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Victor Davis Hanson: The End of Journalism [the rise of advocacy journalism]
NRO ^ | October 31, 2008 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 10/31/2008 5:11:53 AM PDT by Tolik


        Sometime in 2008, journalism as we knew it died, and advocacy media took its place.

 

There have always been media biases and prejudices. Everyone knew that Walter Cronkite, from his gilded throne at CBS news, helped to alter the course of the Vietnam War, when, in the post-Tet depression, he prematurely declared the war unwinnible. Dan Rather’s career imploded when he knowingly promulgated a forged document that impugned the service record of George W. Bush. We’ve known for a long time — from various polling, and records of political donations of journalists themselves, as well as surveys of public perceptions — that the vast majority of journalists identify themselves as Democratic, and liberal in particular.

Yet we have never quite seen anything like the current media infatuation with Barack Obama, and its collective desire not to raise key issues of concern to the American people. Here were four areas of national interest that were largely ignored.

CAMPAIGN FINANCING
For years an axiom of the liberal establishment was the need for public campaign financing — and the corrosive role of private money in poisoning the election process. The most prominent Republican who crossed party lines to ensure the passage of national public campaign financing was John McCain — a maverick stance that cost him dearly among conservatives who resented bitterly federal interference in political expression.

In contrast, Barack Obama, remember, promised that he would accept both public funding and the limitations that went along with it, and would “aggressively pursue an agreement with the Republican nominee to preserve a publicly financed general election.” Then in June 2008, Obama abruptly reneged, bowing out entirely from government financing, the first presidential nominee in the general election to do that since the system was created in 1976.

Obama has now raised over $600 million, by far the largest campaign chest in American political history. In many states he enjoys a four-to-one advantage in campaign funding — most telling in his scheduled eleventh-hour, 30-minute specials that will not be answered by the publicly financed and poorer McCain campaign.

The story that the media chose to ignore was not merely the Obama about-face on public financing, or even the enormous amounts of money that he has raised — some of it under dubious circumstances involving foreign donors, prepaid credit cards, and false names. Instead, they were absolutely quiet about a historic end to liberal support for public financing.

For all practical purposes, public financing of the presidential general election is now dead. No Republican will ever agree to it again. No Democrat can ever again dare to defend a system destroyed by Obama. All future worries about the dangers of big money and big politics will fall on deaf ears.

Surely, there will come a time when the Democratic Party, whether for ethical or practical reasons, will sorely regret dismantling the very safeguards that for over three decades it had insisted was critical for the survival of the republic.

Imagine the reaction of the New York Times or the Washington Post had John McCain renounced his promise to participate in public campaign financing, proceeded instead to amass $600 million and outraise the publicly financed Barack Obama four-to-one, and begun airing special 30-minute unanswered infomercials during the last week of the campaign.

THE VP CANDIDATES
We know now almost all the details of Sarah Palin’s pregnancies, whether the trooper who tasered her nephew went to stun or half stun, the cost of her clothes, and her personal expenses — indeed, almost everything except how a mother of so many children gets elected councilwoman, mayor, and governor, routs an entrenched old-boy cadre, while maintaining near record levels of public support.

Yet the American public knows almost nothing of what it should about the extraordinary career of Joe Biden, the 36-year veteran of the Senate. In unprecedented fashion, Biden has simply avoided the press for most of the last two months, confident that the media instead would deconstruct almost every word of “good looking” Sarah Palin’s numerous interviews with mostly hostile interrogators.


By accepted standards of behavior, Biden has sadly proven wanting. He has committed almost every classical sin of character — plagiarism, false biography, racial insensitivity, and serial fabrication. And because of media silence, we don’t know whether he was kidding when he said America would not need to burn coal, or that Hezbollah was out of Lebanon, or that FDR addressed the nation on television as president in 1929 (surely a record for historical fictions in a single thought), or that the public would turn sour on Obama once he was challenged by our enemies abroad. In response, the media reported that the very public Sarah Palin was avoiding the press while the very private Joe Biden shunned interviews and was chained to the teleprompter.

For two months now, the media reaction to Biden’s inanity has been simply “that’s just ol’ Joe, now let’s turn to Palin,” who, in the space of two months, has been reduced from a popular successful governor to a backwoods creationist, who will ban books and champion white secessionist causes. The respective coverage of the two candidates is ironic in a variety of ways, but in one especially — almost every charge against Palin (that she is under wraps, untruthful, and inept) was applicable only to Biden.

So we are about to elect a vice president about whom we know only that he has been around a long time, but little else — and nothing at all why exactly Joe Biden says the most astounding and often lunatic things.

Imagine the reaction of Newsweek or Time had moose-hunting mom Sarah Palin claimed FDR went on television to address the nation as President in 1929, or warned America that our enemies abroad would test John McCain and that his response would result in a radical loss of his popularity at home.

THE PAST AS PRESENT
In 2004, few Americans knew Barack Obama. In 2008, they may elect him. Surely his past was of more interest than his present serial denials of it. Whatever the media’s feelings about the current Barack Obama, there should have been some story that the Obama of 2008 is radically different from the Obama who was largely consistent and predictable for the prior 30 years.

Each Obama metamorphosis in itself might be attributed to the normal evolution to the middle, as a candidate shifts from the primary to the general election. But in the case of Obama, we witnessed not a shift, but a complete transformation to an entirely new persona — in almost every imaginable sense of the word. Name an issue — FISA, NAFTA, guns, abortion, capital punishment, coal, nuclear power, drilling, Iran, Jerusalem, the surge — and Obama’s position today is not that of just a year ago.

Until 2005, Obama was in communication with Bill Ayers by e-mail and phone, despite Ayers reprehensible braggadocio in 2001 that he remained an unrepentant terrorist. Rev. Wright was an invaluable spiritual advisor — until spring of 2008. Father Pfleger was praised as an intimate friend in 2004 — and vanished off the radar in 2008. The media might have asked not just why these rather dubious figures were once so close to, and then so distant from, Obama; but why were there so many people like Rashid Khalidi and Tony Rezko in Obama’s past in the first place?

Behind the Olympian calm of Obama, there was always a rather disturbing record of extra-electoral politics completely ignored by the media. If one were disturbed by the present shenanigans of ACORN or the bizarre national call for Americans simply to skip work on election day to help elect Obama (who would pay for that?), one would only have to remember that in 1996 Obama took the extraordinary step of suing to eliminate all his primary rivals by challenging their petition signatures of mostly African-American voters.

In 2004, there was an even more remarkable chain of events in which the sealed divorce records of both his principle primary rival Blair Hull and general election foe, Jack Ryan, were mysteriously leaked, effectively ensuring Obama a Senate seat without serious opposition. These were not artifacts of a typical political career, but extraordinary events in themselves that might well have shed light on present campaign tactics — and yet largely remain unknown to the American people.

Imagine the reaction of CNN or NBC had John McCain’s pastor and spiritual advisor of 20 years been revealed as a white supremacist who damned a multiracial United States, or had he been a close acquaintance until 2005 of an unrepentant terrorist bomber of abortion clinics, or had McCain himself sued to eliminate congressional opponents by challenging the validity of African-American voters who signed petitions, or had both his primary and general election senatorial rivals imploded once their sealed divorce records were mysteriously leaked.



SOCIALISM?
The eleventh-hour McCain allegations of Obama’s advocacy for a share-the-wealth socialism was generally ignored by the media, or if covered, written off as neo-McCarthyism. But there were two legitimate, but again neglected, issues.

The first was the nature of the Obama tax plan. The problem was not merely upping the income tax rates on those who made $250,000 (or was it $200,000, or was it $150,000, or both, or none?), but its aggregate effect in combination with lifting the FICA ceilings on high incomes on top of existing Medicare contributions and often high state income taxes.

In other words, Americans who live in high-tax, expensive states like a New York or California could in theory face collective confiscatory tax rates of 65 percent or so on much of their income. And, depending on the nature of Obama’s proposed tax exemptions, on the other end of the spectrum we might well see almost half the nation’s wage earners pay no federal income tax at all.

Questions arise, but were again not explored: How wise is it to exempt one out of every two income earners from any worry over how the nation gathers its federal income tax revenue? And when credits are added to the plan, are we now essentially not cutting or raising taxes, but simply diverting wealth from those who pay into the system to those who do not?

A practical effect of socialism is often defined as curbing productive incentives by ensuring the poorer need not endanger their exemptions and credits by seeking greater income; and discouraging the wealthy from seeking greater income, given that nearly two-thirds of additional wealth would be lost to taxes. Surely that discussion might have been of interest to the American people.

Second, the real story was not John McCain’s characterization of such plans, but both inadvertent, and serial descriptions of them, past and present, by Barack Obama himself. “Spreading the wealth around” gains currency when collated to past interviews in which Obama talked at length about, and in regret at, judicial impracticalities in accomplishing his own desire to redistribute income. “Tragedy” is frequent in the Obama vocabulary, but largely confined to two contexts: the tragic history of the United States (e.g., deemed analogous to that of Nazi Germany during World War II), and the tragic unwillingness or inability to use judicial means to correct economic inequality in non-democratic fashion.

In this regard, remember Obama’s revealing comment that he was interested only in “fairness” in increasing capital-gains taxes, despite the bothersome fact that past moderate reductions in rates had, in fact, brought in greater revenue to government. Again, fossilized ideology trumps empiricism.

Imagine the reaction of NPR and PBS had John McCain advocated something like abolishing all capital gains taxes, or repealing incomes taxes in favor of a national retail sales tax.

The media has succeeded in shielding Barack Obama from journalistic scrutiny. It thereby irrevocably destroyed its own reputation and forfeited the trust that generations of others had so carefully acquired. And it will never again be trusted to offer candid and nonpartisan coverage of presidential candidates.

Worse still, the suicide of both print and electronic journalism has ensured that, should Barack Obama be elected president, the public will only then learn what they should have known far earlier about their commander-in-chief — but in circumstances and from sources they may well regret.

— NRO contributor Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.



TOPICS: Breaking News; Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: mediabias; obama; vdh; victordavishanson
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To: Tolik

The crush I have on Prof. Hanson is only exceeded by the one I have on Bill Kristol.


61 posted on 10/31/2008 8:38:38 AM PDT by Cinnamon Girl ("We rocked the vote all right; those little b-------s betrayed us again." Hunter S. Thompson)
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To: nathanbedford

Good point. The New Media will be the first target of Obama destruction. The first to go will be Rush Limbaugh...


62 posted on 10/31/2008 8:41:59 AM PDT by Sergeant_Ronbo
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To: Rennes Templar

Interesting that the Russian Republic was overthrown by a Communist putsch in November, 1917. Perhaps in November, 2008 the American Republic suffer the same fate. What’s next? The history book says civil war.


63 posted on 10/31/2008 8:48:32 AM PDT by Sergeant_Ronbo
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To: Sergeant_Ronbo

That’d cause too much friction. Watch the video in post 40.


64 posted on 10/31/2008 8:51:01 AM PDT by glock rocks (Unattended children will be given free espresso and a puppy.)
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To: Tolik

More nails in the coffin.

The Obama campaign has banned The Washington Times, The New York Post and I think! The Dallas Morning Herald (someone please correct me if I’m wrong) from the Obama press plane. Excuse is they need the space for a documentary crew. Of course, Obama hasn’t been documented enough.
The fact that these newspapers have endorsed John McCain couldn’t have anything to do with it.

A preview of what’s to come if Obama is elected—silence all dissention at any cost. It’s only our freedom!


65 posted on 10/31/2008 8:59:51 AM PDT by GoldwaterChick (We Snowflakes will always remember our beloved Snowman with the incandescent smile.)
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To: Tolik

Goebbels would be so proud of our media today. Maybe they’ll even get to take their Pulitizers and Peabodys to the camps with them when they’ve outgrown their usefulness.


66 posted on 10/31/2008 9:31:52 AM PDT by According2RecentPollsAirIsGood
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To: Obadiah

“The entire blame for the possible election of Barack Hussein Obama is the American mainstream media.”

I disagree. I believe they’ve been trying to do what they’re doing all along and we’ve had leadership that forced them to check themselves a little. We don’t have that leadership anymore.

The wicked ungodly types have always been here and always wanted to do what they’re doing now but have been kept at bay by the Lord. The Lord has withdrawn His protection a little because Christians have told God they don’t need His protection. After all, as long as we still have a less evil candidate to vote for, who needs God?


67 posted on 10/31/2008 9:36:37 AM PDT by demshateGod (the GOP is dead to me)
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To: Tolik

Walter Cronkite has a lot of blood on his hands.


68 posted on 10/31/2008 9:42:49 AM PDT by prairiebreeze ( Our troops DESERVE BETTER than Barack Hussein Obama!!)
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To: FrogMom

Excellent reply FrogMom. Best I’ve read in awhile.

After the election, we need to get to work.


69 posted on 10/31/2008 9:55:18 AM PDT by upchuck (Law of Logical Argument: Anything's possible if you don't know what you're talking about. => nObama))
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To: Tolik
the rise of advocacy journalism

Likely followed by the rise of state controlled "jounalism," if Obama is elected.

70 posted on 10/31/2008 10:09:35 AM PDT by unspun (Pray and Work! - http://www.etpv.org/whatsnew.html)
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To: unspun
Likely followed by the rise of state controlled "jounalism," if Obama is elected.

I would argue that what we've had for the past forty or so years has been precisely that. Think about it. Has not the Drive-By Media been one of the biggest cheerleaders of all for Big Government? The State had no need to "control" the media. The media acted as their flacks.

71 posted on 10/31/2008 10:23:09 AM PDT by abb ("What ISN'T in the news is often more important than what IS." Ed Biersmith, 1942 -)
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To: Tolik
VDH's observation that this is the end of Public Campaign financing is spot-on.

We are going to hate the elections ahead; there will be a tsunami of advertising.

72 posted on 10/31/2008 10:55:01 AM PDT by happygrl (we are all plumbers now!)
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To: Alkhin
Even Fox News has some Middle Eastern ownership; the head of Fox News has donated to 0bama.

You're not crazy; we are being infiltrated.

73 posted on 10/31/2008 11:02:20 AM PDT by happygrl (we are all plumbers now!)
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To: NoControllingLegalAuthority

The good news is if Zero Hussein 0bama loses the media news lose with him.


74 posted on 10/31/2008 12:57:53 PM PDT by omega4179 (Stop Hussein Vote McCain!)
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To: nathanbedford

The news in America will soon be known as “The State Run News” organization i.e. Pravda, ITAR TASS etc......


75 posted on 10/31/2008 1:13:20 PM PDT by Bruinator (It's the Media.............Stupid)
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To: FrogMom
FrogMom,

There has been a long drift toward where the MSM and left side of this country are today. The last year has been a 10 yard sprint so it is very obvious to real thinkers. I fear, unfortunately, that with a democrat in office, the country will soon be in good shape socially, economically, internationally, etc., as reported by MSM and as was the case all throughout the 90s.

Today, as we look back at the 90s we realize there was a lot going on that didn't get much press. Darfur for example. The news and indeed the influential comfort of the general population always seems better with democrats leading the way. This builds complacency and comfort among the masses. Nothing bad seems to be going on so everything must be much better. It is the MSM that sets the emotional tone of the nation, unfortunately.

I believe, to this effect, the slowly boiling pool we find ourselves in never seems like it is killing us except in short moments of awareness (Carter, Clinton, Obama). If the moments of awareness are big enough, we elect folks like Reagan.

Don't forget, it is the press that reports about the press to most of unsuspecting, gullible and the mostly ignorant general population. They just don't know any better.

Our worst hope and America's best opportunity to a return to Reagan Conservatism is a 1975 - 1980 period of leadership. This is unfortunate and creates for me a difficult conundrum.

I am an American first and a Republican second. I push and pull for what I think is best for America no matter who is in charge. I will support the office of the presidency even as I speak in aggressive disagreement with policies and such. That said, if it is going to be a rough next few years, that is if Obama gets elected, for the sake of my children, I hope it is bad enough that Americans get a radical wake up call. I fear, otherwise, our children will be part of the next revolution as America falls from grace as the world's superpower and plunges into disgrace as the very fabric of freedom unravels.

I am optimistic by nature. And I hope for the best for our country. But in the event that it goes bad, I hope it goes bad enough to awaken the apathetic portion of the population that never says much and are out of touch with the status of our republic.

76 posted on 10/31/2008 1:33:13 PM PDT by Tenacious 1 (Democrats are for Change - Let's run through a mine field at night wearing clown shoes!)
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To: Tolik

VDH is on his game yet again I see. Brilliant.


77 posted on 10/31/2008 1:36:48 PM PDT by Halfmanhalfamazing (There is no "rich". There is only "the hiring class".)
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To: Alkhin

I am so with you on this. There is a concerted effort to control the media and take down this country. If people can’t see that, they are blind.

with the resurgence of Communism in Russia it is very frightening.

The media needs to be tossed in the dumpster of history and start fresh.


78 posted on 10/31/2008 2:37:49 PM PDT by rlferny
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To: bvw

I see so many Divine interventions in this election it is unbelievable.

I think if we would have had a more right wing, conservative candidate, we wouldn’t have the support of the PUMAs.

While evil is alive and well, God is at work also.


79 posted on 10/31/2008 2:39:36 PM PDT by rlferny
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To: Earthdweller

That’s Il Duce’s profile.


80 posted on 10/31/2008 2:45:48 PM PDT by bvw
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