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The Emerging Mediocracy?


One of the most consistent themes on the internet is the liberal critique of the national press corps (the "MSM"). Supported with the works of people like Eric Alterman, liberals argue that the political press at best superficial and at worst the willing dupes (active supporters?) of Rovian hitjobs on Democratic candidates. Glenn Greenwald and Digby have spoken with particular force on this issue, but they by no means are alone. Last night's travesty of a presidential debate is probably the best example of what liberals are so upset about. It's becoming increasingly clear that either the entire political discussion is debased, or there is a systematic bias against Democratic candidates, or both. Probably both.

But having accepted our unfortunate situation - that the mainstream media has become fundamentally corrupted, that it is not only not doing its job but doing the opposite of its job - it remains unclear what we are supposed to do to rectify the situation.

The first option might be to launch a concerted effort to criticize the press, in much the same way that conservatives did starting in the 1960's. This has begun to happen to an extent, although not in any well-funded, systematic way. I suppose that over the long term this might bear some fruit, but I must confess I'm somewhat skeptical that elite journalists would pay sufficient attention to what bloggers say to make any difference. It's not like they care what we think anyway.

The second option is that Democratic political leaders could begin shaming the media and freezing out journalists that displease them. This approach holds promise (because as far as I can tell it's how the Republicans do it), but it would be very risky in the short term. Democratic politicians rely on media exposure. They could boycott a particular journalist or news outlet, but since the problem is system-wide, the task becomes far more difficult. They would effectively absenting the entire party from the public discussion. Furthermore, there would be enormous incentives for each officeholder to "defect" in what looks like a classic prisoner's dilemma.

Of course there is the third option, which is to work for institutional reforms in how news content is disseminated and how political journalists are trained, but that is a very long term strategy that would likely to decades to yield benefits - if ever.

I'm not trying to minimize the problem. The political press has grown enormously in power over the last few decades, and what is worse, they know it. Their malpractice is at least partly responsible for the Iraq War and the election of George Bush. They have enabled Bush's abuses while in office, since Bush and his cronies would never have been able to get away with what they have done for so long and with so little price if the press had been doing their job. The media hated Gore, Dean, and Edwards and played no small role in blocking their candidacies. And the media's bizarre love affair with John McCain probably helped him win the Republican nomination and could very well help him reach the White House.

In effect, it is beginning to appear that the national press corps is the one choosing who will serve in public office and what policies they can pursue - not the voters; that we're becoming not a Democracy, but a Mediocracy. And to honest, I'm not entirely sure what can be done about it.

Cross-posted at the Third Estate.

5 Comments

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Another option:

If Democrats can somehow win the White House and get strong majorities in the legislature despite this toxic media environment, they can do two things:

1. Bring back the Fairness Doctrine (& enforce it)

2. Break up the media monopolies (Taft/Hartley)

Of course, they can't campaign on this, or even talk about it prior to the GE - this would cause the MM (media monopolies) to even try harder to stop them (recall when Dean broached this subject in the 2004 primaries - the reaction was immediate and nasty).

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Absolutely.

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From what I can tell the Fairness Doctrine is pretty much dead for good. And any attempt to roll back media consolidation would spark a major push-back from the media conglomerates - and I don't think a President would be willing to risk his entire legislative agenda on the issue.

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Excellent post.

That said, what "we" can do is what has worked in the past. Bypass the media and go directly to our representatives.

It worked when they tried to further consolidate the media a few years ago. There was very nearly zero press coverage, (notable exception: Bill Safire at the NYTimes), but by working together and going directly to our Reps, regular folks--liberal and conservative--managed to defeat it.

Of course, that was a very specific issue, although I think the best way to get around the press this time is to go directly to voters and convince them that we need a Democrat as C-i-C. I don't think it's really a hard case to make given the last 7 years.

Blogs like this one are certainly a weapon that has been getting more powerful over the past few years precisely because the MSM has become such a joke.

All citizens need to become more pro-active in order to "take back the media"

Maybe the key to all our woes lies in busting the corporations. I think if they are to be considered "persons ," that we should insist on them having a "lifespan," like any "person." That was how corporations were kept from becoming too powerful in the past, and it's long past the time to have them choose "personhood" (in which case they should be forced to dissolve every 75 years or so), or regulated to prevent them from having unfair advantages over "actual persons."

Just my two cents.

Thanks for the post on an actual issue.

:)

It's quite refreshing.

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I don't think there's any sort of unified media bias going on. I think the main problem is that the vast majority of the men and women who make up the punditry just aren't that bright.

Or, maybe that's not fair. Most (but not all) of them are probably blessed with at least average intelligence, and some of them even seem to know a fair amount about the subjects they're paid to chatter on. Very few of them, though, appear have any original thoughts or useful insights. They pretty much just parrot the conventional wisdom, or the opinions of whatever politician or corporate shill has most effectively caught their ears lately. In short, only a very small number of them are actually worth listening to.

Unfortunately, though, a lot of people do listen to them; and, for the last three or four decades, Republicans have been much more adept than Democrats at sticking their hands inside the enormous puppet head that is our national media and making it speak their message. The ideal solution would be to undermine the entire punditocratic system and replace it with a better means of information exchange; and maybe that's what we're all trying to do here in this series of tubes. In the meantime, though, Democrats need to brush up on their ventriloquism.

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arbitrista

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