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The Media and Power by Per Bylund
Many
consider the media a “third power.” It supposedly has the means
and possibility to control whatever the government and state are up
to. In a democracy, the media, closely connected to the generally
advocated “free speech” concept, symbolizes and embodies the
source of critical control of government and limitation of “bad”
politics. The
Political
science theorists generally agree with the political The
media plays its role very well and sometimes exposes suggested
policies which may be harmful to certain groups in society – or
which may violate (or limit) important individual, group, religious,
cultural or economic rights upheld by the state. And both the Left
and Right consider themselves being treated unfairly by the media,
so the media is probably neutral – at least towards the Left and
Right in party politics. I
don’t agree with this. The media is not free to report news to
anyone interested in consuming their news. The government is not
dependent of the media more than the media is depending on what is
offered by the state. In countries like And
even though “free speech” is considered an important part of
democracy, Western governments still control the rights
to speak. In order to start a newspaper, television network or radio
station, one will have to file with and be approved by the
government (or its bureaucrats). These
limitations of “free speech” are all easily recognized since
they are explicit, formal requirements forced upon the media by the
government. Even statist free speech champions recognize these
drawbacks of the implementation of the “free media,” but they
are usually considered “necessary” to uphold the manifold of
opinions and news reporting. But
this is not the main reason I do not trust what is reported in the
media. From a libertarian point of view, it is much more terrifying
to discover what is reported in the media. It is obvious the government trusts
the media to “inform” the public of its achievements and
influence or mold the popular opinion. The
symbiosis between the media and the government is the main reason I
distrust whatever is on the news. Next time you watch the news on
television, take a moment to count how much news originates from the
government or bureaucracy, and how much is really a result from
investigative, trustworthy journalism. Most
news originates from the government and different branches in the
bureaucracy. The reports are usually not questioned or investigated
further – the state is considered a “reliable” source of
information. And there is really no way of controlling that which
the government supplies. Thus, the media is only forwarding whatever
the government wants to get to public attention – and it is
reported as if it was neutral reporting. Different journalists and
different networks may comment on the news from different points of
view, but the original news is the same and is carefully put
together to fit and support whatever purpose. Today’s
news market is huge – the government actually sells
the rights to tell the public whatever the government wishes the
public to “know” (true or not). News networks such as CNN and
BBC cover the globe, and even small countries like As
I see it, the news reporting media of today is for the most part
simply a function of government having been outsourced to private
corporations. News about government and government policy is simply
advertising for the politics in action. News
reporting in a free society, i.e. without a government, would have
to be investigative, analyzing and “digging” for its own facts.
There simply isn’t as much news worth reporting to support all
these news television networks, newspapers and news radio stations
in a society without government. The news market is thus a fraud; it
is for the most part created by the government and for the
government. The
reason I do not trust most of what is on the news is that I simply
do not trust government. Per Bylund is the founder of Anarchism.net and the founding editor of the Swedish Libertarian Forum, a radically libertarian magazine published quarterly. Visit his personal website at www.perbylund.com
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