A Wake-Up Call For The Media Oligarchy?
Filed September 13, 2001
By Arianna Huffington
Even before the twin towers fell on Tuesday, the media
hunt for the villains had begun. Informed speculation immediately suggested the
handiwork of Osama bin Laden. Lesser culprits faced charges from different
quarters: our current administration, the previous administration, all the way
down to the airport security guards and check-in personnel who failed to spot
the hijackers.
"Who's
to blame?" is the second thing we all say when tragedy strikes -- right
after "Oh, my God." It's an extremely human response to an
incomprehensible situation.
Near the top
of many people's list of culpable parties is the U.S. intelligence community.
The phrase "massive failure of intelligence" became one of this
week's numbing clichés. But what no one is talking about is another, equally
serious, intelligence failure. It is the failure of the media to properly
estimate the intelligence of the American people by catering to the lowest
common denominator in pursuit of ratings and, of course, money.
As shocking as
the four-pronged attack was, it shouldn't have been quite so surprising. Only
seven months ago, a congressionally mandated federal commission released a
prophetic report predicting this kind of terrorist assault on U.S. soil,
concluding that the question was not if a terrorist attack on America could
happen but when.
The U.S.
Commission on National Security, headed by former Sens. Gary Hart and Warren
Rudman, found that "despite the end of the Cold War threat, America faces
distinctly new dangers, particularly to the homeland" and identified
"homeland security as a primary national security mission." The
Commission chairmen continued to lobby the administration to heed its recommendations
as recently as last Thursday when Hart called Condoleezza Rice.
A key
conclusion of the Commission was the need to replace the hodgepodge of agencies
that currently deal with terrorist threats and attacks -- including the CIA,
the Justice Department, the Defense Department, FEMA, U.S. Customs and the
Coast Guard -- by the National Homeland Security Agency. Like the rest of the
report, this simple and sensible suggestion was ignored.
Don't feel bad
if you didn't hear about this report. Despite its far-reaching implications,
very few people read it. Indeed, very few reporters read it. Or, if they did,
very few of them reported that they had read it. In fact, the Hart-Rudman
report received practically no play either in print or on television.
"What
happened this week," Hart told me, "ought to call into question what
is important in our society and how the media cover it. But no one is asking
this on TV, and I'd be amazed if there was a single discussion on the board of
any newspaper asking: Did we do our job? There seems to be no self-reflection,
no understanding by the media that they have a job under the direction of the
Constitution to inform, not just entertain, the American people."
At the time
the report came out, the media were too busy ferreting out the latest info on
the supposed defacing of the White House by Gore loyalists and, later, on Gary
Condit, overage Little Leaguers and shark attacks.
In our
modern, information-drenched times, the power of the media has increased as
dramatically as the number of people wielding that power has shrunk. We are at
their mercy. They set the agenda, they decide what we as a nation should be
concentrating on.
But the First
Amendment wasn't intended as a license to make billions. It's there to guarantee that the people are
informed. And when the media fail at this job, we all suffer.
Unfortunately, the American press's penchant for rigorous reporting is
rapidly disappearing, a victim of corporate pressure to build the bottom line
and not rock the highly profitable status quo. Muckraking has been replaced by
smutraking, with the media hunting down the latest sensation as opposed to the
hard stories that are essential to maintaining our freedom and democracy.
But after
Sept. 11, it seems fair to say that the real danger to Americans isn't shark
attacks. And the sad fact is that the media should have known what the real
danger was -- and should have told us.
Forewarned is
forearmed. And there is no doubt that we all would have been better prepared if
the media had focused 10 percent of the energy and resources it spent obsessing
about Condit on talking about the findings of the National Security Commission.
So we are
faced with a media that gives us bread, circuses and people being forced to
confront their darkest fears -- while shying away from issues of vital
importance out of fear of scaring viewers away. Better to bury their talking
heads in the sand. That's the real Fear Factor media critics should be writing
about.
No one can
deny that the threat of international terrorism is a complex onion to peel.
But, after this week, is anyone doubting that it is a critical story worth
explaining with all the skill and seductive power that we know news
professionals can muster?
Hindsight is
always 20/20. But we'll forever wonder: Would the World Trade Center still be
standing today if the Hart-Rudman report had been spotlighted instead of swept
under the Gary Condit rug?
(Arianna
Huffington's e-mail address is arianna@ariannaonline.com. Her
new
book, ``How to Overthrow the Government,'' is
published by HarperCollins.)
(c) 2001, Arianna Huffington. Distributed by the Los
Angeles Times Syndicate