Mainstream media hypocrisy? OWS vs. Moscow protests on TV
Published: 15 December, 2011, 03:24
Board showing newspaper clippings pertaining to Occupy Wall Street movement is displayed in an office space at 50 Broadway in New York. (REUTERS/Andrew Burton)
(26.0Mb) embed videoTAGS: Protest, Politics, USA, Media
As the mainstream outlets in the US continue to pick and choose approaches to coverage according to geographic location and potential political gain, it’s becoming increasingly visible that selective facts aren't really facts at all.
Double standards in journalism were once embarrassing. They now tend to be increasingly mainstream. Demonstrators in the US have been presented in the media largely as a margin of American society. In Russia, a sea of flags carried by truly radical nationalist groups – ignored and gone without explanation.
“Here we have the news media playing up the Russian protests, and playing down American protests that are still underway,” said blogger and media critic Danny Schechter.
Treating protests at home and abroad differently these days seems to be a trend.
“Protesters against foreign countries, particularly countries that are political and economic rivals, to the United States – are always good. Protesters in our country who are against the American system, are usually bad. That’s the construct the media begins with,” said editorial columnist and author Ted Rall.
American mainstream media channels took at least two weeks to catch up and then undermine with Occupy Wall Street protests across the US.
RT has been on the ground since Day 1, showing the hundreds of arrests and tear gas use against the protesters – events largely ignored by the mainstream media.
“When tear gas and lethal weapons was being used during the Arab Spring protests this was seen as an unacceptable crackdown on protesters,” said writer and journalist Sarah Seltzer.
RT has also covered demonstrations in Moscow, and showed the arrests that took place in Russia.
“Russian television, state television, which everyone expected to not be allowed to cover the protests, are covering the protests, showing a commitment to the story which is quite remarkable,” said Schechter.
Meanwhile, others were not even committed enough to “commit” to a crew on the ground in Moscow.
“Usually the skeleton crew, that they have at their Moscow bureaus, spend all their time out with each other, or at local bars – they are not out on the street,” said Ted Rall.
This could lead to knowledge painfully thin on the TV screens.
“Most Americans seriously could not find Russia on a map. So when you are dealing with that audience a producer is going to say, well, you know, the people are too stupid to understand that stuff anyway," said Rall.
As some of the mainstream media in the US continues to pick and choose approaches to event coverage according to geographic location and potential political gain, it’s becoming increasingly visible to the naked eye that selective facts are not really facts at all.
15.12.2011, 02:28
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Americans have never gotten the truth about Russia - in my lifetime.
Keep reminding them. Consider reminders of Russia's Truth as a kind of Journalism / Current History[Call that poetic license] Lesson.
Side Note: Americans are supposedly afraid of getting hit with a nuclear bomb from places such as Iran in the future [or the former USSR in the past]. The twisted "logic" of that threat is the only people on this planet who should have ever rightfully been afraid of a nuclear bomb attack were the ordinary citizens of Hiroshima and Nagasaki! Whhhooossshhhhh - Gone. and the bombs bursting in air had "Buy American" stickers on them. Oh well...
96% of US main news corporations are owned and managed by 5 Judaized Khazarian men, who could easily fit into an elevator. These men can decide what 300 million Americans will see, hear, read, and know in the next six months just while going from the ground floor to the fifth floor.






One important detail worth mentioning is the way the Russian government and security forces responded to the demonstrations in Moscow and other cities.
1) they addressed the reasons for the protest
2) there were no batons, arrests or pepperspray in sight.
Obviously, the Russian government is not afraid of it's people.
In fact, they are listening to what the protestors are saying, and trying to address their concerns. In contrast, see OWS protests and arrests in the United States. For the US to call out the Russians and point to their protests as if there are not even bigger protests occurring in America is a joke.
Really.