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The Big Lie
Ernest Partridge, Co-Editor
The Crisis Papers
April 12, 2011
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In a time of deceit, telling the truth is
a revolutionary act.
George Orwell
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Is there any limit to the outrageousness of the GOP lies?
Is there any limit to the capacity of a large number of our fellow citizens to
accept these lies?
If it were in the interest of the ruling oligarchs to convince a majority of the
public that the earth is flat, could they succeed?
This is, after all, a public almost half of which refuses to accept evolution –
the central coordinating concept of modern biology. And approximately half of
the GOP primary voters believe that Barack Obama was not born in the United
States.
These unsettling thoughts came to my mind when I heard
Michael Steele remark that "not in the history of mankind has the government
ever created a job." This from a man who held a government job as Lieutenant
Governor of Maryland. That remark was echoed by
Mitch Daniels, the Governor of Indiana and Sarah Palin and I can testify
that I have heard it elsewhere.
Michael Steele's comment is more audacious even than the claim that the earth is
flat. (After all, the earth looks flat, doesn’t it?). To say that
government never created a single job flies in the face of ordinary, everyday
experience. What are police, firefighters, teachers, judges, prosecutors, postal
workers, military personnel, etc engaged in if not “government jobs.” What is
the construction and maintenance of roads and bridges, the certification of the
safety of our food and drugs, air traffic control, if they are not “government
jobs.”
The claim that government never creates jobs is so preposterous that it seems
pointless even to bother to refute it.
Yet somehow, some GOP politicians freely utter this absurdity without fear of
being laughed off the stage of public debate. And apparently some people,
failing to give the claim even a moment’s critical reflection, believe it.
Otherwise, why would Steele and others say such nonsense in the first place?
And this is only the most egregious of a long string of Republican lies thrown
at the public by right-wing politicians and pundits and largely unchallenged by
a compliant corporate media. Among them:
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Al Gore claimed to have invented the
internet and to have discovered the toxic contamination of Love Canal.
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John Kerry’s allegedly heroic war record
was fraudulent.
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Barack Obama was born in Kenya and is a
secret Muslim.
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Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass
destruction and was involved in the attacks of September 11, 2001.
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Global warming is a gigantic hoax,
perpetrated by thousands of deceitful scientists.
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Obama has raised taxes.
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“Obamacare” is a “socialist government
takeover of health care.”
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Ninety percent of Planned Parenthood
funding is for abortion services.
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Elections in the United States are always
accurate and fair.
These are not “matters of opinion,” they are
flatly and demonstrably false. Clear and decisive refutation of all these claims
are available to anyone who cares to examine the evidence. As Daniel Patrick
Moynihan famously remarked, while we are entitled to our own opinions, we are
not entitled to our own facts.
Then there are the contradictions:
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Teachers, police officers and firefighters
are greedy. But billionaire CEOs and hedge-fund managers are not.
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Wall street banksters are entitled to
their million-dollar bonuses because these bonuses are contractual
obligations with their firms. But the states are not required to honor their
contractual obligations to public workers, obligations such as pensions and
health coverage.
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Federal revenues are increased by cutting
taxes (i.e., revenues).
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During the Bush administration, “Reagan
proved [that] deficits don’t matter.” (Dick Cheney) In the Obama
administration, the GOP tells us that the federal deficit is the Number One
economic problem today.
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“Not in the history of mankind has the
government ever created a job.” (Michael Steele, etc.). “Since President
Obama has taken office, the federal government had added 200 thousand new
federal jobs.” (John Boehner. Also false, by the way. The correct number is
56,000).
And finally, there is the “dogma” – a
priori “first principles” too sacred to be doubted or subjected to rational
analysis and confirmation:
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“Government is not the solution to our
problem, government is the problem.” (Ronald Reagan).
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Market fundamentalism: “A free market
[co-ordinates] the activity of millions of people, each seeking his own
interest, in such a way as to make everyone better off.” (Milton Friedman)
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Privatization: "Whenever we find an
approach to the extension of private property rights [in the natural
environment,] we find superior results.” (Robert J. Smith).
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“There is no such thing as society.”
(Margaret Thatcher)
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“There is no such entity as ‘the public.’”
(Ayn Rand)
These last two dogmas
bear significant implications. For if there is no such thing as “society,” it
follows that there are no social problems or “social injustice. Poverty is the
fault of individuals who are sinful and lazy. And if there is no “public,” then
there is no “public interest,” and thus no need for government to promote same.
A large portion of the American public believes these lies, accepts these
contradictions, and embraces these dogmas, not because of supporting evidence
(there is none) or cogent arguments (there are none), but out of sheer
unquestioned repetition in the corporate media.
Students of propaganda methods call this “The Big Lie” – a term that has its
origins in the Nazi Regime.
Congressman Steve Cohen (Democrat, Tennessee) correctly observed that when the
GOP claimed that “Obamacare” was “government takeover of health care,” they were
engaging in a “Big Lie.” Yet when he said this on the floor of the House of
Representatives, he was so mercilessly hounded by the media and his colleagues,
that he felt obliged to apologize.
So now the corporate media has, in effect, ruled the expression, “The Big Lie,”
out of bounds of polite political discourse, despite the fact that the term
precisely describes the successful method of the right wing propagandists. In
short, those who wish to complain against this practice have been effectively
disarmed.
So where is the bewildered citizen to go if that citizen is to avoid the big
lies and to encounter a fund of verifiable facts and informed opinion? Rule One:
stay clear of the corporate media. Even The New York Times, once regarded
as “the newspaper of historical record,”
can no longer be trusted
to deliver “all the news that’s fit to print.” Remember the hullabaloo about
Bill Clinton’s “Whitewater” deal? Remember Judith Miller’s breathless disclosure
of Saddam Hussein’s nefarious “aluminum tubes”?
All promoted by the
New York Times. All false.
So where do we find authentic news? Try National Public Radio (while it lasts)
and, of course, the internet (until it is privatized and sold to the media
conglomerates) where one can find a multitude of independent progressive
websites. Also deserving honorable mention is the evening contingent of MSNBC –
O’Donnell, Maddow and Schultz. Even so, along with the entire corporate media,
these worthies never question the integrity of our elections and only rarely
discuss the size of the military budget, now approximately equal all the other
military budgets in the world combined, including those of our allies. It should
be noted that NBC, the parent company of MSNBC, is half owned by the world’s
largest military contractor, General Electric.
In addition, some of the best sources of news are foreign – and all available on
the internet. They include the BBC (England) and the CBC (Canada), The Real
News (broadcast from Toronto, Canada), Al Jazeera English, and,
amazingly, Russia Today. The Russians, it seems, are returning the favor
that we bestowed upon them during the Soviet Era, when the U.S. and Western
Europe sent accurate news across “the iron curtain” via The Voice of America and
Radio Free Europe. Yes, it has come to that!
But these are all pathetically weak voices accessed by thousands, arrayed
against the corporate media that is devoured by millions. And as long as this
remains the case, and those millions accept uncritically the lies, myths and
dogmas fed to them by the mega-corporations that own our government, there
appears to be little hope of a return to economic justice and democratic
government that we once enjoyed in the United States of America.
But all is not lost. As the folk tale of the boy who cried “Wolf!” reminds us,
liars tend through time to lose their credibility. We should strive to
accelerate this process as it applies to the corporate media by exposing the
lies and boycotting the sponsors of those who tell the lies.
The experience of the Russians is instructive. My Russian friends tell me that
after decades of unabashed lying by Pravda, Izvestia and Gostelradio,
fewer and fewer Soviet citizens believed the state media. The facts bear them
out, as history discloses that Russians instead sought out foreign sources of
news such as The Voice of America and Radio Free Europe. (See my
“What if America Loses its
Voice?”). Some Russians were so desperate for authentic news and uncensored
opinion that they risked arrest and prison by producing and distributing
underground manuscripts, "Samizdat," hand to hand. In the United States
today, a comparable "American
Samizdat" can be found on the internet.
When the Soviet government lost control of the hearts and minds of its citizens,
its days were numbered.
In the United States, the corporate media, unlike the Communist Party of the
Soviet Union, is sensitive to market forces. As ever more Americans refuse to
believe the lies served up by the corporate media, the media will either reform
or become politically irrelevant, and more and more attention will be directed
to responsible sources of news, both foreign and domestic. The fate of Glenn
Beck’s TV show and the diminishing audience of Fox “News” may be harbingers of
such reform.
Whatever the outcome, Thomas Jefferson’s warning remains enduringly true: “If a
nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects
what never was and never will be.”
The restoration of sanity in our public discourse is essential to the
restoration of our democracy. Necessary, but not sufficient. In addition, the
liars in public offices must be removed from those offices. And that will only
happen
if official election returns can once again be trusted to reflect the will
of the voters, and not the output of secret software written by right wing
partisans.
But that is a huge topic that deserves a separate essay – perhaps the next. Stay
tuned.
Copyright 2011 by Ernest Partridge
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