TV blowhard barks at Iran: Let's hold CNN accountable
Turn on CNN Headline News–a supposed "news" channel–on weekday nights and you'll be subjected to the lectures of a loudmouthed, factually-challenged, occasionally funny know-it-all whose shtick is that he's "just a regular American schmoe."
His name is Glenn Beck, a talk-radio host and self-described "rodeo clown." His crude rants would be easy to ignore except that CNN–part of the Time Warner conglomerate–has chosen to give Beck a primetime platform, which he uses day after day to cheer on a confrontation with Iran. (Imagine what an informed foreign policy critic could do with such a nightly forum.)
In Beck's world, he and his endless parade of like-mindedly hawkish guests are the only ones who see the danger: "It's Iran, stupid!" Most of US officialdom and media are asleep at the wheel again, Neville Chamberlain-style appeasers.
Here's a typical exchange from Beckastan, as our fearless interviewer engaged right-wing Israeli politician Benjamin Netanyahu in mid-November:
Netanyahu: Iran is Germany, and it's 1938, except that this Nazi regime that is in Iran, that's a religious kind of fanaticism. But it wants to dominate the world, annihilate the Jews, but also annihilate America. Remember, we're the small Satan. You're the big Satan.
Beck: Right.
Beck's CNN guest list is replete with often obscure, simplistic hawks. In his segment asking "How Long Until Iran Gets Nukes?," Beck's expert was novelist Joel Rosenberg, a Jewish-born born-again Christian who describes himself as a "senior advisor" to Rush Limbaugh.
What's unnerving about Beck is that he seems to be amusing himself at least–ever smiling like Pat Robertson–as he does his best to prod the country toward war and confrontation with enemy Islam. He is obsessed with Iranian president Ahmadinejad, whom he calls "President Tom." A recent segment was titled: "Is Iran Pushing for Armageddon?" Alert viewers might ask, "Is Beck pushing for Armageddon?"
Another segment asked, "Are We Too PC Over Islam?" Beck certainly isn't. A day before his hour-long Netanyahu special, Beck hosted Congressman-elect Keith Ellison, a Muslim and moderate voice on the Middle East. "I have been nervous," said Beck, "about this interview with you because what I feel like saying is, 'Sir, prove to me that you are not working with our enemies.' "
This was vintage Beck, seeming to hold a Muslim-American accountable by suggesting that Muslims prove they're not traitors.
But who is holding CNN accountable for hiring such a blusterer?
And are we mistaken to laugh off TV pundits and "experts" who now blow smoke at Iran?
Three years ago, our country was driven to war in Iraq by a deceptive White House, abetted by blaring advocates echoing into every household and car radio–courtesy of a half-dozen media conglomerates.
And in the middle of that media propaganda onslaught was Glenn Beck. From his talk show distributed by radio giant Clear Channel, Beck sparked "pro-America" rallies across the country, some organized by Clear Channel stations. He wished violent death upon Michael Moore and Congressman Dennis Kucinich, and later called Cindy Sheehan a "big prostitute." All this was known to CNN when it hired Beck.
Today, the war-hawks are back, as Target Iraq has become Target Iran. And none of them–including Beck–are held to account for having been so deadly wrong when they urged on the last war.
But how can we hold media leaders accountable–those talking heads and "experts" and news executives who steamrolled us into war? How can we change the faces of those who speak for us in the media? We need a media consumers' revolt. We must raise our voices to demand balance–and dissenting hosts and experts–on cable news and PBS and NPR and elsewhere.
A good place to begin is with CNN and the Glenn Beck issue–urging that a progressive host (like Amy Goodman, Laura Flanders, Michael Eric Dyson or Jim Hightower) be added to the lineup. A good time to begin is now... before any new military adventure in Iran.