April 14, 2023
The US State
Department’s spokesperson Ned Price is being replaced by a man named Matthew
Miller. Like Price, Miller has had extensive prior involvement in both the US
government and the mass media; Price is a former CIA officer and Obama
administration National Security Council staffer who for years worked as an NBC
News analyst, while Miller has previously had roles in both the Obama and Biden
administrations and spent years as an analyst for MSNBC.
Like every
high-level government spokesperson, Miller’s job will be to spin the nefarious
things the US empire does in a positive light and deflect inconvenient
questions with weasel-worded non-answers. Which also happens to be essentially
the same job as the propagandists in the mainstream media.
In journalism
school you are taught that there’s supposed to be a sharp line between
government and the press; journalists are meant to hold the government to
account, and there’s an obvious conflict of interest there if they’re also
friends with government officials or are looking to the government as a
potential future employer. But at the highest levels of the world’s most
powerful government and the world’s most influential media platforms the line
between media and state is effectively nonexistent; people flow seamlessly
between roles in the media and roles in the government depending on who’s in
office.
We see this
indistinctness between government and media with White House press secretaries
even more clearly. The current press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre is a former
analyst for NBC News and MSNBC, and the last press secretary Jen Psaki now has
her own show on MSNBC. Prior to her stint as White House press secretary Psaki
worked as a CNN analyst, and before that she was a spokesperson for the State
Department like Price and Miller.
At a recent
event for the news startup Semafor, Psaki was asked if she considers herself a
journalist and she said she does, adding that “to me, journalism is providing
information to the public, helping make things clearer, explaining things.”
Which is a bit funny considering that Psaki’s political faction has spent the
last seven years furiously insisting that WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is
not a journalist. In liberal brainworms land the world’s greatest journalist is
not a journalist at all, but Joe Biden’s spin doctor is because she’s got a
knack for “explaining things”.
Lest you get the
mistaken impression that this phenomenon is unique to Democrats and their
aligned media outlets, it should here be noted that Trump’s press secretary
Sarah Huckabee Sanders got a job as a Fox News contributor immediately after
resigning from that position, and now she’s the governor of Arkansas. Another
Trump administration press secretary, Kayleigh McEnany, is now an on-air
contributor to Fox News, and previously worked for CNN. Trump’s first press
secretary Sean Spicer reportedly tried to get jobs with CBS News, CNN, Fox
News, ABC News and NBC News after his stint in the White House, but was turned
down by all of them because nobody likes him.
Without any
clear lines between the media and the state, US media are not meaningfully
different from the state media the west spends so much energy decrying in
“tyrannical regimes” like Russia and China. The only difference is that in
Tyrannical Regimes the government controls the media, while in Free Democracies
the government is the media.
On a related
note, journalist Michael Tracey just observed on Twitter that all questions
asked during the Pentagon press briefing today about the documents leaked
online from the Department of Defense all pertained not to the information
contained in those documents, but to the Pentagon’s failure to keep them from
leaking to the public. Rather than trying to obtain more information and
transparency from their governments as journalists should, they’re actually
badgering their government to do more to prevent important information from
getting into the hands of journalists.
So I suppose
that’s another difference between Totalitarian Regimes and Free Democracies: in
Totalitarian Regimes the government instructs the media to suppress
inconvenient facts, while in Free Democracies the media instruct the government
to suppress inconvenient facts.
As it happens
the man who allegedly leaked the Pentagon documents, a 21 year-old National
Guardsman named Jack Teixeira, was tracked down and named by The New York Times
even before his arrest by the FBI. The New York Times assembled a crew of a
dozen reporters to hunt down the leaker, even using contributing reporting from
the empire-funded propaganda firm Bellingcat. This job typically undertaken
solely by federal agents was undertaken first by reporters from the mainstream
press; we’re just a click or two away from New York Times reporters kicking
down the doors of people who leak classified information and shooting their
dogs like proper feds.
All this while
state propaganda outlet NPR continues its ongoing tantrum about Twitter
accurately labeling its account “Government Funded”, an upgrade from its
also-accurate previous designation as “US state-affiliated media”. NPR has now
officially rage-quit Twitter in objection to the label on the basis that “the
platform is taking actions that undermine our credibility by falsely implying
that we are not editorially independent,” which is hilarious because NPR has no
credibility to undermine.
As we discussed
recently, NPR receives funding from the US government, consistently promotes
the information interests of the US government, and is run by the former CEO of
the US government’s foreign propaganda network US Agency for Global Media. It
doesn’t even deserve the label “Government Funded”; it should have the exact
same labels as Russian and Chinese state media, because it is not meaningfully
different from them.
This was made
even funnier by the fact that America’s literally state-owned media outlet
Voice of America is now standing in very unhelpful solidarity with NPR by also
objecting to the “Government Funded” label that has been placed on its own
account.
Everywhere you
look you can find extensive entanglements between the US government and the
news media outlets that westerners look to for information about the world, and
that’s before you even get into the way the plutocratic class which owns and
influences the US media is also not meaningfully separate from the US
government. When corporations are part of the government, corporate media is
state media.
It seems a safe
bet that the US would be a completely different country if separation of media
and state and separation of corporation and state were enshrined like the
separation of church and state is.
The only reason
Americans consent to the freakish status quo of their government which
impoverishes and oppresses people at home while bombing and starving people
abroad is because their consent has been manufactured by a media class that is
not meaningfully separate from the government. Place the press in their proper
place as oppositional scrutinizers of government behavior, and the dynamics underlying
the nation’s problems would no longer be hidden from the public.
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