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Tue Mar 16 2010
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Columns
Norman Solomon
On the media horizon: "We invest, you decide"
May 6, 2007
Predictably, some critics have decried the current efforts by Rupert
Murdoch’s News Corp. to buy the Dow Jones company, which publishes The
Wall Street Journal. But let’s imagine the dynamics that might emerge if
Murdoch gains control of that newspaper.
Like viewers of his Fox News Channel, readers of The Wall Street
Journal under Murdoch could look forward to jaw-dropping claims along the
lines of “We invest, you decide.”
The Wall Street Journal would need to make some changes in order to
be in sync with Murdoch-brand journalism. The Journal’s recent design
make-over could provide a tidy framework for spreading the content of the
editorial page to the rest of the newsprint pages.
But executives at News Corp. would swiftly face a dilemma. Investors
and money managers -- prime demographic targets of The Wall Street Journal
-- are apt to be intolerant of financial news reporting
that’s unduly screened through an ideological mesh.
Slanted journalism may be fine for big commercial enterprises when
news consumers largely base their outlooks on prevailing media
biases. But investors and others who move large amounts of money are apt
to be less forgiving when political agendas behind news reports might
impede the quest to maximize profits.
Each day, investors seek accurate news as the basis for their
money-related decisions. On Wall Street, they can recognize when an
editorial page is spinning and grinding ideological axes. But
investors will quickly stop relying on financial news pages if those pages
are more dedicated to political maneuvers than well-founded
portrayals of business reality.
In other words, if a newspaper is just distorting reality to the
detriment of civic understanding and democratic discourse, the most
powerful corporations may not mind at all. In fact, corporate elites are
likely to appreciate any storyline that helps them to consolidate power
over the nation’s political system.
But if a business-oriented newspaper claims to be reporting the
financial news and keeps skewing that news to serve ideological
agendas, many investors and business leaders are likely to turn away in
disgust. It’s one thing to bamboozle the American public -- but quite
another to mislead high-end readers about how to get even
richer.
Right now, the editorials of The Wall Street Journal are the rough
equivalent of Sean Hannity and Rush Limbaugh (with an occasional dose of
Ann Coulter thrown in). The grasp of right-wing ideology is
notable, but the grip on reality is loose to the point of routine
slippage.
At times, we all find ourselves wishing that the world were different
than it is. But on the job -- at least in theory -- reporters can’t allow
themselves the luxury of turning wishful delusions into
straight-faced news accounts.
However, like those who call the shots at Fox News Channel, the Dow
Jones employees in charge of the editorial page at the Journal have been
unstinting in their fantasies: The Iraq war remains a noble
enterprise. Global warming is a liberal fraud. There is no widening gap
between the rich and poor in the United States. And so on, and so on, and
scooby-dooby-doo.
It’s all well and good to mislead voters and cover up for an
administration in Washington that is functioning more like a massive
criminal enterprise than a legitimate executive branch. But if press
ideologues serving as apologists for the Bush presidency try to blend
their contempt for reality with purported financial news, the media result
could prove less than satisfactory for the nation’s
upper-crust money movers.
If his current media properties are any indication, Rupert Murdoch
would quickly turn The Wall Street Journal into a news operation
engaged in a dizzying regimen of spin and distortion. For several
decades, he has enjoyed notable success in marketing right-wing
political fantasias to the general public. Whether the nation’s
financial elites would be such easy marks is another matter.
____________________________
Norman Solomon’s book “War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep
Spinning Us to Death” is out in paperback. A documentary film based on the
book will premiere this month. For information, go to:
www.WarMadeEasyTheMovie.org
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Click here to visit Harvey Wasserman's Solartopia.org.
 Don't forget to check out articles from 2008 and 2009 Norman Solomon
"Channeling Suze Orman" December 28, 2007
"Announcing the P.U.-litzer Prizes for 2007" December 23, 2007
"The mad corporate world of Glenn Beck" December 20, 2007
"The USA's human rights daze" December 14, 2007
"The media and class warfare" November 22, 2007
"Good news for Americans -- your wages are flat!" November 22, 2007
"The pro-war undertow of the Blackwater scandal" October 31, 2007
"The United States of Violence" October 19, 2007
"How Sputnik contributed to the marriage of science and weaponry" October 8, 2007
"Sputnik, 50 years later: the launch of techno-power" October 5, 2007
"Political "science" and truth of consequences" October 1, 2007
"Here’s the smell of the blood still" September 12, 2007
"Six years of 9/11 as a license to kill" September 11, 2007
" Thomas Friedman: Hooked on war" September 6, 2007
"Let’s face it: the warfare state is part of us" August 23, 2007
"Let us now praise an infamous woman -- and our own possibilities" August 8, 2007
"Media Corrections We’d Like to See" August 5, 2007
"Media blitz for war: the big guns of august" August 2, 2007
"Media spin on Iraq: we're leaving (sort of)" July 26, 2007
"From the grave, a Senator exposes bloody hands on Capitol Hill" July 21, 2007
"A bloody media mirror" July 5, 2007
"War at the remote" June 20, 2007
"Deadly illusions, rest in peace" May 27, 2007
"On the media horizon: "We invest, you decide"" May 6, 2007
"Bowing down to our own violence" April 22, 2007
"Awful truth about Hillary, Barack, John... and Whitewash" April 12, 2007
"The Martin Luther King you don't see on TV" April 4, 2007
"While McCain walks in McNamara’s footsteps" April 2, 2007
"The pragmatism of prolonged war" March 13, 2007
"Making an example of Ehren Watada" February 7, 2007
"The Pentagon vs. press freedom" January 23, 2007
"The headless Horseman of the Apocalypse" January 10, 2007
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