Even now, there may be more fake-news segments on the way

The Bush gang’s penchant for creating fake-news segments — with our money — is well documented. As we learned a couple of weeks ago, at least 20 federal agencies have made and distributed hundreds of television news segments in the past four years. In all, the administration spent over a quarter-billion dollars on generating professional-quality propaganda videos, aired as news, without disclosing the government’s role to viewers.

But for all the outrage and consternation this practice has caused, let’s not loose sight of the fact that the Bush administration plans to keep on doing what it’s been doing.

Medicare administrator Mark McClellan on Tuesday wouldn’t rule out using government-produced video news releases in the future to inform seniors about the new Medicare prescription drug benefit.

A congressional agency, the Government Accountability Office, has concluded that the made-for-TV releases, which mimic actual news segments, may violate a ban on government propaganda. But a Justice Department opinion found that they don’t as long as the information is truthful.

In testimony before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, McClellan said Medicare would “fully comply with the law” regarding government-made video news releases. But he wouldn’t pledge to ban their use, which Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., and Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., pressed him to do.

The word that keeps coming to mind is chutzpah.

The administration keeps suffering embarrassments in this area — from the fake-news to the pundits on the payroll — but refuses to make any changes to its policies. These guys just don’t care — they get caught abusing the public trust and undermining the very idea of an independent media, but they refuse to apologize and reject any suggestion that they change course.

Also remember, we’re not just talking about politics here — the GAO has concluded that the fake-news segments are illegal.

[V]ideo news releases [that make it easy to edit out the government’s role] constitute covert propaganda and violate federal laws that prohibit the use of public money for such purposes, according to the GAO. In a May 2004 investigation of so-called VNRs touting the new Medicare drug benefit, the GAO held that the videos’ failure to name Medicare as their source violated a portion of the federal Anti-Deficiency Act dealing with propaganda. The provision bans spending public funds on “materials that are self-aggrandizing, purely partisan in nature, or covert as to source,” the GAO report said.

But since the GAO has no enforcement power, the White House has decided that it sees the law differently and will ignore the GAO’s conclusion.

Opponents have limited options here. The administration won’t budge, Republicans in Congress won’t hold hearings, and Alberto Gonzales’ Justice Department hardly seems poised to leap into action to investigate. There’s been some talk about the FCC getting involved, but the agency hasn’t expressed any interest yet.

Any chance significant public outrage will generate a change? Nah, I didn’t think so either.

This administaration is so adamant in their use of illegal propaganda. I wish we could impeach the whole crew of them for all of their MISDEEDS.

  • You guys kill me……

    Come on, really, you expect anyone to beleive that the Dems dont create their own news? How about Danny Rather-biased? He is only the most recent and notable example of broadcasting ‘all the news that fits our agenda’

  • I dunno Todd….
    I would like to think that since our representatives – in either party are elected to serve us the people that they should uphold themselves to a higher ethical standard. I won’t make a comment on the Rather story since I don’t feel like I have enough information to give a valid opinion. But I don’t like being lied to by people, i.e. our elected representatives, who are supposed to be working for us, and I am including you in this equation since I am making the assumption that you are a US citizen.

  • Stupid troll. Rather’s story wasn’t being paid for with undisclosed tax dollars. Try again later when you’ve actually read the post you are commenting on.

  • Thanks jimBOB,
    Maybe if we keep pointing out the truth to some of these folks they might figure out that they’re being taken for suckers.
    Ah, my own little liberal utopia where I keep dreaming that if we all work for a better world we’ll all reap the benefits.

  • Good comments here, but aren’t all of you missing the real point. The Bush Republicans are working to destroy all citizen control of government through the privatization of all government functions. And of course they will use every possible way to do this. This privatization of government began with Reagan’s declaration that government is “the enemy”. Since I (silly me?) still believe in the statement of the Declaration of Independence that the only legitimate government is one based on the consent of the governed, I find their transfer of governmental function to private business fundamentally frightening. Think Rumsfeld’s privatized army, Medicare, and most recently how many elections have been run by software which cannot provide an independently verifiable result or record.

  • Pat,
    Are you referring to the agenda of one arch conservative that says he wants to cut the size of government in half in 25 years and then drown it in a bathtub. I know that this is the underlying agenda of the far right-wingers but in our 30 second sound byte culture it’s really hard to get people’s attention on this. I keep hoping that if the public starts looking at Social Security, all the cuts to social programs and what have you that they will maybe take a step back and have an aha moment.

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