Red Wind

Where is the “where is the outrage?”

by Red Wind  ::  Filed Under Media Issues  ::  October 8th, 2007 @ 10:05 am EST

I was mildly heartened this weekend to hear NPR’s On the Media lead with a Bob Garfield story about the shocking lack of shock at the revelation that, as the New York Times summed up its own reporting:

President Bush and his aides have not only condoned torture and abuse at secret prisons, but they have conducted a systematic campaign to mislead Congress, the American people and the world about those policies.

When I read in the Times on Thursday that the Bush White House and Justice Department had conspired to circumvent several laws—domestic and international—and provide their henchmen with the legal cover to perpetuate pointless and barbaric interrogation techniques, torture, I expected the exposé to be the lead story on every network news program that evening.

It was not.

I was not able to watch every broadcast, so I did not remark on it last week, but the Garfield piece filled in some of the missing parts and confirmed what I had only partially witnessed. The NBC nightly news with Brian Williams led with more of the “will he or won’t he” about the toe-tapping Senator from Idaho, Larry “Wide Stance” Craig; the revelation of the administration’s secret torture memos was the second story.

That was the highlight. As Garfield observed, neither ABC’s Charles Gibson nor CBS’s Katie Couric had word one to say about the new news that the Bush administration had worked out in secret a way to keep kidnapping and torturing. I watched with amazement as The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer could not find room in its newsie hour to examine the story (the program did pick up on it on Friday). And, needless to say, I was not surprised to discover that ABC’s Nightline thought it more newsworthy to run with two pre-taped pieces: one, a heartwarming tale of a young girl’s struggle with heart disease, the other, a giant infomercial for a New Jersey wine superstore.

Local newscasts paid the torture memos no mind, either.

With that deafening silence, I was surprised to read in the Times the following day that their story had caused an uproar. Maybe it had over cocktails in a bevy of Beltway watering holes, but it couldn’t be heard above the last slurps of a super-big-gulp across America’s broad media landscape.

That yet another horrific betrayal of all that we hold dear as a country by a band of greedy, cynical cowards didn’t cause an instant and intense shockwave to shake every branch of the establishment media isn’t, at this point, almost seven years in to the G. W. Bush Administration, really such a wild surprise, as much as I might want it to be. Rather, and sadly, at this place in history, I am surprised by the seeming lack of surprise.

Back in 2003 and 2004, when we first learned about “extraordinary rendition” and saw photographic evidence of the Bush torture regime in action, I was indeed shocked that such revelations didn’t cause the entire house of grimy, marked cards to topple. When it did not, when these revelations seemed to come and go without much more than a few weeks of elaborate lip-service from Congress and the establishment media, then, at that point, I did shout, “Where is the outrage?”

Today, after so many more stories about so many more atrocities committed in our name with our tax dollars, I have stopped mouthing that simple plea. I understand all too well, as Alan Ginsberg did 50 years ago, that “Whoever controls the media, the images, controls the culture.” And, I understand that a scant handful of corporations with a vested interest in currying favor with the powers that be control what, for better or more likely worse, critics on many sides have come to call the “mainstream media.”

That this mainstream media has little in common with mainstream thought is a bugaboo for another post, but that the occasional burst of solid professional journalism is now met with a cynical and all too collective “quelle surprise” is still news to me. And that we have come to expect not only the mis-, mal-, and nonfeasance of this presidency, but the lack of interest by the media and its consumers is sad news indeed.

So, it was a small consolation to find at least one veteran journalist who was, like me, outraged by the lack of outrage. That this tiny prize buoyed my spirits even a little is perhaps the most outrageously sad revelation of all.

(cross posted at capitoilette)

The Seminal News Feed

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DISCUSSION

6 RESPONSES to “Where is the “where is the outrage?””

LGS says  ::  October 8th, 2007 @ 11:59 am EST

spot on, Red Wind. The shortcomings in the media are a national disgrace, right up there with the torturous acts being done with our tax dollars, and in our name.

J-Ro says  ::  October 8th, 2007 @ 12:09 pm EST

One’s gotta wonder, is the media leading this trend or following? Are they not covering this outrage because people just don’t care, or because either they themselves don’t care or are much more right wing than many believe?

Red Wind says  ::  October 8th, 2007 @ 5:57 pm EST

Dare I say, It takes a village? The media has an obligation to cover everything, even things we don’t think we care about or want to hear, and they need to place the information in some context and perhaps teach us a little about why we should care. But it is also the consumer’s duty to be curious, to wonder, to question, to be somewhat educated and want to be educated more.

Of course, if your K-12 schools sucked, and you are now struggling to put food on the table, that second half of the bargain can get a little tough to honor.

Roach says  ::  October 10th, 2007 @ 8:23 am EST

Criminal behavior runs rampant in this folly of an administration. They have destroyed our image around the world and it will continue when the neo-cons steal the next election with Vinny “The Wack” Giuliani at the helm. It won’t matter by then; they’ll be herding us into the camps.

Goldstein says  ::  October 10th, 2007 @ 5:51 pm EST

American citizens are slowly being inured to the fact that their president, his administration and the entire federal government in general are criminals and terrorists. Supporters of genocide, pre-emptive killings, abduction and torture, diseases hardship and needless suffering for children, destruction of liberty, secret police and imprisonment without charge, rigged elections and intimidation and disenfranchisement of voters, and all other instruments that we have seen exercised by tyrannical, brutal dictatorships throughout the ages.

People ask “Why hasnt Mugabe been assassinated yet?”. “Why didnt the german people act against Hitler?”. “How can Kim Jong Il starve his people and yet be worshiped by those he oppresses?”

Now they can ask “How is a lawless sociopathic mass murderer and traitor able to commit so many crimes against the US and the world from safety within the Oval Office?”

John Rohan says  ::  October 11th, 2007 @ 12:35 am EST

OK, you claim to be a journalist, and you wonder why the public wasn’t outraged? OK, as someone who has done interrogations in Iraq myself, I’ll take a stab at it.

Didn’t you notice SOMETHING missing from the story, anything at all?

The problem is that this story lacked any new evidence, or really any evidence at all. All of its sources, like so many of these stories, were totally ANONYMOUS. See here, for example (4th paragraph):
http://shieldofachilles.blogspot.com/2007/10/thursday-roundup.html

The problem is NOT that they don’t care. Look at the Abu Gharaib story, for example, which was all the headllines through 2004. Bring us a real life witness or some photographs and I guarantee you people would be outraged.


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