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SENTIENT TIMES December 2003/January 2004 Our Democracy is in Danger of Being Paralyzed By Bill Moyers Over 1700 people attended the National Conference on Media Reform last November in Madison, Wisconsin. Media reform activists joined members of Congress, the FCC, leaders of major groups working for civil rights, womens rights, rural renewal, the environment, labor, and community development. The mission of the conference included: Mobilization of new consti-tuencies; Strengthening coalitions working in Washington and at the grassroots; Developing unified action plans for immediate and long-term reforms; Generating policies and strategies that will structurally improve the media system. The following is excerpted from journalist Bill Moyers keynote address. Thank you for inviting me tonight. Im flattered to be speaking to a gathering as high-powered as this one thats come together with an objective as compelling as media reform. I must confess, however, to a certain discomfort, shared with other journalists, about the very term media. Ted Gup, who teaches journalism at Case Western Reserve, articulated my concerns better than I could when he wrote in The Chronicle of Higher Education (November 23, 2001) the very concept of media is insulting to some of us within the press who find ourselves lumped in with so many disparate elements, as if everyone with a pen, a microphone, a camera, or just a loud voice were all one and the same David Broder is not Matt Drudge. Meet the Press is not Temptation Island. And I am not Jerry Springer. I do not speak for him. He does not speak for me. Yet the media speaks for us all. Thats how I felt when I saw Oliver North reporting on Fox from Iraq, pressing our embattled troops to respond to his repetitive and belittling question, Does Fox Rock? Does Fox Rock? Oliver North and I may be in the same media but we are not part of the same message. Nonetheless, I accept that I work and all of us live in medialand, and God knows we need some media reform. Im sure you know those two words are really an incomplete description of the job ahead. Taken alone, they suggest that youve assembled a convention of efficiency experts, tightening the bolts and boosting the output of the machinery of public enlightenment, or else a conclave of high-minded do-gooders applauding each others sermons. But we need to beand we will bemuch more than that. Because what were talking about is nothing less than rescuing a democracy that is so polarized it is in danger of being paralyzed and pulverized. Alarming words, I know. But the realities we face should trigger alarms. Free and responsible government by popular consent just cant exist without an informed public. Thats a cliché, I know, but I agree with the presidential candidate who once said that truisms are true and clichés mean what they say (an observation that no doubt helped to lose him the election.) Its a reality: democracy cant exist without an informed public. Heres an example: Only 13% of eligible young people cast ballots in the last presidential election. A recent National Youth Survey revealed that only half of the fifteen hundred young people polled believe that voting is important, and only 46% think they can make a difference in solving community problems. Were talking here about one quarter of the electorate. The Car-negie Corporation con-ducted a youth chal-lenge quiz of l5-24 year-olds and asked them, Why dont more young people vote or get involved? Of the nearly two thousand respondents, the main answer was that they did not have enough information about issues and candidates. Let me rewind and say it again: democracy cant exist without an informed public. So I say without qualification that its not simply the cause of journalism thats at stake today, but the cause of American liberty itself. As Tom Paine put it, The sun never shined on a cause of greater worth. He was talking about the cause of a revolutionary America in 1776. But that revolution ran in good part on the energies of a rambunctious, though tiny press. Freedom and freedom of communications were birth-twins in the future United States. They grew up together, and neither has fared very well in the others absence. Boom times for the one have been boom times for the other. Yet today, despite plenty of lip service on every ritual occasion to freedom of the press radio and TV, three powerful forces are undermining that very freedom, damming the streams of significant public interest news that irrigate and nourish the flowering of self-determination. The first of these is the centuries-old reluctance of governmentseven elected governmentsto operate in the sunshine of disclosure and criticism. The second is more subtle and more recent. Its the tendency of media giants, operating on big-business principles, to exalt commercial values at the expense of democratic value. That is, to run what Edward R. Murrow forty-five years ago called broadcastings money-making machine at full throttle. In so doing they are squeezing out the journalism that tries to get as close as possible to the verifiable truth; they are isolating serious coverage of public affairs into ever-dwindling news holes or far from prime-time; and they are gobbling up small and independent publications competing for the attention of the American people. Its hardly a new or surprising story. But there are fresh and disturbing chapters. In earlier times our governing bodies tried to squelch journalistic freedom with the blunt instruments of the lawpadlocks for the presses and jail cells for outspoken editors and writers. Over time, with spectacular wartime exceptions, the courts and the Constitution struck those weapons out of their hands. But theyve found new ones now, in the name of national security. The classifiers Top Secret stamp, used indiscriminately, is as potent a silencer as a writ of arrest. And beyond what is officially labeled secret there hovers a culture of sealed official lips, opened only to favored media insiders: of government by leak and innuendo and spin, of misnamed public infor-mation offices that churn out blizzards of releases filled with self-justifying exaggera-tions and, occasionally, just plain damned lies. Censorship without officially appointed censors. Add to that the censorship-by-omission of consolidated media empires digesting the bones of swallowed independents, and youve got a major shrinkage of the crucial information that thinking citizens can act upon. People saw that coming as long as a century ago when the rise of chain newspaper ownerships, and then of concentration in the young radio industry, became apparent. And so in the zesty progressivism of early New Deal days, the Federal Communications Act of 1934 was passed. The aim of that cornerstone of broadcast policy, mentioned over 100 times in its pages, was to promote the public interest, convenience and necessity. The clear intent was to prevent a monopoly of commercial values from overwhelming democratic values. To assure that the official view of realitycorporate or governmentwas not the only view of reality that reached the people. Regulators and regulated, media and government were to keep a wary eye on each other, preserving those checks and balances that is the bulwark of our Constitutional order. What would happen, however, if the contending giants of big government and big publishing and broadcasting ever joined hands? Ever saw eye to eye in putting the publics need for news second to free-market economics? Thats exactly whats happening now under the ideological banner of deregulation. Giant megamedia conglomerates that our founders could not possibly have envisioned are finding common cause with an imperial state in a betrothal certain to produce not the sons and daughters of liberty but the very kind of bastards that issued from the old arranged marriage of church and state. Consider where we are today. Never has there been an administration so disciplined in secrecy, so precisely in lockstep in keeping information from the people at large andin defiance of the Constitutionfrom their representatives in Congress. Never has so powerful a media oligopolythe word is Barry Dillers, not minebeen so unabashed in reaching like Caesar for still more wealth and power. Never have hand and glove fitted together so comfortably to manipulate free political debate, sow contempt for the idea of government itself, and trivialize the peoples need to know. When the journalist-historian Richard Reeves was once asked by a college student to define real news he answered: The news you and I need to keep our freedoms. When journalism throws in with power thats the first news marched by censors to the guillotine. The greatest moments in the history of the press came not when journalists made common cause with the state but when they stood fearlessly independent of it. Which brings me to the third powerful forcebeyond governmental secrecy and megamedia conglomeratesthat is shaping what Americans see, read, and hear. I am talking now about that quasi-official partisan press ideologically linked to an authoritarian administration that in turn is the ally and agent of the most powerful interests in the world. This convergence dominates the marketplace of political ideas today in a phenomenon unique in our history. You need not harbor the notion of a vast, right wing conspiracy to think this more collusion, more than pure coincidence. Conspiracy is unnecessary when ideology hungers for power and its many adherents swarm of their own accord to the same pot of honey. Stretching from the editorial pages of the Wall Street Journal to the faux news of Rupert Murdochs empire to the nattering nabobs of no-nothing radio to a legion of think tanks paid for and bought by conglomeratesthe religious, partisan and corporate right have raised a mighty megaphone for sectarian, economic, and political forces that aim to transform the egalitarian and democratic ideals embodied in our founding documents. Authoritarianism. With no strong opposition party to challenge such triumphalist hegemony, it is left to journalism to be democracys best friend. That is why so many journalists joined with you in questioning Michael Powells bidblessed by the White Housefor the FCC to permit further concentration of media ownership. If free and independent journalism committed to telling the truth without fear or favor is suffocated, the oxygen goes out of democracy. And there is a surer way to intimidate and then silence mainstream journalism than to be the boss. If you doubt me, read Jane Kramers chilling account in the current New Yorker of Silvio Berlusconi. The Prime Minister of Italy is its richest citizen. He is also its first media mogul. The list of media that he or his relatives or his proxies own, or directly or indirectly control, includes the state television networks and radio stations, three of Italys four commercial television networks, two big publishing houses, two national newspapers, fifty magazines, the countrys largest movie production-and-distribution company, and a chunk of its Internet services. Even now he is pressing upon parliament a law that would enable him to purchase more media properties, including the most influential paper in the country. Kramer quotes one critic who says that half the reporters in Italy work for Berlusconi, and the other half think they might have to. Small wonder he has managed to put the Italian State to work to guarantee his fortuneor that his name is commonly attached to such unpleasant things as contempt for the law, conflict of interest, bribery, and money laundering. Nonetheless, his power over what other Italians see, read, buy, and, above all, think, is overwhelming. The editor of The Economist, Bill Emmott, was asked recently why a British magazine was devoting so much space to an Italian Prime Minister. He replied that Berlusconi had betrayed the two things the magazine stood for: capitalism and democracy. Can it happen here? It can happen here. By the way, Berlusconis close friend is Rupert Murdoch. On July 3lst this year, writes Jane Kramer, programming on nearly all the satellite hookups in Italy was switched automatically to Murdochs Sky Italia. So the issues bringing us here tonight are bigger and far more critical than simply media reform. Thats why, before I go on, I want to ask you to look around you. Im serious: Look to your left and now to your right. You are looking at your allies in one of the great ongoing struggles of the American experiencethe struggle for the soul of democracy, for government of, by, and for the people. Its a battle we can win only if we work together. Weve seen that this year. Just a few months ago the FCC, heavily influenced by lobbyists for the newspaper, broad-casting and cable interests, prepared a relaxation of the rules governing ownership of media outlets that would allow still more diversity-killing mergers among media giants. The proceedings were conducted in virtual secrecy, and generally ignored by all the major media, who were of course interested parties. In June Chairman Powell and his two Republican colleagues on the FCC announced the revised regulations as a done deal. But they didnt count on the voice of independent journalists and citizens like you. Because of coverage in independent outletsincluding PBS, which was the only broadcasting system that encouraged its journalists to report what was really happeningand because citizens like you took quick action, this largely invisible issue burst out as a major political cause and ignited a crackling public debate. You exposed Powells failure to conduct an open discussion of the rule changes save for a single hearing in Richmond, Virginia. Your efforts led to a real participatory discussion, with open meetings in Chicago, Seattle, San Francisco, New York and Atlanta. Then the organizing that followed generated millions of letters and filings at the FCC opposing the change. Finally, the outcry mobilized unexpected support for bi-partisan legislation to reverse the new rules that cleared the Senatealthough House Majority Leader Tom De Lay still holds it prisoner in the House. But who would have thought six months ago that the cause would win support from such allies as Senator Trent Lott or Kay Bailey Hutchinson, from my own Texas. You have moved media reform to center-stage, where it may even now become a catalyst for a new era of democratic renewal. We working journalists have something special to bring to this work. This weekend at your conference there will be plenty of good talk about the mechanics of reform. What laws are needed? What advocacy programs and strategies? How can we protect and extend the reach of those tools that give us some countervailing power against media monopolyinstruments like the Internet, cable TV, community-based radio and public broadcasting systems, alternative journals of news and opinion. But without passion, without a message that has a beating heart, these wont be enough. Theres where journalism comes in. It isnt the only agent of freedom, obviously; in fact, journalism is a deeply human and therefore deeply flawed craftyours truly being a conspicuous example. But at times it has risen to great occasions, and at times it has made other freedoms possible. Thats what the draftsmen of the First Amendment knew and its what we cant afford to forget. During the War for Independence itself most of the three dozen little weekly newspapers in the colonies took the Patriot side and mobilized resistance by giving space to anti-British letters, news of Parliaments latest outrages, and calls to action. But the clarion journalistic voice of the Revolution was the onetime editor of the Pennsylvania Magazine, Tom Paine In 1776, just before enlisting in Washingtons army, he published Common Sense, a hard-hitting pamphlet that slashed through legalisms and doubts to make an uncompromising case for an independent and republican America. Its been called the first best seller, with as many as 100,000 copies bought by a small literate population. Paine followed it up with another convincing collection of essays written in the field and given another punchy title, The Crisis. Passed from hand to hand and reprinted in other papers, they spread the gospel of freedom to thousands of doubters. And why I bring Paine up here is because he had something we need to restorean unwavering concentration to reach ordinary people with the message that they mattered and could stand up for themselves. He couched his gospel of human rights and equality in a popular style that any working writer can envy. As it is my design, he said, to make those that can scarcely read understand, I shall therefore avoid every literary ornament and put it in language as plain as the alphabet. That plain language spun off memorable one-liners that were still quoting. These are the times that try mens souls. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered. What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly. Virtue is not hereditary. And this: Of more worth is one honest man to society and in the sight of God than all the crowned ruffians that ever lived. I dont know what Paine would have thought of political debate by bumper sticker and sound bite but he could have held his own in any modern campaign. Courage is a timeless quality and surfaces when the government is tempted to hit the bottle of censorship again during national emergencies, real or manufactured. As so many of you will recall, in 1971, during the Vietnam War, the Nixon administration resurrected the doctrine of prior restraint from the crypt and tried to ban the publication of the Pentagon Papers by the New York Times and the Washington Posteven though the documents themselves were a classified history of events during four earlier Presidencies. Arthur Sulzberger, the publisher of the Times, and Katherine Graham of the Post were both warned by their lawyers that they and their top managers could face criminal prosecution under espionage laws if they printed the material that Daniel Ellsberg had leakedand, by the way, offered without success to the three major television networks. Or at the least, punitive lawsuits or whatever political reprisals a furious Nixon team could devise. But after internal debatesand the threats of some of their best-known editors to resign rather than fold under pressureboth owners gave the green lightand were vindicated by the Supreme Court. Score a round for democracy. Bi-partisan fairness requires me to note that the Carter administration, in 1979, tried to prevent the Progressive magazine, published right here in Madison, from running an article called How to Make an H-Bomb. The grounds were a supposed threat to national security. But Howard Morland had compiled the piece entirely from sources open to the public, mainly to show that much of the classification system was Wizard of Oz smoke and mirrors. The courts again rejected the governments claim, but its noteworthy that the journalism of defiance by that time had retreated to a small left-wing publication like the Progressive. In all three of those cases, confronted with a clear and present danger of punish-ment, none of the owners flinched. Can we think of a single executive of todays big media conglomerates showing the kind of resistance that Sulzberger, Graham, and Erwin Knoll did? Certainly not Michael Eisner. He said he didnt even want ABC News reporting on its parent company, Disney. Certainly not General Electric/NBCs Robert Wright. He took Phil Donahue off MNBC because the network didnt want to offend conservatives with a liberal sensibility during the invasion of Iraq. Instead, NBC brought to its cable channel one Michael Savage whose diatribes on radio had described non-white countries as turd-world nations and who characterized gay men and women as part of the grand plan to cut down on the white race. I am not sure what it says that the GE/NBC executives calculated that while Donahue was offensive to conservatives, Savage was not. And then theres Leslie Moonves, the chairman of CBS. In the very week that the once-Tiffany Network was celebrating its 75th anniversaryand taking kudos for its glory days when it was unafraid to broadcast The Harvest of Shame and The Selling of the Pentagon the networks famous eye blinked. Pressured by a vociferous and relentless right wing campaign and bullied by the Republican National Committeeand at a time when its parent company has billions resting on whether the White House, Congress, and the FCC will allow it to own even more stations than currently permissible CBS caved in and pulled the miniseries about Ronald Reagan that conservatives thought insufficiently worshipful. The chief honcho at CBS, Les Moonves, says taste, not politics, dictated his decision. But earlier this year, explaining why CBS intended to air a series about Adolf Hitler, Moonves sang a different tune: If you want to play it safe and put on milquetoast then you get criticized There are times as a broadcaster when you take chances. This obviously wasnt one of those times. Granted, made-for-television movies about living figures are about as vital as the wax figures at Madame Tussaudsand even less authenticgranted that the canonizers of Ronald Reagan hadnt even seen the film before they set to howling; granted, on the surface its a silly tempest in a teapot; still, when a once-great network falls obsequiously to the ground at the feet of a partisan mob over a cheesy mini-series that practically no one would have taken seriously as history, you have to wonder if the slight tremor that just ran through the First Amendment could be the harbinger of greater earthquakes to come, when the stakes are really high. And you have to wonder what concessions the media tycoons-cum-supplicants are making when no one is looking. When Joseph Pulitzer, a one-time immigrant reporter for a German-language paper in St. Louis, took over the New York World in 1883 he was already a millionaire in the making. But heres his recommended short platform for politicians: Tax luxuries; Tax inheritances; Tax large incomes; Tax monopolies; Tax the privileged corporation; A tariff for revenue; Reform the Civil Service; Punish corrupt officers; Punish vote buying; Punish employers who coerce their employees in elections. Not a bad mission statement. Can you imagine one of todays huge newspaper chains taking that on as an agenda? Muckraking lingers on today, but alas, a good deal of it consists of raking personal and sexual scandal in high and celebrated places. Surely, if democracy is to be served, we have to get back to putting the rake where the important dirt lies, in the fleecing of the public and the abuse of its faith in good government. When that landmark Communications Act of 1934 was under consideration a vigorous public movement of educators, labor officials, and religious and institutional leaders emerged to argue for a broadcast system that would serve the interests of citizens and communities. A movement like that is coming to life again and we now have to build on this momentum. It wont be easy, because the tides been flowing the other way for a long time. The deregulation pressure began during the Reagan era, when then-FCC chairman Mark Fowler, who said that TV didnt need much regulation because it was just a toaster with pictures, eliminated many public-interest rules. That opened the door for networks to cut their news staffs, scuttle their docu-mentary units (goodbye to The Harvest of Shame and The Selling of the Pentagon), and exile investigative producers and reporters to the under-funded hinterlands of independent production. It was like turning out searchlights on dark and dangerous corners. A crowning achievement of that drive was the Telecommunications Act of 1996, the largest corporate welfare program ever for the most powerful media and entertainment conglomerates in the worldpassed, I must add, with support from both parties. And the beat of convergence between once-distinct forms of media goes on at increased tempo, with the communications conglomerates and the advertisers calling the tune. As safeguards to competition fall, an octopus like GE-NBC-Vivendi-Universal will be able to secure cable channels that can deliver interactive multimedia contenttext, sound and imagesto digital TVs, home computers, personal video recorders and portable wireless devices like cell phones. The goal? To corner the market on new ways of selling more things to more people for more hours in the day. And in the long run, to fill the airwaves with customized pitches to you and your children. That will melt down the surviving boundaries between editorial and marketing divisions and create a hybrid known to the new-media hucksters as branded entertainment. Lets consider whats happening to newspapers. A study by Mark Cooper of the Consumer Federation of America reports that two-thirds of todays newspaper markets are monopolies. And now most of the countrys powerful newspaper chains are lobbying for co-ownership of newspaper and broadcast outlets in the same market, increasing their grip on community after community. And are they up-front about it? Hear this: Last December 3 such media giants as The New York Times, Gannett, Cox, and Tribune, along with the trade group representing almost all the countrys broadcasting stations, filed a petition to the FCC making the case for that cross ownership the owners so desperately seek. They actually told the FCC that lifting the regulation on cross ownership would strengthen local journalism. But did those same news organizations tell their readers what they were doing? Not all. None of them on that day believed they had an obligation to report in their own news pages what their parent companies were asking of the FCC. As these huge media conglomerates increase their control over what we see, read, and hear, they rarely report on how they are themselves are using their power to further their own interests and power as big business, including their influence over the political process. Take a look at a new book called Leaving Readers Behind: The Age of Corporate Newspapering published as part of the Project on the State of the American Newspaper under the auspices of the Pew Charitable Trusts. The people who produced the book all love newspapersGene Roberts, former managing editor of The New York Times; Thomas Kunkel, dean of the Philip Merrill College of Journalism; Charles Layton, a veteran wire service reporter and news and feature editor at the Philadelphia Inquirer, as well as contributors such as Ken Auletta, Geneva Overholser, and Roy Reed. Their con-clusion: the newspaper industry is in the middle of the most momentous change in its three hundred year historya change that is diminishing the amount of real news available to the consumer. A generation of relentless corporatization is now culmi-nating in a furious, unprecedented blitz of buying, selling and consolidating of newspapers, from the mightiest dailies to the humblest weeklies. It is a world where small hometown dailies in particular are being bought and sold like hog futures. Where chains, once content to grow one property at a time, now devour other chains whole. Where they are effectively ceding whole regions of the country to one another, further minimizing competition. Where money is pouring into the business from interests with little knowledge and even less concern about the special obligations newspapers have to democracy. They go on to describe the toll that the never-ending drive for profits is taking on the news. In Cumberland, Maryland, for example, the police reporter had so many duties piled upon him he no longer had time to go to the police station for the daily reports. But newspaper management had a cost-saving solution: put a fax machine in the police station and let the cops send over the news they thought the paper should have. In New Jersey, the Gannett chain bought the Asbury Park Press, then sent in a publisher who slashed fifty five people from the staff and cut the space for news, and was rewarded by being named Gannetts Manager of the Year. In New Jersey, by the way, the Newhouse and Gannett chains between them now own thirteen of the states nineteen dailies, or seventy three percent of all the circulation of New Jersey-based papers. Then there is The Northwestern in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, with a circulation of 23,500. Here, the authors report, is a paper that prided itself on being in hometown hands since the Johnson administrationthe Andrew Johnson administration. But in 1998 it was sold not once but twice, within the space of two months. Two years later it was sold again: four owners in less than three years. Youd better get used to it, concluded Leaving Readers Behind, because the real momentum of consolidation is just beginningit wont be long now before America is reduced to half a dozen major print conglomerates. You can see the results even now in the waning of robust journalism. In the dearth of in-depth reporting as news organizations try to do more with fewer resources. In the failure of the major news organizations to cover their own corporate deals and lobbying as well as other forms of crime in the suites such as Enron story. And in helping people understand what their government is up to. The report by the Roberts team includes a survey in l999 that showed a wholesale retreat in coverage of nineteen key departments and agencies in Washington. Regular reporting of the Supreme Court and State Department dropped off considerably through the decade. At the Social Security Admini-stration, whose activities literally affect every American, only the New York Times was maintaining a full-time reporter and, incredibly, at the Interior Department, which controls five to six hundred million acres of public land and looks after everything from the National Park Service to the Bureau of Indian Affairs, there were no full-time reporters around. Thats in Washington, our nations capital. Out across the country there is simultaneously a near blackout of local politics by broadcasters. The public interest group Alliance for Better Campaigns studied forty-five stations in six cities in one week in October. Out of 7,560 hours of programming analyzed, only 13 were devoted to local public affairsless than one-half of 1% of local programming nationwide. Mayors, town councils, school boards, civic leaders get no time from broadcasters who have filled their coffers by looting the public airwaves over which they were placed as stewards. Last year, when a movement sprang up in the House of Representatives to require these broadcasters to obey the law that says they must sell campaign advertising to candidates for office at the lowest commercial rate, the powerful broadcast lobby brought the Congress to heel. So much for the public interest, convenience, and necessity. So what do we do? What is our strategy for taking on what seems a hopeless fight for a media system that serves as effectively as it sellsone that holds all the institutions of society, itself included, accountable? Theres plenty we can do. Heres one journalists list of some of the overlapping and connected goals that a vital media reform movement might pursue. First, we have to take Tom Paines example and reach out to regular citizens. We have to raise an even bigger tent than you have here. Those of us in this place speak a common language about the media. We must reach the audience thats not herecarry the fight to radio talk shows, local television, and the letters columns of our newspapers. We must engage the main-stream, not retreat from it. We have to get our fellow citizens to understand that what they see, hear, and read is not only the taste of programmers and producers but also a set of policy decisions made by the people we vote for. We have to fight to keep the gates to the Internet open to all. The web has enabled many new voices in our democracyand globallyto be heard: advocacy groups, artists, individuals, non-profit organi-zations. Just about anyone can speak online, and often with an impact greater than in the days when orators had to climb on soap box in a park. The media industry lobbyists point to the Internet and say its why concerns about media concentration are ill founded in an environment where anyone can speak and where there are literally hundreds of competing channels. What those lobbyists for big media dont tell you is that the traffic patterns of the online world are beginning to resemble those of television and radio. In one study, for example, AOL Time Warner (as it was then known) accounted for nearly a third of all user time spent online. And two other companiesYahoo and Microsoftbring that figure to fully 50%. As for the growing number of channels available on todays cable systems, most are owned by a small handful of companies. Of the ninety-one major networks that appear on most cable systems, 79 are part of multiple network groups such as Time Warner, Viacom, Liberty Media, NBC, and Disney. In order to program a channel on cable today, you must either be owned by or affiliated with one of the giants. If were not vigilant the wide-open spaces of the Internet could be transformed into a system in which a handful of companies use their control over high-speed access to ensure they remain at the top of the digital heap in the broadband era at the expense of the demo-cratic potential of this amazing technology. So we must fight to make sure the Internet remains open to all. We must fight for a regulatory, market and public opinion environment that lets local and community-based content be heard rather than drowned out by nationwide commercial programming. We must fight to limit conglomerate swallowing of media outlets by sensible limits on multiple and cross-ownership of TV and radio stations, newspapers, magazines, publishing companies and other information sources. Let the message go forth: No Berlusconis in America! We must fight to expand a noncom-mercial media systemsomething made possible in part by new digital spectrum awarded to PBS stationsand fight off attempts to privatize whats left of public broadcasting. Commercial speech must not be the only free speech in America! We must fight to create new opportunities, through public policies and private agreements, to let historically marginalized media players into more ownership of channels and control of content. Let us encourage traditional mainstream journalism to get tougher about keeping a critical eye on those in public and private power and keeping us all informed of whats importantnot necessarily simple or entertaining or good for the bottom line. Not all news is Entertainment Tonight. And news departments are trustees of the public, not the corporate medias stockholders In that last job, schools of journalism and professional news associations have their work cut out. We need journalism graduates who are not only better informed in a whole spectrum of special fieldsand the schools do a competent job therebut who take from their training a strong sense of public service. And also graduates who are perhaps a little more hard-boiled and street-smart than the present crop, though thats hard to teach. Thanks to the high cost of education, we get very few recruits from the ranks of those who do the worlds unglamorous and low-paid work. And as for those professional asso-ciations of editors they might remember that in union there is strength. One journalist alone cant extract from an employer a commitment to let editors and not accountants choose the appropriate subject matter for coverage. But what if news councils blew the whistle on shoddy or cowardly managements? What if foundations gave magazines such as the Columbia Journalism Review sufficient resources to spread their stories of journalistic bias, failure or incompetence? What if entire editorial departments simply refused any longer to quote anonymous sourcesor give Kobe Bryants trial more than the minimal space it rates by any reasonable standardor to run stories planted by the Defense Department and impossible, for alleged security reasons, to verify? What if a professional association backed them to the hilt? Or required the same stance from all its members? It would take courage to confront powerful ownerships that way. But not as much courage as is asked of those brave journalists in some countries who face the dungeon, the executioner or the secret assassin for speaking out. All this may be in the domain of fantasy. And then again, maybe not. What I know to be real is that we are in for the fight of our lives. I am not a romantic about democracy or journalism; the writer Andre Gide may have been right when he said that all things human, given time, go badly. But I know journalism and democracy are deeply linked in whatever chance we human beings have to redress our grievances, renew our politics, and reclaim our revolutionary ideals. Those are difficult tasks at any time, and they are even more difficult in a cynical age as this, when a deep and pervasive corruption has settled upon the republic. But too much is at stake for our spirits to flag. Earlier this week the Library of Congress gave the first Kluge Lifetime Award in the Humanities to the Polish philosopher Leslie Kolakowski. In an interview Kolakowski said: There is one freedom on which all other liberties dependand that is freedom of expression, freedom of speech, of print. If this is taken away, no other freedom can exist, or at least it would be soon suppressed. Thats the flame of truth your movement must carry forward. I am older than almost all of you and am not likely to be around for the duration; I have said for several years now that I will retire from active journalism when I turn 70 next year. But I take heart from the presence in this room, unseen, of Thomas Paine, the muckrakers, I.F. Stone and all those heroes and heroines, celebrated or forgotten, who faced odds no less than ours and did not flinch. I take heart in your presence here. Its your fight now. Look around. You are not alone. Free Press, organizer of the National Conference on Nedia Reform, is a national organization working to increase informed public participation in crucial media policy debates with the aim of producing a more competitive and public interest-oriented media system with a strong nonprofit and noncommercial sector. MediaReform.net is a joint project of Free Press and Free Press Action Fund, 26 Center Street, 2nd floor, Northampton, MA 01060, (413) 585-1533; e-mail info@mediareform.net or www.mediareform.net. Watch NOW with Bill Moyers on PBS Fridays at 9pm SENTIENT TIMES
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