BuzzMachine
by Jeff Jarvis

June 14, 2004

Your assignment, should you choose to accept it

: Micah Sifry gives reporters 10 questions they should be asking about public campaign finance reform.

Government meddles in media... in Britain

: At last month's The Week event, FoxNews' John Gibson said he was in trouble in the U.K. for calling the BBC a bunch of liars.

Strange but true.

The official British FCC, Ofcom, just handed down a ruling against Gibson. His sin? His crime? His offense to the crown? On the official Ofcom site, it says Gibson "claimed":

a) that the BBC had “a frothing-at-the-mouth anti-Americanism that was obsessive, irrational and dishonest”;
b) that the BBC “felt entitled to lie and, when caught lying, felt entitled to defend its lying reporters and executives”;
c) that the BBC reporter, Andrew Gilligan, in Baghdad during the American invasion, had “insisted on air that the Iraqi Army was heroically repulsing an incompetent American Military”;
d) that “the BBC, far from blaming itself, insisted its reporter had a right to lie – exaggerate – because, well, the BBC knew that the war was wrong, and anything they could say to underscore that point had to be right”.
Well, yes, that sounds about right to me.

But here's a government agency defending a government network. How do you spell conflict of interest? How do you say in English, "Butt out, bud?"

This is what is so wrong with government involvement in speech. This is where it heads. Gibson had an opinion. The audience can agree or disagree with that opinion. The audience doesn't need some government agency to decide for it whether the opinion expressed is right or wrong. But what makes this really perverse is that the opinion was right and the BBC was wrong and another damned government commission said so and yet this government commission goes after Gibson. Perverse indeed.

Catchup

: Rafat Ali's Paid Content reported the deal to bring a Starz movie network to the Internet with Real on June 10. The NY Times and LA Times reported it only today, four days later. If the reporters had only read blogs, they could have had the story long since.

Passport

: Here's an AP story on the rash of newspaper sites requiring registration (it particarly seems rashy because Knight Ridder and Tribune have have been putting up the gate a paper at a time).

Years ago, the newspaper industry tried to start a constorium of its online news services, the New Century Network, and among the thing -- the too many things -- it tried to do was create a uniform registration and login for all member sites.

Oh, if only that existed: Register once and get into any news sites without having to reregister or even log in and the sites get the data they want without pissing off their readers.

It would be nice if somebody would try to restart that initiative. Hint. Hint.

A nation undecided, not a nation divided

: I've been arguing for months, since the primaries (here, here, and here), that we are not a nation divided, we are a nation undecided.

Finally -- finally -- I have a story to link to that agrees with that argument. The cover of this weekend's NY Times Week in Review by John Tierney says -- at last -- that this red v. blue war we're supposedly waging is a product of the wishes of politicians. He neglects to say that it is also the figment of the wishful imagination of journalists raring for a fight to cover.

Most voters are still centrists willing to consider a candidate from either party, but they rarely get the chance: It's become difficult for a centrist to be nominated for president or to Congress or the state legislature, said Morris P. Fiorina, a political scientist at Stanford and senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.

"If the two presidential candidates this year were John McCain and Joe Lieberman, you'd see a lot more crossover and less polarization," said Professor Fiorina, mentioning the moderate Republican and Democratic senators. He is the co-author, along with Samuel J. Abrams of Harvard and Jeremy C. Pope of Stanford, of the forthcoming book, "Culture War? The Myth of a Polarized America."

"The bulk of the American citizenry is somewhat in the position of the unfortunate citizens of some third-world countries who try to stay out of the cross-fire while Maoist guerrillas and right-wing death squads shoot at each other," the book concludes. "Reports of a culture war are mostly wishful thinking and useful fund-raising strategies on the part of culture-war guerrillas, abetted by a media driven by the need to make the dull and everyday appear exciting and unprecedented."

The book presents evidence that voters in red and blue America are not far apart. Majorities in both places support stricter gun control as well as the death penalty; they strongly oppose giving blacks preference in hiring while also wanting the government to guarantee that blacks are treated fairly by employers. They're against outlawing abortion completely or allowing it under any circumstances, and their opinions on abortion have been fairly stable for three decades. Virtually identical majorities of Blues and Reds don't want a single party controlling the White House and Congress.

Right. We're Americans, not extremists.

There's more. Paul DiMaggio, a sociologist at Princeton, says:

"The two big surprises in our research," Professor DiMaggio said, "were the increasing agreement between churchgoing evangelicals and mainline Protestants, even on abortion, and the lack of increasing polarization between African-Americans and whites. Evangelicals have become less doctrinaire and more liberal on issues like gender roles. African-Americans are showing more diversity in straying from the liberal line on issues like government programs that assist minorities."
Alan Wolfe of Boston College "called the culture war largely a product of intellectuals." He said that gay rights could have been a dividing line but that's not proving to be the case.
But now, he says, it will probably be a minor issue.

Opinion on gay marriage and civil unions has fluctuated over the past year, but a Gallup poll last month showed increased support, with more than a third of Americans in favor of gay marriage and about half in favor of civil unions. The long-term trend has been to a great tolerance toward gays. The percentage of Americans favoring equal rights for homosexuals in employment has risen since 1977 by more than a third to about 80 percent today.

Support for gay rights has become especially strong among young voters, which suggests that the trend will continue.

"Gay rights could prove to be the issue that ends the culture war," Professor Wolfe said. "If gay marriage does not become a polarizing issue in 2004 - and it does not look like it will - there are no wedge issues left."

The article goes on to blather rather unhelpfully on possible causes and disagreement; that's what editors think these articles have to do. It's still a good and important and overdue piece.

But there is still a big story to be reported and written here: Are we really a nation divided? And if not -- and I see evidence here that we are not -- then how did this become the accepted wisdom of media and politics? Who benefits from this chronic illusion of internal war? Who helped foster this myth? What questions did reporters and editors fail to ask? When we concentrate on disagreements in a democracy, are we painting democracy as a failure? But when we concentrate on the agreements in a democracy, don't we instead paint a picture of the shared values of the nation?

And why aren't media reporting -- admiting -- today that we are a nation? Just that: A nation.

We are America. Today, of all times -- as others attack us because we are American -- it is vital that we acknowledge our nationhood and define it, not out of patriotism or ethnicity (we have none) but as a matter of principle, the principle we are defending and fighting for.

We are not a nation divided. Hell, we are not even a world divided. Most Americans, most people, are just people trying to get through a day and a life and do the decent thing and improve their future and avoid politics. It is a mistake -- it is a damned and dangerous lie -- to paint the extremists as normal, whether those extremists are of political or religious.

We're not red v. blue. We're Americans. It's the world vs. America. It's Islamic nut jobs vs. America.

There's the story that needs reporting.

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