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Diane M. Grassi
The Fourth Estate is Dying
June 22, 2009
It
was on June 21, 1788 that the United States Constitution was officially
adopted with its ratification. And it was at that time that its
ratification was contingent upon suggested changes be made to the
Constitution, thereafter.
Leading up to the Constitution becoming effective, there were numerous
debates among the states, namely that the Constitution did not go far
enough in protecting personal rights and liberties and would provide for
a necessary buffer from infringement by the government on the
fundamental rights of the people.
The
document simply failed to specify what fundamental rights would be
protected from abuse of power, by the federal government and especially
in times of emergency.
And
it was in the first session of Congress in 1789 in which 12 amendments
were proposed of which 10 were ultimately ratified on December 15, 1791.
These amendments became known as the Bill of Rights.
The
people were rightfully concerned that the Constitution must remain true
to its intent; to prevent the misuse of its powers and to protect those
very fundamental rights it was charged to protect.
Not
the least of such rights was Amendment 1, and its often referenced
freedom-of-speech clause. Its main purpose is to provide protection or a
deterrent against censorship by the government and its officials. And it
is implicit that the First Amendment be invulnerable when a law or
government action is at issue.
And
it is crucial that the press remains the watchdog of the people, in
order to help decipher fact from fiction and for it to report the facts.
If we
fast-forward 300 years, we still have two Houses of Congress, more
unaccountable than any time in our history, an Executive Branch,
creating its own shadow government within the very walls of the White
House, and a judicial branch which has evolved into an activist
judiciary. And most unfortunately, we have a press corps, a/k/a the
media, which no longer remains accountable to the people and at every
turn fails to remain objective in its reportage.
It
was Thomas Jefferson who noted in 1799 that, “Our citizens may be
deceived for awhile, and have been deceived; but as long as the presses
can be protected, we may trust to them for light.”
But
sadly on June 24, 2009, in perhaps the most egregious exercise in
blurring the lines between fact and fiction. ABC News, one of the three
largest news broadcasting networks in the U.S. and throughout the world,
will broadcast its programming from the Blue Room in the East
Wing of the White House.
But
even more stunning and unprecedented in White House history, it
broadcast a prime time special titled, Questions for the President:
Prescription for America, an ABC News production. President Obama
will answer questions, pre-selected, pre-scripted and censored, by ABC
News and the White House.
The
intent is to “inform” the people of Obama’s new healthcare plan, which
has not been seen nor discussed by the Congress, in an open forum, and
remains a mystery as to its details, not publicly disclosed. No
opposition questions or representation of any ideas other than those of
Obama’s, ABC’s or the Democratic Party will be permitted.
So
essentially, conservatives and Republican lawmakers felt justified
referring to it as a paid infomercial, not a “news” program. Usurping
the Congress and the will of the people is anathema to abuse of power.
The
nationalization of U.S. healthcare, as important and personal a matter
as it is to every American has now been hijacked, along with the
public’s airwaves. If Obama’s intentions for the American people cannot
withstand honest and unscripted dialog and discourse but rather
necessitates an imposter shilling as a news network, then it will fail
the American people.
But
do remember if you decide to tune in on Wednesday, that,
“The most effectual engines for pacifying a nation are the public
papers...A despotic government always keeps a kind of standing army of
news writers who, without any regard to truth or to what should be like
truth, invent and put into the papers whatever might serve the
ministers. This suffices with the mass of the people who have no means
of distinguishing the false from the true paragraphs of a newspaper.”
– Thomas Jefferson (1816)
About Diane M. Grassi
Diane M. Grassi is an investigative journalist and reporter
providing topical and in-depth articles and analysis on U.S. public
policy and governmental affairs, including key federal and state
legislation as well as court decisions relative to the public interests
of average Americans. Ms. Grassi sticks to the facts on myriad issues,
often given short shrift by the mainstream press and broadcast media.
With a passion for holding U.S. lawmakers and government officials
accountable for their legislative and policy decisions, Ms. Grassi has
an undying resolve to awaken others to these facts in order to promote
an educated electorate.