By Danny Schechter
Author of The Crime Of Our Time
Grrrrrrrr.
You can almost hear the growling in the background as the masters of attack politics go into action, virtually every hour on the hour, on the Fox News Channel. The issues they focus on are carefully selected by top executives and then broken down into highly politicized message points.
Their dominant emotion is annoyance as expressed in sarcasm and scowling; contempt is the underlying attitude,
The other side is usually not just wrong but plain stupid, almost unbelievable in its softheaded naivete, and distance from reality,
A โwhat do you expectโ question invariably tops off the argument which always ends with the Fox host a winner and the Democrat or social critic a loser on every level.
Standing on a podium driven by self-righteous certainty, the finger pointers view the people they talk about, and talk down to, as below the intelligence threshold of people even worth arguing with.
In this universe, hyping the extreme and outrageous seems to attract audiences as Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck have proven.
That leads to higher ratings and, the real goal, higher revenues.
Clearly they feel it is their duty to play Paul Revere who warned Colonial America that โThe British Are Coming. They warn their faithful against political deviations that might lead them astray.
What is hard to recognize or often realize is that that the topics chosen are calculated and behind a strategy of using emotionally tested wedge issues to politicize by polarizing.
Political scientist Alan Abramowitz argues that polarization is good for America in his new book โThe Disappearing Center:โ
โAll the indicators we have show that polarization has actually contributed to increased engagement in politics, because people do perceive important differences and they think that there are big stakes in elections, he writes.โ
He was asked if he thinks this is healthy for a democracy:
โWell, up to a point. I think that a certain degree of polarization is healthy in a democracy. It clarifies the choices people have in elections, and it helps voters to hold the parties accountable for their performanceโ
At the same time, other political analysts say, โThe more polarized political parties are, the less most of us care about the political processโ
Survey data shows that people often take polarized positions because they think they are expected to when they identify with a certain party. With the sincerity and beliefs of Democrats mocked and under constant vitriolic attack, who would want to be thought of that way?
If they have questions, they donโt raise them. Itโs easier to parrot the party line.
Recall, it is politicians, not โthe peopleโ who define those issues. They rely on corporate -style market research and focus groups. They chose slogans and even language that often has a patriotic subtext. When government programs are likened to Socialism, itโs not surprising when people who consider themselves conservatives reject them even when they donโt really know what socialism is.
This is also true of what appears to be populist movements like The Tea Party whose agenda and talking points have been established by professional consultants, guided by political operatives and funded by conservative billionaires.
As one study put it. โIn other words, since the parties are now more clearly divided-and on a broader set of issues-it is easier for people to split accordingly, without changing their own views.โ
Thatโs the key pointโโwithout changing their own views.โ The dirty little secret is the discovery in many studies that the most systematic polarization appears only in mass partisanship: those who are politically active or identify themselves with a party or ideology tend to have more extreme positions than the rest of the population. But, at the same time, their core political views have changed very little. For example, many on the right depend on and support Medicare.
Whatโs also not always clear to folks on the left is that Fox News positions itself as an upholder of what are, at bottom, liberal American values. Hence their motto about Fairness and Balance. (They actually have more opposing views on their programs than channels like MSNBC.)
The LA Times understood this when writing, โFoxโs real ethos is not Republican but anti-elitist โ a major reason it connects with so many Americans and annoys so many coastal elites. โThereโs a whole country that elitists will never acknowledge,โ Ailes once observed. โWhat people resent deeply out there are those in the โblue statesโ thinking theyโre smarter.โ
This anti-elitism shows itself in Foxโs pro-U.S. stance in covering the Afghanistan and Iraq wars and its broadcastersโ use of terms such as โterroristโ instead of โmilitants.โ Another aspect of Foxโs anti-elitism: Christians, far from being seen as lunatics or curiosities โ as too often is the case in the mainstream media โ actually get some respect.โ
So Fox plays a double game, concealing the most reactionary and partisan of perspectives in the appearance of populism. It is then packaged in the format of news programming and above the fray television driven by hot graphics, pretty blondes, and relentless posturing.
The formula works in attracting audiences while the same time, feeding into a political strategy of promoting partisanship through heightening polarization and political conflict.
No issue is too small to exploit. A week after the targeted killing of Osama bin Laden, Fox had found a new enemy to bash as a target in the nightly culture war behind its political war.
Michelle Obama had invited a rapper named Common to a White House poetry reading. Some of his lyrics, in the parlance of ghetto talk, appeared
to suggest he approved of a cop killing. Thatโs all that Fox needed to hear. Program after program went on the attack at this latest example of black racism.
Comedy Centralโs Jon Stewart used video clips and his own free- style rapping to ridicule the distortions in their characterizations. He blasted Fox for โmanufacturing outrageโ and pumping a blend of propaganda he calls โfoxygenโ into the room. Foxโs Bill OโReilly blasted back inviting Stewart to debate him and insisting that their focus only reflected their outrage over a pro-cop-killing artist being invited to the White House.
(Hip Hop radio personality Davey D reminds his audience that Fox never gets outraged by police brutality in black communities. He posted a thoughtful commentary on his Facebook page.)
Any objective person might concede the poet rapper was not calling for a jihad against cops. It didnโt matter because Fox viewers tend to believe what their TV heroes tell them. It looked like he was; there fore he was.
Soon, the facts no loner mattered in a cross-cultural battle of metaphor and misinformation. Fox had its new weapon of mass distraction to focus on and smear Obama with while ignoring the other big story of the day: the conviction of a billionaire Hedge Fund schemer accused on insider trading and conspiracy.
In Fox world, the Free Market is holy, even when its not, and only big government (under Democrats, of course) is to blame for our economic woes.
In the end what we have is a cruel and deceptive game that appears to be informative when its not, presided over by professional actors and reactors. And like the old joke asks: โHow do you know when they are lying?โ The answer: โwhen their lips are moving.โ
News Dissector Danny Schechter edits Mediachannel.org. His current film is Plumder The Crime Of Our Time. (Plunderthecrimeofourtime.com) Comments to Dissector@mediachannel.org


