Press the Press
By
zmag
The only
surprising thing to me about the mainstream media coverage of the worldwide
anti-war demonstrations on February 15 is that it was more positive than usual.
A few news reports actually communicated some of the politics behind the
protests and a certain amount of respect for the people who had come out.
This isn’t
saying much, I realize, but front page photos with headlines “Millions March Against War” (
Of course, I
also watched three hours of coverage of the New York demonstrations broadcast
on World Link satellite TV produced by a coalition of media groups, including
WBAI, Pacifica, Free Speech TV, Working Assets Radio, and more. Amy Goodman of
“Democracy Now,” among others, hosted the televised event. This coverage was
very well done and included many of the speeches and interviews with a broad
cross-section of people (feminists, labor activists,
etc.), proving that we can do it much better.
There is no
question that February 15 was an important day. It revealed to the world,
perhaps even more than the anti-capitalist globalization actions, that there is
an international movement of movements and that it is working in solidarity.
That said—there
are two main things that concern me. First, many of the people interviewed at
the NY demonstration expressed the feeling, “now, the government has to listen
and stop this war.” (Oddly, in a kind of illogical dysfunction, most people
speaking and being interviewed indicated that they thought the war on
A similar
dynamic occurred during
Instead of
seeing that progress was being made, people grew despondent over not being at
the finish line. The same could happen here: the government rides this out,
demonstrations get smaller and more isolated, the media becomes more
contemptuous, and that’s that. The alternative, of course, is for activists to
have a more patient and long-term approach.
Second,
marching against this particular war and even stopping this war without building a lasting movement will not alone change
broader imperial policy or imperialist institutions that will surely bring more
wars. It will not alone change an economic system that wages war on a large
portion of the world. Our movements need to diversify, deepen, and persist.
But in addition
to ongoing demonstrations and teach ins, the protests
must become more varied, creative, militant, and disruptive. They must happen
at all levels of society.
If students
strike on March 5; if hundreds of thousands of women join hands around the
capital to protest war and campaign for peace on March 8; if teachers begin
teaching about the war and the real reasons the U.S. wants to go to war; if
ministers preach anti-war messages; if community groups canvas; if city
councils pass resolutions and pressure state and federal governments; if
petition campaigns are set up; if labor unions strike
against war and for peace and justice (as is already threatened in England,
Ireland, Australia and numerous other countries), then there will be a climate
of social unrest that can stop a militaristic government from running its
agenda.
But there is
something else that has to happen. We have
to go after the media. For years activists have been complaining about and critiquing
mainstream media. Even while making these critiques, many seem surprised, even
upset, by the way our events and politics are covered in the very media we have
long been describing as incapable, institutionally and ideologically, of ever
giving our agenda any kind of legitimacy and credence, much less coverage—as if
we don’t believe our own analysis.
We forget at times that mainstream media (when not
informing elites) is to (quote Chomsky) “keep[ing]
the rabble in line. [It] make[s] sure that we are
atoms of consumption, obedient tools of production, isolated from one another,
lacking any concept of a decent human life. We are to be spectators in a
political system run by elites blaming ourselves and each other for what’s
wrong.”
Interestingly,
given our analysis of how media exists to sell audience to advertisers for
profit, how it replicates and incorporates the values and structures of
corporate control in its own operations, and how it is owned by and serves the
same elites that Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, and
Powell represent, our media activism has often been confined to critiquing the
mainstream media, coupled with attempts to get our 20 second sound bytes on the
networks, as if that will solve the problem.
Others have
created “alternative” or “independent” media (not all of which is so radical)
and they try desperately to distribute it with little money, in a society where
methods of distribution are under the same control as the mainstream media
itself. Many of these efforts have been incredibly successful (considering the
odds), but many more have folded for lack of funds or from burn out. Those that
have survived are kept small and can only be found by people who go looking for
them, which, ironically most often happens during a crisis or a war.
So it is time
to direct more of our protests toward the media. What we want is for mainstream
media to include peace and justice programming, prepared by the peace and
justice movement, in their daily reports. If they do not agree to this demand,
we picket their offices, occupy them if necessary, and shut them down.
What on earth
is the justification for their continued existence? There is no moral, ethical,
or humanitarian reason for them to continue giving us casualty estimates (from
500 to 1,000,000), as if they were discussing the weather; or for them to
debate calmly whether to assassinate the head of a sovereign country, and then
to take a poll on it, for Christ sakes; or for them to act as if peace and
justice are weird, idiosyncratic concepts that they can’t quite grasp. (And, by
the way, for ease of local organizing, mainstream media outlets are everywhere,
in every city, every town, every campus, and every locale).
During the 1991
U.S. Invasion of Iraq, 50 or so local activists (most of them involved in
media) met together to form Boston Media Action (BMA). Based on the skills and
inclinations of the people involved, we decided to work on three fronts:
(1) To “Spread
the Truth” through an aggressive poster and leafleting campaign throughout the
area, combined with stepped up attempts to disseminate alternative media;
(2) A Media
Watch that would monitor local radio, TV, and print media and produce periodic
reports to be distributed to activists;
(3) A Press the
Press campaign to ensure that peace and justice reporting and analysis by
activists and writers appear regularly in local media outlets.
Press the Press
Campaign
In January
1991, the BMA’s Press the Press campaign began with a teach-in on the truth
behind the propaganda and the real
“Whereas the
mainstream media refuse to allow alternative views of U.S. motives in the mideast such as that the war was pursued to make the U.S.
world cop with the bills paid by the American people and/or whatever country we
can pass them on to; to dispel public desires for peace (called the Vietnam
syndrome); to legitimate future wars of U.S. intervention; to undercut demands
for a redistribution of income to education, housing, and the general
betterment of U.S. citizens; and to retain U.S. domination over oil and oil
pricing as an international economic lever;
“It is
therefore right and proper that peace and justice activists have programming on
mainstream radio and TV, and reporting in print media, that includes
discussions of peace, anti-militarism, conversion, and justice issues,
presenting views of critics of the Administration’s policy; that challenges the
morality of war, domination, empire, and other inhumane relations serving the
rich and powerful; and that presents alternative morality and vision that might
better serve communities in need, and everyone.”
We submitted
thousands of signed declarations and the sample videos to the local public
radio and TV station, using them to lobby for programming. We also organized a
one-day conference to gather more material and spread the truth. After a period
of time, if we didn’t get any response, we were prepared to picket the target
media. If this had no affect, we were going to escalate to civil disobedience,
followed by occupations. But the
It is time to
start a new campaign to Press the Press, this time nationally and
internationally, in addition to continuing to create and distribute our own
media. It should be a long-term, strategic effort aimed at changing existing
repressive media institutions, just as we struggle to change repressive
financial institutions and governments. This Press the Press campaign should
also go after mainstream media distribution companies. The latter ensure that
our peace and justice views are not visible in stores or on newsstands, TV, and
radio.
This campaign
cannot wait. After the 1991 “Gulf War,” TV Guide revealed that much of the TV
war coverage was produced by a public relations company, who sold the war to
the American people. When that news came out, why didn’t we set out to occupy
or shut down every single mainstream media institution in the
Because we
didn’t respond then, they continue to do it now, selling war as an exciting TV
drama (“Showdown With Saddam”), selling fear, selling U.S. imperialism as our
patriotic duty, even promoting it as a victory for feminism (complete with
military fashion statements) because “with war looming, they [women] are closer
to combat than ever.” (NYT Sunday Magazine, 2/16/ 2003).
Let’s begin a campaign to Press the Press, because the news should keep us
informed, not in line.
Lydia Sargent
is co-founder of South End Press and Z Magazine, where her column “Hotel
Satire” has appeared since 1988. A longer version of this article appears in
the March 2003 issue of Z Magazine, which will also be available online at www.zmag.org