The Rove story illustrates once again that the mainstream media
are in the business not of reporting the news but ofÂ
manufacturing it. Their reporting largely consists of
reporting on news they've made -- events that happenÂ
only because of their baiting and manipulation -- with no
mention of their involvement in the event's creation.
Reporters are like people who cause car crashes, then wander
up to the scene and ask innocently, "What happened?"Â
Notice a minor example of this in the New York
Times' Rove story. The TimesÂ
omnisciently reports, without mentioning its participation
in the juvenile stalking, that Rove "nosed" his "Jaguar out
of the garage" in the predawn gloom and "flashed his blinding high
beams into the camera lenses and sped by." The Times can't
bring itself to admit that it now operates at the level of the
paparazzi. So it strains to bring dignity to its stalking by
pretending like it is documenting for some high-minded reason how
an important government offiicial spends his day during a
crisis.
topics:
Mainstream Media, Business