BOOK REVIEW "OBJECTIVE" PROPAGANDA: U.S. Media Business
and Government Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass
Media by Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky New York: Pantheon Press 412 pages,
$14.95 Necessary Illusions: Thought Control in Democratic Societies by
Noam Chomsky Boston: South End Press 422 pages, $16.00 Reviewed by Robert
Weissman IN THE UNITED STATES many people believe the press relentlessly
challenges government policy and is antagonistic to business. Conservative
commentators find the media overzealous; liberal observers more frequently
celebrate the effectiveness of the media in checking abuses of power. In
one of their most clearly written and accessible works, Manufacturing Consent:
The Political Economy of the Mass Media, Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky
offer a sharply contrasting view. They dispute the notion that the media
operate independently of business and government, in defiance of authority.
They argue instead that the media perform a propaganda function, serving
"to inculcate and defend the economic, social, and political agenda of
privileged groups that dominate the domestic society and the state." The
authors suggest that news must pass through five filters which cleanse
it of stories, facts and perspectives contrary to the broad interests of
business and the government. The filters are: 1. The size, concentrated
ownership, owner wealth and profit orientation of the major mass media
firms. Following the lead of Ben Bagdikian (see MM, May, 1987), Herman
and Chomsky document the massive size of the major media firms and the
intense concentration in the industry. They claim these characteristics
align the media industry with the interests of business and government.
Interlocking boards of directors and other close relationships between
media corporations and other major corporations, are common. Moreover,
the media companies are themselves profit-seeking multinational corporations
and often the subsidiaries of other multinationals: for example, General
Electric owns NBC. Herman and Chomsky argue that these tie create many
shared interests between the major media firms and corporate America. 2.
Advertising as the primary income source of the mass media. Advertisers
do not desire large audiences per se, but audiences with buying power.
Additionally, advertisers are unlikely to advertise on programs or in publications
which attack them. Therefore, media firms which orient themselves to a
working class and poorer audience, or which challenge corporate interests,
will find that they are not able to generate advertising revenue. The authors
point to the experience of the social democratic press in Britain to demonstrate
the importance of this second filter. Three leftist papers failed or were
absorbed into the mainstream press between 1960 and 1967, largely because
they were unable to secure sufficient advertising support. Businesses did
not advertise in these papers even though one of those papers had a readership
double that of The Times, the Financial Times and the Guardian combined.
3. The media's reliance on information provided by government, business,
and "experts" funded and approved by these entities. Journalists are dependent
on sources for tips and commentary on news events. The government and large
corporations have unparalleled resources which they can devote to reaching
the public. They house public relations offices which make contact with
the media through interviews, press conferences, press releases and other
means. Reporters rely on public relations officers because they make reporting
easier. They are easy to contact, trained at framing stories and always
available to the mainstream press. Their institutional affiliations give
government and corporate public relations officers immediate credibility.
As journalists come to rely on and develop relationships with government
and corporate sources, they become less likely to report stories critical
of these sources, for fear that they will lose access to an inside source,
and also to avoid harming any personal relationships that might have developed.
4. "Flak". Government and corporate entities respond to media criticism
with "flak"--attacks on the media. Flak may come from corporate or government
officials offended by news reports, or it may originate with corporate-founded
institutional flak producers, such as Accuracy In Media (AIM). Flak received
in one instance has a conservatizing effect on a news organization in the
next. 5. Anticommunism. News organizations and reporters interpret both
domestic and foreign stories in an anticommunist framework. Because anticommunism
is deeply ingrained in the society, efforts to effect fundamental change
are almost automatically labelled "communist," regardless of the validity
of the claim. Herman and Chomsky are most successful in demonstrating that
the media, at least in their coverage of foreign affairs, do in fact act
as propaganda vehicles for the government and business powers. They show
that the media will treat similar events very differently, depending on
whether the incidents are viewed favorably or negatively by U.S. elites.
Comparing the media's coverage of the Polish police's assassination of
a Polish priest active in Solidarity and one hundred religious victims
of state violence in Latin America, the authors show the differing standards
used by the media in covering the activities of allies and enemies. The
murder of Polish priest and Solidarity activist Jerzy Popieluszko received
more mention on network news and was the subject of more column inches
in the New York Times, Newsweek, and Time than all one hundred of the Latin
American religious figures (including Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero
and the four U.S. nuns killed in El Salvador) combined. The quality and
content of the media's treatment of the murders varied as well. Herman
and Chomsky convincingly demonstrate that in the case of the Polish priest,
the media detailed the gruesome nature of his murder and diligently sought
to locate responsibility at the top of the government hierarchy. The media
sanitized the murders of the Latin American victims, avoiding the details
of their deaths and ignoring strong evidence that many of the Latin American
victims (including Romero and the U.S. nuns) were killed at the command
of top military leaders. As a second example of the media's double standards,
the authors contrast coverage of elections in U.S.-supported El Salvador
and Guatemala with coverage of Nicaraguan elections. To advance U.S. geopolitical
interests, the Reagan administration characterized the 1982 and 1984 Salvadoran
and the 1984-5 Guatemalan elections as free and fair and said that the
1984 Nicaraguan election was a meaningless exercise in which the basic
conditions for elections were not met and which should not be allowed to
obscure the dictatorial nature of the Sandinista government. According
to Herman and Chomsky, the media will relay these conclusions to the U.S.
public, irrespective of the facts in the three countries. The media did,
in fact, parrot the Reagan administration's line; and Herman and Chomsky
conclusively demonstrate that, in order to do this, the media was forced
to apply vastly different standards to El Salvador and Guatemala than to
Nicaragua. Relying on a massive amount of evidence collected from human
rights and academic organizations such as Amnesty International, Americas
Watch, and the (U.S.) Latin American Scholars Association, the authors
assert that "neither El Salvador nor Guatemala met any of the...basic conditions
of a free election, whereas Nicaragua met some of them well, others to
a lesser extent." Yet the media presented a very different picture. Any
regular reader of newspapers in the United States is familiar with the
Nicaraguan government's harassment and censorship of the Nicaraguan opposition
paper La Prensa. But a consumer of the mainstream media would have searched
in vain for reports about the plight of La Cronica del Pueblo and El Independiente,
two Salvadoran papers which had been critical of the government. La Cronica
was closed in 1980 "because its top editor and two employees were murdered
and mutilated by the security forces;" El Indepediente shut down six months
later, when "the army arrested its personnel and destroyed its plant."
Herman and Chomsky further buttress their theory of the media as an elite
propaganda machine with five additional case studies. In each instance
they show that the media suppressed or ignored evidence and perspectives
which contradicted the interests of US. elites. The authors do not adequately
substantiate their theory of why the media behaves as it does. The five
filters of the propaganda model stand as very valuable hypotheses; undoubtedly
the institutional factors Herman and Chomsky outline strongly influence
the news produced by the media. But the main shortcoming of Manufacturing
Consent is that the authors, for the most part, do not explore how institutional
forces manifest themselves in the production of news. Thus the reader is
unable to discern the relative importance of the factors they describe
or to determine if other factors should be incorporated into their model.
For example, sexism and, particularly with respect to foreign affairs,
racism, might well be filters through which the news passes, each arguably
more important than "flak." Herman and Chomsky avoid examining how news
is produced--what reporters and editors do, or even the direct ways in
which publishers and owners interfere with stories--because they want to
focus attention on institutional influences. But those institutional forces
are only effective as they are channelled through the reporters and editors.
While some reporters may be corrupt "errand boys" for the elite, Herman
and Chomsky believe most are honest and often courageous in the performance
of their duties. They do not set out to suppress facts; rather, they report
reality as they see it through the lens of an internalized elite perspective.
In Necessary Illusions (and other works by the two authors), however, Chomsky
argues that the internalization of a business worldview occurs generally
among intellectuals, not just among reporters. If this is so, it suggests
that the class position not only of media owners but of columnists and
reporters is also an important factor in determining what is reported and
how it is reported. Based on five lectures delivered in Canada in 1988,
Chomsky's Necessary Illusions: Thought Control in Democratic Societies
covers much of the same ground as Manufacturing Consent but Manufacturing
Consent is a clearer and more comprehensive presentation of the propaganda
model. The most valuable parts of Necessary Illusions are the appendices
which follow the text. In one of the appendices, Chomsky responds to critics
of the propaganda model, offering a detailed defense of the theory and
elaborating its nuances. He compares U.S. and other Western media coverage
of the same events, demonstrating that the Canadian press, for example,
covers stories which are not found in the U.S. mainstream media. This serves
as a supplement to comparisons of media coverage of similar events in allied
and enemy countries, and as another means of demonstrating the validity
of the predictions of the propaganda model. The appendices also contain
a variety of informational nuggets; Chomsky offers clear and concise essays
on subjects ranging from Costa Rica to Woodrow Wilson's Red Scare, from
the Containment Doctrine to the state of civil liberties in the United
States. In Necessary Illusions and especially in Manufacturing Consent,
Herman and Chomsky provide compelling evidence that the media fulfil a
propaganda function for business and government. And they offer valuable
hypotheses about how and why the media do not adopt a more independent,
critical and genuinely adversarial stance in their coverage of foreign
affairs. As with any useful theory, Herman and Chomsky's book suggests
future areas of exploration.The media's coverage of domestic issues merits
the same scrutiny that they have applied to the reporting of foreign affairs.
Additionally, the model needs to be fleshed out to include a careful examination
of how the news is produced. Hopefully, the authors or others will take
up these challenges. In the meantime, their work deserves the widest possible
readership. .