Friday 4th of October 2024

the mainstream news organisations ignore the truth at their peril.....

 

It is frequently claimed that mainstream news organisations are in crisis and becoming ever more marginalised in the contemporary high-choice media environment. Such claims frequently conflate different challenges facing the industry, resulting in over-generalised claims about the prospects for established news brands. In this article, we identify four related crises: reach, resource, reputation and relevance.

 

Why mainstream news media still matter

[GUSNOTE: TO PROMOTE THE ESTABLISHMENT PROPAGANDA]

 

David DeaconDavid Smith, and Dominic Wring

 

Through the analysis of each, we show that many claims about the displacement of mainstream news are overstated, but that the interactive aspects of these crises are presenting particularly significant challenges for local news production and news organisations orientated towards impartiality norms.

Introduction

Doubts about the power of mainstream news media have long existed. They are at the core of free-market media theories that celebrate the sovereign will of the consumer in the media consumption mix. They are also evident in a ‘limited effects’ orthodoxy that emerged with experiments and voting surveys in the mid-20th century and which is still accepted as axiomatic in many quarters of political science. These views have attracted strong criticism but more recently a new scepticism about the power of mainstream news media has emerged that begins from a different premise. It proposes that the influence of legacy news providers is draining away due to the emergence of social media and other digital information networks.

This view is frequently expressed by leading industry insiders who look back with nostalgia to the days of a lower choice media environment. The ex-editor of UK The Sun newspaper, Kelvin MacKenzie (2020), recently lamented ‘the days of newspapers are drawing to a close and as their circulations collapse, so does their power’. Professional doom-mongering is also evident in the ways mainstream news media tend to report industry analysis of emerging trends in news consumption (e.g. ‘TikTok, TikTok. . . Time Running Out for the Old Style BBC’, The Sun, 23/1/2021: 15).

Compatible claims can be found within media research. For example, Habermas (2022) recently stated that ‘we need to get clear about the revolutionary character of the new media. For this is not just a matter of an expansion of the range of media previously available, but of a caesura in the development of the media in human history comparable to the introduction of printing’ (p. 158). While others may avoid such epochal declarations there has been a reordering of research priorities that suggests Habermas and others’ displacement thesis is gaining momentum. As a recent review of leading communication journals concluded: ‘Scholars seem to pay comparatively little attention to what is actually more stable, persistent, or durable over time’ (Driessens, 2023: 2). With regard to news production, Hallin et al. (2023: 5) note ‘a profound change in the sociology of news from seeing news as produced by organizations, institutions or a profession with clear boundaries, to seeing it as produced by networks of heterogenous actors’.

While aspects of this shift have merit, there are risks in under-estimating the durability and significance of legacy news institutions at the heart of contemporary information ecosystems. The news industries in most democracies have confronted significant challenges over recent decades. Some of these have been created by digitalisation while others have deeper roots, but these do not constitute an existential threat for the most well-established news brands. Rather than asking ‘Will legacy news organisations survive?’ we should be asking ‘How are the most powerful news organisations securing their economic survival and with what democratic implications?’ An important step in this re-focusing is to recognise that what is often portrayed as a singular crisis is actually a series of linked but distinctive challenges: reach, resource, reputation and relevance. From this vantage point it is easier to appreciate that these crises are not as terminal as some suppose.

The crisis of reach

Claims about the crisis of reach rest on assumptions that fewer people are accessing legacy news output and, those that are, are ageing. Plenty of evidence appears to support this prognosis. Long term declines in printed newspaper circulations have accelerated over recent years. For example, in the 5 years before the pandemic, press circulation declined by an estimated 33% in the UK, 23% in Germany, 36% in the US and 39% in Australia. Television news consumption has been more resilient, but it is claimed that viewing figures are buoyed up by the loyalty of older viewers. Assorted surveys appear to indicate people are increasingly gravitating towards social media for their news (e.g. Newman et al., 2023; Nordicom, 2023; Ofcom, 2023). There are, however, three reasons why it is mistaken to see this as a zero-sum displacement process.

First, what does it mean to state that people get their news from social media? Social media are platforms not publishers and this distinction has been crucial in enabling tech companies to avoid statutory regulation. Content curation has enormous significance and we do not deny the importance of algorithmic gatekeeping. Nevertheless, news platforming remains a distinct and different phenomenon to the opinion informing rationales of news publishing. We need to consider what sources of information are being accessed through social media platforms.

Second, there is a need to adopt an institutional perspective when considering the reach of legacy news organisations. They are brands that exist online and offline whose masthead value becomes clear when digital reach is factored in. According to a recent estimate, 29.1 million UK adults accessed at least one established national newspaper per day (Pamco, 2023). Furthermore, many leading news brands are internationalising their reach. In 2023, four UK providers (BBC, Mail, Sun and Guardian) were listed in the top 20 most popular news sites in the USA, collectively accounting for 10% of all the traffic to those listed (Majid, 2023). News consumption surveys also provide ample evidence about the enduring primacy of legacy media, notwithstanding their propensity to conflate publishers and platforms. The Reuters Institute shows that, across 49 national and regional contexts, a legacy news outlet was the top-ranking outlet for reach in 53% of cases in 2023 and in 11 cases the first 5 ranked outlets were all legacy news outlets (Newman et al., 2023).

Third, many legacy news providers command a significant presence across social media. From a publishers’ perspective, platforms are ‘unavoidable partners’ (Turvill, 2022) and news organisations distribute and adapt their content via them to drive people to their sites to generate advertising revenue and monetise vertically integrated publishing opportunities (Meese and Hurcombe, 2020). Recent estimates suggest that more than three quarters of online legacy news content is accessed via ‘side-door routes’ such as social media, search and mobile aggregators (Newman et al., 2023: 11). From a platform perspective, social media have long harvested and aggregated legacy news content to populate users’ newsfeeds, much to the frustration of mainstream media organisations and regulators who are now seeking ‘carriage fees’ via new remuneration packages. From a user perspective, following the social media accounts of recognised news sites is a popular choice and this additional exposure occurs serendipitously, as such engagement frequently involves sharing and commenting upon information originating from legacy news sources (Tran, 2022).

The most recent Reuters Institute global news analysis provides relevant insights that amplify this third point (Newman et al, 2023: 13–14). Respondents confirmed information from mainstream news outlets was the most prominent source they ‘pay attention to’ on Twitter and Facebook, and these sources retain prominence behind ‘personalities (including celebrities and influencers)’ on YouTube, Instagram and Snapchat. Legacy news sources are only relegated to third place on TikTok (a situation many established news organisations are addressing). Furthermore, it is important to appreciate that these are not mutually discrete categories: the perorations of Influencers, celebrities and ordinary people are often informed by legacy news content, representing a modern exemplar of the two-step flow of communication.

These factors show that claims about a growing crisis of reach across the legacy news industry are overstated. As a recent 18 nation survey of news performance concluded: ‘media reach remains high’ (Tomaz and Trappel, 2022: 26). That said, digital adaptation has diminished the public profile of some established news providers. Local publishers have particularly struggled to cultivate an online presence and major reductions in circulations can be taken as indicative of their declining voice (Cairncross, 2019). The reach of the US local press has, for instance, reduced by 40% among daily titles and 54% for weeklies since 2015, even with online circulations included (Matsa and Worden, 2022). The crisis of reach in the legacy news industry is therefore partial not universal. It is the national rather than regional news brands that are proving best positioned to consolidate their domestic presence in the new digital markets and even exploit emerging transnational opportunities. The retention of reach in the new digital mediascape, however, is not the same as the retention of revenue, which leads us to the second crisis confronting legacy news providers.

The crisis of resource

In the pre-digital era, high advertising revenues, limited competition and stable circulations combined to deliver generous operating margins. The online revolution obliterated this business model. Newspapers lost considerable advertising revenue to digital platforms, alongside reductions in circulation income. In the UK, latest figures show newspaper advertising revenue declined by 48% between 2011 and 2021, as social media advertising expenditure increased 264% between 2017 and 2022 (see Statista, 2022: 13 and 24). Similar patterns pertain elsewhere.

The reduction in advertising income and loss of circulation revenue has proven calamitous for local commercial news providers, particularly with the migration of classified advertising online. In Sweden, local newspapers are estimated to have lost 71% of advertising income between 2011 and 2021 (Nordicom, 2022) while UK revenues have declined 67% during the same period (Statista, 2022). In the USA there was a 74% fall between 2013 and 2020 (Matsa and Worden, 2022). Unsurprisingly, more than 2155 American newspapers closed between 2004 and 2020 (Abernathy, 2020) and newsroom employment reduced by 56% (Walker, 2021). In 2019, the merger of Gannett and GateHouse media groups consolidated ownership of 20% of all US newspapers: the most dramatic manifestation of a wider pattern of corporate acquisition and concentration of control. In this transformative cycle, the strength of the regional newsnet has weakened, alternatively producing ‘news deserts’ devoid of local titles (Abernathy, 2020), or ‘ghost newspapers’, with thin editorial resources and diminished community connectivity (LeBrun et al., 2022).

We must avoid, however, generalising from the dire conditions facing local newspapers as being representative of the challenges facing legacy news production per se. Television news for example has weathered the digital turn reasonably well. In the UK, television advertising revenue increased by 11% between 2004 and 2020 (WARC, 2023: 12). In the US, TV news employment rose by 5% between 2008 and 2020 (Walker, 2021). In terms of major newspaper publishers, there have even been some significant stories of financial recovery, notably The New York Times which recorded an annual revenue of $2.3 billion in 2022 (up 11.3% from the previous year) and an operating profit of $348 million largely through increased digital subscriptions (Robertson, 2023). In France, the online readership of Le Monde quadrupled between 2016 and 2021, with editorial staff on permanent contracts growing by 68% between 2010 and 2021 (Dreyfus and Fenoglio, 2022). In the UK, The Guardian has reported consecutive revenues of £250 million in the past 2 years (Guardian Media Group, 2022: 4). In Germany, Die Zeit increased its total sales by 28.4% between 2019 and 2022 to €291.1 million (Pimpl, 2023).

What the examples of recent legacy media success demonstrate is that they tend to involve the most prestigious providers; existential threats are borne by smaller outlets. Larger news organisations have begun to adapt through a range of methods: new subscription models, increased digital advertising revenues, diversifying into other news formats, placing high quality journalism behind paywalls and so on. Survival ultimately comes down to atypical capacities related to deep pockets and brand loyalties. This resilience contrasts with the fortunes of several heralded digital-only entrants. For example, Buzzfeed closed its news section in May 2023 after a decade of growth then decline. Ten days later, Vice Media, once valued at billions of dollars, filed for bankruptcy.

The financial uncertainty surrounding digital news has been further shaped by the battle between publishers and tech companies over remuneration packages for content. Google and Facebook may have launched various licencing deals, philanthropic initiatives and ad revenue sharing schemes since 2015 that have provided millions of dollars to news publishers, but collectively these have neither satisfied the publishers nor removed the prospect of government regulation (Turvill, 2022). This was starkly demonstrated in 2021 when Facebook temporarily blocked all news content on its Australian feeds in response to the Canberra government’s proposal to impose a ‘fairer’ negotiation process over the value of news content. This standoff represents just the preliminary skirmish in a tightening global regulatory environment. In August 2023, Facebook and Google started blocking news content from their Canadian platforms in response to the passing of the Canadian Online News Act, which comes in to force at the end of 2023.

These actions have been justified by claims that publishers need platforms more than is the reverse case, given news content accounts for a very low percentage of sharing on platforms whereas new sites gain a large percentage of traffic via these means (Bossio, 2021). Critics argue that this calculus ignores the qualitative significance of authoritative news content to these platforms and that blocking threats are a negotiating tactic rather than a serious long-term prospect. According to David Chavern of the News Media Alliance: ‘Quality news drives engagement and also acts as an answer to many misinformation issues. They want it and need it. . . but they also want to minimise any compensation they may have to pay for it’ (Turvill, 2022). Time will show how this standoff plays out but the claim that platforms need the respectability conferred by trusted news brands is striking when it is frequently asserted that the reputational stock of journalists and news producers has never been lower. We identify this as the third crisis facing the legacy news industry.

The crisis of reputation

There are two dimensions to the crisis of reputation: the growing intensity of attacks upon news organisations’ integrity by political sources and declining public trust in mainstream media provision.

There is nothing new about criticism of journalists by politicians. Complaints, rebuttals and censorship have been a cornerstone of robust news management for centuries. What has intensified over recent years is the tendency for these to extend beyond criticism of what news organisations dotowards an existential critique of what they are. These attacks are most evident in populist discourses, in which mainstream news organisations are excoriated as bastions of liberal elitism, at once demeaning and denying the interests of ordinary people. For many years such claims were marginalised, but electoral successes by bona fide populists and ‘strategic populist ventriloquism’ by established political actors for opportunistic purposes, have propelled these accusations into the political mainstream of many nations (Smith et al, 2021). Where such critiques gain leverage, it is striking that their principal targets tend to be serious news providers, in particular public service media. Intra-media competition has given further traction to these critiques, with powerful commercial operations often amplifying attacks on competitors along populist lines both for reasons of ideological congeniality and vested self-interest (e.g. the pursuit of media deregulation and privatisation).

Recent criticisms of the media have been emboldened by claims that public faith in legacy news providers has collapsed. This is the second component of the crisis of reputation and there seems to be plenty of evidence of mustering distrust. A recent 28 nation survey found ‘journalists’ to be among the least trusted professional groupings, alongside such motivated reasoners as ‘civil servants’, ‘bankers’, ‘business leaders’, ‘advertising executives’, ‘government ministers’ and ‘politicians generally’ (Ipsos, 2022). Other comparative research suggests that approximately only 4 in 10 people on average trust most news most of the time, with some nations recording double-digit declines in trust over the past 5 years (Newman et al., 2023). However, there is a complex picture behind these headline figures. The latter study also shows that levels of media trust are high in several democracies and in some cases have even increased over recent years (e.g. Germany, Greece, Sweden, the Netherlands and Finland). Public scepticism is also differentiated if we consider trust in individual sectors or outlets. For instance, trust in ‘news I use’ is consistently higher than ‘trust in news overall’, suggestive of a third person effect of scepticism about media that we don’t use (Gallup/Knight Foundation, 2020: 10). More generally, broadcast news, local news media and quality newspapers are consistently deemed far more trustworthy and reliable than other commercial news media, search functions, social media, video sites, messaging applications and online-only media (Jennings and Curtis, 2020; Ofcom, 2022; Park et al., 2022). There are, therefore, disconnections in the crisis of trust. Public confidence in legacy media sources is variable and, in many national contexts, in decline. Nevertheless, journalistic impartiality is still highly valued and news audiences are more likely to trust those news publishers that adhere to these normative values, despite political attacks (e.g. public service news providers) or material declines in their operational resources (local news publishers). However, just as some have suggested that citizens are disengaging from mainstream news, so a linked proposition has gained traction that powerful political sources no longer need to pursue media attention to influence public discourse. In short, it is claimed that the relevance of mainstream news media in the management of public opinion and debate is diminishing.

The crisis of relevance

The historical significance of legacy news outlets pivoted on their privileged access to domains of political, cultural and economic authority. Elites exchanged information with news organisations for publicity. The proliferation of new digital modalities has apparently disrupted, even fractured, this reciprocal arrangement. The concept of ‘disintermediation’ is deployed widely to describe the removal of intermediaries from supply chains but has obvious applicability within the field of media and communication research (Katz, 1988). In its cruder versions, it is assumed that we now live in a world in which powerful sources can side-line professional gatekeepers and communicate directly with citizens and consumers. This is said to have flattened and widened the communicative environment creating a new era of disintermediated democracy ripe for exploitation by populist actors. Donald Trump is often cited as an exemplar in chief (Morini, 2020). Renowned for his vituperative disdain for established news organisations, it has been suggested his garrulous and confrontational use of social media meant he ‘did not have to rely on media reporting and serious journalism – he was his own journalist’ (Wodak, 2022: 793).

These claims about Trump among others represent an oversimplification of contemporary conditions. Just as digitalisation has redefined rather than removed mediators in e-commerce (Wigand, 2020), so we need to appreciate how mediation has changed rather than vanished from the new information ecosystem. There is no question that new digital affordances have transformed political communication, with social media now integral to any form of promotionalism. Even so, legacy media still play a key role in channelling public discourse and widening as well as accelerating the circulation of content via digital networks. This was manifestly evident during Trump’s presidency, whereby his messaging was as much designed to engage journalists working in the Washington belt way as it was to mobilise disaffected citizens in nearby ‘rust belt’ states. Statistical comparison between Trump’s formal media engagements during his term and his five presidential predecessors reveal the main differences occurred in the nature of the interactions rather than their number (Kumar, 2020).

Trump consistently favoured informal exchanges over policy speeches and announcements, believing these to be highly effective for shaping the wider media agenda. In turn, mainstream news coverage of Trump’s unfiltered use of social media and unscripted interactions increased the reach of his messaging, oxygenated controversies, burnished his insurgent credentials, fuelled allegations of media victimisation, and diverted journalistic attention away from problematic opponents and policy terrains (Klein, 2018). If the concept of disintermediation has relevance to Trump’s tenure it is more appropriately applied to describe how his combative messaging signalled a new form of discursive governance that bypassed policy consultants, communication specialists, experts, executive agencies and media officers (Şahin et al., 2021).

A further challenge to the disintermediation argument is the significant continued investment governments and legislatures make in centralising news media relations in their communication operations. The most telling example of this is the retention of long-established news corps arrangements with membership typically governed by established accreditation procedures. Although these have been adapted to permit the entry of new digital news-providers, this has had only a marginal impact on the profile of these collectives For example, only 15% of all media organisations accredited to the EU press corps between 2002 and 2022 were online-only news outlets (Council of the European Union, 2022: 34). Table 1 compares which news organisations within five leading Anglosphere democracies enjoy official sanctioned access to their respective legislatures. In all contexts, media outlets founded in the pre-digital era command greatest organisational access and numerical presence.

 

READ MORE:

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/01634437241228765

 

UNTIL JULIAN ASSANGE IS FREE, THE MEDIOCRE MASS MEDIA DE MIERDA WILL BE CRAP....

 

 

conflicted billionaires....

Eric Zuesse (blogs at https://theduran.com/author/eric-zuesse/)

Here’s how that works, regarding Israel’s plan to ethnically cleanse the Gazans out of Gaza (the propaganda-phrase for this is that it’s against only Hamas instead of against Gazans):

Until now, Biden has solidly backed (while saying that it must be humanely done) Israel’s plan to ethnically cleanse Gazans out of Gaza. However, because there now are many college students protesting publicly against that Israel-U.S. ethnic cleansing operation, and because Israel might become charged by the International Criminal Court for genocide before the November 5th U.S. elections, U.S. President Biden recently reversed himself on that, and threatens Israel’s Government with a cut-off of ammunition and weapons if Israel will now invade Raffah to complete the operation. Some of Biden’s billionaire donors are demanding him to do that (reverse his course on this matter), but others of them (especially ethnocentrically Jewish ones who live in the U.S. but are loyal to Israel’s Government instead of to America) demand that he not reverse his course but allow the ethnic cleansing to be completed — Gazans to be eliminated from Gaza.

Here are highlights from the best news-reports thus far about both sides of this split among America’s Democratic Party billionaires, over this issue of completing (or not) the elimination of the Gazans:

On 5 May 2024, Politico headlined “Pro-Palestinian protesters are backed by a surprising source: Biden’s biggest donors”, and reported that

The donors include some of the biggest names in Democratic circles: Soros, Rockefeller and Pritzker, according to a POLITICO analysis.

Two of the organizers supporting the protests at Columbia University and on other campuses are Jewish Voice for Peace and IfNotNow. Both are supported by the Tides Foundation, which is seeded by Democratic megadonor George Soros and was previously supported by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. It in turn supports numerous small nonprofits that work for social change.

Soros declined to comment, but a spokesperson with the Open Society Foundations, of which Soros is the founder and chairman, said in a statement that it “has funded a broad spectrum of US groups that have advocated for the rights of Palestinians and Israelis and for peaceful resolution to the conflict in Israel.” The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which has previously funded the Tides Foundation and other groups, said it no longer has active grants to Tides. It also does not support Jewish Voice for Peace or IfNotNow.

Another notable Democratic donor whose philanthropy has helped fund the protest movement is David Rockefeller Jr., who sits on the board of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund. It has given nearly $500,000 directly to Jewish Voice for Peace, which explicitly describes itself as anti-Zionist, over the past five years. Rockefeller Brothers has separately given grants to both the Tides Foundation and the Tides Center.

Several other groups involved in pro-Palestinian protests are backed by a foundation funded by Susan and Nick Pritzker, heir to the Hyatt Hotel empire — and supporters of Biden and numerous Democratic campaigns, including $6,600 to the Biden Victory Fund a few months ago and more than $300,000 during the 2020 campaign. …

On 10 May 2024, Axios headlined “Biden’s big donors fume over Israel criticism”, and opened with a screen-shot of an email message that had been sent to President Biden by another of his top billionaire backers, Haim Saban (I have retyped it here exactly as it was shown to be in that screen-shot, though I italicize it here):

Hi Steve and Anita

Can you pls share with the President

Dear President Biden.

WE,the US, as you stated numerous times, believe that Hamas should be defeated.

WE,the US,inthis case YOU Mr President ,have  decided to stop sending munitions to Israel to achieve the goal that WE/YOU have set up for Israel and ourselves.

Even beyond Israel,this sends a terrible message to our allies in the region ,and beyond,that, we can flip from doing the right ting to bending to political pressure.

Let’s not forget that there are more Jewish voters, who care about Israel,than Muslims voters that care about Hamas.

Bad,,,Bad,,,Bad….decision,on all levels

Pls reconsider.

Thank you.With respect ,

Haim

Wikipedia’s article on Saban gives his background, having been “‘born in AlexandriaEgypt, to an Egyptian-Jewish family. In 1956, the Saban family immigrated to Israel, along with most of the Egyptian Jewish community.[1]’” He became a pop-music performer and producer, and then moved to  America in 1983, where he rapidly expanded his business internationally:

Fox Family

In 1996, News Corporation‘s Fox Children’s Network and Haim Saban’s Saban Entertainment merged to form Fox Kids Worldwide.[13][14][15][16] Also in that year, the company purchased the C&D library from Jean Chalopin.[17]

With the growing shift in children’s television from over-the-air programming blocks to cable channels such as Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon, the combined entity (half-owned by Haim Saban himself) sought to launch a competitor that would carry programming from the popular Fox Kids lineup. Eying The Family Channel, News Corp. made an offer to purchase IFE through the Fox Kids Worldwide division in 1997.[18]

On July 23, 2001, Saban announced that he and News Corporation would sell Fox Family Worldwide Inc for $5.3 billion to The Walt Disney Company.[19] and on October 24, 2001, the sale was completed[11] and the network was renamed ABC Family.[9] Saban profited about $1.6 billion from this sale.[9]

ProSiebenSat.1

In August 2003, Saban led a consortium, which acquired a controlling stake in the straggling ProSiebenSat.1 Media group from the Kirch Media Group, the then-bankrupt German media conglomerate.[20]

ProSiebenSat.1, is Germany’s largest commercial television broadcasting company, which owns five German TV channels, including ProSieben and SAT.1, two of the top three stations in Germany. Collectively, ProSiebenSat.1’s channels represented approximately 45% of the German TV advertising market at the time. Saban’s ProSiebenSat.1 acquisition was the first time a foreigner took control of a significant German Media company.[9]

Saban oversaw a successful business turnaround of ProSiebenSat.1, recruiting former business rivals, ex-BSkyB chief executive Tony Ball and former BBC Director-General Greg Dyke to the board of the company.[21]

In March 2007, Saban Capital Group and the consortium sold its controlling interest in ProSiebenSat.1 to KKR and Permira, for 22.40 euros a share after originally paying 7.5 euros per share in 2003.[22]

Univision

On June 27, 2006, Saban Capital Group led a group of investors bidding for Univision Communications, the largest Spanish-language media company in the United States.[23] Other investors in the Saban-led group were Texas Pacific Group of Fort Worth, Texas and Thomas H. Lee Partners. The group was successful in acquiring Univision with a bid valued at $13.7 billion (USD),[24] but sold to private equity firm Searchlight Capital Partners and ex-Viacom finance head Wade Davis in 2020.[25][26]

Saban Music Group

In 2019, Saban announced that he had formed the Saban Music Group backed by $500 million of his own capital. The company will focus on global artists, particular Latin American, tapping new artists and acquiring existing businesses.[27]

Views and opinions

Saban, a long-time supporter and donor of many pro-Jewish and Israel causes, has stated his main goal in multiple interviews: “I’m a one-issue guy, and my issue is Israel.”[28][6]

Saban became involved in politics in the mid-1990s when he felt that support for Israel was slipping in the United States.[8] He says his views have shifted over the years:[1]

I used to be a real leftist. I remember Arik Sharon [the leader of Israel’s right-wing Likud Party] coming here, to my house, a few months before Camp David, when he was still leader of the opposition. He told me there would be no deal because [Yassir] Arafat would not sign. I told myself that there was nothing to be done—these right-wingers were simply insane. I had no doubt that there would be a deal and the problems would be resolved. History proved that Sharon was right and I was wrong. In matters relating to security, that moved me to the right. Very far to the right…When there is a terrorist attack, I am [Avigdor] Lieberman. Sometimes to the right of Lieberman. For two days I really love Lieberman. But afterward I come back to reality. Look, I don’t see a solution today.[1]

Saban has been a consistent donor to the United States Democratic Partyaccording to his mandatory Federal Election Commission filings. Mother Jones, in an analysis of the major donors to the campaigns of 1998 election cycle, ranked Saban 155th among individual donors.[29]

My guess is that Biden won’t be swayed by Saban and the other ethnocentric (commonly called “Zionist”) Jews such as Miriam Adelson (who has been a huge donor to Donald Trump), because of the likely decline of support for Israel among the American public as the genocide charges increasingly come into news-reporting even in America.

But what is important here is that this is a conflict between Democratic Party billionaires, over what U.S. foreign policy toward Israel ought to be. The public don’t come into the game until they show in the voting which group of billionaires have won on the Democratic Party side.

On the Republican Party side, it’s the same situation. On each of the two sides, only the billionaires have enough money so as to control the public on its side. And the result will be the winner of this intra-aristocratic contest, and the new Presidency that will start in 2025.

Furthermore: these are international and not merely American billionaires, who, each one of them, actively participates (via his/her ‘news’-media, ‘non-profits’ — “NGOs” such as ‘charities’ and think tanks) in shaping/controlling public opinions throughout the U.S. empire, not merely in the United States. They compete against each other to do this — to win the political competition amongst themselves.

Does this mean that there is democracy within the empire? Of course not, there can’t even possibly be any democracy within an empire, because throughout the empire the same international policies must be adhered to — the policies that the imperial country (in this case, the U.S. Government) pushes for, on the basis of all of the imperial nation’s billionaires, all of whom are what are called “neoconservatives” (actually, Rhodesists, a secret movement that began in 1877) in their foreign policies, but some of them are Democratic Party neoconservatives, and the others are Republican Party neoconservatives. They also all are neoliberals in their domestic policies, which means they place private-property rights above and beyond any other rights (such as any rights that the public might have to health care, education, etc. — and on that basis billionaires favor privatizing such “social services” so that they can profit from them).

Israel-policy is creating a fissure within the American ruling class. This is being felt throughout the empire. For example: Saban was one of the top media-owners shaping public opinion in Germany. It isn’t just a domestic Republican-versus-Democrat thing. (When Saban sold ProSiebenSat.1 to Henry Kravis’s KKR in 2007, he was selling it to one of the chief funders of the Bilderberg Group, the super-secretive private club that two Rhodesists, Prince Bernhard and David Rockefeller, organized in 1954, in order to bring together periodically representatives of billionaires throughout the empire so as to coordinate geostrategy for its NATO and other organizations. So: KKR became a major player in German politics. But, then, in 2019, the Saban-formed ProSiebenSat1 had a big change: Silvio Berlusconi’s Mediaset purchased control of it from KKR. Berlusconi was hated by the Bilderburgers as being insufficiently controllable.) 

There are fissures within every aristocracy. No social organization is monolithic. Even Nazi Germany and Stalin’s Soviet Union weren’t. America today certainly isn’t. The fissures within the U.S. ruling class — America’s billionaires — are clear. It’s now even possible that the U.S. might abandon its colony Israel. It’s not needed in the empire’s long-term wars to conquer Russia and China, and is now certain to become an enormous black mark upon the U.S. international brand. America’s billionaires won’t like that, at all. Democrat Party ones won’t, and Republican Party ones won’t. The few who are unconcerned about the U.S. brand (such as Saban) will probably not be rich enough to counterbalance the other ones, who do care about it.

—————

Investigative historian Eric Zuesse’s latest book, AMERICA’S EMPIRE OF EVIL: Hitler’s Posthumous Victory, and Why the Social Sciences Need to Change, is about how America took over the world after World War II in order to enslave it to U.S.-and-allied billionaires. Their cartels extract the world’s wealth by control of not only their ‘news’ media but the social ‘sciences’ — duping the public.

https://theduran.com/the-political-difference-between-billionaires-and-everybody-else/

 

 

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impeach biden?....

blaming tucker....

Previously, Newsweek and several other outlets reported that Tucker Carlson had launched his own show on Russian television.

Tucker Carlson has refuted reports that he has become a host on Russian television.

This claim was unequivocally false, the journalist told Sputnik.

 

 

“By claiming I work for a foreign government, Newsweek is trying to justify a FISA warrant that would allow the Biden administration to continue to spy on me. It’s disgusting,” he said.

 

❗️EXCLUSIVE❗️

Tucker Carlson refutes reports that he has become a host on Russian television

Newsweek and several other outlets reported yesterday that Tucker Carlson launched his own show on Russian television, a claim that was then widely picked up by users on social media.… pic.twitter.com/dbf0tejMMH

— Sputnik (@SputnikInt) May 22, 2024

Similarly, in a post on X, Neil Patel, the CEO of the Tucker Carlson Network, said the network “has not done any deals with state media in any country." He added that "Whoever is currently pretending to be the old Newsweek brand would know that if they had checked with us before printing like news companies are supposed to do.”

Tucker Carlson’s representative Arthur Schwartz also dismissed such reports as "pure nonsense" in an an email to Forbes.

Earlier, Newsweek reported that the US journalist - a former Fox News anchor - was launching his own show on Russian state TV. The unsubstantiated claim that was then widely picked up by users on social media.

Carlson was fired by Fox News in April 2023 after the outspoken anchor spent over two years using his popular prime time “Tucker Carlson Tonight” show to pillory the Biden administration, the military-industrial complex, and US warmongering. He has since launched a new media company and interview show on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter.

Earlier in the year, Carlson said that his lawyers warned him that the United States could arrest him on sanctions violations for conducting an interview with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow. However, the pundit said he was happy to face such a risk and rejected the premise of such charges.

On February 9, the American journalist released his interview with Putin, which garnered over 100 million views in 24 hours on X. The long-time TV news anchor said at the time that he organized the interview because he felt it was his journalistic duty to inform Americans about the realities of the conflict in Ukraine and its consequences.

Needless to say, the hypocrisy of Western journalists and legacy media was laid bare in the attack they launched at Tucker Carlson, accusing him as a traitor after the sit-down with the Russian leader.

Furthermore, in a series of clips posted to his internet channel about his experiences from his eight-day stay in Russia, Carlson attempted to debunk myths and stereotypes about Russia and life in the capital in the midst of the West’s sanctions ‘total war’.

 

https://sputnikglobe.com/20240522/tucker-carlson-refutes-reports-he-is-host-on-russian-television-1118576535.html

 

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