Sultan Knish
A nation where governments are elected by the people is most vulnerable
at the interface between the politicians and the people. The interface
is where the people learn what the politicians stand for and where the
politicians learn what the people want. The bigger a country gets, the
harder it is to pick up on that consensus by stopping by a coffee shop
or an auto repair store. That's where the Mediacracy steps in to control
the consensus.
The
media is no longer informative, it is conformative. It is not
interested in broadcasting events unless it can also script them. It
does not want to know what you think, it wants to tell you what to
think. The consensus is the voice of the people and the Mediacrats are
cutting its throat, dumping its body in a back alley and turning
democracy into their own puppet show.
Media bias was over
decades ago. The media isn't biased anymore, it's a player, its goal is
turn its Fourth Estate into a fourth branch of government, the one that
squats below the three branches and blocks their access to the people
and blocks the people's access to them. Under the Mediacracy there will
still be elections, they will even be mostly free, they just won't
matter so long as its upper ranks determine the dialogue on both sides
of the media wall.
The Mediacracy isn't playing for peanuts
anymore. It's not out to skew a few stories, it's out to take control of
the country. In military empires, the military can act as a Praetorian
Guard. In political empires, it's the people who control the political
conversation who also control the succession.
In 2008, the
Mediacracy elevated an Illinois State Senator who had briefly showed up
in the Federal Senate to the highest office in the land. They did it
even though he had no skills for the job and no serious plan for fixing
any of the country's problems. They did it to show that they could. They
did it because they wanted to tell a compelling story and inflict
radical change on a country that would have never voted for it, if it
had not been lied and guilted into making the single worst decision in
its entire history.
Propaganda is a powerful weapon and seizing
control of the newspapers, radio and television stations is one of the
first things that tyrants do. That wasn't supposed to be an issue in a
country where anyone could open their own newspaper. But that changed
with the transformation of journalism into the media. The media, plural,
embraces multiple mediums, most of them expensive and requiring a
license and often, government approval.
Two hundreds years ago, a
few friends could open a printing press and take on the big behemoths
and often did. Today the only place they can do that is on the internet.
Radio and television are walled cities controlled by a small number of
interlinked corporations that keep merging together. Their staffers come
out of carefully controlled environments, where with the pyramid of
indoctrination, political gurus pass down their wisdom to professors who
program students with its doctrines, to create the Mediacracy.
FOX
News, for all its faults, is under constant attack by the Mediacracy
because it is independent of that same rigid coercion. Wrong or right,
it represents a view that is fundamentally different from the same
mind-numbing conformity to be found everywhere from the weekly news
magazine in your dentist's office to the talking heads on your cable
channel to the honeyed voices of the anchors giving you the news every
5, 10 or 50 minutes over the radio while you're driving to work.
The
real crime of FOX News is not that it's especially right-wing, it
isn't. It is far less conservative than CNN is liberal. But FOX News'
existence, its patriotic color scheme and attempts at appealing to the
heartland while putting a conservative spin on issues, forces viewers to
notice how conformist and identical the rest of the media landscape.
And that is what makes FOX News truly dangerous. Like a goat among the
sheep, it makes you realize the sameness of their generic competitors
who all cheer for the same team, shop at the same stores and dream of
the day when everyone thinks like them.
They are the Mediacracy
and they are the Ministry of Propaganda. They are the smirking people
who got tired of telling you how many people died in an earthquake in
Indonesia and decided to begin explaining to you why the earthquake is
your fault because you don't ride a bike to work. These are the people
who longer want to report on a shooting, but want to tell you that it's
time for a firearms ban. They no longer want to report on Washington DC,
unless they can control Washington DC.
The Memorandum of Understanding
for the Town Hall debate was that the moderator would relay questions
from the audience, but would not ask the candidates any questions or
comment on what they say. Candy Crowley made it clear before the debate
that she would not abide by those rules and liberal organizations piled
on, deploying a petition against the silencing of Candy Crowley. And so
Candy Crowley wasn't silenced, in true Mediacrat fashion, she silenced
others.
The
Mediacracy's insistence on being the third candidate at every debate,
its outrage that anyone would expect it to be silent and let the actual
candidates speak, reflects its power and arrogance. Its elites are not
interested in the conversation except as a means of controlling its
outcome. They are not here to let other people talk, except as vehicles
for making their own points.
Candy Crowley, in true Mediacrat
style, was not there to facilitate a conversation, but to tell us what
to think. Unlike Obama or Romney, Crowley had no legitimate reason for
being there. She was not a political candidate and had not passed any of
the democratic tests that Obama and Romney had to be able to sit there.
Her influence had no basis of any kind in the voice of the people.
Instead she was there as a representative of the powerful and unelected
Mediacracy which was determined to have its say. She was there to remind
the pols that even in a Two Party system, the Third Estate acts as the
third candidate, never running for office but always winning by
controlling the conversation.
It is not in the public interest
for the Mediacracy to have its say, no matter how often the Mediacrats
trot out their public good routine. Power is either vested in democratic
institutions or undemocratic ones and the media corporations and their
talking heads are about as undemocratic an institution as can be
conceivably imagined. And when Mediacrats try to control the outcome of a
popular election, their actions are an attack by an undemocratic
institution on a democratic institution.
Mediacrats fill the
airwaves with rantings about corporate influence on politics. The 800
pound gorilla of corporate influence on politics is the media. Candy
Crowley's employer, CNN, is owned by Time Warner, the second largest
media conglomerate on the planet. Not the country, the planet. The only
media conglomerate bigger than it is the one that owns ABC News. But the
Mediacrats never report on their own influence, never turn the camera
back into the studio while warning about the danger of corporate
lobbyists. But the corporate lobbyists sitting in the CNN studio don't
just want to chat with a few politicians in a closed room, they do their
best to dictate the outcome of elections.
Businesses turn to
lobbyists when the times are bad. The media is losing the public, so
they are turning from being mere media into Mediacracy. Media is subject
to the whims of the viewing public, but Mediacracy subjects the public
to its whims. And they are dreaming of a country under the enlightened
rule of the Mediacrats. One nation under a thousand channels all serving
the interests of a dying media state.
The media, with its
expensive equipment and its licenses, is confronting an era when
everything is being reduced to a single medium, print, voice and visuals
falling into the internet singularity and leaving them with some
expensive equipment, exclusive rights to broadcast on frequencies that
no one watches anymore and the ability to print millions of papers, when
they can hardly move a tenth of them. And like all imploding tyrannies,
they are confronting the crisis by grasping for power. They know that
they will either be a Mediacracy or they will be nothing.
The
greatest challenge to the integrity of our democracy may be the coup of
the media corporations. Information is the lifeblood of a free society
and the consolidation of information outlets in the hands of a small and
powerful elite with no ethics and no boundaries is leading us down the
road to a virtual tyranny that will maintain the illusory workings of a
democratic society without any of the substance.
The old
institutions of elections are becoming a charade, a formal routine where
the outcome is determined by the employees of a handful of major media
corporations that present the public with the inevitable result. And
America is falling into the hands of the Government-Media Complex.
The
Mediacracy has directed all its efforts into hijacking the public
dialogue, turning elections into a cheap sideshow accompanied by
sneering commentary. It has insisted on being the third candidate in
every election and turned its corporate shills into the pretend voice of
the people. It has stomped all over the traditions of this country, its
independent institutions and its freedoms with thousand dollar shoes
while wrapping itself in any available flag. And it cannot be allowed to
get away with it.
A free society does not only become unfree at
the point of a gun. It becomes unfree when its mechanisms of freedom are
jammed, when the institutions that are meant to provide power to the
people are taken over by unelected forces and twisted into the apparatus
of a new tyranny. When undemocratic institutions seize control of
democratic institutions then democracy dies, strangled by men and women
who keep on smiling while they tighten their grip.
America can be
a Democracy or a Mediacracy. It cannot and will not be both. And the
only way to preserve democracy is to challenge the Mediacrats and force
them out of the public space that they have usurped and back into the
private sphere of their financial interests where they belong.
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