Friday, December 21, 2012

Carl Bernstein reminds us of a huge scandal which has not yet received true media scrutiny, and wonders why?

Courtesy of Carl Bernstein:  

So now we have it: what appears to be hard, irrefutable evidence of Rupert Murdoch's ultimate and most audacious attempt – thwarted, thankfully, by circumstance – to hijack America's democratic institutions on a scale equal to his success in kidnapping and corrupting the essential democratic institutions of Great Britain through money, influence and wholesale abuse of the privileges of a free press. 

In the American instance, Murdoch's goal seems to have been nothing less than using his media empire – notably Fox News – to stealthily recruit, bankroll and support the presidential candidacy of General David Petraeus in the 2012 election. 

Thus in the spring of 2011 – less than 10 weeks before Murdoch's centrality to the hacking and politician-buying scandal enveloping his British newspapers was definitively revealed – Fox News' inventor and president, Roger Ailes, dispatched an emissary to Afghanistan to urge Petraeus to turn down President Obama's expected offer to become CIA director and, instead, run for the Republican nomination for president, with promises of being bankrolled by Murdoch. Ailes himself would resign as president of Fox News and run the campaign, according to the conversation between Petraeus and the emissary, K T McFarland, a Fox News on-air defense "analyst" and former spear carrier for national security principals in three Republican administrations. 

All this was revealed in a tape recording of Petraeus's meeting with McFarland obtained by Bob Woodward, whose account of their discussion, accompanied online by audio of the tape, was published in the Washington Post – distressingly, in its style section, and not on page one, where it belonged – and, under the style logo, online on December 3. 

Indeed, almost as dismaying as Ailes' and Murdoch's disdain for an independent and truly free and honest press, and as remarkable as the obsequious eagerness of their messenger to convey their extraordinary presidential draft and promise of on-air Fox support to Petraeus, has been the ho-hum response to the story by the American press and the country's political establishment, whether out of fear of Murdoch, Ailes and Fox – or, perhaps, lack of surprise at Murdoch's, Ailes' and Fox's contempt for decent journalistic values or a transparent electoral process. 

The tone of the media's reaction was set from the beginning by the Post's own tin-eared treatment of this huge story: relegating it, like any other juicy tidbit of inside-the-beltway media gossip, to the section of the newspaper and its website that focuses on entertainment, gossip, cultural and personality-driven news, instead of the front page.

Bernstein makes some very good points, WHY hasn't this story blown up the way other, far less explosive, stories have?

Here's more:

And here let us posit the following: were an emissary of the president of NBC News, or of the editor of the New York Times or the Washington Post ever caught on tape promising what Ailes and Murdoch had apparently suggested and offered here, the hue and cry, especially from Fox News and Republican/Tea Party America, from the Congress to the US Chamber of Commerce to the Heritage Foundation, would be deafening and not be subdued until there was a congressional investigation, and the resignations were in hand of the editor and publisher of the network or newspaper. Or until there had been plausible and convincing evidence that the most important elements of the story were false. And, of course, the story would continue day after day on page one and remain near the top of the evening news for weeks, until every ounce of (justifiable) piety about freedom of the press and unfettered presidential elections had been exhausted. 

You know Fox New pimped the Benghazi story every single day, like a dog worrying a meatless bone, until there was an investigation, and afterward they STILL remain unsatisfied and continue to beat the drums as if they are on the trail of the next Watergate.

But THIS story which appears to be an ACTUAL scandal, and even features audio tape to back it up, receives hardly a mention, And when it does get mentioned it is treated with nothing approaching the kind of scrutiny that an attempt by a media giant to purchase a Presidential candidate and use their empire to get them elected SHOULD have received!

Why IS that exactly? Are we that cynical? Do we simply expect News Corp and Fox News to always break the rules? Or is Rupert Murdoch so powerful now that our media is simply too intimidated to take him, and Fox News, on in any substantive way?

Personally I think this should discredit Fox News for all time, and be used to shut them down. And that an investigation should be launched that saw Rupert Murdoch, Roger Ailes, and General Petraeus answering serious questions before Congress.

Oh, I almost forgot, Congress WORKS for Fox News.

17 comments:

  1. Anonymous2:39 PM

    Well, Petraeus is "old news" now. His scandal dominated the air waves for about a week so no more need to bring his name up. Somehow nothing negative about the Republicans ever sticks. And conservatives complain all the time about the "liberal media." How I wish! The media in this country is part of the corporate GOP establishment. Thanks goodness for blogs like this. Or we'd never know anything.
    Beaglemom

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    1. Anonymous3:32 PM

      Right you are, Beaglemom.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous3:36 PM

      Very true, Beaglemom..very true. Fox News is, as Stephen Colbert has said, the Republicans' running mate with whomever is on the top of the ticket.
      Beaglegrandma (Monty!)

      Delete
    3. Anonymous4:02 PM

      "Somehow nothing negative about the Republicans ever sticks."

      It enough to make you scream.

      A shiny star is affixed next to your name for that post, Beaglemom. Thanks.

      Paul in Indiana

      Delete
  2. Anonymous2:49 PM

    I want to see Anonymous leak the documents on Judith Regan's lawsuit, issues with Fox. From the time she was humping "Rudy" Giuliani's bff Karnac.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous3:37 PM

      Oh, I'd love for Anonymous to go after Rove and Cheney's involvement in the Valerie Plame outing...Scooter Libby, is he still in jail? He needs to be..

      Delete
  3. Anonymous2:57 PM

    Oh, I almost forgot, Congress WORKS for Fox News.

    That would be problematic for the truth.

    Gee, I wonder how Babygate was buried.

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  4. Perhaps this is the reason Faux has been beating the Benghazi drum so loudly and for so long...to deflect from what should be the story of the year!!!

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    Replies
    1. Hadn't thought of it that way. I bet you're right.

      Delete
  5. Anonymous3:42 PM

    O/T
    Did Karl Rove Lie To The IRS To Gain Tax-Exempt Status For Crossroads GPS?
    http://www.addictinginfo.org/2012/12/21/did-karl-rove-lie-to-the-irs-to-gain-tax-exempt-status-for-crossroads-gps/

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  6. hauksdottir4:03 PM

    Don't forget...

    MURDOCH KNEW ABOUT PETRAEUS AND BROADWELL!!!

    Months and months before anybody broke the story... and he sat quietly on it rather than utilize it to make even more millions of smackaroonies... why?

    I was thinking of blackmail, to get classified insider information from the warzones (the sort of stuff that Broadwell was leaking all over the place to bolster her own speaking fees). However, if Murdoch was also offering material support for a Presidential run, at the same time Petraeus was bouncing in bed with his lover, I must revise that thought to "carrot & stick": absolute control of a President... the most powerful man in the world? What wouldn't Murdoch do to achieve that?

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  7. (Spell check in title: Bernstein, not Bernstien)

    Perhaps because Petraeus would never have been elected anyway. Even if he won out over Rmoney, the sex scandal would have broke probably before it really did and he would have ended up like John Edwards.


    Oh, and delete Anonymous 4:00pm. It's SPAM.

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  8. Anonymous5:09 PM

    So this larger issue Bernstein raises certainly fits with our speculation about why the Palin Pregnancy Hoax never got the MSM attention such a dirty-trick travesty deserves.

    And it also fits with the idea that Murdoch personally authorized Palin's book advance (although it came from a company several ownership levels below Murdoch). A good investment for Murdoch to see whether Palin's nutty bafflegab in "energizing the base" had any staying power, contrary to common sense (it DID have staying power). And also, good to be the source of funds for Palin, the better to steer her in desired directions.

    A missing piece that I think is still lurking around some shady corner: it certainly seems plausible that paying for the creation of the bad anti-Muslim movie could have been part of a plan to use it as a match to ignite the Benghazi terrorist action, or at least to appear to do so. I've never heard of a plausible other explanation re the point of making and showing that movie, esp considering how badly done it was.

    Benghazi as a issue that would discredit Obama. To help a GOP win, in case the other dirty tricks (voter fraud, denying voter access, etc.) didn't work well enough.


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  9. Anonymous5:11 PM

    So is THIS the giant other bigger part of the Petraeus/Broadwell story that Broadwell's father claimed would be revealed? Or did he have something else in mind?

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  10. Anonymous7:54 PM

    ot
    Dana Loesch sues Breitbart.com LLC
    http://www.politico.com/story/2012/12/dana-loesch-sues-breitbartcom-llc-85436.html

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  11. Washington Post followed up with another explosive article: http://www.washingtonpost.com/video/thefold/petraeuss-unusual-civilian-advisors-raise-questions/2012/12/19/5cf5dd54-4a2f-11e2-ad54-580638ede391_video.html

    "Two unpaid cvilians spent months at Gen. David Petraeus's side in Afghanistan. The Post's Rajiv Chandrasekaren explains the story he broke in today's paper."

    Please read this article. I ask myself how the hell our military needs input from hawks that advised Bushco and are in bed with military contractors.

    Proof positive that the war system is rigged and we are the fools. The military seems to have more power than our president. Or why the hell did our president not know about these civilians?

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  12. Anonymous9:02 AM

    I would caution against reading too much into Ailes' lame attempt to recruit Petraeus to run for office. I read it more as an attempt by someone who is delusional about the amount of power they actually possess trying to flex their muscles.

    It is just another example of how people have fallen prey to how somebody looks in uniform, which has probably happened millions of times since the Spartans went to Troy to retrieve Helen. Ailes and Company are the same people that thought Oliver North must have been a true patriot because of how patriotic he looked testifying in his uniform.

    Yes, the organization that Ailes has put together disgusts me on every level. I hope that the Faux News story ends badly for the network -- they're already reaping what they sowed, dissociating their listeners so far from reality that what worked to whip up the loyal base for so many years is now backfiring.

    I think it is important that non-Republicans avoid the temptation to turn into conspiracy mongers just like those on the rabid right. Some of the comments here sound exactly like what the Fox crowd accuses Obama of doing, if you just reversed the names.

    The best way to deal with this story is to laugh at Ailes: he honestly thought that a general who spent as much time at PR as he did at managing the Army would be a good Presidential candidate. Ailes is obviously not too good at looking beneath the surface, given how easily Petraeus's exterior shell was pierced. Ailes revealed himself to be the most inept kingmaker ever.

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