It Begins. . .

SunTVNews

This didn’t take long.  Kory Teneyke has apparently been saying for years that Canada needs a Fox News.  Now that the analogy has people alarmed, he’s claiming it’s merely “critics throwing stones.”

The Sun TV News Wikipedia page:

Kory Teneycke, a former chief spokesman to Prime Minister Stephen Harper who will head the network in his capacity as Quebecor’s vice-president of development,[1][3] dismissed the “Fox North” comparisons as critics throwing stones . . . .

Don Newman:

The first time I met Kory Teneycke, he told me that Canada needed a Fox News channel of its own.

James Hansen

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jc4OzpgTOhk&feature=PlayList&p=B026A9066F0B1332&playnext_from=PL&playnext=1&index=17

James Hansen describing the censorship he was subject to during the Bush years on 60 Minutes

On this date in 1988, NASA scientist James Hansen testified to the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural resources that it was 99% probable global warming had already begun.

He was of course 100% correct.

It’s 22 years later.  Look how little we’ve done to address the problem.  A major contributing cause is corporations like Koch Industries which fund global warming denialism.

“Canadian Nightmare”

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Murray Dobbin has a must-read story in today’s Vancouver Sun about how Sun News is gaming the system to get the necessary license to become “Fox News North.” He also reports that this is what it appears to be: an attempt by the Harper government to install a right wing news organization that will serve as the propaganda arm for its agenda.

Here is the most chilling part of the story:

One of the most unnerving aspects of this story is that it was Harper himself who seems to have got the ball rolling for a news network devoted to his political project. According to reporter Bruce Cheadle, of the Canadian Press “on March 30, 2009,“Prime Minister Stephen Harper sat down for lunch in New York with Rupert Murdoch and Roger Ailes.

Ailes is the longtime Republican communications guru who is the president of Fox News Channel, which is owned by Murdoch’s News Corp. Harper’s [then] communications director Kory Teneycke was also present.”

It must surely be unprecedented that a Canadian Prime Minister would be having a secret personal luncheon with one of the world’s most powerful right-wing media barons and the head of his most virulent broadcaster.  (The meeting was only discovered by CP when it examined media consultant Ari Fleischer’s mandatory disclosures with the U.S. Justice Department. The former Bush media flak was doing consulting work for Harper at the time.)

We can’t know exactly what was discussed but we do know that Harper holds virtually all of the Canadian media in contempt and has gone to extraordinary lengths to control his “message” – sending out his own photos; refusing interviews with the national press gallery, sneaking into the House of Commons through a side entrance so the media can’t engage him. Now he hopes to have a channel all to himself.

There can be little doubt that Harper is behind the Fox news North idea. Just four months after that meeting, according to Cheadle, immediately after Teneycke left the PMO, he got a contract with Quebecor to explore the Fox news north project.

Peladeau met at least twice with Harper in the first part of 2009 and also met with cabinet heavyweights Jim Flaherty, Tony Clement and James Moore. The project is moving ahead at breakneck speed with it proponents clearly hoping to make it a fait accomplis before anyone can do anything about it.

Quote of the Day

1957

“Censorship is an expression of weakness.  Or confession.”  Frye in Notebook 50 (CW 5, 397).

The censorship I have in mind is the censorship of the right, which manifests as under-reporting, misleading reporting, and non-reporting — not to mention completely made-up reporting, which these days  seems to get an extraordinary amount of play during the shaping of public opinion phase of any debate.  Outside of the closed partisan elite who either run or run with Fox News, I’d be surprised if many people who’d describe themselves as moderates or liberals would hesitate to say that this kind of right-wing censorship is now rampant in the U.S. and has significantly degraded both the quality of news reporting and the political debate that follows from it.

The turning point was perhaps the 2000 presidential election when all the major networks initially called Florida for Al Gore, which would have won it for him.  But the first network to reverse that call for Bush and cast the outcome into doubt (which the other networks quickly followed) was Fox News, and the Fox employee who made the call just happened to be a Bush cousin.  Meanwhile Florida itself was then governed by Bush’s older brother, Jeb, whose government agencies were packed with partisan appointments overseeing the conduct of the election in the state.  We know what a mess that turned into.  We remember the Brooks Brothers Riot (all Republican operatives), which shut down the recount of ballots in Broward County.  We also remember the Supreme Court, stacked with conservatives who were supposedly avowed states’ rightists,  nevertheless intervened to stop the state-wide recount of ballots ordered by the Florida Supreme Court, and who then deliberated while the clock ran out, and issued a decision giving the presidency to Bush so legally dubious that the court itself declared that this particular decision applied exclusively to Bush v Gore and was not to be considered precedent in future cases.  That’s how Gore’s presidency was stolen.  It’s how we got eight nightmare years of Bush — not to mention his nightmare legacy, including the Deepwater Horizon disaster which is the result of years of gutted regulations overseen by impotent or corrupt regulators who took their cues from the oil industry.

But let’s turn to Canada.  If Sun News does not get a license from the CRTC, does that constitute censorship?  No.  Because free speech is not the freedom to repeat whatever noxious lies you want to suit your particular political agenda.  Free speech ought always to be responsible speech in the public sphere relating to matters of public interest, and that is why we regulate it with broadcast standards.  That regulation has served us well.  We’ve been spared the insanity of the U.S. example, for starters.  Canada’s use of regulation in fact seems enviably effective and efficient generally.  We are, for example, the only major industrialized nation not to have experienced a single bank failure during the recent financial markets meltdown.

The Sun News people, whose admiration for all things American is so complete that they openly say they want to establish a Canadian Fox News, may wish that we did things the American way.  But, no, sorry, uh uh.  It’s the laws and regulations of Canada that apply here.  We can enumerate good reasons for this, not least being our possession of a public discourse that is not an open sewer and does not skew public opinion by way of lies and bullying and government-sanctioned misbehavior of oligarchical interests that regard the general public as little more than a source of cheap and expendable labor with minimal legal rights to defend itself.

Folks, if you are middle class, your after-tax income has remained static for the last 30 years.  All of the wealth generated by your productivity for a generation has gone to the top 5% of the population, and most especially the top 1%.  This elite class accomplished that by hijacking government to make it serve corporate rather than public interests.  Now they tell you that this new reality is the reality you have to live with, whatever the consequences.

We don’t yet have a deeply entrenched American-style plutarchy in Canada.  But it’s hard not to believe that if Harper gets a majority government and a Fox News North, both journalism and the political process will become much worse for it.  Just look at the Americans.  And then consider what we’ve achieved.  We have health care that costs just half what the Americans need to deliver it inadequately, not to mention a decent social safety net that does not allow people to be reduced overnight to helpless poverty. This is not anything to be compromised by a brutish and degraded public discourse.

Quote of the Day

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Rupert Murdoch and Roger Ailes

“The American fascist would prefer not to use violence. His method is to poison the channels of public information. With a fascist the problem is never how best to present the truth to the public but how best to use the news to deceive the public into giving the fascist and his group more money or more power.”

Vice President Henry A. Wallace, New York Times, April 9, 1944


Frye on Fascism and Communism

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In “The Present Condition of Society” (1943):

It was inevitable that those who saw most clearly that there was much in American life heading straight for Nazism, and who were still looking for something which should be definitely anti-Nazi enough and still consistent with deism, should have found what they were looking for in the Communists.  (CW 10, 219)

In 1949 Diary (Jan. 28):

Many well-meaning and gentle people suffer from a vicious streak of masochism–they feel helpless in the midst of a brutal society, & in some warped way they want to feel so: they like saying they can’t do anything about, say, the American hold on Canada, or say it with a significant grin.  In the last decade they helped the rise of fascism, & now they show a sneaking fondness for communism because of the nihilistic element in it.  (CW 8, 104)

In “Trends in Modern Culture” (1952):

Fascism is an oligarchic conspiracy against the open-class system, deriving its real power from the big oligarchs and its mass support from would-be oligarchs, the “independent” (i.e. unsuccessful) entrepreneurs.  Communism is the corresponding conspiracy on the other end, addressing itself to those most likely to feel that society in its present form will permanently exclude them from its benefits. (CW 11, 252)

In T. S. Eliot (1963):

Fascism and Communism are the products of strong tendencies within democracy itself, and our horror at these products springs from the ego’s dislike of inconvenience rather than love of freedom. (CW 29, 188)

In the “Foreward to 1984″ (1967):

In [Orwell’s] writings on Spain, particularly Homage to Catalonia, he shows how like in aim and motivation Russian Communism was to the Fascism it in theory opposed. (ibid., 278)

Frye Alert

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CSU Long Beach Professor Emeritus Charles May has posted his paper on Alice Munro that cites Frye on Romance.  He delivered it at the 11th International Short Story Conference in Toronto earlier this month.  You can read it at his blog here.

Video of the Day

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJVNnAIrLkM

Kory Teneycke, former communications director for Stephen Harper now working for Brian Mulroney as Quebecor’s point man on “Fox News North,” interviewed on the CBC where until recently he was a commentator for the right.

Offered without comment.

However, I will repeat this comment left about the video at YouTube: “Does EVERY right-winger have to lie to make a point?”