Those Magnificent Men and their (F)lying machines
Tagged as: anti-war cultureNeighbourhoods: grantham
A piece showing our media's function as the PR arm of the armed forces (also published on my website www.freedemocrats.co.uk)
Those Magnificent Men and their (F)lying Machines
Apparently newspaper owners and editors up and down the country are scratching their heads and wondering why newspaper sales have plummeted. No doubt some comfort themselves, and each other, by blaming the internet. They would be partly right – but probably not for the reasons they might give. It’s difficult to know how many of them will learn the important lessons of the recent furore that revealed some of the deceit, bribery and corruption that is standard practice behind much of our so-called ‘news’.
Some might think the scandal is confined to the national papers. Not a bit of it. The Guardian’s George Monbiot reported (see Monbiot.com 9.11.09 ‘Champions of the Overdog’) that Sir Ray Tindle, who once controlled about 230 newspapers, including such giants as the Totnes Times, ordered his editors at the outbreak of the Iraq War in 2003 “to ensure that nothing appears in your newspapers which attacks the decision to conduct the war”.
Most British newspapers have always supported war, and continue to do so to this day. It’s because war is very good for business, which matters far more to the Rupert Murdochs and Ray Tindles of this world than the shattered bodies of innocent and defenceless civilians (who are seldom even counted – let alone reported).
A piece of typically shabby war-loving propaganda appeared last Friday (22nd July) in the Grantham Journal. An article bearing the title “Airman Rob is helping to defend the skies over Libya” displayed a nice photograph of a pleasantly harmless-looking chap who, apart from the fact he’s wearing military uniform, could be mistaken for an accountant, or a banker. The article tells us about ‘Airman Rob’s many important duties, such as supporting construction and catering “and even medical services.” Ahhh – he sounds a bit like a social worker really, or a comic-book superhero. But curiously enough, helping to overthrow foreign governments, dispatch tens of thousands of defenceless civilians to eternity, and plunder whoever’s left behind – which is the real purpose of ‘Airman Rob’s employers – doesn’t get a mention.
The words “helping to defend the skies over Libya” in the title are almost too ridiculous to comment on; “helping to steal Libyan oil”, although only part of the story, would at least have been more accurate.
No doubt ‘Airman Rob’ is a thoroughly decent chap with a loving family and human weaknesses just like all the rest of us; and is quite possibly as oblivious of the cynicism of his work as Nazi concentration camp guards were seventy years ago – a natural consequence of enduring similar brainwashing; but what is the media’s excuse? What is the media’s excuse for calling the plundering and murder of innocent civilians thousands of miles away from Britain ‘defending the skies’?
A friend of mine who once worked at the Grantham Journal told me that it was editorial policy that all articles appearing in the paper should be written for ‘Earlsfield Man’ (Earlsfield is the part of Grantham with the highest social deprivation). It’s the sort of thing I could imagine Rupert Murdoch or Ray Tindle saying. It’s a line of thinking that proposes that the newspaper in general and its articles in particular should be composed in such a way as to appeal to the dullest mind. Well a surprising number of these dull minds know exactly what’s going on in spite of the best propaganda efforts of the media. So if more and more people are turning to foreign internet sites and the likes of Al Jazeera and Russia Today for their news it’s hardly surprising. Although these sources are of course also rich in propaganda at least they tell us some of the hard truths about our own government – truths our own media should be supplying.
Contact email: john.andrews57@ntlworld.com
Comments
help for 'heroes'
I recently wrote a letter to the Grantham Journal where I was pretty hard about the myth of modern-day 'heroes'. To my complete astonishment they printed every single word of it. The following week there was an editorial comment in the letters page saying that the response had been so overwhelming that the Journal was adding a whole extra page to print the slightly more rational ones. Of course every single reply condemned what I wrote. Such is the power of brainwashing.


Published: July 26, 2011 06:20
by
john andrews
Good point
You're quite right to point out that the media are an important vehicle for supporting corporate wars. They cynically take the focus off the top generals and politicians who have most to blame and put it on the footsoldiers, people who could be your neighbour or your relative, who it is harder to take argument with. Many low ranking soldiers are blindly 'serving their country' and have fallen for the lies of those at the top. Anyone who questions the motives for war is immediately blacklisted for having attacked our gallant plucky lads on the frontline.
The most recent manifestation of that is the rebranding of heroism. According to the mainstream media, anyone who dons a British uniform is now a 'hero'. Long gone are the days when you had to have noble motives in order to get such a lofty title. Again, this serves to give cold-blooded resource grabs and power politics a human face, and to make it impossible to question without the risk of becoming labelled some kind of traitor.
This discourse needs to be challenged.