About
Frank Salvato
Frank Salvato is the Executive Director and Director of
Terrorism Research for
BasicsProject.org a non-profit,
non-partisan, 501(c)(3) research and education initiative. His
writing has been recognized by the US House International
Relations Committee and the Japan Center for Conflict
Prevention. His organization partnered in producing the original
national symposium series addressing the root causes of radical
Islamist terrorism. He serves as the managing editor for The New
Media Journal. Mr. Salvato has appeared on The O'Reilly Factor
on FOX News Channel and is a regular guest on talk radio
including on The Right Balance with Greg Allen on the Accent
Radio Network and on The Captain's America Radio Show catering
to the US Armed Forces around the world. His opinion-editorials
have been published by The American Enterprise Institute, The
Washington Times & Human Events and are syndicated nationally.
He is occasionally quoted in The Federalist. Mr. Salvato is
available for public speaking engagements.
To say the least, there is quite an
ideological and political gulf between John McCain and Barack Obama. So
too, is there a great deal of difference between their running mates,
Sarah Palin and Joe Biden. On just about every issue examined during
this interminably long presidential election cycle the two tickets stand
miles apart. From taxes to the struggle with radical Islam, energy
independence to American sovereignty, McCain and Obama, Palin and Biden,
stand diametrically opposed in their approaches to the issues. But one
subject seems to be championed by both sides and by all the players,
honesty.
To be certain, honesty, truthfulness, is a precious commodity in
American politics. From the very days of our country’s creation many of
those questing for political power have walked the fine line of fact and
fiction in an effort to paint themselves in a better light than their
opponents. With the advent of the professional "spin doctor” the line
between fact and fiction blurred to an almost illegible point. Today,
the process has become somewhat more simplistic, less refined and
artful, almost crude in that Washington politicians have taken to simply
calling each other "liars.”
Both John McCain and Barack Obama have taken issue with each other’s
campaign ads, calling into question the validity of statements,
requesting apologies and retaliating in kind. Statistics get
cherry-picked and legislative attributions get skewed. Obama surrogate
Jimmy Carter – father of the West’s modern day conflict with radical
Islam – even went as far as to say that John McCain was unfairly playing
up his stay at the luxurious Hanoi Hilton. And where McCain’s responses
to Obama’s less than fully-truthful allegations may begin with his
trademark salutation "my friends,” Obama’s mouthpieces respond to any
less-than-thoroughly-accurate contention with a good amount of
indignance, arrogance and caustic vitriol. Obama’s surrogates are even
worse.
Granted, we in the citizenry have come to accept this kind of behavior
from our politicians, it’s expected to a certain extent, sad that it is.
That said, we are reaping the rewards from our apathy to the political
process and our lack of civic responsibility. If we were providing the
governmental stewardship that our Founders and Framers envisioned the
politicians of today would have been tarred and feathered – literally
– many years ago and no one – no one – would be aspiring to be a
professional politician.
Nevertheless, the issues facing our nation are real and the candidates
who stand before us in referendum have real beliefs in how these issues
should be handled. Simply put, one ticket believes in the American
people and the other believes in the American government. Where the
McCain/Palin ticket wants to limit the reach of government into our
personal lives and empower the individual, the Obama/Biden ticket has
proposed new government programs and entitlements, higher taxes and
solutions to problems and crisis that are based on government as opposed
to the citizenry. Where the McCain/Palin ticket adheres to the
"bottom-up” power structure envisioned by our Founders and Framers, the
Obama/Biden ticket champions a "top-down” governmental model, a
Marxist-Leninist, Progressive-Socialist model that favors wealth
redistribution and mounting governmental intervention into our private
lives.
Most of us – but for the undecided voters (and really, how can anyone be
undecided at this point) – have already decided whose vision for our
country’s future we support. We have based our decisions on well thought
out examinations of the candidates and the issues, and an adequate
understanding of world events. Of course, the accumulation of the facts
as they pertain to world events, the candidates and the issues has been
no easy task. Thanks to an aggressively agenda-driven mainstream media,
a media so transparently in the tank for an Obama presidency, finding
the truth has been a difficult undertaking.
Case in point. FactCheck.org entertains the illusion that they are the
arbiters of political fact, of truth, where the candidates’ political
assertions are concerned. But FactCheck.org’s parent organization is the
Annenberg Public Policy Center. Annenberg, for those of you who are not
keeping up with the Barack Obama-William Ayers relationship, is the
organization that brought former and unrepentant terrorist William
Ayers, Barack Obama and millions of dollars into the same realm. In
light of this reality, wouldn’t it be responsible for FactCheck.org to
sit this election out or, at least, recuse itself from opining on the
presidential race? Predictably, this is not to be.
Stories like this are plentiful this election cycle. MSNBC is so
incredibly transparent in their support for Barack Obama that two of
their political anchors – Keith Olbermann and Chris Matthews – were
removed from the anchor assignments. The disparity in approaches taken
by Charlie Gibson of ABC News during the interviews of Republican Sarah
Palin and Democrat Barack Obama were stark and telling. CBS News anchor
Katie Couric has been fawning over Barack Obama since before he
officially announced his candidacy. And the women of The View,
minus Elizabeth Hasselbeck...well, if you’re watching The View to
acquire honest and unbiased information you really shouldn’t be voting.
Which brings me to my point.
The American mainstream media has always been good for sifting down any
election cycle to a single referendum. Whether it was the issue of
slavery in the 1860 election, the Iranian hostage crisis in 1980, the
peace dividend in 1992 or the struggle against aggressive radical Islam
in 2004, the mainstream media has always thought so little of the
American people that they presuppose our intellectual wherewithal to be
too limited to take the total of issues and positions into consideration
when selecting our choices for president. Derived of this notion is the
arrogance and elitism of today’s mainstream media, an entity so
empowered with conceit that they have deemed it acceptable to keep the
whole truth from the American people when opportune while injecting
agenda-driven opinion and enthusiasm into what they sell us as "the
news”; the facts.
We have all complained about the disingenuousness and elitism of the
mainstream media. And while some of us have actually acted on that
disgust in canceling subscriptions and/or writing advertisers to their
outlets, still many more of us act as enablers to their intellectual
charlatanism; too much the creatures of habit to affect change. But now
comes a time when we really can send a message to the elitists and
opportunists of the mainstream media.
This election cycle, let’s send a message to the golden chairs of the
mainstream media, to the Olbermanns, the Matthews, the Courics, the
Gibsons and the Williams. Let’s tell the Wolf Blitzers and Campbell
Browns, the Frank Richs and the Maureen Dowds that their time at the
helm is over, that their influence exists only in the smallest
corners of their own bloated egos. Let’s tell CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN, MSNBC,
The New York Times and all the rest of the agenda-driven,
disingenuous propaganda peddlers that it is time to excommunicate those
who offer opinion disguised as fact and return to news that consists
exclusively of "who, what, where, when, why and how.”
"But Frank,” many of you are thinking, "how do we go about doing this?”
Easy. Defeat their anointed candidate at the polls on November 4th. Make
the election of 2008 a referendum on the mainstream media and their
manipulation of the American public. If you believe that the mainstream
media in the United States has failed in their public mission, their
obligation to adequately and honestly inform the public on important
issues, if you believe that the mainstream media has tried to manipulate
this election in favor of Barack Obama, then vote against them
this November 4th; vote against them by casting a vote against their
candidate, Barack Obama.
Never has it been easier of simpler to show your discontent toward the
mainstream media elite, toward the ideologically influential, toward the
self-anointed keepers of the truth. Defeat their candidate on
November 4th, 2008.
The choice in this year’s referendum is clear: You can choose those who
believe in the American people and send a message to the mainstream
media elite that we are mad as hell and we aren’t going to
take it anymore, or you can vote for those who believe the government
knows best and enable a mainstream media that believes you’re too stupid
to handle the truth.