Don't Trust the News!
BBC Propaganda Watch:
Tell-Tale Signs That Slip Through The Cracks
Text from MediaLens http://www.medialens.org/
Pics from all over the Internet
Text from MediaLens http://www.medialens.org/
Pics from all over the Internet
Even the
most powerful systems of propaganda inadvertently allow uncomfortable truths to
slip out into the public domain. Consider a recent BBC News interview
following the death of Cuba's former leader Fidel Castro. Dr Denise Baden,
Associate Professor in Business Ethics at the University of Southampton, who
has studied Castro's leadership and Cuban business models, was asked by BBC
News presenter Maxine Mawhinney for her views on Cuba and Castro. It's fair to
say that Baden's responses didn't follow the standard establishment line echoed
and amplified in much of the 'mainstream' media.
Fidel and young Justin |
Mawhinney kicked off the interview with the standard Western propaganda line about Castro:
'He ruled with an iron fist, didn't he?'
Baden
immediately challenged the cliché:
'Well, that's something that everyone's fond of saying. But
when I talk to the people who live in Cuba, and the Cubans who've come to live
in the UK, that's not the story that I get. The feeling that comes through is
of Fidel Castro almost as a father figure. So, the older generation tend to see
him as a hero of the revolution. They're aware that many of them wouldn't even be
here if it wouldn't have been for the health advances and the equalisation of
resources that he provided.'
Bay of Pigs & American bombers |
The academic, who visited the island in 2013 and 2014, 'drawn by its record on sustainability', then pointed out that it was the crippling US embargo on Cuba that was responsible for much of the hardships suffered by the Cubans for over five decades: a crucial point that the BBC interviewer significantly did not pursue.
Mawhinney
then raised Castro's human rights record. Baden addressed the issue of free
speech first:
'When I went to talk to people in Cuba, I found it
remarkable how freely they all spoke about Fidel Castro, and Raul Castro, and
the policies. I was expecting from the discourse we hear that people would be
afraid to speak out. And that wasn't what I found - people spoke out very
freely.'
The BBC
interviewer pressed her on whether Cuban people really did speak out:
'Did they criticise the regime?'
Baden:
'Oh yes. I had the head of a topical newspaper who was quite
critical of the government in some ways. Not all ways, but some ways. And I
think what it is, is the [Western] media's been dominated by America. So, for
example, when Obama visited Havana [in March 2016] you had the Cuban Ladies in
White come out to protest against the human rights abuses. And so, of course,
that dominates the headlines. But they're paid for by Americans – people don't
realise that; an American agency pays for them. The Cubans don't take them
seriously.'
Once again,
the BBC interviewer did not pick up the uncomfortable point about US support,
including financial sponsorship, of anti-Castro activism. Imagine the reverse
case if Cuba, or another foreign power, were responsible for funding or
otherwise fomenting activism inside the United States. Indeed, look at the
media outrage at alleged
interference by 'Putin's Russia' in the recent US election, with a new
explosion of coverage devoted to evidence-free assertions made by anonymous CIA officials.
The BBC
interviewer returned to Castro:
'But he did carry out human rights abuses. Look, let's just
take one section. Gay people and those with Aids – completely persecuted.'
Raoul Castro's daughter and gay activists |
'I think when you look back at the time at which the
revolution was considered to be a little bit homophobic, which was in the 60s,
I'm not sure many countries could hold their heads up high and say that they
were as open as they should be. So, I think you have to look at it in context
of the period as well.'
Trying a
different tack, Mawhinney continued:
'You seem quite fond of Fidel Castro.'
Rather than
rise to this personalised bait, Baden pointed out that, like many Western
consumers of news broadcasts, she had long 'been exposed to the Miami voice
[often privileged Cuban exiles], which is the very dominant voice, and I think
I was just surprised when I went there not to find this browbeaten people who
felt oppressed.'
She
continued:
'And I think that made me a little bit cross actually
because I think we have been exposed to a lot of misinformation, and
this quite small minority in Florida has dominated the headlines today and over
the past fifty years.'
This
implicit criticism of BBC News was left hanging in the air.
By now
sounding quite incredulous, the BBC interviewer asked:
'So, are you saying that what he did, the things that we
would see as a human rights abuse was okay?'
Baden's calm
challenge was professorial:
'Well, do you want to be more specific?'
Mawhinney
followed up in hand-waving fashion:
'Well, the prisoners, the political prisoners, the problems
with gay people, et cetera, et cetera.'
'Well no, I don't think political prisoners are ever okay.
And I don't think persecuting gay people is ever okay.'
Crucially,
the academic then made the point that matters:
'What I'm disputing is that Fidel Castro of Cuba was any
worse than any other country. I think if you expose America to the same lens,
then you'd have a stack of crimes that would overshadow what Fidel Castro has
done.'
It's a rare
moment when even a mention of American crimes is carried on BBC
airwaves, never mind stating that they would dwarf the alleged crimes of an
Official Enemy.
Baden
continued with the context
that was routinely missing
from, or downplayed in, recent coverage of Cuba following Castro's death:
'I think the important thing to realise is the moment Fidel
came into power in the revolution, at the time at which there was very strong
anti-Communist feeling, the Americans did everything they could to subvert
that. They invaded in the Bay of Pigs, the Cuban missile crisis was a response
to an expected additional invasion, and there was, I think, an estimated 638
CIA-sponsored attempts on Fidel Castro's life. So, I think you have to
understand the responses and the fear of open speech in context of a constant
aggression coming from ninety miles over the water.'
Again, the
notion of 'constant aggression' from the US is virtually verboten on the
BBC.
This
remarkable segment of BBC News would most likely have been lost down the Memory Hole were it not
for Media Lens reader Steve Ennever
who captured it, uploaded it to YouTube, and then informed people about it
(including us). The clip
quickly went viral. At the time of writing, it has had around 140,000 views on
YouTube, with around half a million views on the Media Lens Facebook page
and 2.7 million views via EvolvePolitics.
This truly shows the power of social media.
Most public
commenters were highly appreciative of the way Baden handled the BBC interview.
A few preferred to say instead: 'Well done BBC for showing this', as though the
corporation had upheld its commitment to impartiality. But those people are
rather missing the point. The BBC line of interviewing – in reality, assertions
with a token question mark added at the end - consisted of propaganda bullet
points. Thanks to Baden, here was a rare and welcome example of that propaganda
line being dismantled live on BBC News.
Yes, it is
possible to praise the interviewer, or BBC News, for 'allowing' that to happen
here; Maxine Mawhinny did at least refrain from constantly interrupting the
interviewee in the way of Andrew Neil, Andrew Marr or John Humphrys. By
'balancing' praise with criticism, some argue, the BBC will be 'encouraged' to
'improve' its performance. Perhaps marginally. But, as seen
over many years, the very structure of the BBC means there is a systemic bias
in favour of the state, big business, elites and power. Praising a prison guard
for being a little less harsh is futile when the prison system remains
essentially unchanged. Are we really meant to be pathetically grateful for tiny
bits of comfort?
Such are the
perils of live television, then, for BBC News. An interviewee may end up
querying, perhaps rejecting, the ideological script presented by a BBC News
journalist. The script may even be turned on its head, by pointing out that the
West is guilty of far worse crimes than the Bogeyman in question – Fidel
Castro, as we saw above.
'A
Grand Bargain'
Another
potentially vulnerable moment for the BBC in maintaining the correct
ideological stance is the live artificial 'chat' that takes place between a BBC
News presenter and a journalist who is on location, or sitting across a glossy
table from the presenter in the studio. Normally these are such tightly managed
affairs between two highly trained and carefully selected media professionals
that nothing 'untoward' happens. But very occasionally, the impromptu language
allows over-reaching or unguarded thoughts to spill out, making alert viewers
do a double-take.
For example,
BBC Business Editor Simon Jack inadvertently delivered a tasty morsel of newspeak on BBC News at Ten last month (BBC One, November 21, 2016).
Jack was describing Prime Minister Theresa May's keynote speech to business
leaders at the CBI conference. Supposedly, her tone was more 'conciliatory'
compared to a previous 'withering attack' a week earlier when she had pointed
out 'some abuses she saw in capitalism and their [business leaders'] behaviour
in some corners of British business'. May's vague words then about curbing 'the worst excesses of capitalism' did not exactly herald a revolution. Instead, they smacked
of appeasing 'populism' in the wake of Brexit and Trump's US electoral win.
Jack
paraphrased May's key message to the CBI:
'I know you've got some problems. And there's going to be a
grand bargain. I'll do some things, I'll lower taxes, I'll invest in
productivity. You clean up your act and make sure the wealth is shared.'
BBC viewers
may well have thought: 'Run that past me again?' Did you really report without
comment, far less journalistic scrutiny, that the Prime Minister instructed
business elites to 'make sure the wealth is shared'? Is the British public
expected to believe that big business will actually 'make sure the wealth is
shared'? As ever, there was no proper scepticism towards government pronouncements
or policy. In reality, Jack's role is the BBC News editor for business –
and government. Sometimes the bias is that blatant.
Another
point in BBC News where viewers can be rewarded for particular vigilance is at
the start of the programme; or when a specific news story is being introduced.
Here the required establishment view – the perspective of 'our' government or
big business - is sometimes especially obvious.
'In Iraq, special forces are slowly pushing back so-called
Islamic State in the country's second city, Mosul. But the fighting is hard...'
This was propaganda-style
reporting once again from BBC News; no doubt similar to how the Russian media
report on Russian forces pushing back against terrorists in Syria. Indeed, as
we have pointed out before, there are many parallels between British and
Russian/Soviet propaganda reporting of foreign policy and military action (see here,
here
and here).
'The
World Wants America As Its Policeman'
And then
there are those brave people who enter the labyrinthine den of the BBC
'complaints system'. This is a soul-crushing experience that even the former
BBC chairman Lord Grade once described as 'grisly' due to a system that is
'absolutely hopeless'. So what hope for us mere mortals? Anyone who makes the
attempt is surely forever disabused of the notion that BBC News engages with,
or indeed serves, the public in any meaningful way. Long-time readers may
recall that Helen Boaden,
then head of BBC News, once joked
that she evaded public complaints that were sent to her on email:
'Oh, I just changed my email address.'
One of our
favourite cases was a challenge made about an article by that avuncular epitome
of BBC gravitas, World Affairs Editor John Simpson. In a 2014 article, 'Barack Obama's best years could still be ahead of him', Simpson claimed that:
'The world (well, most of it) wants an active, effective
America to act as its policeman, sorting out the problems smaller countries
can't face alone.'
One of our
readers (name withheld) read the article, then submitted a complaint to the
BBC, noting that:
'In an international opinion poll
by Gallup this year the US was found to be the greatest threat to peace in the
world, voted three times more dangerous to world peace than the next country.
The BBC article is therefore, at worst, incorrect and biased or at best highly
inaccurate. Will you be retracting the statement?'
Needless to
say, the BBC did no such thing. In fact, Sean Moss, whose job title reads 'BBC
Complaints Adviser for BBC News website', delivered a comical reply (forwarded
to us, 13 November 2014):
'In fact the poll referenced in your complaint was from the
end of last year rather than this year. It is an annual end of year survey
which in this edition "explores the outlook, expectations, hopes and fears
of people from 65 countries around the world" from 2013.
'Given that
we're now nearly at the end of 2014 and they will be conducting a new poll next
month we're unclear on what basis you feel these views are still applicable.'
'Unclear' if
'still applicable'? Far from being a rogue result, the US regularly tops
polls of global public opinion as the world's greatest threat to peace. As
Noam Chomsky noted
in an interview earlier this year when discussing nuclear weapons:
'Iran is not a threat, period. The world doesn't regard Iran
as a threat. That's a U.S. obsession. You look at global—polls of global
opinion taken by Gallup's international affiliate, the leading U.S. polling
agencies—agency, one of the questions that they ask is, "Which country is
the greatest threat to world peace?" Answer: United States, by a huge
margin. Iran is barely mentioned. Second place is Pakistan, inflated by the
Indian vote, that's way behind the United States. That's world opinion. And
there are reasons for it. Americans are protected from this information.'
Not only
Americans. British – indeed, global - audiences too; thanks in no small measure
to the BBC.
The
requirement to keep awkward facts hidden or marginalised is especially pressing
on those BBC journalists who are entrusted to report from the United States.
Thus, in an online report titled 'The decline of US power?', the BBC New York correspondent Nick Bryant had to tread
carefully in even mentioning America's 'approval rating', as measured by
Gallup:
'In Asia, America's median approval rating in 2014, as measured
by Gallup, was 39%, a 6% drop since 2011.
'In Africa,
the median approval went down to 59%, the lowest since polling began, despite
Obama hosting the US-Africa Leaders' Summit in Washington in August, last
year.'
There was no
mention that, as mentioned, global public opinion regularly regards the US as
the greatest threat to world peace, and by a considerable margin.
However,
there was plenty of space for Bryant to churn out the usual BBC
boilerplate about America's 'national interest' and Obama's 'pragmatism' and
'diplomatic dexterity'; all this about a leader who boasted he had bombed seven countries, rapidly escalated a killer drone programme and broke his pledge to shut down the US Guantanamo torture camp in Cuba.
Dying
In A Ditch For BBC News 'Impartiality'
The irony in
the ongoing corporate media allegations about 'fake news' (see our previous media alert)
is that, as Glenn Greenwald noted,
'those who most loudly denounce Fake News are typically those most aggressively
disseminating it.' That is because the corporate media fears losing control of
the media agenda.
As for BBC
News, its privileged, publicly-funded position as supposedly the world's most
trusted broadcaster is under threat. So, while reasonable questions can be asked
of the growing behemoths of the media landscape – Google, YouTube and Facebook
– 'mainstream' journalists know full well not to publicly scrutinise their own
industry's output of state-corporate 'fake news'.
Thus, BBC
Technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones can safely hold Facebook up to the light and ask:
'If Facebook or something similar had not existed, would
Donald Trump still be heading for the White House?
'That is
hard to say but what does seem likely is that social media served to polarise
views in what was already a bitter election and may have encouraged a few hesitant
voters to come out for Mr Trump.
'This makes
Facebook's claims that it just a technology platform, rather than a hugely
powerful media company with Mark Zuckerberg as editor-in-chief, look very thin
indeed. But there are few signs that the company is ready to face up to this
heavy responsibility or engage in some serious soul-searching.' (our
emphasis)
It would be
virtually unthinkable for a BBC journalist to write of his employer:
'there are few signs that the broadcaster is ready to face
up to this heavy responsibility or engage in some serious soul-searching.'
'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.'
As a prime
example, consider Laura Kuenssberg, the BBC's political editor. Last week, Press
Gazette awarded
her the accolade of 'Journalist of the Year'. She told
the trade paper proudly that:
'I would die in a ditch for the impartiality of the BBC.'
Two former
senior BBC figures would dispute that self-serving depiction of wonderful BBC
'impartiality'. Greg Dyke, a former BBC director general, believes
that:
'The BBC is part of a "conspiracy" preventing the
"radical changes" needed to UK democracy.'
He says that
a parliamentary commission should look into the 'whole political system',
adding that:
'I fear it will never happen because I fear the political
class will stop it.'
And Sir
Michael Lyons, former chairman of the BBC Trust , said
earlier this year that there had been 'some quite extraordinary attacks' on
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn by the BBC.
Readers may
recall that Kuenssberg was behind the on-air resignation of a Labour shadow
foreign minister in an apparent attempt to manipulate the news agenda and heap pressure on Corbyn. Former British diplomat Craig
Murray describes
her as:
'the most openly biased journalist I have ever seen on the
BBC'.
Up to and
including dying in a ditch, Kuenssberg would do anything to defend the
impartiality of the BBC. Well, perhaps not anything. Asked for her
'impartial' view on why 35,000 members of the public had signed a petition
calling for her to be sacked for her bias, Kuenssberg replied
rather less heroically: 'I'm not going to get into that.'
Des
Freedman, Professor of Media and Communications at Goldsmiths, University of
London, notes
that the kind of bias displayed by Kuenssberg:
'isn't an accident or a one-off example of "bad
journalism" but is built into a media system that is intertwined with the
interests that run the country.'
'This doesn't mean that there's a smoke-filled room
somewhere where anti-Corbyn people get together. I think you just call it a
routine editorial meeting. The point is many senior journalists ... reflect the
dominant strain that runs through their newsrooms – one based on the assumed
benefits of neoliberalism and foreign intervention and the undesirability (or
the sheer madness of the idea) of redistribution, nationalisation and
people like Jeremy Corbyn who don't share the same social circles or
ideological commitments.'
As Freedman
rightly concludes:
'We need a wholly different media system: one that's not
afraid to challenge power because it's not steeped in power in the first
place.'
DC and DE
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