Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Tuesday, 4 July 2017
Donald Trump did more than 'wrestle' CNN in a video. He attacked democracy
Will news organizations and professionals be intimidated by the
president? Probably not, at least not at this point – but we may be on a
slippery path
‘If Trump’s goal was deflection, he did a fairly good job.’
Photograph: UPI/Barcroft Images
On Sunday morning, Donald Trump
seemed to promote violence against CNN. He tweeted an old video clip of
him performing in a WWE professional wrestling match, with a CNN logo
superimposed on the head of his opponent.
In it, Trump is shown slamming the CNN avatar to the ground and
pounding him with punches and elbows to the head. Trump added the
hastags #FraudNewsCNN and #FNN, for “fraud news network”.
This tweet culminated a bizarre week of Trump attacks on the media.
The video Trump tweeted of himself 'wrestling CNN to the ground'
On Saturday night, Trump used a portion of his speech at the
“Celebrate Freedom” rally at the Kennedy Center to denounce the press.
“The fake media is trying to silence us, but we will not let them. The
people know the truth,” he said. “The fake media tried to stop us from
going to the White House, but I’m president and they’re not.”
Trump’s words drew a standing ovation from the crowd, which waved miniature American flags.
On Thursday, Trump posted a crude tweet blasting the co-hosts of
MSNBC’s Morning Joe, who have been critical of him – calling Mika
Brzezinski “low IQ Crazy Mika” and Joe Scarborough “Psycho Joe”, and
claiming that when they visited him New Years Eve, Brzezinski “was
bleeding badly from a facelift.”
On Wednesday, Trump charged: “The #AmazonWashingtonPost,
sometimes referred to as the guardian of Amazon not paying internet
taxes (which they should) is FAKE NEWS!” It wasn’t clear exactly what
Trump meant by this, except to take a jab at Amazon founder and CEO Jeff
Bezos, who purchased the Post in 2013. (Trump’s blast seems to have
been provoked by a Post story the previous day, revealing that a Time
magazine cover featuring Trump hangs in at least four of his golf clubs
around the world is a fake.)
What’s going on here?
Maybe Trump’s attacks on the press were meant to distract public
attention from a week of embarrassing news – the Congressional Budget
Office’s conclusion that the Senate’s version of Trumpcare would cause 22 million Americans to lose their coverage,
and the inability of Senate Republicans to pass it; the refusal of
election officials in most states to cooperate with Trump’s commission
on voter fraud; and the news that Republican financier Peter W Smith
last fall assembled a team of computer experts to contact hackers
connected with the Russian government, saying he was working with Trump
campaign advisor Michael Flynn.
If Trump’s goal was deflection, he did a fairly good job. His
inflammatory tweets and statements took up a lot of newspaper space and
airtime.
But it’s also possible Trump is truly losing it. “President Trump is not well,”
Scarborough and Brzezinski concluded after the Trump tirade against
them. Maybe the strain of being a thin-skinned narcissist under the
continuous and critical glare of the press is finally tipping him over
the edge.
But I fear an even more menacing reality.
Trump began his presidency attacking the press for “fake news”. Then
he called the networks and publications that criticized him “enemies of
the people”.
His newly escalating attacks seem to be going a step farther –
mobilizing his supporters against media personalities and executives
that are critical of him.
As the tweets and rallies become shriller and more provocative, their
underlying message is that Trump’s critics are bad people who are
conspiring to undo his presidency – people whom Trump supporters must
“not let” silence him, who deserve to be slammed the way Trump took it
out on CNN in the mock video he posted Sunday morning.
It’s a narrative that’s showing up increasingly on right-wing websites.
In one recent video
from the National Rifle Association, for example, Dana Loesch, an NRA
spokeswoman and former editor at Breitbart News, charges that a
left-wing cabal “use their media to assassinate real news. They use
their schools to teach children that their president is another Hitler.
They use their movie stars and singers and comedy shows and award shows
to repeat their narrative over and over again.”
As black-and-white images of recent protests play in the background,
Loesch says: “The only way we stop this, the only way we save our
country, and our freedom, is to fight this violence of lies with a
clenched fist of truth.”
This “clenched fist” theme is being legitimized by the president of
the United States, who’s on a new and intensifying warpath against those
in the media who criticize him.
Will news organizations and professionals be intimidated? Probably
not, at least not at this point. But we may be on a slippery path.
Trump’s increasingly incendiary tweets and messages constitute an overt
assault on freedom of the press, the cornerstone of our democracy.
Whether you agree or disagree with Donald Trump, all of us must stand up against this.
Robert Reich is professor of public policy at the University of
California at Berkeley. He was Secretary of Labor under President Bill
Clinton
No comments:
Post a Comment