| ||||||||||||||
|
Local News & Opinion
Travel
Books, Arts & Education
08.05 "American Teen": A Winning Documentary about Real-Life High Schoolers 07.31 Francis Boyle's "Palestine Palestinians and International Law" Letters
Ref. : Letters to the editor Open Letters: 08.16 Out Damn Blot: A Letter to Colin Powell Health & Environment
08.14 The End of Cheap Oil: The Future is Now 08.05 Obama is Right: It's Easy to Reduce the Nation's (and Your Own) Fuel Bill Dramatically Media Watching
08.21 Mixed Truth of the Russia-Georgia War 08.16 John McCain's Party of Hate 08.15 Corporate Media Bashes New Chavez Enabling Law Decrees 08.15 Georgia/Russia Conflict Forced Into Cold War Frame 08.13 WPost and the Great Disconnect 08.12 WPost Admits Bungling Obama Quote 08.06 Why McCain May Well Win 08.06 Media Fall for 'Race Card' Spin 08.01 Wall Street Journalomics: The Case of the Missing Tax Facts 07.31 CNN Scoffs at White House Critics 07.31 WPost Calls Out 'Uppity' Obama US Politics, Policy & Culture
08.21 McCain's Ties to Neocon Hard Lines 08.21 Peace Mom v. Guardian of Power 08.20 Are You Ready For Nuclear War? 08.19 A Book Written to Defeat Obama 08.19 McCain's 'Cone of Silence' Caper 08.14 Is Perpetual War Our Future? 08.12 5 Years After Blackout, Power Grid Still in 'Dire Straits' 08.12 Olympic Shame 08.12 Thinking About Intermissions 08.11 ‘Medaling’ With Free Speech at the Olympics 08.11 Targeting Immigrants - The Largest Ever US ICE Raid 08.09 A Novel Approach to Politics 08.07 The Hamdan Principle and You 08.07 McCain Adopts Cheney's Energy Plan 08.06 The Serpent's Egg: Solzhenitsyn and the Origins of America's Gulag 08.05 Mining Racism and Murder in a Northeastern Pennsylvania Coal Town 08.04 The Other Presidential Candidates 08.03 McCain, Anthrax & the Afghan Blunder 08.01 Justice Probe Still Threatens Gonzales 07.31 Obama's Surge in Berlin 07.30 War Without End, Amen: Into the Afghan Abyss with Obama 07.30 McCain's Spin on the 'Surge' 07.30 Friday's House Judiciary Hearing on Impeachment: A Victory and a Challenge US High Crimes & Misdemeanors
08.20 Musharraf, Not Bush, Follows Nixon 08.18 Fear, Procurement, Profit: Permanent War and the American Way 08.17 This Time, the World Is Not Buying It 08.15 'Imminent' Threats Should Be a Belli Laugh 08.08 American Insouciance 08.07 Extra! Dog Bites Man! Read All About It! 08.05 Marching Off Into Tyranny 08.05 Follow This Dime 07.31 Wave of 'Capitol Crime' Continues 07.29 Bodyguard of Lies: The Truth Behind the 'Surge's' Smokescreen 07.28 Secret "Torture Memo" Gave Legal Cover to Interrogators Who Acted in "Good Faith" 07.28 The Bush Administration's Secret Biowarfare Agenda 07.26 The Endless Smearing of Joe Wilson Economics & Business
08.04 Thinking About Ponzi International
08.18 Blockades: Acts of War 08.17 Rice’s Recipe for Duck Soup 08.14 The Lawless Roads: Bluster in Georgia, Rank Tyranny at Home 08.14 Marching Through Georgia V: U.S. Forces Moving Into Putin's Powderkeg 08.14 Marching Through Georgia IV: The Butt Thumper and the Bear 08.13 Using Georgia to Target Russia 08.12 From Stupid to Moronic to Evil 08.11 Marching Through Georgia III: Reality's Rout and Cheney's Viagra 08.11 Marching Through Georgia II: The Kremlin Surge 08.08 Marching Through Georgia I: Cold War II Proxy Conflict Turns Hot 08.07 Living Death: The Eternal Now of Hiroshima 08.07 War with Iran - On, Off or Undecided? 08.04 Gaza Under Siege We are a non-profit Internet-only newspaper publication founded in 1973. Your donation is essential to our survival.
|
"LIBERAL MEDIA" EXPOSED AS A LIE, AGAIN:Media Fall for 'Race Card' SpinOutraged press ignores McCain's ties to GOP race-baiting traditionRacialized attacks are a standard part of the Republican playbook--and the strategy has been employed by key advisers to John McCain.
8/5/08—Corporate media have been absurdly receptive to the McCain campaign's charge that Barack Obama "played the race card" by predicting that his opponents in the presidential race would try to use his race against him. The fact is that racialized attacks are a standard part of the Republican playbook--and the strategy has been employed by key advisers to John McCain. The "race card" controversy started when Obama responded to an ad by McCain that drew a nonsensical equation between Obama and celebrities Paris Hilton and Britney Spears:
ABC News' Jake Tapper immediately called foul (Political Punch, 7/30/08), labeling Obama's prediction of race-baiting "pretty inflammatory": "There's a lot of racist xenophobic crap out there," Tapper acknowledged. "But not only has McCain not peddled any of it, he's condemned it." (Tapper's comments recalled NPR's Scott Simon's outrage when Obama earlier previewed the Republican campaign against him with the phrase, "And did I mention he's black?" Scott declared on the June 21 Weekend Edition: "To my knowledge, Senator McCain has never mentioned Senator Obama's race, much less in the tone Senator Obama implied. What has John McCain ever done or said to merit the charge that he's going to make Senator Obama's race an issue?") The McCain campaign itself chimed in on the "dollar bill" comment: "Barack Obama has played the race card, and he played it from the bottom of the deck. It's divisive, negative, shameful and wrong." McCain's surrogates eagerly went on outlets like the Today show (8/1/08), Good Morning America (8/1/08), CNN Late Edition (8/3/08) and Fox News Sunday (8/3/08) to publicize their complaint--in one case charging that Obama was trying to instigate a "race war" (MSNBC, 8/1/08). The New York Times (8/1/08) put the McCain camp's purported outrage on its front page --judging it a more important story than, for instance, a judge's ruling that the Bush administration claim that former officials could refuse to testify to Congress was "without any support in the case law," a story that ended up on page A12. The Times "race card" story, by Michael Cooper and Michael Powell, declared that the McCain camp's statement "effectively assured that race would once again become an unavoidable issue"--as though the New York Times' front page did not play a major role in determining which issues were "unavoidable." Corporate media so accepted the McCain campaign's spin on this issue--when an Obama aide acknowledged that the "dollar bill" remark was an allusion to the candidate being African-American, ABCNews.com (8/1/08) headlined the story "Obama Camp Admits Playing Race Card"--that it becomes difficult to see the obvious: that it's McCain and not Obama who is eager to see the 2008 campaign become a debate about race. The shameful fact is that appeals to white racism have long been a winning part of the Republican playbook against African-American candidates--notably Harvey Gantt, who lost racially charged campaigns against Sen. Jesse Helms (R.-N.C.) in 1990 and 1996, and Harold Ford, who lost a close race for an open Senate seat from Tennessee in 2006. Gantt's 1990 loss is remembered for a notorious Helms ad in which white hands crumpled up a job application while an announcer intoned that the job had to go to a "less qualified minority." Ford's defeat is widely credited to an ad where a young white actress declared that she met the candidate at "the Playboy party;" she then winked at the camera, "Harold, call me." That ad's barely veiled appeal to white fears of race-mixing has been recalled (Talking Points Memo, 07/30/08) as a possible model for the McCain ad's juxtaposing Obama with white women well-known for their sexualized images--surely a more plausible explanation for their appearance in the ad than the McCain camp's claim that voters will actually see a similarity between Hilton and Spears on the one hand and the former community organizer and law professor on the other. But McCain would never approve an ad with a covert appeal to racism, would he? That's the assumption behind media outrage at Obama's suggestion that racial messages might be used against him in the 2008 campaign. Yet the Republican strategist who created the anti-Ford ad, Terry Nelson, served as McCain's campaign manager from December 2006 until July 2007; at the time that he produced the ad he was an adviser to McCain (Austin American-Statesman, 10/26/06). Meanwhile, the person who created the "white hands" ad, Alex Castellanos, serves as an outside adviser on advertising to the McCain campaign (New York Times, 5/12/08). (Castellanos is the spin doctor who declared on CNN that it was "accurate" to call some women "bitches"--Situation Room, 5/20/08). McCain's chief campaign adviser, Charles Black, was a key strategist in Helms' 1990 race (TheNation.com, 7/4/08), and defended the ad in an appearance on PBS's NewsHour (11/5/90): "I advised Jesse Helms to do what he's always done."
McCain himself has defended the use of a racial slur to describe his captors in Vietnam. "I hate the gooks," he told reporters during the 2000 campaign (SFGate, 2/18/00). "I will hate them as long as I live." In a rare exception to the media's uncritical coverage of McCain's claims, David Gergen pointed out on This Week (8/3/08) in relation to another ad that McCain ran that mockingly compared Obama to Moses:
And another guest on the August 3 This Week, Donna Brazile (Watch clip on YouTube.), was perhaps alone in corporate media in mentioning Michael Shaw's observation in the Huffington Post (8/1/08) that the McCain campaign actually had produced an ad that morphed Ben Franklin's face on a hundred-dollar bill into Obama's (YouTube, 6/27/08). If the point was not that Obama is out of place on money, what message was McCain trying to send? It seems to be accepted in corporate media circles that it's worse to be accused of racism than it is to be subjected to racism. But maybe when a candidate has surrounded himself with advisers with a history of race-baiting, journalists ought to look more critically at that candidate's advertising--and at his charges that his opponent is "playing the race card." Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting is a nonpartisan media watchdog organization. Visit http://fair.org for more information, or share your opinion about this story by writing to fair@fair.org. Republished in the Chronicle with permission from F.A.I.R.
Copyright © 2008 The Baltimore News Network. All rights reserved.
Republication or redistribution of Baltimore Chronicle content is expressly prohibited without their prior written consent. Baltimore News Network, Inc., sponsor of this web site, is a nonprofit organization and does not make political endorsements. The opinions expressed in stories posted on this web site are the authors' own. This story was published on August 6, 2008. |
| ||||||||||||