Saturday, June 30, 2007

How Does Digby Not Have a Major Newspaper Column?

I remember after the 2000 election debacle, a rather exasperated acquaintance explained to me that Americans respect winners and it didn't matter how Bush took office, all that mattered was that he did. Even at my advanced age I was a bit shocked by such cynicism. But as I watched the way the media and the political establishment treated Bush, I had to admit that, at least as far as the leadership class of America was concerned, he was right. But it was even worse than what he said. There was a distinct undercurrent of special respect for the fact that Bush had not only won, but that he'd done it in such a way that everybody knew he'd manipulated the system and there was nothing they could do about it. That audaciousness made people bow down. On some level he wanted people to know he cheated and he wanted them to recognize that he got away with it. That's real power. (emphasis mine)
I never would have been able to articulate it as well as Digby does, but I have thought a lot about this same idea. The press obviously knows how corrupt these bastards are. They have to. At first I was going to write that they don't care, but Digby is right - it is more than that. In some ways they actually respect their corrupt power. They clapped and laughed when Karl Rove rapped as if he was just another "one of the guys". As usual, only Jon Stewart seemed to understand how absurd it was.

Ken Silverstein, former LA Times reporter and current editor of Harpers Magazine has an interesting Op-Ed in the LA Times today which also deals with the pathetic nature of our press corps:
Now, in a fabulous bit of irony, my article about the unethical behavior of lobbying firms has become, for some in the media, a story about my ethics in reporting the story. The lobbyists have attacked the story and me personally, saying that it was unethical of me to misrepresent myself when I went to speak to them.
That kind of reaction is to be expected from the lobbyists exposed in my article. But what I found more disappointing is that their concerns were then mirrored by Washington Post media columnist Howard Kurtz, who was apparently far less concerned by the lobbyists' ability to manipulate public and political opinion than by my use of undercover journalism.

"No matter how good the story," he wrote, "lying to get it raises as many questions about journalists as their subjects." ...

...The decline of undercover reporting — and of investigative reporting in general — also reflects, in part, the increasing conservatism and cautiousness of the media, especially the smug, high-end Washington press corps. As reporters have grown more socially prominent during the last several decades, they've become part of the very power structure that they're supposed to be tracking and scrutinizing.

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