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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: greenspirit who wrote (265954)6/24/2002 2:58:29 PM
From: Thomas M.  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
A little insight into the "fair & balanced" alternative to CNN:

speakeasy.org

Kissing the Boots of the Media Goliath

by Norman Solomon

In a media world where the preposterous has become routine, it's hard to be
shocked anymore. But I hope you're sitting down.

A major religious organization has decided to give its "Humanitarian of the
Year" award to...Rupert Murdoch.

What's next? Prizes to Jenny Jones and Howard Stern for quality journalism?
A posthumous award to Marshall Herff Applewhite for affirmation of life?

Media mogul Murdoch is getting his Humanitarian of the Year plaque from a
group that calls itself "the largest philanthropic organization in the world." The
United Jewish Appeal-Federation of New York will honor Murdoch at a
posh dinner in late May.

Fawning over mighty tycoons is nothing new. But the UJA-Federation is
pushing the obsequious envelope.

Murdoch, whose grandfather was a Presbyterian minister, has emerged as
the planet's media giant. His possessions in this country include the Fox
television network, TV Guide, the tabloid New York Post, HarperCollins book
publishers, Twentieth Century Fox and the right-wing Weekly Standard
magazine.

Lax federal regulation has swelled the profits of Murdoch's News Corp., now
a $28 billion conglomerate. As a recent New York Times article noted, his
10-year-old Fox TV network "could never have succeeded if it had not
received generous treatment at the Federal Communications Commission."
Naturally, turning such big governmental wheels requires lots of political
grease.

Last year, Murdoch donated $1 million to the California Republican Party,
while News Corp. gave another $654,700 in "soft money" to the national
GOP. The current chairman of Fox News is Roger Ailes, the former media
adviser to George Bush's 1988 presidential campaign who went on to
become executive producer of Rush Limbaugh's TV show.

Murdoch has floated an abundance of lofty rhetoric about his Star TV global
satellite network. For example: "Satellite broadcasting makes it possible for
information-hungry residents of many closed societies to bypass
state-controlled television." He touts new media technology as a "threat to
totalitarian regimes everywhere."

But Murdoch quickly kowtowed to China's totalitarian regime when Beijing
objected to Star TV transmissions of BBC News reports about Chinese
human rights abuses. In 1994, Murdoch's network dropped the BBC from its
broadcasts to Asia. "The BBC was driving them nuts," Murdoch reportedly
said. "It's not worth it."

In Murdoch's native Australia, News Corp. dominates the mass media. In
Britain, Murdoch controls more than a third of daily newspaper circulation
along with much of cable and satellite television. While using his media
outlets to push for the slashing of government social services, Murdoch was a
pioneer of union-busting in the newspaper industry.

Why would the UJA-Federation choose to laud this man?

Well, of course, he's extremely wealthy - wielding enormous media leverage
and political clout on several continents. And he's an avid backer of Israel.
Meanwhile, a News Corp. subsidiary boasts of being "the largest R&D
firm in Jerusalem."

The UJA-Federation - proud of its aid programs for Jewish immigrants
in Israel - avoids the concept of human rights for Arabs in the holy
land. The organization encourages the attitude that Palestine belongs
to Jews but not to Palestinians. With a similar spirit, Murdoch declares
"my faith and News Corporation's faith in the integrity and worthiness
of the Zionist undertaking."

So, it's appropriate that the presenter of the upcoming Humanitarian of the
Year award will be none other than Henry Kissinger. The former secretary of
state has never apologized for a bigoted remark he made in June 1992 while
speaking at an "Israel benefit" event for the Jerusalem Foundation: "You
can't really believe anything an Arab says."

Next month's salute to Murdoch also features "honorary dinner chair" Sumner
Redstone, the Viacom CEO whose vast media empire includes the UPN,
MTV, Nickelodeon and USA Networks, Simon & Schuster and Paramount
Pictures. Many other media titans will be at the head table.

By proclaiming that Rupert Murdoch is Humanitarian of the Year, the award
sponsors have chosen to kiss the boots of a media Goliath. The May 29
banquet at the Waldorf-Astoria will pay tribute to a global magnate who
exemplifies how wealth and media power can buy a gloss of moral
legitimacy.