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Media Manipulation The propaganda is
coming at us from all directions. It is extremely
important that we begin to do our own research to
validate anything and everything we hear in media,
or on forums, such as below. Relying (only) on
mainstream media, is no longer a reliable source of
truth, because they are all controlled by the
Conspirators, as are the "Fusion Centers" located in
a every state in America, and around the
world. Stolen from "Mike".
Leading
Journalists Expose Major Media Manipulations
The riveting excerpts
below are from the revealing accounts of 20
award-winning journalists in the highly acclaimed book
Into the Buzzsaw. These
courageous writers were prevented by corporate media
ownership from reporting major news stories. Some were
even fired or laid off. They have won numerous awards,
including several Emmys and a Pulitzer. Join in
building a better world by helping to spread this news across the land.
Jane Akre—Fox News
.
After our struggle to air an honest report [on
hormones in milk], Fox fired the general manager
[of our station]. The new GM said that if we
didn’t agree to changes that the lawyers were
insisting upon, we’d be fired for insubordination
in 48 hours. We pleaded with [him] to look at the
facts we’d uncovered. His reply: “We paid $3
billion dollars for these stations. We’ll tell you
what the news is. The news is what we say
it is!” [After we refused] Fox’s GM presented us
an agreement that would give us a full year of
salary, and benefits worth close to $200,000, but
with strings attached: no mention of how Fox
covered up the story and no opportunity to ever
expose the facts. [After declining] we were fired.
(click for more)
Dan Rather
—CBS, Multiple Emmy
Awards
. What's going on is
a belief that you can manipulate communicable
trust between the leadership and the led. The way
you do that is you don't let the press in
anywhere. Access to war is extremely limited. The
fiercer the combat, the more the access is
limited, [including] access to information. This
is a direct contradiction of the stated policy of
maximum access to information consistent with
national security. There was a time in South
Africa when people would put flaming tires around
people's necks if they dissented. In some ways the
fear [now in the U.S.] is that you will have a
flaming tire of lack of patriotism put around your
neck. That fear keeps journalists from asking the
tough questions. I am humbled to say, I do not
except myself from this criticism. (click for more)
Monika Jensen-Stevenson
Kristina
Borjesson
In the months leading up to the November
[2000] balloting, Gov. Jeb Bush ordered elections
supervisors to purge 58,000 voters on the grounds
they were felons not entitled to vote. As it turns
out, only a handful of these voters were felons.
This extraordinary news ran on page one of the
country’s leading paper. Unfortunately, it was the
wrong country: Britain. In the USA, it was not
covered. The office of the governor [also]
illegally ordered the removal of felons from voter
rolls—real felons—but with the right to vote under
law. As a result, 50,000 of these voters could not
vote. The fact that 90% of these were Democrats
should have made it news as this alone more than
accounted for Bush’s victory. (click for more)
—25-year veteran of
DEA, writer for New York Times, Los
Angeles Times, USA Today. The Chang Mai “factory” that the CIA
prevented me from destroying was the source of
massive amounts of heroin being smuggled into the US
in the bodies and body bags of GIs killed in
Vietnam. Case after case was killed by CIA and State
Department intervention and there wasn’t a thing we
could do about it….In 1980, CIA-recruited
mercenaries and drug traffickers unseated Bolivia’s
democratically elected president. Immediately after
the coup, cocaine production increased massively.
Bolivia [became] the source of virtually 100% of the
cocaine entering the US. This was the beginning of
the crack “plague.”…The CIA along with State and
Justice Departments had to protect their
drug-dealing assets by destroying a DEA
investigation. How do I know? I was the inside
source….I sat down at my desk in the American
embassy and wrote evidence of my charges. I
addressed it to Newsweek. Three weeks later
DEA’s internal security [called] to notify me that I
was under investigation….The highlight of the 60
Minutes piece is when the administrator of the
DEA, Federal Judge Robert Bonner, tells Mike
Wallace, “There is no other way to put it, Mike,
[what the CIA did] is drug smuggling. It’s illegal.”
Gary
Webb
—San Jose Mercury News, Pulitzer Prize winner. In 1996, I wrote a series of stories that began this way: For the better part of a decade, a Bay Area drug ring sold tons of cocaine to the Crips and Bloods gangs of LA and funneled millions in drug profits to a guerilla army run by the CIA. The cocaine that flooded in helped spark a crack explosion in urban America….The story was developing a momentum all of its own, despite a virtual news blackout from the major media. Ultimately, it was public pressure that forced the national newspapers into the fray. The Washington Post, the New York Times, and the Los Angeles TimesMercury NewsWashington Post reporters assigned to debunk the series “could not find a single significant factual error.” A few months later, the Mercury News [due to intense CIA pressure] backed away from the story, publishing a long column by Ceppos apologizing for “shortcomings.” The New York TimesMercury News not long after that….Do we have a free press today? Sure. It’s free to report all the sex scandals, all the stock market news, [and] every new health fad that comes down the pike. But when it comes to the real down and dirty stuff—such stories are not even open for discussion. (click for more) published stories, but spent little time exploring the CIA’s activities. Instead, my reporting and I became the focus of their scrutiny. It was remarkable [ editor] Ceppos wrote, that the four hailed Ceppos for “setting a brave new standard,” and splashed his apology on their front page, the first time the series had ever been mentioned there. I quit the John
Kelly
—Author, ABC producer. ABC hired me to help produce a story about an investment firm that was heavily involved with the CIA. Part of the ABC report charged that the CIA had plotted to assassinate an American, Ron Rewald, the president of [the investment firm]. Scott Barnes said on camera that the CIA had asked him to kill Rewald. After the show aired, CIA officials met with ABC executive David Burke, [who] was sufficiently impressed “by the vigor with which they made their case” to order an on-air “clarification.” But that was not enough. [CIA Director] Casey called ABC Chairman Goldenson. [Thus] despite all the documented evidence presented in the program, despite ABC standing by the program in a second broadcast, Peter Jennings reported that ABC could no longer substantiate the charges. That same day, the CIA filed a formal complaint with the FCC charging that ABC had “deliberately distorted” the news. In the complaint, Casey asked that ABC be stripped of its TV and radio licenses….During this time, Capital Cities Communications was maneuvering to buy ABC. [CIA Director] Casey was one of the founders of Cap Cities. Cap Cities bought ABC. Within months, the entire investigative unit was dispersed. (click for more) Robert
McChesney
—500 radio & TV appearances. [There has been a] striking consolidation of the media from hundreds of firms to an industry dominated by less than ten enormous transnational conglomerates. The largest ten media firms own all US TV networks, most TV stations, all major film studios, all major music companies, nearly all cable TV channels, much of the book and magazine publishing [industry], and much, much more. Expensive investigative journalism—especially that which goes after national security or powerful corporate interests—is discouraged. Largely irrelevant human interest/tragedy stories get extensive coverage….A few weeks after the war began in Afghanistan, CNN president Isaacson authorized CNN to provide two different versions of the war: a more critical one for the global audience and a sugarcoated one for Americans….It is nearly impossible to conceive of a better world without some changes in the media status quo. We have no time to waste. (click for more) This page is mirrored on Google
sites, Angelfire,
and Fortune
City
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