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View Full Version : Ron Paul and Censorship in the Media - an editorial




arkitekt
11-13-2007, 09:28 PM
Chances are good that those of you who are reading this have been paying attention to the brewing race for the 2008 presidential election. If we also take into account those who have not been paying attention, we can effectively separate the population of the United States into three disparate camps: Those who love to hear, those who are sick of hearing, and those who have never heard – of Ron Paul.

It can be said that this is perfectly normal, given the election is still, at the time of writing, barely under a year away. Consider, though, that the primaries begin in merely 50 days or so, and that this election cycle has been gaining steam for months now, and the argument falls apart. It can also be said that due to his low scores in the polls, Ron Paul simply is getting the amount of coverage that should be expected for a middle-bottom tier candidate. All other refutations to this point aside, from his performance in straw polls and post-debate polls to his vast support on the internet, nothing more need be said than “money bomb.” On November 5th, but we Paul-istinians (my favorite dirty name for his supporters) proved to the country what we had known all along; Ron Paul has long had first tier support.

The simple fact of the matter is, though, apart from that rarest of species, the non-Paul-supporting internet user, nobody else had a clue that all of those people were partaking in his – he calls it our – revolution. This begs a serious question: why, during a race in which the favorite candidates have been household names for months, is there such a large portion of the population which has simply never heard of Doctor Ronald Ernest Paul, Republican Representative, Texas?

As we have already established, those reading this have most likely been paying active attention, and therefore have also probably heard rumblings of a general media bias against Dr. Paul. I cannot speak for the truth of this as per print, for, like so many of my peers, I have not held one of those archaic “news paper” devices for some time. Radio outlets are wide and varied, so again I cannot speak to that which I have no option to hear; I refused to drive around the country with my car radio on as part of the research for this piece. Suffice to say, though, that the big name conservative talk show hosts all seem to have reserved their love for some variation of Rudy McRomneyson. The internet, though seemingly dominated by Paul supporters, is such a huge venue that while biases among certain outlets on the internet certainly do exist, there is a forum for literally any idea one might wish to pursue. Don’t believe me? Try googling “2,” “girls,” “1,” and “cup” and see what comes up. Go ahead, I can wait. Now that we have that out of our system, lets take a look at the end-all be-all of the current journalistic forum, the mainstream media (MSM) god, television.

To understand any motives the MSM may have, and thus to be able to decide if they really are conducting a brown-out of Dr. Paul, one must first examine exactly what the MSM outlets are. The news media corporations, while able to draw their roots to the earliest stages of our country, are not organizations devoted to the dissemination of truth and objectivity. Our modern MSM outlets are entities devoted to profit, to be gained by representation of selective facts, along with analyses of said facts conducted in a manner which best appeals to their, and their advertisers, target audiences. There really is nothing fundamentally wrong with this. The profit motive involved provides for competition within the market, and competition between providers is the best way for consumers to have inexpensive, high-quality products. If there is any fault with the aforementioned profit motive within the MSM, it lies most closely with exactly what it is that the average consumer desires from their news.

The important lesson, though, is that the MSM syndicates want to make money, and will not present anything which they feel will not appeal to their customers. The reason why many of the MSM stations seem to have chosen favorite candidates is because their target audience already has. The stations aren’t dumb. Most of them compete for overlapping audiences, and they have all done comprehensive research and studies into exactly what those audiences want to hear.

It could be argued that were this profit motive truly guiding the MSM, they would simply provide their audiences with whatever distorted analyses they desired, disconnected from any facts which might not fit into it. Again, this is countered by competition. Due to the interactive environment of the news media, with each provider vying for similar viewers, each must strive to be seen as the “best” source. Were any of the MSM outlets to ignore reality entirely, it would give ammunition to their competitors to attack them, lessening their prestige, and thus, viewer base.

Of course, given Dr. Paul’s popularity in the only de-centrally controlled media venue, the internet, some more questions must be raised. Namely, if the MSM is solely profit motivated, and they must compete over a limited amount of viewers, and thus advertisers attempting to reach them, wouldn’t one of them “pick up” Ron Paul and his teeming masses? The question is extremely appropriate, and cannot be satisfactorily answered given the understanding of the MSM as it stands thus far in this piece. The reason for this is that there is another aspect to the companies which give us our news. They are also the singularly most powerful special interest group in existence. They have access to the political world of the United States through two means. First is the traditional method of simply throwing money at politicians in Washington, and secondly, and uniquely to them, the MSM has direct access the voting public, and extensive control over how that public perceives the political world. Because of this access to the public, they also enjoy the attentions of every other special interest group in existence. This is their power, and they use it.

To understand why the MSM as a special interest group would be violently averse to Ron Paul – and they are – one must examine what changes Dr. Paul would bring to our political landscape. This is actually quite simple, for while the changes he would bring are widespread, the motives behind the special interest groups’ reactions to them are uniform. Ron Paul would end our military involvement over seas. Ron Paul would secure our borders. Ron Paul would, through a series of reforms, end government handouts of taxpayer dollars and end government interference impeding free markets. Now imagine how much money many companies, from Halliburton to Blackwater to Lockheed-Martin, stand to lose if we end our obsession with using our military globally. Imagine how much money some groups stand to lose, both by ending the stream of illegal labor and stemming the rampant drug markets, if we secure our borders. Imagine how much money the agriculture industry, the auto industry, and all the other mendicants stand to lose if their huge tax-payer funded government subsidies disappear, or if the quotas and tariffs which shelter them are removed. Imagine how much of this money currently being made, how many tens of billions of dollars, finds its way to the MSM in the effort to control you and me, and thus currying favor among politicians. Now you begin to understand what the MSM stands to lose if our champion, Dr. Paul, is elected to the office of President of the United States of America. It seems it was the profit motive after all dictating the actions of the MSM outlets, only we had yet to see the big picture.

It is with all of this very much in mind that those who are centrally in control of our syndicated, constitutionally protected news corporations have resisted Dr. Paul with all of their considerable might. They could never deny his existence completely, though they tried, but they could attempt to marginalize him, and have, again, tried. Thanks to the efforts of 38,905 individuals on the fifth of November, 2007, and thanks to the efforts of everyone around the nation who has heralded the message of liberty and freedom, Dr. Paul is now beyond suppression. In fact, many in the media, who are unable to further ignore or marginalize him, have begun to embrace him. The embrace may be tentative still on the part of most, but the simple fact of serious recognition is a harbinger of things to come. After the full effects of Money Bomb 2.0 have been seen next December 16th, on the anniversary of the Boston Tea Party, the true course of the future might become visible, and it will be then that we shall see how the mainstream media failed to censor Ron Paul.

-Emmett Moore
aka - Arkitekt

Hope you enjoyed it. Sorry for any grammatical inaccuracies.

arkitekt
11-13-2007, 09:30 PM
Feel free to use or refer to this in any blogs or any such other means. You have my full permission to edit for grammar, but please do not change the structure or content. All I ask is that you give me credit for writing this.

steph3n
11-13-2007, 09:30 PM
They will be getting cozy soon for one reason, MONEY
TV and Radio is the means to the people, they will get cozy to take a good part of the donations we give. Sad but true.

fsk
11-13-2007, 09:46 PM
If you're writing your own posts, why not go ahead and get your own blog? Blogger has a good UI. I also heard that Wordpress is popular.

If you're going to the trouble of writing a detailed article, you might as well keep a record of it somewhere.

literatim
11-13-2007, 09:47 PM
Why don't we advertise on their website?

arkitekt
11-14-2007, 01:28 AM
This is really the first whole piece I have written, so I have not considered starting a blog. Depending upon feedback, I may consider doing so.

PatriotG
11-14-2007, 07:41 AM
[QUOTE=arkitekt;407864]Chances are good that those of you who are reading this have been paying attention to the brewing race for the 2008 presidential election. If we also take into account those who have not been paying attention, we can effectively separate the population of the United States into three disparate camps: Those who love to hear, those who are sick of hearing, and those who have never heard – of Ron Paul.

arkitekt
I would like you permission to post this on our website?

RTR (http://www.restoretherepublic.org)

Thanks In Advance
PatriotG

arkitekt
11-14-2007, 09:30 AM
PatriotG: Of course, you have my full permission. All I ask is that you give me credit for having written it.

JenaS62
11-14-2007, 10:24 AM
ohhhhh - I so wish that I had not done the search on "2 girls 1 cup". That kind of ruined my day and your point is well taken.

arkitekt
11-14-2007, 11:35 AM
Ha ha, I had considered leaving that out, but I feel it was an effective lesson in the fact that true censorship simply cannot exist in the internet. This is why you can find, now at least, a good deal of information about Dr. Paul on the big media web sites (CNN, CBS, MSNBC, Fox, etc), though it should not lead us to think in any way that the MSM resistence to Dr. Paul is over. That is why I feel the December 16th money bomb is so important; it will get a great deal of coverage, and force the MSM outlets to finally drop the idea that anyone is convinced he is a fringe or bottom tier candidate.

Channing
11-14-2007, 11:40 AM
The reason the mass media ignore Ron Paul as long as they reasonably can is that they do *not* pursue profit but a political agenda.

Watch the documentary "Outfoxed" or read about "Operation Mockingbird".

----------------------
"The Central Intelligence Agency owns everyone of any significance in the major media."
- William Colby, former CIA director

“… it would have been impossible for us to develop our plan for the world if we had been subjected to the lights of publicity during those years. But, the world is now more sophisticated and prepared to march towards a world government …”
- David Rockefeller in Baden-Baden, Germany 1991, thanking major media for keeping secret for decades the movement of the prophetic one world government.

arkitekt
11-14-2007, 12:19 PM
Channing: You misunderstand the term "profit motive." In economics, profit is not limited to strict monetary gains, though profits are often referred to in this manner for ease of reference. Even political gains or relative gains are considered profit. It just so happens that, in this case, large portions of monetary gains are tied with their political status.

arkitekt
11-15-2007, 12:41 AM
I took your advice, fsk, and started my own blog as well.

http://the-arkitekt.blogspot.com/

Currently there is only the single post (the one above), but I have also begun writing another one entitled "Nonintervention and the True Isolationists." I'll try to have it finished within a day or two, and post it both there and here.

Any comments are appreciated.