In keeping with Joe's theme of media irresponsibility today, I would be remiss in not pointing out this Victor David Hanson column.
The money paragraphs:
"ly, I was more intrigued that in passing the same reporter at last fessed up that during all of her previous gloomy reports from the Palestine Hotel of American progress, she and others had been shaken down daily for bribe money, censored, and led around as near hostages. It is impossible to calibrate how such Iraqi manipulation of American news accounts affected domestic morale, if not providing comfort for those Baathists who wished to discourage popular uprisings of long-suffering Iraqis.I make the following observation here on media. One of the post-Watergate reforms was to forbid American businesses from bribing foreign government officials for foreign government contracts. By in large this has proved to be a profoundly good law in that it promoted good business practice and reduced corruption in American business.There is something profoundly amoral about this. A newsman who interviewed a state killer at his convenience later revisits a now liberated city and complains of the disorder there. A journalist who paid bribe money to fascists and whose dispatches aired from Baghdad in wartime only because the Baathist party felt that they served their own terrorist purposes is disturbed about the chaos of liberation. Now is the time for CNN, NPR, and other news organizations to state publicly what their relationships were in ensuring their reporters’ presence in wartime Iraq — and to explain their policies about bribing state officials, allowing censorship of their news releases, and keeping quiet about atrocities to ensure access.
In general, the media has now gone from the hysteria of the Armageddon of Afghanistan to the quagmire of Iraq to the looting in Baghdad — the only constant is slanted coverage, mistaken analysis, and the absence of any contriteness about being in error and in error in such a manner that reflected so poorly upon themselves and damaged the country at large at a time of war. It is as if only further bad news could serve as a sort of catharsis that might at least cleanse them of any unease about being so wrong so predictably and so often.
In the weeks that follow, the media, not the military, will be shown to be in need of introspection and vast reform. Partly the problem arises from the breakneck desire of reporters to obtain near celebrity status by causing controversy and spectacle. Many (especially executives) also came of age in Vietnam and are thus desperate to recapture past glory when once upon a time their efforts made them stars and changed our national culture. Reporters are cultural relativists, who never ask themselves how many more people are tortured and die because of their own complicity with a murderous regime. Ignorance also is endemic. Few read of history’s great sieges and the bedlam that always follows conquest, liberation, and the birth of a new order. Arrogance abounds that journalists are to be above reproach and thus deserve to be moral censors in addition to simply recording the news."
It is a measure of the corruption of the American media that if such a law was introduced aimed at such media practices. It would be fought on "1st Amendment grounds."








Why wouldn't the law apply as written?--media companies are certainly corporations. Is there a specific exclusion?
Try writing a law that defines "paying for access."
The wonderful thing about a foreign government contract is that it is a legal, enforcecable, instrument whose existance cannot be denied in court.
Hmmm, I feel kinda stupid now. Never occured to me that these reporters were paying for protection and to have the right to broadcast from what was "behind the lines". Here I thought they were just brave.
The most important thing is, of course, to keep the media's feet to the fire. I loved it yesterday when Sec'y Rumsfeld would not let Tim Russert get away with asking a stupid question about the looting, and really put him on the defensive. Those politicians who are asked to be guests on these shows need to begin to confront their interrogators on these issues, and especially confront them when they ask stupid questions that imply a not so hidden agenda. I would love to see the President lay into Rather or Jennings. Remember when Rather made his career by asking Nixon if he were a crook. Well, turnabout is fair play. Someone should ask him on TV if he were a patsy for Saddam. God, I'd pay money to see that!
Is there a First Amendment violation when communications are required to be identified as paid political advertisements? If not, what real impediment is there to require the media to identify stories as "censored state propoganda?" Let them say whatever they want, but if they fail to label it for what it is then let them pay a really steep fine for failing to identify it as such.