Although
the term "fake news" was not part of their lexicon, the Founding
Fathers understood quite well the concept. As I discussed last week in
"1st Amendment was written to protect fake news,"
highly partisan editors used the power of their presses to disseminate
their views with little concern over whether they were being truthful or
even upheld basic standards of decorum.
Newspapers,
pamphlets and broadsheets provided nourishment to both spark the American
Revolution and keep it alive. Doubtless King George thought the ongoing
lists of grievances colonial editors proclaimed against the crown were at
best overblown if not outright lies.
As Ken
Burns notes in his book , Infamous Scribblers: The Founding Fathers and
The Rowdy Beginnings of American Journalism:
Certainly
the war would not have begun as soon as it did without the encouragement of
the press. As New York Journal editor John Holt said on one occasion to Sam
Adams, "It was by means of News papers that we receiv'd & spread
the Notice of the tyrannical Designs formed against America, and kindled a
Spirit that has been sufficient to repel them.
And
almost certainly, the war would not have ended with an American victory in
a period of seven years from the first shot to signed treaty had not the
newspapers – and some pamphlets – constantly reminded the colonists of the
cause they shared, thereby inspiring the valor of soldiers and the patience
and support of civilians.
The
British knew it, too. The Boston Gazette was the only
paper on their hit list before the war began, but as battles raged and
patriot prose became ever more the tie that bound the colonies into a
makeshift nation, the British set upon print shops as they did stray
battalions of colonial militia. Sometimes, rather than wrecking the
supplies and equipment, they stole them and delivered them to Tory
publishers for more sympathetic use.
Criticism
from the press during the war wasn't just aimed at the crown. Editors,
pamphleteers and broadsheet publishers directed scorn at one another, at
the generals – George Washington in particular -- and the politicians. And
after the war politicians – even esteemed and venerated figures like
Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton – were
special targets. The media occasionally feigned impartiality, but it wasn't
unusual for an editor to use his publication for the sole purpose of
tearing down one politician or cause and venerating another. And yet even
with this history, the Founders believed a free press to be an essential
freedom.
In The
Founding Father's Guide to the Constitution, author Brion
McClannahan writes that the drafters spent little time debating most 1st
Amendment freedoms because they almost unanimously agreed they were all
essential for a free people. Still some saw not giving the idea a free
press a mention in the document as a grave oversight.
Arthur
Lee, writing as "Cincinnatus" to James Wilson in 1787 said,
"I have proved, sir, that not only some power is given in the
constitution to restrain, and even to subject the press, but that it is a
power totally unlimited; and may certainly annihilate the freedom the press
and convert it from being the palladium of liberty to become an engine of
imposition and tyranny. It is an easy step from restraining the press to
making it a place of the worst actions of government in so favorable a
light, that we may groan under tyranny and oppression without knowing from
whence it comes."
Richard
Henry Lee wrote that a "free press is the channel of communication as
to mercantile and public affairs; by means of it the people in large
countries ascertain each other's sentiments; are enabled to unite, and
become formidable to those rulers who adopt improper measures. Newspapers
may sometimes be the vehicles of abuse, and of many things not true; but
these are small inconveniences, in my mind, among many advantages."
In 1797,
Benjamin Franklin Bache – the grandson of Benjamin Franklin -- published a
pamphlet titled "Remarks Occasioned by the Late Conduct of
Mr. Washington." In that pamphlet, Bache stated, "[Washington
was] A Virginia planter, by no means that most eminent, a militia-officer
ignorant of war both in theory and useful practice, and a politician
certainly not of the first magnitude… He is but a man, and certainly not a
great man."
When
Washington decided that he would not run for a third term in 1796, and that
the vice president of his administration John Adams would run instead,
Bache's paper, the Aurora, approved. It claimed that Washington avoided
running for a third term "from a consciousness that he would not be
re-elected" and "to save himself the mortification and disgrace
of being superceded. (sic)"
Bache
praised Adams through the early part of his presidency. But that changed
after Adams gave his war speech to a special session of Congress in 1797.
Bache began to excoriate Adams for what he saw as Adams' increasing
likelihood to take the U.S. to war with Great Britain. So harsh were
Bache's attacks on Adams that the In June of 1798 Bache was arrested under
the Alien and Sedition Act – which had not yet passed Congress, much less
been signed into law – just 10 days after publishing a letter from the
French minister Talleyrand exposing the XYZ Affair.
Alexander
Hamilton used a newspaper, the Gazette of the United States to
prop himself up and excoriate his enemies – most notably Adams and later
Thomas Jefferson.
The Gazette
of the United States began publication on April 15, 1789, a
month before the Constitutional Convention. Editor John Fenno used the
publication to promote Washington and gave Hamilton a forum for promotion
of self and later promotion of a national bank, his politics
(Hamiltonianism, which was British mercantilism or crony capitalism), his
friends for political office and to denigrate his political enemies
andJefferson's actions as Secretary of State.
While he
was Secretary of the Treasury, Hamilton used the Gazette
as a house organ for the Treasury Department and in turn supported the
paper with money from the Treasury Department in the form of
"advertising." He also leaned on friends and business associates
to purchase ads in the paper in exchange for "favors" from the
government.
To
counter Hamiltonianism, which Jefferson rightly saw as an assault on
individual liberty, he – with James Madison's assistance – recruited
another well-known editor named Philip Freneau to publish a paper named the
National Gazette in 1791. Jefferson even put Freneau
on the State Department payroll to supplement his salary.
Over
most of the next decade the two papers went after one another and their
benefactors tooth and thong, with the National Gazette revealing an
adulterous affair between Hamilton and Maria Reynolds, and the Gazette
of the U.S. eventually printing stories of a relationship between
Jefferson and slave Sally Hemings.
The
national press has changed little over the years. Elites have used it to
start wars, tear down their enemies and prop up others. They've used it to
plunder and pillage.
Under
the George W. Bush regime, we learned that syndicated broadcast host
Armstrong Williams was paid $240,000 by the Department of Education to
promote the No Child Left Behind Act. In 2004, the Department of Health and
Human Services disseminated a propaganda video promoting the
Medicare prescription drug law that ended with the tagline "In
Washington, I'm Karen Ryan reporting." This video and several like it
were run by local television stations as news clips without disclosing its
source.
This was
blatant government propaganda that violated U.S. law, and it was shut down
by an inspector general.
Dozens
of members of the mainstream press are also members of the Council on Foreign
Relations, "the American Branch of a society which originated in
England, and which believes that national boundaries should be obliterated,
and a one-world rule established," as CFR member Carroll Quigley
himself wrote in his book Tragedy and Hope. So the CFR not
only controls the branches of government, it also controls the press.
And what
it doesn't control, the CIA, British MI6, Germany's BND and
Israel's Mossad do. German reporter Dr. Udo Ulfkotte told American Free
Press that "typically, intelligence agencies use 'unofficial covers' —
people working for the agency but not actually on its payroll as agents. It
is a broad, loose network of 'friends,' doing one another favors. Many are
lead journalists from numerous countries. This informality provides
plausible deniability for both sides, but it means an 'unofficial cover,'
as Ulfkotte became, is on his own if captured."
Reporters
get large sums of money, gifts, public recognition, significant career
advancement and open doors to the elite policymakers in the Trilateral
Commission (an arm of the CFR), Atlantik-Brücke, the Aspen Institute and
German Marshall Fund of the United States in exchange for information
obtained through spying. Those who don't cooperate are fired.
Utfkottee
also told RT: "We're talking about puppets on a string, journalists
who write or say whatever their masters tell them to say or write. If you
see how the mainstream media is reporting about the Ukraine conflict and if
you know what's really going on, you get the picture. The masters in the
background are pushing for war with Russia and western journalists are
putting on their helmets… I'm ashamed I was part of it. Unfortunately I
cannot reverse this. Although my superiors at the Frankfurter Allgemeine
Zeitung approved of what I did, I'm still to blame. But yes, to my
knowledge I am the first to accuse myself and to prove many others are to
blame."
Now
Donald Trump, with the almost universal acquiescence if not support of his
acolytes, is calling out "fake news" and threatening to shut down
or sanction news outlets. And leftists have long been advocates for
shutting down unapproved news outlets and continue to do so under the guise
of cutting off "Russian propaganda."
Both
truth and dissent – which may or may not be the same thing – are like
kryptonite to the power elite. The Founders understood this. They also
understood that propaganda was a powerful tool, but that it could be
overcome only by allowing a free press.
Those
who join in condemning "fake news" and seeking to shut down
certain news outlets on the premise that they may be printing 'fake news'
are advocating for their own slavery. If government can shut down one
outlet it deems fake, it can shut down them all. And then what are we left
with?
I agree
with Richard Henry Lee. "Newspapers (and online blogs and even Russian
bots) may sometimes be the vehicles of abuse, and of many things not true;
but these are small inconveniences, in my mind, among many
advantages."
Yours for the truth,
Bob Livingston
Editor, The Bob Livingston Letter™
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