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influence ever existed?
Can
the media be made democratic?
Romanticised
past
For
many, a belief in the abstract democratic ideal is closely linked to
the myths surrounding the origin of the Constitution and the founding
of America as a separate country. But far from being a revolutionary
event that encouraged a genuine development of democratic values, the
War of Independence was a strictly conservative affair. The colonial
rebellion was not the work of enraged peasants but of landed
gentlemen, who argued their case on the principles of the British
constitution by demanding free assembly, trial by jury, and no
taxation without representation. Despite pretensions of being
“enlightened” – sweeping aside monarchy, aristocracy and the
established church – the new republic was never designed to be
anything other than an oligarchic state. The political institutions
and Constitution mirrored instincts of conservatism and constructed
an array of checks and balances motivated by paranoia, suspicion of
central government power, and religion that laid the foundation for
laissez faire economics.
The
expulsion of the British eliminated the constraints of the feudal
social order substituting in its place the abstract principles that
“all men are created equal” and that power is derived from “the
will of the people”. The desire to protect and then extend private
property rights sanctified by religious superstition led to a type of
liberty intended to allow the pursuit of individual aims and wealth
unconstrained by government interference. To those who took up the
reins of power, government was to be judged not by its ability to
promote prosperity but by its capacity to leave people alone to
pursue private ends. The principle that personal opportunity should
be maximised also struck a chord with Puritanism that saw the
acquisition of money as the just result of hard work and “the
Lord’s blessing”.
This
moderate civic liberty was deemed more important than any tendency
towards democracy, and the architects of the Declaration of
Independence – the land and property owners – were quick to
construct a system of government based on the division of power that
would guard against the “excesses of democracy”. They adopted a
definition of “the people” which excluded women, non-landowners
and slaves.
While
it is undoubtedly true that writers like Tom Paine were influential
in pushing the colonial revolt further than originally intended, it
is also clear that the real beneficiaries of the break with Britain
were the landowners and wealthy traders who were able to expand their
own wealth without interference. Although Paine’s call to arms,
based on abstractions and ideals, appealed to the ordinary person,
the benefits accrued were material and went to the wealthy.
The
“democracy” practised today in America is usually held up as the
ultimate symbol of “liberty”. But from its outset this system was
not envisaged as a condition in which individuals would be kept
informed and use the knowledge acquired in the decision making
process. On the contrary, this type of “democracy” was
constructed as the institutional means to exclude the people
from this arena by limiting involvement to the periodic election of
someone, normally submissive to a political party, who would make
decisions for them.
In
capitalist society the media has always had a role to play in the
promotion in this kind of vision. The production of a successful
newspaper, for example, has always meant that journalistic integrity
and editorial objectiveness have been subordinate to the
institutional requirement of production for profit. From the moment
that newspaper became a commodity and subject to advertising
patronage and market forces, the genuine dissemination of information
was always going to be the first casualty.
Prevailing
ideas
So
the media, in America as elsewhere, has a vested interest in driving
out all but the most benign opinions and instilling a set of values
and a code of behaviour that integrate people into class society. But
this does not mean that the media are necessarily part of some
conspiracy. While the media’s role is to circulate information
presented in the context of society’s prevailing ideas, which have
a strong influence over the way people think, this does not mean that
the media originate these ideas. In general, the ideas presented by
the media are rooted in the social milieu and are traceable, in the
main, to the material conditions and the economic relations of
society. The class that controls society’s economic structure
shapes the institutions that arise in order to manage the economic
conditions in its own interests and perpetuate its ascendancy over
society. As well as its control over society’s coercive powers and
the means by which the wage and salary earners live, this class also
exercises persuasive powers, based on legal rights, traditions,
customs and, as in America, historical myth that works its way into
the consciousness of the working class. In a society divided by
class, based on economic interests, the prevailing ideas are
therefore a reflection of the needs and aspirations of the dominant
class, which explains why many members of the working class often
think and act in ways that are in contradiction to their real
interests. The media therefore speaks not just for itself but for the
whole of the capitalist class.
There
are two reasons why Moyers’ belief that a reformed media can
resurrect an abstract vision of “democracy” conjured up from a
romanticised image of America’s past does not stand up to scrutiny.
Firstly, the type of democracy he seems to want has never really
existed, and secondly he fails to appreciate that capitalism and
genuine democracy can never co-exist. Moyers does not criticise the
economic system that compels the media to act in the way it does and
does not see that in this system the media cannot operate in any
other way – as if in a vacuum, uninfluenced by market forces. Media
reform, which tinkers with the detail but leaves the underlying
causes firmly entrenched, is, it could even be argued, actually
dangerous because it reinforces the belief that capitalism can be
made to work in the interests of the working class, when the opposite
is patently the case.
STEVE
TROTT
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