The Awful Truth(continued)
(Photo: Getty Images) It changes over time, so that's hard to answer. The telecom and pharmaceutical industries are two of the most robust in terms of lobbying and contributions. The defense industry, which has thousands of companies spread throughout the country, actually doesn't spend as much as you might think given the importance of that in our policy. It's more a question of having it spread throughout the country so that every congressman has a vested interest in keeping all this crap going? Oil is certainty right up there; pharmaceutical and telecoms. The Center has done frontal examinations of the funding of all these industries. Those are the ones who do the most. So there's no chance the telecoms won't get immunity in the current bill? Did you see that thing about the 435 days of missing White House e-mails? And it probably hasn't been on the evening news at all. Isn't [Los Angeles congressman] Henry Waxman still pretty good? An exception to this general mess? There's this image we have from our civic books that congressmen will haul people up and get them to talk about whatever they want to. It's actually not like that.
(Photo: Getty Images) Right. It's really frustrating to watch, because you know the truth is not coming out; a piece of the truth is coming out about something you're not quite interested in. Are you disappointed that the change in control of Congress to the Democrats hasn't made more of a difference? But even when they try to get folks up there, even when they flex their muscle and try to do what is an entirely reasonable oversight thing to do, they're stiff-armed by the White House. And most of the power in Washington for several years now has been at the White House, clearly, and not at Congress. It shows. The other problem is that the national news media takes its lead from Congress. They're clearly symbiotic. If the press doesn't want to cover the hearings, Congress doesn't want to hold them. The dynamic has changed so much from 20 years ago. Our checks and balances are not what people might thing they are; it seems to be much more diminished. The gusto and the aggressiveness by folks doing oversight is nothing like it used to be. It's quite serious for democracy. You end up having mono instead of stereo for the information the public gets. It ends up just coming out of the White House, and everyone being carefully on message. And Congress for much of the time was the same party. So it too was on talking points. When you have everyone saying the same thing, the media emaciated in its newsroom ranks and otherwise disinclined to be aggressive, they generally went with the easy way—the horse's mouth. The president said it; it must be fact. And they amplified it like hell all over the world. So they're complicit in what's happened here. It does give the average citizen a sense of powerlessness that someone else is in charge of this country. What are five things a citizen can do? The reason news organizations are hollowing out their newsrooms and investors are harboring their investments is because people are not consuming news the way they once did. When sound bites have gone from 19 seconds to six seconds from the '70s to the '90s, when you dumb down the public, you get a certain result here. They're much more easy to manipulate by those in power. Democracy is not a spectator sport; people have to participate. This idea of sitting on the sidelines and bitching and moaning gets old, too. You can't just complain about what they are doing. It's supposed to be us. This is our government. READ MORE Ben Behaving Bradlee: The Grumpy Legend of American Journalism sounds off Joe, Schmo: Blowhard Time pundit sings a song of himself Today's Top Stories < BACK TO Features |
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