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Destroying PBS: Bush political operative says he'll erase bias at PBS... by inserting bias |
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by Molly Ivins Working For Change Entered into the database on Saturday, June 18th, 2005 @ 12:09:19 MST |
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AUSTIN -- I was watching the PBS science program "Nova" the other night
and spotted the liberal bias right away. I knew it would be there because Ken
Tomlinson, the Bush-appointed chairman of the board of the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting (CPB), says the network is riddled with leftist leanings. Sure enough,
in a program on tsunamis and what causes them, the show blamed it on shifting
tectonic plates in the earth's surface. Then the graphic shows these two tectonic
plates grinding against each other -- suddenly, the one on the left sort of falls
down, and the big, aggressive plate on the right jumps on top of it, causing a
killer tsunami. See? Wouldn't have happened on Fox. I have listened patiently to years of right-wing bull about liberal bias in the
media, but let us be perfectly clear about what is happening at PBS. Big Bird
is not in favor of affirmative action. Bert and Ernie are not gay. Miss Piggy
is not a feminist. "The Three Tenors," "Antiques Roadshow,"
"Masterpiece Theater," "Wall Street Week" and nature programs
do not have a political agenda. "The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer" is biased
in favor of boring, old, white guys who appear on painfully well-balanced panels.
"Washington Week in Review" is a showcase for "Inside the Beltway,"
conventional wisdom, power-parroting, political-geekhead, Establishment journalism
-- there is nothing liberal about it. But there is a plot to politicize public broadcasting. It is plain as a pikestaff,
and it is coming from the Right. It is obvious, undeniable and happening right
now. The Bush administration is introducing a political agenda to public broadcasting.
They are using the lame pretext that PBS is somehow liberal to justify it into
a propaganda organ for the government. That is precisely what the board of CPB
was set up to prevent 40 years ago; it is there to be a firewall between public
broadcasting and political pressure. Ken Tomlinson is a disgrace to the purpose
of that board, he has a political agenda and is engaging in a raw display of
ideological bullying. The right-wingers in the House of Representatives are
backing his power play with a threat to cut off funding for PBS entirely. Tomlinson's claim of liberal bias at PBS is based on the program "NOW
with Bill Moyers," even though Moyers' program frequently featured guests
on the Right. Moyers is now retired, and the show has been cut to half an hour.
Tomlinson "balanced" it with a weekly program by the editorial writers
of the Wall Street Journal, who don't even bother to pretend to be objective:
They are right-wing beyond argument. Tomlinson actually spent $10,000 of the
taxpayers' money to pay some consultant to find bias in Moyers' program but
has never released the results of that "study." Tomlinson, himself a former head of Voice of America in the Reagan administration
and a retired editor Reader's Digest, has been an active right-winger since
I first met him in 1974. He is also the Bush-appointed chair of the Broadcasting
Board of Governors, which oversees the Voice of America, Radio Free Europe and
other official arms of the government's propaganda machine. He is a Bush information
apparatchik. It is quite clear he believes PBS and NPR should also function
as cheerleaders for the government. His choice for president of the CPB is Patricia Harrison, who is such a Republican
activist she was elected co-chair of the Republican National Committee, where
she was particularly noted for attacking Hillary Clinton. This is beyond open
partisanship. Harrison is currently at State, where she oversees that department's
propaganda arm, including the production "news segments" openly intended
to support Bush administration policy. She has testified before Congress about
the value of such "news segments" in swaying public opinion. When Richard Nixon attacked PBS 35 years ago, the Republican chairman of CPB
resigned in protest over the political interference. The impeccably Republican
Ralph Rogers of Dallas led a nationwide effort to stop the malicious meddling.
Where's a decent Republican when you need one? I've read all those studies that show people on the Right lack the gift of
empathy. I can see they have a real hard time imagining themselves as people
on welfare or as blacks in East Texas -- that's quite a stretch even for white
bleeding hearts like me. What I don't get is their inability to do the simplest
exercise in elementary fairness -- how would you feel if the shoe were on the
other foot? Let's pretend Hillary Clinton wins the 2008 election. Who do you want her to
appoint chairman of CPB? James Carville? Noam Chomsky? Or should she show how
much she understands the importance of the independence of public broadcasting
by naming an esteemed Republican, say John Danforth or Alan Simpson or Richard
Lugar? How about anyone who understands that the function of journalism is not
to toady to those in power but to challenge them? Is that too much to ask? The ideological Republicans are destroying a fine public institution. |