Pro-Corporate Media Bias
Pro-Corporate Bias in the Media
"I believe democracy requires a 'sacred contract' between journalists and those who put their trust in us to tell them what we can about how the world really works" (Moyers, 2004). This essay examines the pro-corporate bias in media coverage as network journalism underreports corporate corruption, and analyzes how the 'sacred contract' has been violated by failures of the news media.
Any discussion of journalistic malfeasance must consider societal expectations and requirements with respect to media coverage. Over the course of time many thought leaders have sought to define the basis of a superior socio-political and economic system. Johnson's survey of social philosophy, Culture, Ideology, and Justice, (date) provides some insights into the structure of an ideal society. According to Johnson, there are five criteria that determine the essential structure of justice:
Whether persons should be self-governing or subservient to their betters?
How best to limit power: oligarchy or democracy?
Determining the basis for a just distribution of wealth: productivity, competition or policy?
How should freedom of conscience be expressed?
How to balance personal freedoms with the obligation to prevent harm to others: ideology, anarchy, and/or oligarchy?
If one gains widespread consensus on these cultural considerations, there still remain questions about how to implement this ideal. Should this society attempt to repair past mistakes? Is such repair possible, desirable, or advisable? Would a preferable approach involve simply learning from past mistakes, while applying the new principles going forward?
Certainly shortcomings that should not be repeated in the newly redefined society include the systemic failure of journalism to adequately report corporate corruption. There are a number of factors which led to current abuses of the system, factors which should be mitigated going forward. Vertical and horizontal integration create business relationships across media giants. As Johnson observes in The New Media Oligarchy (date), media outlets that should normally be engaged in healthy competition against one another are now partners with each other. Johnson argues that these partnerships ultimately stifle aggressive news coverage.
The global commercial-media system, according to Johnson, does not respect any tradition or custom if it stands in the way of profits. However, he points out "ultimately it is politically conservative because the media giants are significant beneficiaries of the current social structure around the world, and any upheaval in property or social relations -- particularly to the extent that it reduces the power of the business -- is not in their interest." This hyper-commercialism manifests in an implicit political bias in media content. Johnson cites a quote by Burt Neuborne, legal director of the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law. What has changed in journalism as a result of consolidation "is not a question of misreporting. It's not a question of false reporting. It's a question of not reporting" (Johnson, date, p. 1).
A typical example of how the media deliberately exercises a pro-corporate bias is shown in coverage of the savings and loan scandals of the 80s. Patrick Bond comments in his article (1989): "The average taxpayer, curious to know how and why an estimated $1,000 per household will be handed to the Savings and loan industry, won't get much help from the news media…coverage of the S&L crisis has offered little analysis of how the multi-billion dollar boondoggle relates to broader economic questions…" Bond backs up his assertions with the following facts: When Ralph Nader put forward an alternate proposal to have the S&L bailout be funded by the rich who actually made money from risky S&L activities, Nader got no mention on the three nightly network news shows, and no coverage in the Washington Post or New York Times. When Jesse Jackson joined more than 100 organizations to launch an all-out attack on the S&L bailout, the Times and Post carried wire stories (3/3/89) with only six paragraphs of coverage (Bond, 1989).
Coverage of the Enron debacle was similarly minimal, until the company's flameout reached spectacular proportions. Forbes reporter Dan Ackman (2001) described how Enron was involved in barely understood activities, mostly under the rubric of trading energy, and reported its results in mysterious ways, but it announced larger and larger revenues with each passing quarter, without raising any alarms. New York Times reporter Edward Wyatt (2002) wrote that credit-rating agencies Moody's Investors Service, Standard & Poor's and Fitch Ratings saw signs of Enron's deteriorating finances at least five months prior to their warning investors. CBSNews.com...
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