A prep course for the month-long World Cup soccer tournament, a worldwide pheno
Download 9.93 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
offended by a magazine that celebrated white culture and heritage with the ferv or that Ebony celebrates African American culture . A Congressional White Caucus in Washington ? No way ! Are blacks guilty of a double standard with regard to racism ? `` First of all , the Congressional Black Caucus has never disallowed w hite members we have approximately 26 associate members who are white , '' said Rep. Kweisi Mfume , the caucus chairman , when I put my question to him . `` Sec ond , the caucus exists to leverage opportunity and enforce change for black peo ple . In the absence of a civil rights movement , the caucus is one of the most important vehicles for change that blacks have . '' Mfume said that most whites either are unaware of the continued disparities between blacks and whites in thi s society or they don't care . `` There is a feeling in the larger community tha t ` We 've done enough for blacks . We don't want to do any more , '' said Mfume . `` But , in fact , every major indicator suggests that the disparities are ev en more stark than they were 30 years ago . I hope and pray for a time when we w illn't need a black caucus , '' he said . `` But realistically , I don't expect that time to occur in my lifetime . '' John H. Johnson , the publisher and chief executive officer of Ebony Magazine , makes a similar point : `` Until the two races are meshed or merged or integrated , you will need both ` white ' and ` bl ack ' media , '' Johnson said in a 1984 interview , provided by his office . `` If we somehow reach a point in this country when race will no longer be a factor , then Ebony will simply serve all the people . In fact , Ebony would be a grea ter success than its white competitors , simply because black people have more e xperience studying and meeting the needs of whites than white people have had st udying and meeting the needs of blacks . '' Seymour conceded he was unaware of m any of the continued problems that make blacks feel they have to organize for ch ange . And , I conceded something too : Maybe blacks are too quick to cry `` rac ism '' whenever whites question our goals . Maybe both sides must learn to liste n .
WASHINGTON Journalists and the corporations that employ them are worriers . We worry about the economic survival of the news business , about the `` meaning '' and social utility of what we do , about our ethics and status and about our `` relevance '' to a public that seems increasingly bored and turned off by the `` news '' as we have traditionally defined it . Howard Kurtz , the media critic o f The Washington Post , published a book last year in which he said , `` The sme ll of death permeates the newspaper business . '' A headline in the trade magazi ne Editor & Publisher last week notes the trend line on our health chart : `` Ne wspaper Circulations Plummet . '' The journalistic outlook at the television net works is not sunny , either . As audiences for news programming decline , some T V executives wonder aloud whether it makes sense to keep the network news divisi ons alive . Advertisers are deserting us for `` new media '' serving the special interests of a fragmented , narcissistic society `` the culture of contentment '' in which consumption is the dominant theme . Our young people , Jay Rosen wri tes , `` have available to them not only a substitute source of news , but a kin d of substitute universe , an alternative culture that is centered around televi sion but is , in fact , more pervasive . This `` everywhere culture ' the cultur e of popular music , Hollywood , MTV , `` Entertainment Tonight ' , People magaz ine generates its own notion of currency .. . ( and ) is loosening the very grou nd on which the newspaper stands . '' Half of these people 18 to 24 never read a newspaper , and great numbers never watch or hear the evening news . If `` citi zenship '' is defined as active and informed participation in public affairs and the political process , they the young in particular have become noncitizens al ong with millions of their elders . While our politicians and editorial writers preach to the world about the joys and successes of democracy , half the America n electorate ignores our presidential elections . Turnouts in off-year congressi onal elections and in local elections of all kinds are an international joke . T here are close relationships among the decline of citizenship in this country , the decline of interest in traditional definitions of `` news '' and the decline of journalism 's large role in the life of the society . Rosen notes correctly that , `` To pick up a newspaper and scan the front page is to feel yourself a m ember of a world in which politics and public affairs matter . '' That has been true since the late 18th century , and journalists have assumed ever since that our intense interest-some might say obsession-in these affairs is shared by the general population . However valid that assumption may have been in some golden era past , it obviously has little validity today . Vast numbers of Americans ar e not only turned off by politics and public affairs , as their lack of particip ation and their lack of interest in political journals demonstrates ; they have become actively hostile . E. J. Dionne , an editorial writer at The Post , wrote a book on the subject a couple of years ago : `` Why Americans Hate Politics . '' The corruption of government at all levels by lobbyists and special interests of every description is a factor . The frequent incompetence and lavish waste o f government bureaucracies and officials is another . The character flaws of pol itical leaders and candidates , the cliches and psychobabble that pass for polit ical discourse , the malign influence of political consultants who brainwash and mislead us with deceptive and irrelevant political advertising contribute signi ficantly to the public 's alienation . So does the incompetence and superficiali ty of the press . Post political columnist David Broder has identified a central problem . `` Citizens , '' he has said , `` now perceive the press as part of t he insider 's world. .. . We have , through the elevation of salaries , prestige , education and so on among reporters distanced ourselves to a remarkable degre e from the people we are writing for and have become much , much closer to the p eople ( experts and politicians ) we are writing about . '' Our professional liv es are tied up with ( and greatly dependent on ) the political elite government officials , lobbyists , bureaucrats , consultants , experts and academicians . W e socialize with them , talk the same language , have the same interests , live in the same neighborhoods , share lifestyles , schools for our children , clubs and poker games . It is no wonder that the pictures of the world we present to t he newspaper audience and the spin we put on them are , in the strict meaning of the word , the `` propaganda '' of the ruling class . Tom Koch , a journalist a nd author of books on journalism , makes the same point : `` For twenty years co ntent analysis studies have shown that between 70 and 90 percent of our content is at heart the voice of officials and their experts , translated by reporters i nto supposedly `` objective ' news . People don't trust us anymore .. . because the way we quote and attribute and build factoids as if they were truth is a lie . And folks are catching on . '' They not only do not freely give us their trus t , they often do not understand us at all . We write in the argots of politics and the bureaucracy and the academic world , which is as comprehensible and usef ul to the masses as the journals of quasars , black holes and quantum physics . Because of uncertain prospects in the 21st century , there is a lot of talk in t he press these days about reinventing ourselves through the marvels of technolog y electronics and the `` information highway , '' for example . Others see a sol ution in design and artistic innovation . But until we re-examine and change the way we conceive of `` news , '' until we redefine the `` reliable source '' and until we learn to use a language that is accessible and meaningful to the apath etic public out there , neither the press nor our political system will be cured of its problems . D-day 's success on June 6 , 1944 , together with a Russian victory at Stalingr ad 15 months earlier , assured that Nazi ambitions for European and world domina tion would not be realized . But when the common enemy collapsed in 1945 , what British Prime Minister Winston Churchill called the Grand Alliance swiftly broke apart , giving way to Cold War between the Soviet Union and the United States . Many Americans were distressed when their hope for a peaceful postwar world fai led to materialize , but hard-nosed observers recognized the new international a lignment that emerged between 1946 and 1950 as a classic example of balance-of-p ower politics . This was exactly what wartime presidents Woodrow Wilson and Fran klin D. Roosevelt had hoped to banish from the Earth by making international law enforceable . How ironic , then , that the United States found itself unexpecte dly engaged in a ruthless game of power politics instead of relying on internati onal law . Does half a century 's experience since the shocking international re alignments of the 1940s make us any wiser ? It is hard to tell . Hopes and fears about international affairs are less intense than they were 50 years ago . But the decay of Cold War alignments and motivations , like the decay of the wartime alliance , puts the future up for grabs in an unusually drastic way . Perhaps t he peace-keepers of the United Nations can really keep the lid on international conflicts if the great powers cooperate . Perhaps a new balance of power among r ival states will emerge to replace the Cold War antagonism . Or perhaps changes within the leading states of the Earth have altered public life so much that old -fashioned balance-of-power politics has begun to decay not because peace has br oken out , but because other kinds of conflict have begun to limit and distract attention from intergovernmental rivalries . As far as I can tell , all three of these alternatives which find their origin at least in part in the victory of D -day are live options . U.N. peacekeeping has not been uniformly successful , bu t as long as the great powers refrain from taking sides , local wars remain loca l and sending in outsiders to keep combatants apart might become habitual . On t he other hand , if the great powers quarrel , they can easily form rival blocs a nd alliances as aforetime . Radically different lineups seem possible . The clas sic balance-of-power response to the eclipse of the Soviet Union would require t he American Cold War alliance to split up . Fortress America would then confront Festung Europa under German leadership once again , with a new Japanese Co-pros perity Sphere in Asia to challenge both . Alternatively , the United States and Japan might ally against China ; Russia might join or oppose western Europe ; In dia might join or oppose China in Asia , and so on . Permutations are innumerabl e , but according to this view , the balance of power is immortal , even if unst able , and compels statesmen to form and break alliances willy-nilly . The third alternative is more interesting to think about . Balance of power is only as pe rmanent as the states and governments that play the game . But states exist only in the minds of the people they govern , and if enough people feel themselves a lienated , governmental power can dissolve with quite surprising rapidity . This was what happened to the USSR . Other states may face similar difficulties in t he future . Subnational identities on the one hand and transnational connections on the other have modified national politics already . A tangle of overlapping rights , duties , obligations and beliefs , if they increase in the future as th ey have been gaining power of late , might weaken national identities and restri ct the sovereign power of existing governments far more than they are restricted today . None of these scenarios is likely to bring peace to the world . But the way people organize themselves into groups and distribute loyalty among differe nt and often overlapping groups makes all the difference . Divided loyalties and plural identities are incompatible with total war and marginalize balance-of-po wer politics . Perhaps divided loyalties have already multiplied to such a point that international behavior is changing in ways no one imagined in 1944 and no one yet fully understands 50 years after the D-day victory that prepared the gro und to make it possible . It 's become something of a commonplace to say that foreign policy should not b e governed by television coverage . The most prominent example of the alleged ab use , probably , is the American intervention in Somalia . In late 1992 , the pu blic witnessed almost daily television coverage of hundreds of thousands of Soma lis starving to death , and in January President Bush launched Operation Restore Hope , whose purpose was to deliver food and other supplies to the afflicted . No doubt the Bush administration 's reasons for intervening were complex . It is clear , however , that it never would have taken place without public acceptanc e , and that public acceptance was primed by the television coverage . Naturally , the action was attended by debate regarding the purposes and justifications f or intervention generally in the post-Cold War period . Some argued that any hum an catastrophe on the scale of the Somali famine was justification enough for in ternational intervention . Others feared that intervention for humanitarian reas ons would quickly lead to political and military involvement , which would prove both interminable and self-defeating . This warning seemed especially pertinent inasmuch as the famine , initially caused by drought , was greatly extended and protracted by a civil war in which control of food had become a weapon among th e contending sides . By the time of the American intervention , food sent by the outside world was piling up in warehouses in Somali ports . Later developments seemed to confirm the fear of involvement . In October of 1993 , 18 American sol diers were killed in a battle with the forces of the Somali warlord Mohammed Far ah Aidid , and the corpse of one was dragged through the streets . The televisio n images of this event proved as powerful in pulling U.S. troops out of Somalia as the earlier pictures of starving Somalis had been in pushing the troops in . Within days , President Clinton vowed to withdraw U.S. soldiers in six months . They are now gone . This sequence of events left in its wake a widespread belief that international intervention inspired by horror at faraway events cannot lea d to anything good : A frivolous public , it seemed , had first lightly demanded intervention and then abruptly abandoned support for it at the first sign of ad versity . The Somalia intervention became a byword for futility . That character ization is especially potent in the current debate over intervention in the geno cidal proceedings in Rwanda , where government forces have massacred some hundre ds of thousands of members of the Tutsi tribe , and Tutsis have retaliated , tho ugh on a smaller scale . A recent editorial in The New York Times , for example , warned that intervention in Rwanda might turn out to be a repeat of the `` deb acle '' in Somalia . This characterization , however , overlooks certain facts o f epic proportion . The most important is that hundreds of thousands of lives we re saved . The U.S. . Agency for International Development estimates the number at 500,000 , and Oxfam America , the independent relief organization , confirms the figure . Peggy Connolly , who traveled widely in Somalia for Oxfam America i n the spring , recently told me she found nearly universal gratitude among Somal is for the international intervention , and for the crucial American role in par ticular . Farming has resumed , she found , and communities are rebuilding . `` And the civil war is over , '' she added though she agrees with other observers that the long-term political future of the country is worrisome . There may be s ound reasons for the international community 's reluctance to intervene in Rwand a , but an alleged `` debacle '' in Somalia should not be among them . Nor , in this case , did television coverage inspire bad policy . The public saw starving people , and wanted something done . Something was done , and hundreds of thous ands lived who otherwise would have died . Let 's say you 're an anti-abortion protester . You think abortion is murder . And so , you believe you must do whatever you can to stop it . As a pro-life adv ocate , however , you don't believe in violence . In fact , you completely disav ow the hard-core radical fringe of the movement , the kind of people who killed Dr. David Gunn and firebomb abortion clinics . You don't believe you can be pro- life and pro-violence at the same time . But you 'll do anything short of violen ce . Because your conscience willn't allow you to do anything less . So , as you try to stop people from going inside abortion clinics , you hold true to your b eliefs in nonviolence . You practice civil disobedience , in the tradition of Ga ndhi and Martin Luther King Jr. . You sit in front of a doorway , and you shall not be moved . It 's against the law , of course , just like the civil rights si t-ins were . But you 're prepared to be dragged away by police . You 're willing to spend a few days in jail and pay a fine , if you must . But now the cost has gone up . Now , the president has signed into law a bill that makes it a federa l crime to blockade an abortion clinic or related medical facilities . Violent o ffenders can face up to $ 100,000 in fines and a year in prison for a first conv iction . You wonder why they single out violent pro-life advocates . Aren't viol ent acts already illegal ? You hear the oft-quoted numbers that since 1977 , the re have been 36 bombings of clinics , 81 cases of arson , 131 death threats , 84 assaults , two kidnappings but you don't understand what they have to do with y ou . The person accused of killing Gunn is in jail . Firebombers are in jail . Y ou never firebombed or threatened anyone . What you do is plead with women who a re going inside for an abortion to reconsider . Some call that intimidation . Yo u say it 's an attempt to persuade a woman to do the right thing . Some people c all you a zealot . Maybe you are . Surely , it 's not against the law to be a ze alot in America . But now nonviolent offenders , the people who participate in s it-ins blocking the entrance to a clinic and maybe even those who simply kneel a nd pray in front of the entrance , face a prison term of up to six months and a fine as high as $ 10,000 for a first conviction . An additional conviction can b ring 18 months and $ 25,000 in fines . What do you do now ? The people who write the law say they 're not after lawful protesters . The people who write the law say you can still picket and speak out . You wonder , though , about the risks . Who knows how the law will be enforced ? Who can say exactly where picketing e nds and blockading begins ? Isn't this what they call a `` chilling effect '' on protest ? These days , you feel like you have little recourse other than protes t . The courts continue to rule against your cause . Most of the state legislatu res have gone over to the pro-choice side . Bill Clinton has brought RU-486 , th e abortion pill , to this country . You understand you hold a minority position . But you figure one of the great things about America is that the Constitution protects the right to hold unpopular positions . Now you don't know . You wonder how Clinton , a former professor of constitutional law , doesn't see this law a s a First-Amendment problem . You wonder how the ACLU , the dogged defenders of the First Amendment , the same guys who defend the rights of Nazis to march , ca n support this law . You wonder what would have happened if , 30 or 40 years ago , Congress had passed a law aimed specifically at civil rights protesters who s at-in at lunch counters . How many sit-ins would there have been with a six-mont h jail term as a result ? You wonder what would have happened if they 'd passed such a law during the Vietnam era , singling out protesters who sat down in fron t of draft boards . Actually , you don't wonder . You know exactly what 's going on . They say they want to stop the violence at abortion clinics . You know tha t 's a phony issue . Existing laws handle that problem . What the people who bac k the law want is to stop you . What they want is for you and the entire anti-ab ortion protest movement to just go away . And if , in the process , the liberal establishment chooses to disregard and even endanger principles it once fought s o hard to win , that 's just the price we 'll all have to pay . About the time a home furnishings trend shows up on a bathmat , it 's washed up . So it is with heavenly objects . Not that you 'd know it by scanning the stor es and catalogs : Suns , moons and stars still fill the shelves and cover multip le pages . But such is the nature of these trends just when they 're everywhere , they 're goners . `` It is post-peak , '' pronounces Raymond Berger , vice pre sident of Plummer-McCutcheon , which gave two entire pages to the celestial them e in its most recent catalog . During the decorating-down years ( on average , p eople replace furniture only 1 times during their lifetimes , designer Vladimir Kagan says ) , we freshen our nests with small decorative items . They are to fu Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling