Does America have a military-industrial-media complex?
Whether you consider the question in terms of psychology or
economics, some grim answers are available from the National Association of
Broadcasters, a powerful industry group that just held its radio convention
in San Francisco.
When a recent Federal Trade Commission report faulted media
companies for marketing violence to children, various politicians expressed
outrage. But we've heard little about the NAB -- a trade association with a
fitting acronym. The NAB has a notable record of nabbing the public
airwaves for private gain.
Nearly 40 years ago, a farewell speech by President Dwight
Eisenhower warned about the "conjunction of an immense military
establishment and a large arms industry." He said: "In the councils of
government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence,
whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The
potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will
persist." That potential has been realized, with major help from media.
Rather than scrutinize the merchants of militarism, large news
organizations have been inclined to embrace them. (In some cases, as with
General Electric and NBC, the arms contractor and the network owner are one
and the same.) The Pentagon's key vendors can rest assured that big TV and
radio outlets will function much more as allies than adversaries.
On television, the recruitment ads for the armed forces symbolize
the cozy -- and lucrative -- ties between the producers of fantasy violence
and the planners of massive carnage. Military leaders have good reasons to
appreciate the nation's entertainment media for encouraging public
acceptance of extreme violence.
In practice, big money rules the airwaves, and that's the way the
NAB likes it. The industry is swinging its mighty lobbying arm to knock
down a proposal -- approved by the Federal Communications Commission -- to
license low-power radio stations. The specter of community-based
"microbroadcasting" worries the NAB, which sees wealth as a vital
precondition for control of broadcast frequencies.
But the NAB has championed some new laws, like the landmark
Telecommunications Act of 1996 that made it possible for a single
corporation to own several radio stations in the same city -- and hundreds
of stations across the country. Now, more than ever, cookie-cutter stations
from coast to coast are beaming identical syndicated garbage to millions of
listeners.
With autumn getting underway, the NAB convention's keynote speaker
was a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. "Colin Powell is a true
national hero," said NAB's president.
Powell won great media acclaim for overseeing the Gulf War
slaughter of Iraqi people -- 200,000 of them in a six-week period,
according to a Pentagon estimate. At the time, America's broadcasters and
their cable television colleagues presented the bloodshed as a glorious
exercise of military prowess -- rendered on TV screens as dramatic video games.
Political bluster tells us that children should not be
desensitized by media images of simulated violence -- but it's A-OK to
depict the real thing as a big feather in the nation's patriotic cap. The
military-industrial-media complex takes its toll with deeply ingrained
patterns of newspeak and doublethink. Orwell recognized such patterns long ago.
American media's high comfort level with sanctioned violence --
imaginary or real -- has a numbing effect on people of all ages. Meanwhile,
the dominant weave of propaganda and militarism is, for some, a brocade
embossed with gold.
Since September 1998, Powell has been on the management board of
America Online. Nine months ago, the retired general voted with other
members of the board to approve AOL's purchase of Time Warner.
Gen. Powell holds AOL stock options worth $13.3 million. His son
Michael Powell -- one of the five FCC commissioners -- has refused to
recuse himself from the agency's pending vote on whether to approve the
merger of AOL and Time Warner.
Dissent was not on the agenda at the NAB convention. But I was
glad to be among more than a thousand people who protested nearby, in the
streets of San Francisco, to confront the dire centralization of media
ownership.
Articles probing the current clout of America's broadcast industry
are posted at www.mediademocracynow.org -- a website that's unlikely to be
mentioned on the national airwaves. One of the most insidious prerogatives
of radio and TV giants is that they largely filter out news about
challenges to their own power.
Norman Solomon is a syndicated columnist. His latest book is The Habits of
Highly Deceptive Media.