If Richard Nixon were alive today, would he get a Come to
Jesus moment on Oprah? Because the
Senate has decided to not only make the Watergate break-in and cover-up legal,
it has given retroactive immunity to today’s version of the Plumbers.
From the Boston Globe:
If you wonder why Britney, the round-the-clock Heath Ledger TragedyWatch[tm], the idiotic horse race aspects of Election 08 etc. get
so much play on CNN and the like, look no further than the nature of the actual
news the smoke and mirrors exist to conceal.
Today’s vote is such a story.
Let me take you back in time to 1987 when contemporary GOP deity Ronald Wilson Reagan decided that the framers of the Constitution and
all the other big brains involved with the formation of this country were
wrong, and a free press was not necessary for democracy. Reagan’s FCC did away with something called the
Fairness Doctrine, which essentially required any media company holding a
public license (that means it runs on airwaves actually owned by you and me) was required to allow all sides of issues affecting Americans to be represented. One component of that was allotted time to report the actual news. It didn’t make money, but since the public
airwaves are theoretically owned by We the People, it was considered quid pro quo to benefit the public at large by keeping us informed of what’s happening
in our town, city, state, country, world, etc.
So, the FISA smack down will most likely not take up too much air time between Hillary’s tears and the social context for the word ‘pimp.’ Because what’s good for AT&T is good for the politicians it supports. And what’s good for them is good for the corporations holding the public airwaves hostage in the name of profit.
Whither Woodward and Bernstein?
“I think that men living in aristocracies may, strictly speaking, do
without the liberty of the press; but such is not the case with those
who live in democratic countries. To protect their personal
independence I do not trust to great political assemblies, to
parliamentary privilege, or to the assertion of popular sovereignty.
All these things may, to a certain extent, be reconciled with personal
servitude. But that servitude cannot be complete if the press is free;
the press is the chief democratic instrument of freedom.” — Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, 1831