How We Got Here
It is amazing to me that most folks don't understand how we got to where we are now with regard to the media, misinformation, people hating both political parties, etc. So I thought I'd take a walk down memory lane and invite you along for the ride. Off we go!
The Eisenhower Years
Our story starts back in what most White Supremacists refer
to as "the good old days." Dwight D. Eisenhower was president, and
from all accounts, he was an honorable man, a former war hero, and a moderate
Republican. Remember those? Me neither.
These were times when “a woman’s place was in the kitchen” and black
people were still being lynched in the South, a practice
which believe it or not continued until 1981.
Eisenhower refrained from publicly criticizing Senator
Joseph McCarthy during his asinine anti-communist crusade, though he did work
behind the scenes to diminish his influence and discredit him. He also was
hesitant to support civil rights, and in fact refused to use his presidential
authority to enforce the Supreme Court's 1954 decision ruling school segregation
unconstitutional.
Other than sending combat troops in Lebanon in 1958, he
would send no other armed forces into active duty during his presidency. He
did, however, sow the seeds of Vietnam via his support of the anti-communist
government in South Vietnam. He also sought to improve Cold War-era relations
with the Soviet Union (especially after Stalin's death in 1953), and
U.S.-Soviet relations were relatively cordial throughout his presidency.
In his farewell
address in January 1961, he warned of the rise of the
"military-industrial complex," and given what we have seen in the
past 60 years, his warning was prophetic.
The 1960 Election
In 1960, the presidential elected pitted a young Democratic,
Catholic Senator from Massachusetts against California Senator Richard Nixon,
who was Eisenhower’s Vice President. The election proved to be one of the
closest in U.S. history. Nixon was a staunch anti-communist “red-baiter” who
sowed fear of the Soviet Union in all his messaging. Kennedy stressed his
character and the press reported stories of his heroism during World War II to
assist him. But both candidates were moderates on nearly every political issue
of the time.
Many believe the election was decided during the televised
Presidential debates, as this was the first time TV played a major role in a
presidential campaign. Kenned was well-tanned, well-rested, telegenic, and
well-prepared. Nixon was nervous, tired, sweated profusely under the hot
lights, and sported a five o’clock shadow. It was a public relations massacre,
and Kennedy won the popular vote 49.7% to Nixon’s 49.5%, and he also took the
electoral college by a 303-219 margin despite Nixon winning more states. Kennedy’s
faith cost him an estimated 1.5 million votes in November, though Nixon chose
to leave religious issues out of the campaign.
There were lessons to be learned from Nixon’s televised failure,
and certain parties were paying very close attention. More on this later.
Kennedy chose a Southern Democrat for his running mate,
Lyndon Johnson of Texas, to curry favor in the South during the election. This
would prove to be a fateful decision in December of 1963.
As President, Kennedy confronted mounting Cold War tensions
in Cuba, Vietnam, and elsewhere and he led a renewed drive for public service.
He also provided federal support for the growing civil rights movement. One of
his early foreign affairs mishaps occurred in 1961, when he approved a plan to send
1,400 CIA-trained Cuban exiles in an amphibious landing at The Bay of Pigs in
Cuba with the intention of spurring a rebellion that would overthrow Fidel
Castro. This ill-advised mission ended in abject failure, with nearly all of
the exiles captured or killed.
A few months later, Kennedy met with Soviet leader Nikita
Khrushchev in Vienna to discuss the divided city of Berlin, Germany, yet two
months later, East German troops began erecting a wall to divide the city.
Kennedy sent an armed convoy to reassure West Berliners of U.S. support, later
delivering his “I am a Berliner” speech.
In 1962, Kennedy again clashed with Krushchev in October of
that year during the Cuban missile crisis. A tense standoff lasted nearly two
weeks, with the world on the brink of yet another war. But Krushchev relented
and agreed to dismantle the missiles and return for America’s promise not to
invade the island and the removal of U.S. missiles from Turkey and other sites
close to Soviet borders. Kennedy then won his greatest foreign affairs victory
when Khrushchev agreed to join him and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan
in signing a nuclear test ban treaty.
In Southeast Asia, however, Kenney’s desire to curb the
spread of communism led him to escalate U.S. involvement in the Vietnam
conflict despite privately expressing his dismay over the situation there.
Kennedy was enormously popular both at home and abroad,
though later stories of his infidelities and personal association with
organized crime members would tarnish his idyllic image.
The Johnson Years
Everyone knows what happened in November of 1963. In that
moment, JFK’s attempt to mollify Southern voters in the 1960 election became
vitally important, as Lyndon Johnson took over the Oval Office.
When he took office as the 36th president, LBJ
admirably launched an ambitious slate of progressive reforms, championing
Medicare, Head Start, the Voting Rights Act and the Civil Rights Act, plus
attempts to improve education, prevent crime, and reduce air and water
pollution.
It should be noted that during this period, the so-called
“Southern Democrats” turned against the Democratic Party due to that party’s
support of the civil rights movement. The south, previously a Democratic
stronghold in which no Republican stood a chance of election, now embraced the
GOP and began a long run of racist behavior in the name of conservatism. The
political tables had truly turned.
Despite these wonderful achievements, Johnson’s legacy was
marred by his failure to lead the nation out of the Vietnam quagmire. Like the
three presidents before him, Johnson was determined to prevent North Vietnamese
communists from taking over the U.S. supported government of South Vietnam. He
was a staunch believer in the “domino theory,” and worried that America’s
security depended on containing the spread of community around the world.
Hence, Johnson steadily escalated U.S. military involvement
in the Vietnam War, taking the number of U.S. troops there from 16,000 when he
took office in 1963 to more than 500,000 by 1968. Yet the conflict remined a
bloody stalemate. Casualties mounted, and anti-war protests tore through
college campuses and cities across the country. Johnson’s popularity began to
plummet, and on March 31, 1968, he announced his decision to not run for
re-election. LBJ’s departure was hastened when Eugene McCarthy polled 42% of
the vote in the New Hampshire primary, this against a sitting president. And
here is where our story begins to take a real turn for the worse.
The 1968 Election
When anti-war advocate Robert F. Kennedy decided to make his
run for the presidency, it had to have been déjà vu all over again for poor
Richard Nixon. Kennedy’s entry was the death knell for Johnson’s reelection
hopes, and he bowed out, his Vice President, Hubert Humphrey, entering the
fray. Nixon likely had little shot against Kennedy, whose popularity soared.
Still, Nixon’s “silent majority” messaging dominated the
Republican Party, and he cruised to the nomination. When RFK fell in June after
winning the California Democratic primary, Hubert Humphrey became the de facto
nominee, and this move escalated tensions as anti-war protestors flocked to
Chicago to pressure the party into softening its stance on Vietnam.
Kenney’s death and Humphrey’s nomination basically threw the
election into the hands of the Republicans, aided by a South united by George
Wallace’s “segregation now” movement and with his running mate, Curtis LeMay
suggesting that the U.S. “bomb Vietnam back to the Stone Age.”
But there was another sinister force at work during this
election.
In 1967, Nixon met Roger Ailes, who was working on the Mike
Douglas Show. Nixon was impressed, and he hired Ailes as a political
consultant, his “executive producer for television.” Ailes understood the
awesome power of the medium, and he was fully aware of how TV probably cost
Nixon the 1960 contest against Kenney. He sought to correct that miscue.
Ailes assembled a group of media experts to help him master
the visual language of television. Together, the team choreographed Nixon’s
talk show appearances, smoothed out his speaking tics, and staged TV town halls
where the candidate could show off a warmed, less queasy public persona. Nixon
was given soft-ball questions in advance, and a loving crowd was recruited and
filmed. No dissent was allowed. The tactics worked, and Nixon defeated Humphrey
in both the popular vote and electoral college, running on a platform of “law
and order,” with all the racial and political overtones build into that
message.
The seeds that grew into Fox “News” had been born.
Ailes rejected the idea that the TV could lie but conceded
that it could magnify and distort. By his reckoning, though, the liberal media
was already distorting reality, so when the opportunity came for him to launch
his own channel in 1996, he set out to be the nation’s corrective lens.
The Republican Counterargument Begins
People like Ailes, Nixon, Agnew, and countless others in the
Republican party HATED the media. They believed the media was liberally biased,
and they sought out to build a narrative that supported their conservative
views. Hence, the concept of think
tanks was born. Quite often these think tank "experts" are depicted
as neutral sources without any ideological predispositions when, in fact, they
represent a particular perspective. This happens on both the left and on the
right. But none of this existed in 1968, and it was born of Ailes’ need to
force his warped perspective into the conversation.
So the Republican Party and Ailes embarked on a decades-long
quest to build conservative think tanks, supply conservative viewpoints to
media and DEMAND they be included in coverage, and eventually to issue in the
birth of Fox “News” in 1996.
But there was a major obstacle holding them back, and in
1986, under the watch of yet another president Ailes helped elect, they took
aim and The
Fairness Doctrine.
The Demise of The Fairness Doctrine
Introduced in 1949, this doctrine required broadcast license
holders to present controversial issues of public importance in a manner that
the FCC deemed “honest, equitable, and balanced.” Naturally, Republicans HATED
those three words, and in 1987 the FCC abolished the doctrine by a 4-0 vote.
Congress vehemently opposed this action and attempted to
preempt the decision by codifying the doctrine, but the attempt was vetoed by
Ronald Reagan. In fact, an additional attempt to revive the doctrine was again
vetoed in 1991, this time by George H.W. Bush.
The Fairness Doctrine has always been strongly opposed by
conservatives and libertarians, who view it as an attack on the First Amendment
at worst, “unnecessary regulation” at best. However, it should also be noted
that many Democrats, including Barack Obama, opposed the revival of the
Doctrine.
But the revocation of the Doctrine opened the doors for
media to basically say whatever they want whenever they want to say it, and
this has benefitted no one on either side of the political coin. The fruits of
this decision are clear on every channel today.
With all that “truth, honestly, and balance” bullshit out of
the way, Roger Ailes was free and clear to start and run a “news” channel that
could fully run with his warped view of the country.
And for the past 35 years, Fox “News” has been doing just
that, in the process warping the minds of millions of Americans who now are
fully convinced that:
·
All politicians lie
·
The government is bad
·
The rich need less taxes
·
The poor are dragging us down
·
Immigrants are the problem
·
The blacks are taking over
·
Barack Obama was a Kenyan spy
·
Russia never meddled in our elections
·
Trump is doing more for us than any president in
history
·
Hilary Clinton is a war criminal
·
COVID-19 is a Democratic plot against Trump
Etcetera, so on, and so forth. The list is endless.
Truth is, the press was never all that liberal, especially
in its reporting of the news. On the editorial pages, yes, I would agree that
there were more liberals writing than conservatives. But was the Washington
Post being liberal when it discovered and exposed the fact that the Eisenhower,
Kennedy and Johnson administrations were lying through
their teeth about the Vietnam War? Were they lying when they discovered and
exposed the fact that the president of the United States was behind dirty tricks
against the Democratic Party?
No, they were not lying. They were simply doing what the
press had always done: acting as a watchdog for us over government, and
reporting the truth as honestly as they could.