"SWAT TEAM: The Media's extermination of Bernie Sanders" by Thomas Frank

The November issue of Harper's has a shocking cover, illustrating Frank's article. Bernie Sanders is at a podium and there's a giant rolled up Washington Post newspaper hovering over him about to swat him. Thomas Frank was a Sanders voter. I'm sure most of you know him from his book "What's the matter with Kansas." His interviews are great too, a very witty man.

The article is available to subscribers only and the print version is $7.99. But you can see the cover here:
http://harpers.org/archive/2016/11/

Thomas Frank writes:

I intend to raise some larger questions about the politics of the media in this time of difficulty and transition (or, depending on your panic threshold, industry-wide apocalypse) for newspapers.

I have never before seen the press take sides like they did this year, openly and even gleefully bad-mouthing candidates who did not meet with their approval.

This shocked me when i first noticed it. It felt like the news stories went our of their way to mock Sanders or to twist his words, while the op-ed pages, which of course don't pretend to be balanced, seemed to be of one voice in denouncing my candidate.

Frank zeroes in on The Washington Post and the class of people who run that paper, affluent, white-collar professionals, ivy league educated. They saw something horrifying in Bernie Sanders.

After reading through some 200 [Washington] Post editorials and op-eds about Sanders, I found a very basic disparity. Of the Post stories that could be said to take an obvious stand, the negative outnumbered the positive roughly five to one. (Opinion pieces about Hillary Clinton, by comparison, came much closer to a fifty-fifty split)

The article concludes that newspapers are doomed and when that happens the pundits will be laid off. They will find out that the people they hobnobbed with don't care about them. One day they will be wishing for the policies of Bernie Saunders, like universal health and tuition-free college. It's too late now.

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elenacarlena's picture

Just because things are going well now doesn't mean they'll continue to go well.

But as Upton Sinclair said, "It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it."

I wonder how many pundits can write whatever they like any more.

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MarilynW's picture

- the elite. They have lost touch with humanity.

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To thine own self be true.

While I think Bernie's had his run, and is now a Hellery asset, Caitlin Johnstone at www.inquisitr.com is on the march:

...There is a thrum emanating up from the ground on which we walk, from the trees which we rest under, from the howls in the wind....It goes “Bernie, Bernie, Bernie, Bernie…”

[snip]

I said it back then, and I’ll say it again. Let it be known — if Tim Kaine or Joe Biden are nominated in place of Hillary Clinton, there should be unmitigated and furious indignation and outrage.

[snip]

They are not legitimate alternatives. They have not been popularly nominated; they were not included in the primary process; they have not been under the scrutiny of the press or the public, and they did nothing to demonstrate that they are the choice of the people. Because they aren’t. Not one vote went their way.

[snip]

The resumed criminal investigation plus the Observer recording of her saying she favors rigged elections coming out on the same day means her campaign is dead. If she died today, they’d find a way to replace her. Her campaign is dead.

[snip]

They will tell us they can’t do Bernie while trying to give us Tim Kaine. If they can do Tim Kaine, they can do Bernie Sanders.

[snip]

And we’re awake to your tricks, Podesta et al. We know how you move. We’ve seen too much, and we know all your plays. We know you’re furiously trying to create a human-sounding response for her right now while frantically back and forthing all over the place in text and on the phone. We know you’re illegally coordinating with your super PACs right now to create distractions and to bring your army of online shills “on message.” We know that if we try to join in peaceful protest, you will send in disruptors to make us look violent. There’s so much we know now. That’s just a slice of your playbook, and WikiLeaks has plenty more.

And what if this were to happen? How can we be certain that Bernie would get the opportunity to do anything? The two wings of the corporate party will wrap themselves defensively around the corporatist center to prevent We the People from having our say, much less rule.

This nation is done. What other conclusion can be drawn from the 20 fools who ran against Bernie for the presidency, with two of the worst winning nominations. The worst of the worst own the entire process, and we are the enemy. We want to pretend that our laws still mean something in the face of uninhibited greed.

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Vowing To Oppose Everything Trump Attempts.

he couldn't resist the pressure from the powers that be. If he was in the WH, he would just fold again. Trump on the other hand would take a chain saw to any of them and do it in public. Trump is dangerous to them, not us so much, which is why the elite hate him. Michael Moore makes the case starting around the 0:50 mark.

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

this video of michael moore's take on trump had me agreeing over and over, recognizing the effect of trump's successful takeover of the PTB's plans for this election, and for that alone, when we hear what he says, we have a come-to-jesus moment, we understand our fellow americans delight over him;

it's so terribly clear that the working people-voters are disenchanted, but good, with the establishment

and truth to tell, if he's elected, with history as the lesson, i fear he could be like that guy hitler, who also won unexpectedly with the vote of the workers and those of the left-out populace;

nothing more to say than to appreciate what a special time in u.s. history this is...

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TheOtherMaven's picture

Are YOU?

The thought of that vulgar lout in the White House is repulsive - but he wouldn't be the first vulgar lout to inhabit it. Nor would he be the first xenophobic racist.

Andrew Jackson had him beat by a mile and nearly two centuries, on both counts.

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There is no justice. There can be no peace.

solublefish's picture

But Andrew Jackson didn't have the scale and technical apparatus of a machtstaat at his command, nor a standing army, nor nukes.

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Roy Blakeley's picture

but a lot of native Americans did not. Trump is frightening but so is HRC.

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lotlizard's picture

one that already happened — Congress in joint session, standing up, time after time, over and over, to applaud an extreme nationalist leader known for crushing resistance with an iron fist.

To come anywhere near being a Hitler-like figure, that’s the kind of response Trump or any other American politician would need to be able to elicit from Congress.

Even if by some fluke Trump were to become president, he won’t be Hitler because Congress still controls the purse strings, and most of Congress bipartisanly hates his guts.

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lunachickie's picture

See, here's the thing about Trump--if he were to win, I think he would try and take a chainsaw to this government. Finesse is not exactly his middle name. But if he becomes that much of a threat to TPTB, he'll get Wellstoned, in favor of the much more compliant Mike Pence. Eeek.

I agree with you, unfortunately, about Sanders at this point, unless he's got a good Dead Man's Switch of some kind. Which...what kind that could be, I don't know (and you'd think he'd have flipped it by now, even); and as much as I love the man, and supported him from Day One, I am pretty resigned to the idea that those same "powers" found some way to keep him in line but good. Even if they didn't, the fact remains that the House (and possibly the Senate) are staying red. So there's that reality as well. They won't give up anything, because they're inhumane bastards.

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MarilynW's picture

undermined by the press. He will outlive "the newspaper" as we know it.

We the people have other sources for "the news."

Whoever "wins" the election, what will they win? They will be controlled by the elite, the shadow government.

In Canada, we elected a real popular hero, Justine Trudea but he demonstrates every single day how he is controlled by the 1%. He had 86 visits from the pipeline/oil sands lobby since January. How many environmentalists and First Nations groups has he met with?

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To thine own self be true.

Will he get the Nobel peace prize before he demonstrates a thirst for blood? He seems like a sellout to the 1%. I can tell by how much he likes photo-ops and how anxious he is to exude coolness.

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solublefish's picture

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Good article, thanks!

Except for the claim that 'everybody loves him'? WTF???!!!

Edit: all of this was utterly predictable - we possibly could have had Elizabeth May of the Green Party with better-organized strategic voting - could not figure out why the Liberals were included in that, opposite the NDP having become so disappointing (to say the least) under Mulcair!

If the NDP had stuck to their social democrat roots and platform, they'd have had a landslide... damn near did, too.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

Can't figure out how Trudeau is perceived by anyone as a popular hero? The Liberal party may not be blatantly psychopathic in the manner of the Cons, but the Liberals have long been the corrupt party of the self-appointed elites and I would never have voted for them.

They're place-holders for Alberta Tar Sands Harper and his lot, when it was so painfully evident that public outrage would not allow them to be cheated in again.

Naturally, Justin's weaseling out of the Fair Vote promise among many others and the traitor went today to sign CETA - one of the other horrible privately made 'agreements' - which Harper specifically demanded have no environmental protections included.

That's also mass murder, not just reckless endangerment, even if only regarding the human lives 'acceptably' lost even in the short term.

My strategic vote to get the Cons out went to the in-name-only NDP as being more recently increasingly corrupt and less so that the original two-party trade-offs, the Cons and Liberals, rather than for the Green Party, and we somehow wound up with Cons??? provincially? Here? We had what remains of the best Medicare coverage remaining in the country and that'll be gone, along with everything else, even before the corporate coups begin to demand it...

Harper illegally 'changed law' to prevent Election Canada from informing the public about electoral cheating shortly before this last election - have the 'landslide' Liberals (followed later by a smaller 'landslide' of Con votes noted by my roommate, with the Greens and NDP almost disappearing,) removed any of his illegal laws? Would they be expected to, considering what swine they are? Who on Earth would have expected them to do the decent thing???

Never mind the referendum mentioned below - democracy is entailed for those to come and cannot be disposed of by anyone, not even if all adults currently alive in each country chose an abusive and deadly serfdom with their eyes wide open.

Democracy - a pre-existing condition in many countries which forestalls any such hostile take-overs being gifted/sold via betrayal, fraud or in any manner - and a free, not-poisoned/endangered-for-profit life with a normal life-span are the rights also of those yet unborn.

Democracy does not belong to whoever happens to be transitorily in public office at any time - any more than the country and people do - to be disposed of as whichever public servant is in office pleases.

(Bolding mine.)

https://dezayasalfred.wordpress.com/2016/10/28/un-rights-expert-urges-st...

Alfred de Zayas' Human Rights Corner ~ This is a human rights blog in which I address issues of general concern freely and spontaneously. It is not an official blog nor is it issued in my function as United Nations Independent Expert on the Promotion of a Democratic and Equitable International Order. It is a private blog intended to further an informal exchange of views in the democratic spirit of freedom of opinion and respect for the opinions of others.

UN rights expert urges States not to sign the ‘flawed’ CETA treaty and put it to referendum

28
Friday
Oct 2016

Posted by alfreddezayas in UN, United Nations (UN)

Alfred de Zayas, Belgium, Canada, CETA, EU, European Union, Geneva, TTIP, UN Independent Expert on the promotion of a democratic and equitable international order, United Nations, Wallonia

GENEVA (28 October 2016) – The trade deal set to be signed by the European Union and Canada is a corporate-driven, fundamentally flawed treaty which should not be signed or ratified without a referendum in each country concerned, a United Nations human rights expert says.

Alfred de Zayas, the UN Independent Expert on the promotion of a democratic and equitable international order, deplored the pressures brought on the Belgian regional parliament of Wallonia, which initially said it would not approve the treaty but later said its concerns had been met. “A culture of bullying and intimidation becomes apparent when it comes to trade agreements that currently get priority over human rights,” the expert said.

In his reports to the Human Rights Council and General Assembly Mr. de Zayas has previously warned that CETA is incompatible with the rule of law, democracy and human rights, and substantiated how and why before the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.

He believes that both CETA and TTIP – the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership currently being negotiated by the EU and the US – give undue power to corporations at the expense of national governments and human rights, and deplores that the mere existence of investor-state dispute settlement generates a regulatory chill.

“The danger of CETA and TTIP being signed and one day entering into force is so serious that every stakeholder, especially parliamentarians from EU Member States, should now be given the opportunity to articulate the pros and cons. The corporate-driven agenda gravely endangers labour, health and other social legislation, and there is no justification to fast-track it” Mr. de Zayas said.

“Civil society should demand referendums on the approval of CETA or any other such mega-treaty that has been negotiated behind closed doors,” he noted.

The expert said the EU should have heeded expert warnings and strong civil society opposition to CETA. His specific concerns include provisions which he says could hamper States’ regulatory powers and could allow investment companies to sue over legislation affecting profits, even in cases where the laws were designed to protect workers’ rights, public health or the environment.

States should not sign the agreement unless their powers to regulate and legislate in the public interest are fully safeguarded and the so-called “investment protection” chapter is removed.

“This chapter creates privileges for investors at the expense of the public,” said Mr. de Zayas, noting that the new text may slightly amend this chapter but adding that the Investment Court System (ICS) is similarly incompatible with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which requires legal cases to be heard by transparent, accountable, independent public tribunals.

“The associations of German and Spanish judges have already decried this kind of investor-State dispute settlement, which is a one-way street, and also discriminates against domestic enterprises, Moreover, ICS is not necessary when all participating States are parties to the ICCPR and already have public courts that are independent, transparent and accountable,” he said.

“CETA – along with most trade and investment agreements – is fundamentally flawed unless specific provision stipulates that the regulatory power of States is paramount and must not be impacted by a regulatory chill. It must also be clear that in case of conflict between commercial treaties and human rights treaties, it is the latter that must prevail.”

The expert said there was now a strengthened case for a legally binding instrument on corporate social responsibility, obliging transnational corporations not to interfere in the internal affairs of States, and imposing sanctions when they pollute the environment or shift their profits into tax havens. The Human Rights Council has established an inter-governmental working group on transnational corporations, which is holding its second session this week. Mr. de Zayas, who has participated in this working group, urges the prompt adoption of a treaty that makes the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights legally binding and enforceable.

He also said it was time to discuss the secrecy surrounding the drawing up of the CETA treaty, and the anomaly that much of the information about it became available only through whistleblowers, in violation of State obligations to ensure open access to information.

“The constitutionality of the CETA and TTIP agreements should be tested before the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg, and the human rights aspects before the European Court of Human Rights, which could be called upon to issue interim measures of protection,” said Mr. de Zayas.

“National courts should also test the compatibility of the agreements with national constitutions,” the Independent Expert stated.

“There is a legitimate fear that CETA will dilute environmental standards, food security, and health and labour protection,” he said. “A treaty that strengthens the position of investors, transnational corporations and monopolies at the expense of the public interest conflicts with the duty of States to protect all people under their jurisdiction from internal and external threats.”

Mr. de Zayas said the EU should have paid greater attention to a warning from a committee of Members of Parliament from the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.

The Committee on Social Affairs, Health and Sustainable Development said earlier this month that CETA imposed unacceptable restrictions on the legislative powers of national parliaments, and called for the signing to be postponed.

NOTE TO EDITORS:

The UN Independent Expert devoted his 2015 report to the UN Human Rights Council to the adverse human rights, health and environmental impacts of so-called free trade agreements such as CETA, TPP, TTIP and TISA. Check the report (A/HRC/30/44): http://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/IntOrder/Pages/Reports.aspx

Mr. de Zayas focused his 2015 report to the UN General Assembly on the incompatibility of Investor-state-dispute-settlement arbitrations with fundamental principles of transparency and accountability. Check the report (A/70/285): http://www.un.org/en/ga/search/view_doc.asp?symbol=A/70/285

ENDS

Mr. Alfred de Zayas (United States of America) was appointed as the first Independent Expert on the promotion of a democratic and equitable international order by the Human Rights Council, effective May 2012. He is currently professor of international law at the Geneva School of Diplomacy. Learn more, log on to: http://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/IntOrder/Pages/IEInternationalorderIndex....

The Independent Experts are part of what is known as the Special Procedures of the Human Rights Council. Special Procedures, the largest body of independent experts in the UN Human Rights system, is the general name of the Council’s independent fact-finding and monitoring mechanisms that address either specific country situations or thematic issues in all parts of the world. Special Procedures’ experts work on a voluntary basis; they are not UN staff and do not receive a salary for their work. They are independent from any government or organization and serve in their individual capacity.

Granted, the TPP and others being pushed/Fast-Tracked by Obama are much worse, but none of this is acceptable in any country and cannot be held as legal or binding over a free people in a free country anywhere in the world.

These are betrayals by traitors who need to be charged as such. And the vehicles for these betrayals need to be stopped at source before the private armies of 'security forces' come in against the citizens.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

MarilynW's picture

Excellent essay, looking beyond the trivial
to the essential.

I'm not worried about the puppet-show election. I am more concerned about the corporate elite: the puppet masters. Our next big challenge will be opposing [TTIP] Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership. This is where the shadow government in charge of the puppet show will share the wealth with each other across the Atlantic.

Canada has already signed a preamble, NAFTA extension called CETA Comprehensive Economic Trade Agreement, whereby our Prime Minister has given away the fishing rights on the Atlantic coast. The protected economic zone will no longer be able to ban any European fishing ship. That's only one give-away, the other is having dispute resolutions ruled by investors. There's a lot more in the TTIP but the overall description is corporations on both sides of the Atlantic sharing the wealth with each other no matter where the resources are situated and no matter the environmental protections of any country. It's a win-win for Pete Peterson and his group of economists.

PM Justin Trudeau had to delay his trip to sign CETA over French Belgium's temporary opposition, then his plane was turned around for mechanical problems. Those were two bad omens. Besides he inherited CETA from former ultra right-wing PM Stephen Harper. CETA is not finalized and the Peterson Institute for International Economics is worried about the anti-globalization movements on both sides of the Atlantic calling them "knee-jerk" reactions

TTIP is the pathway to global dystopia.

After reading the New York Times article on CETA, I found that they were quoting Pete Peterson economists. PP is the far right wing advocate for repealing Medicare etc. I was up late reading what I could about CETA. It's 1645 pages long. Plus I don't know much about economics so I just focused on two things, the fisheries giveaway and the dispute resolution to be decided by investors. These trade deals are for the corporate elite, I know that much.

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To thine own self be true.

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

Unless you're talking about all the liberals who are abandoning every principle they ever had in order to justify support for Hillary.

There are many, many people in this country who hate this election and everything about it, and they have had little opportunity to affect the outcome.

I don't know why we can't get it through our heads that we don't have electoral power.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

ThoughtfulVoter's picture

This is a somber essay by john Pilger that deserves to be read by all, but I will attempt to extrapolate a few quotes from it.

Today, the invisible government has never been more powerful and less understood. In my career as a journalist and film-maker, I have never known propaganda to insinuate our lives and as it does now and to go unchallenged.

Without this drumbeat of propaganda dressed up as news, the monstrous ISIS and Al-Qaida and al-Nusra and the rest of the jihadist gang might not exist, and the people of Syria might not be fighting for their lives today.

The attack on Iraq, the attack on Libya, the attack on Syria happened because the leader in each of these countries was not a puppet of the West. The human rights record of a Saddam or a Gaddafi was irrelevant. They did not obey orders and surrender control of their country.

The same fate awaited Slobodan Milosevic once he had refused to sign an “agreement” that demanded the occupation of Serbia and its conversion to a market economy. His people were bombed, and he was prosecuted in The Hague. Independence of this kind is intolerable.

As WikLeaks has revealed, it was only when the Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad in 2009 rejected an oil pipeline, running through his country from Qatar to Europe, that he was attacked.

From that moment, the CIA planned to destroy the government of Syria with jihadist fanatics – the same fanatics currently holding the people of Mosul and eastern Aleppo hostage.

Why is this not news?

Propaganda is most effective when our consent is engineered by those with a fine education – Oxford, Cambridge, Harvard, Columbia — and with careers on the BBC, the Guardian, the New York Times, the Washington Post.

To most of us, the American presidential campaign is a media freak show, in which Donald Trump is the arch villain.

But Trump is loathed by those with power in the United States for reasons that have little to do with his obnoxious behaviour and opinions. To the invisible government in Washington, the unpredictable Trump is an obstacle to America’s design for the 21st century.

This is to maintain the dominance of the United States and to subjugate Russia, and, if possible, China.

(Obviously, this is why Bernie was such a threat too.)

In 1946, the Nuremberg Tribunal prosecutor said of the German media: “Before every major aggression, they initiated a press campaign calculated to weaken their victims and to prepare the German people psychologically for the attack. In the propaganda system, it was the daily press and the radio that were the most important weapons.”

Read the whole thing here: http://www.counterpunch.org/2016/10/28/inside-the-invisible-government-w...

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gulfgal98's picture

Thank you for linking it.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

"So we found the words, The Council on Public Relations" ...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_public_relations

Propaganda was used by both sides to rally domestic support and demonize enemies during the First World War. PR activists entered the private sector in the 1920s. Public relations became established first in the US by Ivy Lee or Edward Bernays, then spread internationally. Many American companies with PR departments spread the practice to Europe after 1948 when they created European subsidiaries as a result of the Marshall plan.

Thanks

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solublefish's picture

the attack on Syria happened because the leader in each of these countries was not a puppet of the West."

Absolutely! But I thought he was going to say: "The attack on Iraq, the attack on Libya, the attack on Syria happened because" of the "drumbeat of propaganda dressed up as news". And that, too, would be true.

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Roy Blakeley's picture

All did the bidding of the US, but they were not reliable long-term ass kissers. The US thought they could be replaced with more reliable, more neoliberal puppets. This malevolence was alloyed with grotesque misreading of the situations in each country.

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Lookout's picture

from last week.
The Global Empire - Tariq Ali talks to the author Thomas Frank about the unfolding mess of the USA’s upcoming election and the failure of its political and electoral system.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atWpZ9PMHTc (30 min)

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

MarilynW's picture

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To thine own self be true.

if they dare. What's he doing with the profit? Acting like an imbecile, not smart just greedy as hell. Exploiting everything within reach to belch out a few more pennies, because investors. immagetthefuckupouttaheeeeeeeere...

A worldwide Amazon boycott would definitely send them a messooh what's that shiny new thing? What was I saying? LOL

~kerplunk~

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MarilynW's picture

they are nothing more than a lapdog for the Washington DC elite.

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To thine own self be true.

Mark from Queens's picture

Poignant piece about the media collusion to bring down Sanders, thanks for calling our attention to it.

Hardly anyone is digging in to expose the media's (with the exception of the Intercept and a few others, even major favorite Taibbi has been slipping into the clutches of the Fear) over-the-top, bizarre and unprecedented collusion this election cycle beside Thomas Frank. He's been traveling the country speaking some serious truth to power that is music to the ears of true progressives who hoped for a New Deal-style makeover from Obama, and who then went to the trenches with Bernie Sanders for what seemed like a once-in-a-lifetime real New Deal candidate. I get the feeling those fake-assed Democrats at TOP shit bricks when the name Thomas Frank is mentioned. That's because he's on fire lately, with the focus on the reasons why we are all here, because the Democratic Party sold out the 99%. They deserve the grave they're digging now.

I stayed up in bed riveted reading this excellent piece. Some excerpts:

Perhaps it was the very particular media diet I was on in early 2016, which consisted of daily megadoses of the New York Times and the Washington Post and almost nothing else. Even so, I have never before seen the press take sides like they did this year, openly and even gleefully bad-mouthing candidates who did not meet with their approval.

He goes on to wonder how a guy with such a legitimate Left point of view, and so free of scandal, could be taken down by such a perennial liberal paper as WaPo. Goes on to say his views were perceived by the Beltway insiders as such an existential threat, because of who they are and what their world is like.

The Washington Post, with its constant calls for civility, with its seemingly genetic predisposition for bipartisanship and consensus, is more than the paper of record for the capital—it is the house organ of a meritocratic elite, which views the federal city as the arena of its professional practice. Many of its leading personalities hail from a fairly exalted socioeconomic background (as is the case at most important American dailies). Its pundits are not workaday chroniclers of high-school football games or city-council meetings. They are professionals in the full sense of the word, well educated and well connected, often flaunting insider credentials of one sort or another. They are, of course, a comfortable bunch. And when they look around at the comfortable, well-educated folks who work in government, academia, Wall Street, medicine, and Silicon Valley, they see their peers.

Then he methodically analyzes a succession of hit-pieces they churned out relentlessly, 5 to 1 negative on Bernie, where for HRC it was 50/50. Some of them are astounding to read (I missed a good many when they were published, and was furious reading their pathetic, snotty derision and fabrications, much of it derived and regurgitated from the Clinton campaign). The backdrop to all this "Bernie is wishful thinking, he's not going to get any of these things, he doesn't understand this or that," is people were desperately wanting to hear such populist talk, not the least because it would dignify their worries and concerns and get the conversation started, which the media up until then had completely shirked away from. It went on and on, ignominiously ending with this:

The danger of Trump became an overwhelming fear as primary season drew to a close, and it redoubled the resentment toward Sanders. By complaining about mistreatment from the Democratic apparatus, the senator was supposedly weakening the party before its coming showdown with the billionaire blowhard. This matter, like so many others, found columnists and bloggers and op-ed panjandrums in solemn agreement. Even Eugene Robinson, who had stayed fairly neutral through most of the primary season, piled on in a May 20 piece, blaming Sanders and his noisy horde for “deliberately stoking anger and a sense of grievance—less against Clinton than the party itself,” actions that “could put Trump in the White House.” By then, the paper had buttressed its usual cast of pundits with heavy hitters from outside its own peculiar ecosystem. In something of a journalistic coup, the Post opened its blog pages in April to Jeffrey R. Immelt, the CEO of General Electric, so that he, too, could join in the chorus of denunciation aimed at the senator from Vermont. Comfort the comfortable, I suppose—and while you’re at it, be sure to afflict the afflicted.

Franks concludes genuine Left Wing ideals are an anathema to the 10% Professional Class.

For one thing, we learn that the Washington Post, that gallant defender of a free press, that bold bringer-down of presidents, has a real problem with some types of political advocacy. Certain ideas, when voiced by certain people, are not merely debatable or incorrect or misguided, in the paper’s view: they are inadmissible. The ideas themselves might seem healthy, they might have a long and distinguished history, they might be commonplace in other lands. Nevertheless, when voiced by the people in question, they become damaging.

Looking back from the vantage point of several months, however, it seems to me that the real recklessness is the idea that certain political questions are off-limits to our candidates—that they must not disparage the party machinery, that they must not “revile” the Wall Street bailouts, and so on. Consider the circumstances in which Post pundits demanded that Sanders refrain from disparaging the Democratic National Committee. Democratic elected officials across the country were virtually unanimous in their support of Hillary Clinton, President Obama was doing nearly everything in his power to secure her nomination, and the D.N.C. itself was more or less openly taking her side. All these players were determined (as we later learned) to make this deeply unpopular woman the nominee, regardless of the consequences. Maybe Sanders didn’t have the story exactly right—nobody did, back then. But still: if ever a situation cried out for

Really what it comes down to is, the insiders will tell you what is attainable and what is not, according to what keeps their lifestyles firmly in place.

The reason the Post pundits embrace these tidy sophistries is simple enough. Knee-jerk incrementalism is, after all, a nifty substitute for actually thinking difficult issues through. Bernie Sanders ran for the presidency by proposing reforms that these prestigious commentators, for whatever reason, found distasteful. Rather than grapple with his ideas, however, they simply blew the whistle and ruled them out of bounds. Plans that were impractical, proposals that would never pass Congress—these things are off the table, and they are staying off.

Clinging to this so-called pragmatism is also professionally self-serving. If “realism” is recognized as the ultimate trump card in American politics, it automatically prioritizes the thoughts and observations of the realism experts—also known as the Washington Post and its brother institutions of insider knowledge and professional policy practicality. Realism is what these organizations deal in; if you want it, you must come to them. Legitimacy is quite literally their property. They dole it out as they see fit.

The doublespeak couldn't be more obvious.

Think of all the grand ideas that flicker in the background of the Sanders-denouncing stories I have just recounted. There is the admiration for consensus, the worship of pragmatism and bipartisanship, the contempt for populist outcry, the repeated equating of dissent with partisan disloyalty. And think of the specific policy pratfalls: the cheers for TARP, the jeers aimed at bank regulation, the dismissal of single-payer health care as a preposterous dream.

Here's the catch. These kiss-ass positions are so shortsighted and this embarrassing epoch of collusion between well-off, hermetically-sealed upper middle class pundits will be coming back to haunt them.

Now, here’s the mystery. As a group, journalists aren’t economically secure. The boom years of journalistic professionalization are long over. Newspapers are museum pieces every bit as much as Bernie Sanders’s New Deal policies. The newsroom layoffs never end: in 2014 alone, 3,800 full-time editorial personnel got the axe, and the bloodletting continues, with Gannett announcing in September a plan to cut more than 200 staffers from its New Jersey papers. Book-review editors are so rare a specimen that they may disappear completely, unless somebody starts breeding them in captivity...

So why do the people at the very top of this profession identify themselves with the smug, the satisfied, the powerful? Why would a person working in a moribund industry compose a paean to the Wall Street bailouts? Why would someone like Post opinion writer Stephen Stromberg drop megatons of angry repudiation on a certain Vermont senator for his “outrageous negativity about the state of the country”? For the country’s journalists—Stromberg’s colleagues, technically speaking—that state is pretty goddamned negative.

They're removed from reality, playing in a fantasy world of doing as little as possible as a muckraker to ensure your precious upward mobility.

Here in the capital city, every pundit and every would-be pundit identifies upward, always upward. We cling to our credentials and our professional-class fantasies, hobnobbing with senators and governors, trading witticisms with friendly Cabinet officials, helping ourselves to the champagne and lobster. Everyone wants to know our opinion, we like to believe, or to celebrate our birthday, or to find out where we went for cocktails after work last night.

Until the day, that is, when you wake up and learn that the tycoon behind your media concern has changed his mind and everyone is laid off and that it was never really about you in the first place. Gone, the private office or award-winning column or cable-news show. The checks start bouncing. The booker at MSNBC stops calling. And suddenly you find that you are a middle-aged maker of paragraphs—of useless things—dumped out into a billionaire’s world that has no need for you, and doesn’t really give a damn about your degree in comparative literature from Brown. You start to think a little differently about universal health care and tuition-free college and Wall Street bailouts. But of course it is too late now. Too late for all of us.

Fucking brilliant.

There's a lot more that Frank has done this season, and it's worthwhile to check out. I've watched a number of his speaking appearances for "Listen Liberal" (as well as for his other books) and have been a long-time fan (although I was a bit befuddled that he sort of overlooked or gave shirt shrift to Occupy, when doing speaking engagements for "Pity The Billionaire").

I can't think of many who have provided such of rock solid criticism and illuminating insights to the inner working of the New Democrats, which began under the Clintons and runs through the veins of the Obama administration, and the fucking disaster we're in a the present moment, with all those old New Democrats salivating at the keys to the pantry again. Basically, their idea was to jettison the heritage as Party of the People's responsible to middle and working class voters, for the big money donation of Wall St and corporate America and the votes of the top 10% upper middle class white professionals, who used to be reliably Republican voters but have now been swayed. He uncovers how Clinton and Newt Gingrich were all set behind closed doors (the public face was adversarial, the private face congenial, because, hey, now we're talking money, for our friends, donors and ourselves) to see out Social Security to Wall St but then you Monica got down on her knees.

If you haven't seen any of these they're worth your time:

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solublefish's picture

"So why do the people at the very top of this profession identify themselves with the smug, the satisfied, the powerful? Why would a person working in a moribund industry compose a paean to the Wall Street bailouts?"

1. Same petit bourgeois blindness that afflicts all such: "I did it, why can't you?"
2. They got theirs, and don't want to do anything that might impair the luxury of their twenty years of retirement.

Same thing happens in my world of higher education. The dwindling tenured faculty - a minority in many colleges and universities across the country - do not want to share anything they have with the 'adjuncts', because it would be that much harder to make payments on their summer cottages and etc. They are content to watch the profession destroyed, knowing they themselves will come out unscathed. They justify it with the jargon of inevitability.

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Hawkfish's picture

Just read the last paragraph of any article to see what the intended editorial slant is.

What's so sad is how unsubtle it is. It's like they have so much contempt that they don't even bother to try.

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