Media Education Foundation graciously granted permission to post
Rich Media,
Poor Democracy on RFS! for one week only. To obtain a copy of the DVD, contact MEF.
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Radio Free Silver! Program Guide
Rich
Media /
Poor
Democracy
w/ Robert McChesney
&
Marc Crispin Miller
"The basis of our governments being the opinion of the people, the very first object should be to keep that right; and were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter. But I should mean that every man should receive those papers and be capable of reading them."
Thomas Jefferson to Edward Carrington, 1787.
As the author of the Declaration of Independence, Jefferson's words are
timeless and profound in their assessment of the importance of the media
and its relation to a functioning democracy.
Professors Robert
McChesney & Marc Crispin Miller critique government failure to regulate rich corporations, thereby allowing media consolidation to undermine democracy and ignore the public interest.
Both
Miller and McChesney have been in the forefront of addressing these issues
in their respective positions as professors at New
York University and University
of Illinois and in the social movement to counter media consolidation
and to promote media justice, media reform, and democratic ideals.
The struggle to control information and thereby manipulate society is
older than government itself. In the pre-Guttenberg world, literacy
was by far the exception even among the nobility and the influence of a
particular sector of society - the church - profoundly limited what
information would be placed on paper and thereby disseminated.
The creation of the printing press made the spread of information a new
power in the world. New forms of media utilizing the internet and
other networks such as cel phones and WiFi are further upending the
communication landscape.
But like the medieval church with its then unequaled resource of monks
and scribes, the mega corporations own the vast majority of radio and
television outlets and are self-interested, self-serving, and with the
best congressional suport that money can buy, self -perpetuating.
Their near monopoly perverts the function of an informed electorate in a
democracy. Their mantra is profit at any cost and private interest
over the public interest at all times. The failure of the MSM -
mainstream media - in confronting the Bush administration and in beating
the drums of war are tragic proof of the consequences of having a defense
contractor - war profiteer might be more accurate - such as General
Electric in control of a major network such as NBC.
Media Education Foundation graciously granted permission to post
Rich Media, Poor Democracy
on RFS! for one week only. To obtain a copy of the DVD, contact MEF.
Click here
for Media Education Foundation
Click here for Rich Media /
Poor Democracy at MEF
Click here for McChesney's website
Click here for Crispin Miller's blog
Click here for Alliance
for Community Media
Click here for FAIR / Fairness
& Accuracy in Reporting
Click here for New Mexico Media Literacy Project
Click here for Democracy Now!
Click here for Corporate Accountability Project / Media Reform Info Ctr
Click here for Prometheus Radio
Click here for Radio for People