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17 February 2010 By Dave
Lindorff NBC, the Military Industry Network owned by General
Electric, at least unless or until it is sold to
Comcast, was, along with most of the rest of the US
corporate media, outraged when, last year, the
Associated Press circulated, and some newspapers ran,
a photo of an American Marine, Lance Cpl. Joshua
Bernard, dying after being shot in battle in
Afghanistan. There was all kinds of high-minded talk about the
protecting the dignity of the dead, and about how it
was not appropriate to show such images without the
permission of the deceased’s close relatives. But then how to explain the spectacle of poor Notar
Kumaritashvili, the 21-year-old luge rider from the
Georgian olympic team. Kumaritashvili had the
misfortune of hitting the edge of the luge shute he
was on during a training run in British Columbia, and,
at a speed of 89 mph, he was thrown from his sled and
over the safety wall into the air, where he hit a
steel pole, which killed him. NBC, which was taping the run, rushed to air the
grisly death. No attempt was made to seek permission
from Kumaritashvili’s family. Hey, this was good TV.
Why risk ruining it by giving the family a veto over
the tape? Well, NBC, when criticized, claimed it was all in
the interest of public safety. They had a "legitimate
need," you see, to inform the public that riding a
luge is dangerous, the network pontificated. Never
mind that almost nobody rides a luge, and that all of
those who do are keenly aware that it is a
life-risking sport. The word for this kind of nonsense is hypocrisy.
Another word is capitalism. Blood and gore sell, and
this tape meant great ratings for NBC. On the other hand, you’d think that showing what
the war in Afghanistan, or the war in Iraq, look like
would be good for ratings too. And shouldn’t there be
a journalistic responsibility to show Americans what
is going on in our name and with our tax dollars, in
our country’s wars, not to mention that if it’s
important for potential sledders to know how dangerous
a luge shute is, shouldn’t potential military recruits
be shown how dangerous wearing a uniform can be?
Anyhow, we should be able to take the real ugliness
and the blood: We Americans pay good money to see the
fake gore of military slaughter--even of Americans--in
movies like Avatar, or Saving Private Ryan, or
Apocalypse Now. But when it comes to war, politics intervenes. The
military and its political handmaidens in Congress and
the White House, don’t think that showing the authenic
gore of American casualties that occur daily in the
course of our bloody imperial adventures is a good
idea. It might get Americans to thinking too hard
about those wars, and about whether we ought to be
fighting them. And so NBC, and most of the rest of the
US media, politely keep those images safely abroad. Seriously. They have the footage, and the photos.
They just don’t let Americans see them. I was stunned,
for example, when I lived in Taiwan in 2004 for five
months, to see that CNN International, which is viewed
all around the world, but not seen in the US, had
plenty of film footage of dead American soldiers. They
have to air that stuff if they want to compete
commercially overseas with such other international
news programs as the BBC and Al Jazzeera. But those
scenes get censored out in Atlanta, so we don’t see
them here. We get to see dead Haitians. We get to see dead
Sri-Lankans. We get to see dead Taliban fighters. We
get to see dead Olympians--especially if they’re
foreigners like poor Kumaritashvili. They don’t get
shown any “respect for their dignity.” But we don’t get to see dead or dying American
soldiers. That would be a shameful thing to do. |