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Fri Nov 21 2008
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Columns
Norman Solomon
The Los Alamos story: spinning like crazy
June 22, 2000
It's media spin in overdrive: Major security breaches have jeopardized the
vital work going on at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, where scientists
toil to protect America.
But after many years of monitoring key weapons policies, Jacqueline
Cabasso dismisses the uproar as "a sideshow." Cabasso, executive director
of the Western States Legal Foundation, is a perceptive expert on nuclear
arms issues. Her views don't come near the conventional media wisdom.
"The real scandal," she told me, "is that while the media focuses
attention on a couple of lost and found hard drives, the U.S. weapons labs
-- Los Alamos, Lawrence Livermore and Sandia -- are spending billions of
taxpayer dollars busily developing new and improved nuclear weapons, almost
completely shielded from public scrutiny or even awareness. Moreover, the
U.S. is continuing to brandish these weapons on a daily basis."
Meanwhile, as far as most journalists are concerned, the purposes of
America's weapons laboratories are sacrosanct. The professional thing to do
is to echo the assumptions of politicians like Florida Republican Porter
Goss, chair of the House Intelligence Committee, who likes to describe Los
Alamos as a bastion of "creativity." In a recent interview on CNN, Goss
extolled the lab's mission of "creating the innovation, the creativity, the
breakthrough that you need to develop these kinds of weapons and have this
kind of progress."
For several decades, a macabre form of creativity has flourished at the
Los Alamos and Sandia labs in New Mexico and at Lawrence Livermore in
California. The default position of media coverage is that these are fine
institutions; the alarm is about dysfunction, not function.
So, from coast to coast, news outlets marked the summer solstice with an
outpouring of fiery complaints about Los Alamos -- without the slightest
questioning of its mission. "Management there remains shockingly
lackadaisical," fumed a New York Times editorial. "Tighter oversight cannot
come soon enough." With such fixations on secrecy, there is virtually no
light shed on the fact that America's massive nuclear weapons program is
devoted to being able to incinerate the planet. (Only if duty calls, of
course.)
Behind the countless news reports about Los Alamos is a prolonged
infatuation with notions of protective secrecy. Long ago, Albert Einstein
saw the folly. On April 30, 1947, he wrote of atomic weapons: "For there is
no secret and there is no defense; there is no possibility of control
except through the aroused understanding and insistence of the peoples of
the world."
But the usual news accounts and commentaries, amplifying the voices of
policymakers in Washington, refuse to ask why the United States continues
to design, test and deploy nuclear weapons. In the universe of mainstream
media, Einstein's observations are upside down: We keep hearing that there
is a secret and there is a defense. This posture allows the U.S. government
to go unquestioned by citizens, while nuclear design labs stay busy. Their
creations -- if used as intended -- will destroy millions or billions of
human lives. That's an odd concept of creativity.
To Cabasso, the media preoccupations are ludicrous. "While the absurd
question of who took the hard drives, and why, dominates the national
news," she says, "Armageddon is still just the push of a button away.
Today, U.S. Trident submarines are quietly patrolling the world's oceans at
the same rate as the height of the Cold War, armed with thousands of the
deadliest weapons ever conceived, on hair-trigger alert."
As an opponent of nuclear proliferation and an advocate of nuclear
disarmament, Cabasso sees enormous danger in the status quo: "While the
U.S. relentlessly relies on nuclear weapons as the 'cornerstone' of its
national security -- and the currency of global domination -- it goes to
extraordinary lengths to demand that other nations forego this option. This
unsustainable 'do as we say, not as we do' nuclear policy is the real
threat to our national security."
Considering what's at stake, the narrow range of media discourse about
nuclear weapons is outrageous. Forget the hard drives. The most serious
problem at the Los Alamos laboratory is its function. "In the interests of
our human security," Jacqueline Cabasso points out, "a comprehensive, open,
publicly accessible national debate on nuclear weapons and national
security is desperately needed and long overdue."
Info link: http://www.abolition2000.org
Norman Solomon is a syndicated columnist. His latest book is The Habits of
Highly Deceptive Media.
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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008 
Norman Solomon
"And now, the P.U.-litzer Prizes for 2000" December 23, 2000
"Media crucial as Bush faces 'Legitimacy Gap'" December 17, 2000
"How to improve on the feats of network news" December 8, 2000
"A dire shortage of pre-inaugural schlock" November 30, 2000
"Finally: A Huge Media Spectacle That Really Matters?" November 23, 2000
"Public wiser than pundits in post-election uproar" November 16, 2000
"Arrogance of TV Networks: Compounding a national crisis" November 9, 2000
"New Democrats: Maybe the jig is up" November 2, 2000
"Resistance to a tightening grip of censorship" October 26, 2000
"The debates: Truth is stranger than science fiction" October 19, 2000
"Media spin remains in sync with Israeli occupation" October 13, 2000
"Our debts to new media technology" October 6, 2000
"Level the playing field: What a media concept!" September 29, 2000
"Dr. Laura gets a TV show-but at what cost?" September 7, 2000
"When watchdogs have a blind spot - for themselves" August 31, 2000
"Paying homage to the Two-Party Media System" August 24, 2000
"The Deception Convention: Don't stop winking about tomorrow" August 17, 2000
"Holy smoke and mirrors: the rise of centrist theocrats" August 10, 2000
"The Pleasantville party floats on a media cloud" August 2, 2000
"Convention hospitality and police brutality" July 24, 2000
"The easy media politics of optimism" July 19, 2000
"And now, an all-new episode of 'Media Jeopardy!'" July 13, 2000
"Nader raises hackles of media establishment" July 6, 2000
"George Orwell's unhappy birthday" June 29, 2000
"The Los Alamos story: spinning like crazy" June 22, 2000
"The case for corporate-given names" June 15, 2000
"Can 'E-government' bring us point-and-click democracy?" June 8, 2000
"Campaign forecast: A long hot summer of punditry" June 1, 2000
"U.S. news media: A security zone for Israel" May 25, 2000
"Virtual Commandments of the dot.com faith" May 18, 2000
"Overcoming the hazards of media monoculture" May 11, 2000
"Ad industry: Giving women special treatment " May 3, 2000
"Break up Microsoft? . . . Then how about the media 'Big Six?'" April 27, 2000
"When Corporate Media Cover 'Independent Media'" April 20, 2000
"Protests in Washington clash with media spin" April 13, 2000
"From the news media to Elian, with love" April 6, 2000
"Mickey Mouse network participates in abuse" March 30, 2000
"Broadcasters celebrate big gains from violence and greed" March 26, 2000
"A season of news coverage: No cure for political blues" March 25, 2000
"The power and limits of photojournalism" March 23, 2000
"The media’s lethal injection of numbing" March 16, 2000
"Self-censorship is shadowing the new media era" March 3, 2000
"Reporting on bloodshed, TV journalists play dumb" March 2, 2000
"Dr. Laura: Radio’s leading anti-gay zealot" February 24, 2000
"NPR floats an ombudsman, but problems run deep" February 17, 2000
"E-Vandalism intrudes on the power to be heard" February 10, 2000
"Fine journalism deserves a lot more attention" February 3, 2000
"Bill Bradley, news media and 'The Politics of Ambiguity'" January 27, 2000
"Aol Time Warner: calling the faithful to their knees" January 14, 2000
"What happened to the 'Information Superhighway'?" January 7, 2000
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