans, the Kucinich's.

K&R
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waiting for hope Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 11:37 AM
Response to Original message
7. Another example of how much
the "elite" fear Edwards.....

"And it's hard for mainstream pundits to paint Edwards as "unelectable." Polls suggest he has wide appeal to non-liberals and swing voters."

That says it all right there.

K&R!! Thanks SB! :hi:

:bounce: :bounce: :bounce: :bounce: :bounce: :bounce: :bounce: :bounce: :bounce: :bounce: :bounce:

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EFerrari Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 12:00 PM
Response to Original message
9. The Thuggery doesn't want him because he can win. The DLC
doesn't want him because he's too independent.
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EFerrari Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 12:37 PM
Response to Reply #9
10. Oh, and K&R
:kick:
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SoCalDem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 12:47 PM
Response to Original message
11. They have a new target for their assassination by media.. (I said it in '04)
Edited on Fri Jun-01-07 12:51 PM by SoCalDem
SoCalDem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Sat Feb-07-04 04:19 PM
Original message

The "New" Assassins!


Poor Jack Kennedy, Poor Martin Luther King, Poor James Meredith, Poor Malcolm X, Poor Bobby Kennedy...and so many others who were "under the radar", and we never even knew ..

People who dare to speak out are always in fear for their lives, and those named paid the ultimate price for their "free speech".

Had they lived now, in a more "evolved" time, they might have never had to die for their audacity. People who made waves back then were just "dealt with" in the crudest, but most effective way of the day......elimination.. Everyday people were stunned, shocked, saddened, outraged, and then they moved on. Daily life has a way of taking over, and except for a poignant "anniversary" acknowledgment, or the recurring "conspiracy talk", these people just passed into history as tragic figures.

Those assassinations did serve a purpose though. The message sent was loud and clear. Say the Wrong thing, and you are DONE.

In the "modern" world, although there are still assassination attempts here and there, the "serious" ones are not as common . A more efficient way of handling "rogue elements" is the new and improved way...Assassination by Media is the more accepted way now. If one looks back to the period following the Bobby Kennedy assassination, you can see it taking root. Bobby's slaying might have been the straw that broke the camel's back, in that people were ready to say..ENOUGH!!. People took to the streets and things got too "messy" for the old ways to ever work again.

Flash forward to the Watergate era. At first the story dribbled out and people did not pay a lot of attention, but the Washington Post knew they had a story and they kept at it like a junkyard dog. They challenged BIG GOVERNMENT, and they never quit. When the story finally got the attention of the general public, and Nixon was taken down, the press was bolder than ever before.

This was the era of the "white paper".... 60 Minutes was the very embodiment of "make them accountable".. They went after sleazy business practices and governmental screw-ups, and they hit hard.The show they do today is more "individual driven", and is pure tabloid journalism when compared to the way they started. The targets of their "investigation" are often beleaguered people who are already overextended financially by lawsuits or other problems, so they are probably less likely to sue, or they are the pathetic , sympathy-inducing people who have been "done wrong".

Behind the scenes though, there was a group of people who were seething with anger over what had just happened, and they were determined to get things "under control again". This was the beginning of media consolidation. Towns that had once had 2 or 3 competing newspapers, now had only one, television was still the "big three", Republican Think Tanks were sprouting up like toadstools after rain.

Jimmy Carter's tenure was the "test case" for what would come later. This gentle man was attacked in the press for every little thing. The Nixon hangover may have been partly to blame, since people were genuinely more interested in what went on "behind the curtain", but the things that Carter was berated about were just plain silly..Who remembers the "lusting in his heart" episode...or the "attack of the killer bunny".. or the "he wears sweaters in the oval office".."turn down your thermostats"...or "Amy is so ugly".. Those were the memes of the day.. The press chose to amplify these things to make this man appear to be a lightweight. The real problems he encountered as president were things not of his making, and I think he did try to solve them, but with only one term, and the difficulties of the first "oil crisis", and the "hostage thing", he was doomed..

Nightline was born out of the frustration of the hostage crisis. That show started as a one hour news program with a daily update on the hostages.

A rootin-tootin Dubya would have just saddled up (other people's kids) and attacked Iran, and if the hostages were killed, it would have been "collateral damage", but Carter thought he could negotiate them home. This was our first real experience with the "new middle east". They were radical.. They were mad.. They were Bad.The old ways would never work again. Oddly enough, we now know that some of the very same people we associate with the Reagan/Bush , Bush # 1, and Bush # 2 regimes were involved , behind-the scenes , in the Iran Hostage issue.. At the time, I do not recall hearing their names mentioned when Nightline went on night after night, enumerating the "days since....".

The press attacked Carter relentlessly, and I do not recall much rallying on his behalf from anyone, and the hostage crisis did him in. It was not accidental that the hostages were released at the exact moment of Reagan's swearing in. Bush 1 had CIA connections, and the Bush loyalists (the same ones we have now) choreographed the incident masterfully, and the press ate it up. People love a winner, and Reagan came in as a winner. It was also no accident that doing away with the fairness doctrine was high on the list of "things to do".

The republicans were riding high, awash with money, and the public gaze was averted. Inflation was rampant,unemployment was high,there had been wage & price freezes and gas shortages... All in all, people were willing to "be taken care of", and they trusted the grandfatherly guy they had seen in the movies. It was not long before the doctrine was gone, and without that, it was easy for very rich ideologues to start buying up media , and they did it with a vengeance.

Looking back, it's not hard to see how effective it was. The things that have been attributed to Reagan/Bush 1 would have never been tolerated by a Democratic administration.The Clinton years showed us that , in spades.

The switchover was seamless too. Local radio stations had mostly been music, with local hosts who did silly home town pranks, held local contests for their listeners, and had news on the hour. Somewhere during this time frame, "talk/opinion" formats started really emerging, and more and more stations gave up their music formats altogether.

What better way is there to ensure that a particular opinion saturates the public, than to have local radio stations all under the same corporate ownership?. If station ABCD in Omaha is owned by the same parent company as most of the others in the area, the "movement" between stations will not happen. In the past, a radio host could get into a jam with his bosses, and the next week, he was on a competing station in a nearby town, taking a lot of his listeners with him, but when the same people own all the stations, and a host goes against the wishes of his bosses, there is NOWHERE for him to go. The atmosphere of "go-along-to-get-along" stifles any real discussion of opposing ideas.

When the major source of information of a population only airs ONE viewpoint, it's easy to demonize the opposition. The "media people" had , and still have, easy access to their own "facts" that are regularly churned out by the think tanks, they have access to all the "professional speakers/pundits" that they could ever use (also cheerfully provided by the think tanks). These same people are often editorial columnists for the papers , who just happen to be owned by the same people who own/operate the radio & TV stations.. .

There was a time when, once an election was over, people just licked their wounds, accepted that they had lost and then vowed to try again. The "new assassins" in the media cannot ever allow the "quiet time" between elections, because the fires must always be stoked. The potential adversaries must be ridiculed,belittled,scorned, accused and abused, well in advance of the next election so that the "right" people win. The unusual aspect of this , is that since the Fairness Doctrine went by the wayside, it's usually the Democratic candidates who are put through the grinder, while republican candidates with more "baggage" are treated with kid gloves. Any misgivings about a republican candidate can be explained away as a "youthful indiscretion", or a "cute colloquialism" ,or a "miscalculation", or "getting inaccurate advice", and so many more.

A candidate who has all the qualities necessary for office, is attacked mercilessly from the moment they announce they are running for office. The 24/7 media of today is expert at the art of "linguistic assassination", and they have the time to do the job well.

Election 2000 is a prime example of assassination by media. Al Gore was a vice president. He did not wield the power that our current vice president does. He had impeccable credentials, was eloquent, had a squeaky clean family life, and lived modestly considering his position. He was actually considered dull. He never presented himself as a "life-of-the-party" guy.He was the studious guy, who read bills before he voted. He was the guy who did research. He was the guy who actually went to Viet Nam , even though he was not a Green Beret with a bayonet between his teeth, singlehandedly wiping out a division of Viet Cong.The fact is ..He went.

They hammered at him about his wardrobe. Every little gaffe, was portrayed as a LIE. His opponent was secretive, smart-assed, sullen, and un-knowledgeable, yet HE was portrayed as "a bit rough", "a nice guy that you would like to have a beer with", " a friendly "people-person", and too many others to list. By implication, HE was the guy with the white hat, the Good Guy, and poor old Gore was the liar with the bad fashion sense, who was dull. The daily indictment and litany of his "sins" was impossible to ignore, and every interview started and finished with him trying to refute the smears aimed at him, and him alone.

The assassins have taken aim this election season, and again they have taken aim and have wounded, if not killed, a few of the possible candidates. The media has moved from a position of watching what happens, and then reporting on it, to MAKING it happen, and then tweaking it to make an ever-better "story"..

The little known governor from a small state ..hmm that sounds familiar... is such a good story. Howard Dean was this cycle's John McCain. The press loved him.....until they had built him up to almost rock-star status, and then the only thing for them to do to get more ratings, was to "kill" him. And so they did.. They report with childlike wonder at why "he's not doing better in the polls", and then they laugh and giggle and "cue up the tape".. Then they put on their scrunched up worried face and wonder if the campaign is broke.. They are "so concerned".. They cluck-cluck to each other about how disappointing it is to see him not doing well, and yet they have already reloaded for the next victim.

Now on to the next willing contestant, John "Botox" Kerry.




By the time the election actually occurs, the candidate has been hopelessly smeared, and politically assassinated.. It not only can remove a candidate from the prospect of elected office, but it effectively silences them as well.

Assassination by media is so much more effective, since the whole "martyr thing" is eliminated and it's not nearly as "untidy" as the old way..
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Gabi Hayes Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 05:43 PM
Response to Reply #11
20. la plus, etc? you should start a thread with this. also, you know it's only going to get
WORSE!

hard to imagine, but it always does
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Warren DeMontague Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 12:48 PM
Response to Original message
12. The way things stand now, if Gore doesn't get in, I'm voting for Edwards. nt
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goodhue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 01:10 PM
Response to Original message
13. great read
and very true
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Triana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 02:14 PM
Response to Original message
15. K & R!!! I see through the lamestream media's attacks...
...I H8 the friggin lamestream media. This is just another reason why.

I ordered Al Gore's book on CD and I can't WAIT to hear it! Because THIS TYPE OF CRAP is what it helps address.

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EFerrari Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 02:50 PM
Response to Original message
16. kick
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LSK Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 03:29 PM
Response to Original message
18. K&R
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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 05:37 PM
Response to Original message
19. YES! Cramer was on Hardball tonight bashing Edwards as the most dangerous candidate.
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Inspired Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 08:38 PM
Response to Original message
21. Kick
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sojourner Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 11:14 PM
Response to Original message
22. HELL YES, they are.
They don't want him getting our votes. He is sincere in his populism and he'll stand by his promises, pricey haircuts and mansion notwithstanding.

Just heard Bill O'Liely and the "Ragin Cajun" James Carville on CSPAN discussing the 08 lineup. Carville was really slim in his list of Edwards' "strengths" and gave the impression that this was a candidate that was no more than a lightweight. O'Loofah slammed Edwards as a hypocrite. I get the feeling that Edwards has been "cut" from the team. Corpo-masters don't want no stinkin' "middle class" defenders in their game.
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Sapphire Blue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-01-07 11:53 PM
Response to Reply #22
23. They downplay & deflect attention from the issues he addresses, instead attacking him...
... on irrelevant nonsense like haircuts.

We, the people, are listening to what Edwards is saying, though, and they are really afraid of that. We, the people, are the ones who will cast our votes.

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