PBS airs special it knows to be false

I noted last week that PBS is poised to broadcast a one-hour special on the separation of church and state, “The Wall of Separation.” By all appearances, it sounded like a propaganda piece for the religious right. Indeed, the program is a production of Boulevard Pictures, which is led by an evangelical Christian who believes that Christians have an obligation to “shape the culture” and “spread the faith,” and the program itself was written and directed by an activist who did movie reviews for a Christian Reconstructionist website.

Confronted with questions, PBS Vice President John F. Wilson defended the decision to air the program, arguing that it serves the network’s “mandate to present a diversity of viewpoints on issues of public importance.”

This week, in response to pressure, PBS responded in more detail. PBS’s ombudsman, Michael Getler, devoted a column to the controversy.

Getler writes, “The interviews in the film, in terms of time on screen and numbers, seemed to me to tilt clearly in favor of those who see a danger in the “wall of separation” metaphor used by Jefferson….” He points out that the narrator “time and again, conveys the theme of this film — that God is the necessary foundation of society’s law and government.” Getler even calls the treatment a “heavy-handed hammering away by the narrator.”

Getler goes off the rails when he tries to defend the program. “My sense,” he writes, “is that people can take from this film whatever they wish. It can be a useful reminder of the context of our founding documents and a way of looking at that context — and at the intent of the framers of the First Amendment as assessed in the dominant view of this film — that challenges the more common view….Or it can be viewed as sophisticated propaganda, as some critics already have….”

I’m all for spirited debate. When it comes to law, political science, and religion, there are a nearly endless supply of ideas and perspectives. Let a thousand flowers bloom.

But facts are stubborn things, and “Wall of Separation” is not history. It’s a religious-right-style interpretation of history, presented by PBS to its viewers as fact.

Indeed, PBS’s ombudsman seems to realize that this film is driven by a religious agenda, and made by religious activists, who brush over details in order to make a religious point. He seems to believe airing misleading information, intentionally, is consistent with “diverse” programming. That’s absurd.

In principle, what’s wrong with religious people putting together a video to share their ideas, even wrong ones? Absolutely nothing. PBS, however, has certain responsibilities to its viewers when airing historical specials like these. If the network is offered propaganda, and the network knows it’s propaganda, then it should know better than to air it as objective and reliable information.

My friend Barry Lynn put it this way:

What Getler fails to grasp is that the perspective offered in this film has been debunked. Getler notes that during the film, the narrator says, “The United States is a society based on the rule of law. And our Founding Fathers believed that if they did not base their laws on a higher authority, then whoever was in power would determine what the law said. They called this ‘tyranny.’ Their higher authority was the Law of God — the Ten Commandments.”

Legal historians have researched this issue time and again. They found no references to the Ten Commandments during the debate over the Constitution. Furthermore, there is no reference to “higher authority” or “the Law of God” in the Constitution, a wholly secular document.

I suspect PBS knows all of this, but doesn’t care. By airing far-right pseudo-history, the network can say, “See? We’re not liberal after all.” If that means deceiving viewers, so be it.

When Corporation for Public Broadcasting Chairman Kenneth Tomlinson, a close Karl Rove ally, took over PBS, he told the Association of Public Television Stations along with officials from the CPB and PBS that they should make sure their programming “better reflected the Republican mandate.”

We’re still seeing the results of Tomlinson’s agenda.

Hey CB, typo alert:

“the program itself was written and directed by [???] did movie reviews a Christian Reconstructionist website”

  • “Nice little network you have here…shame if anything happened to it.”

    The Piranha administration….Doug used violence, Dinsdale used appropriations.

  • Well then.

    I guess PBS would be willing to do a show about how America was founded by a bunch of damn-near-atheists who were intent on creating a society that wasn’t ruled by a bunch of ignorant religious tyrants.

    Any day now.

  • All the wrong people in all the right places. Will there ever be restitution?

    Mr Carpetbagger, the time for a hardcore political information as entertainment channel is long overdue. What would it take? You’re in pole position to author it.

  • “By airing far-right pseudo-history, the network can say, ‘See? We’re not liberal after all.’ If that means deceiving viewers, so be it.”

    More proof that historical facts have a well-known liberal bias.

  • Mr Carpetbagger, the time for a hardcore political information as entertainment channel is long overdue. What would it take? You’re in pole position to author it.

    If that ever happens Steve- you HAVE to get me a job there.

  • Sounds like you got the same response I did–I received an email from someone named “Mary” at PBS. I replied that her response was not sufficient and pointed out why. At least the local PBS station here in DC does not appear to have a greed to show this program, and its representative stated as such to me in an email.

  • From http://www.ucctruths.com

    Barry Lynn and the Hypocrisy of Separation

    Americans United for the Separation of Church and State (AU) purports to be a non-sectarian, non-partisan organization with no religious affiliation and its Executive Director, the Rev. Barry Lynn, is prominently featured on television news programs whenever issues of religion and government cross. Although Lynn prides himself as an independent arbiter of where the line between church and state meet, his silence on his own denomination’s encroachment on Jefferson’s wall of separation is not only hypocritical, it ultimately undermines his own mission.

    Lynn and Americans United issue dozens of statements each year regarding church and state conflicts and, at times, go as far as go as far as challenging the issues in court. Last May, Lynn chastised a $150,000 appropriation the Maryland General Assembly granted for the National Baptist Congress of Christian Education (NBCCE) conference held in Baltimore. Lynn claimed the grant was “totally inappropriate and clearly unconstitutional.” He further stated that “religious groups should pass the collection plate to their own members, not the taxpayers.”

    However, while Lynn was criticizing Maryland’s grant, his own denomination, the United Church of Christ (UCC), was busy securing a grant from the state of Connecticut for its convention (called a General Synod) which is being held later this month in Hartford. Lynn has been noticeably silent about the Connecticut grant even though it is clearly a greater offense to the Establishment Clause of the federal constitution than the Maryland grant.

    The differences between the Maryland and Connecticut grants are dramatic. After a careful legal review, the Maryland Department of Budget & Management clearly distinguished secular events the grant could support from non-secular events the grant could not support. The non-secular events supported by the grant included additional transportation resources to help ease the strain that 50,000 convention attendees would put on public transportation services. Explicitly, access to the subsidized transportation services was not “restricted to members of a particular sect.”

    In contrast to the Maryland grant, the Connecticut grant is being used exclusively to pay a $100,000 fee to the Hartford Civic Center for facilities to host the United Church of Christ General Synod which is clearly a secular event with worship services where the primary audience is UCC delegates and members.

    Some have argued that the Connecticut grant serves the secular purpose of promoting economic development that the approximately 8,000 attendees to the UCC General Synod will bring to Hartford. Constitutionally speaking, the distinction is not dependent on the residual economic benefit that the aid could bring but on the religious effect of the aid.

    The Maryland Department of Budget & Management defined the religious effect of their grant on similar court cases involving papal visits to Philadelphia and Washington D.C. In Gilfillan v. City of Philadelphia, the Third Circuit determined that aid for the building of a platform in a public park for a liturgical service rendered the religious effect of the aid “both plain and primary.” In contrast, O’Hair v. Andrus, the District of Columbia Circuit determined that the “provision of police, sanitation and related public services is a legitimate function of government and not an ‘establishment’ of religion.”

    The distinction between the Connecticut grant and the Maryland grant couldn’t be clearer. In the Maryland case, the grant was used to help ease the burden on public transportation. In the Connecticut case, the grant is being used to defray the cost of the facilities to host a clearly religious event for the United Church of Christ.

    When they were initially contacted last June about the Connecticut grant in light of Lynn’s public condemnation of the Maryland grant, Americans United promised that a complete investigation would be made. At a public church and state discussion forum in Columbus, Ohio last October, Lynn was asked specifically about the Americans United investigation. Lynn expressed concern about the grant but noted that further investigation was still needed.

    Now, within a week of the UCC General Synod in Hartford and nearly a year after Americans United began their investigation, Lynn has yet to publicly disclose the results of his investigation into the grant that will benefit his own denomination.

    Lynn is in a unique position on this issue. Part of his attraction as a public figure is his status as an ordained minister which he uses to legitimize his concern about the separation between church and state. However, if Lynn is incapable of addressing clear concerns that involve his own denomination, what credibility does he or Americans United have?

    ______________

  • Oh well, at least they’re broadcasting “Foyle’s War.” That and “Bill Moyers’ Journal” are the sum total of must-see PBS for me anymore. Even as a self-confessed Auld Phart, theAuld Phart music fudraising shows are getting embarassing.

    PBS, I hardly know ye…

  • This just makes me ill, and sadly reinforces the need for Carpetbaggers and Josh Marshalls and Digbys and Greenwalds and . . . . A world where PBS publishes obvious propaganda, and doesn’t label it as such, is unrecognizeable to me. It makes them no better than ABC last year with their 9/11 propaganda film.

    If PBS chose, they could turn the program into a teachable moment where real historians discuss the program and dissect the inaccuracies and present what the founding fathers really said and how the explicitly designed our system to work and the ills they designed our system to prevent. But that would have been the old PBS.

    Kudos to Steve for the piece in that other propaganda rag The Politico. How do you feel about being positively profiled by Drudge’s twin? Disoriented?

    And if folks haven’t seen it yet, they can meet the real Digby and hear a wonderful speech on this world so many of us depend on for factual information, cogent analysis, and reality-based arguments. She’s at FDL http://www.firedoglake.com/2007/06/19/ladies-and-gentlemen-digby

  • Legal historians have researched this issue time and again. They found no references to the Ten Commandments during the debate over the Constitution. Furthermore, there is no reference to “higher authority” or “the Law of God” in the Constitution, a wholly secular document.

    It’s already a thoroughly researched area of scholarly study- by 1st Amendment legal scholars. To present an accurate and informative piece, they could have just gotten the foremost Civil Liberties constitutional law scholars and had them talk about it on the documentary.

  • Can’t someone sue PBS (and block airing of the special via a temporary restraining order) because the special itself violates the Establishment Clause?

  • This really hurts. Now I have to tell my children that PBS has changed and can’t be trusted anymore, that they make things up that aren’t true, that they lie. They know the stuff on the other channels are just “stories”, fantasy. But they thought the stuff on PBS was true.
    What a shame. Knowingly allowing this propaganda film to be presented as factual just cost PBS their credibility and integrity.
    I doubt they will ever get it back again and that we will just see more and more propaganda.

  • Can’t someone sue PBS (and block airing of the special via a temporary restraining order) because the special itself violates the Establishment Clause?

    You have to prove actual harm to have standing. A generic ‘because my tax dollars make up part of a funding pool’ argument won’t cut it.

    And that’s before the Constitutional issues. Prior (pre-broadcast) restraint is very, very, rare.

    Which on balance is a good thing…

  • So maybe it’s time for Private Broadcasting.

    I know the kids offerings in private broadcasting, on Nickelodeon and Disney Channel, are less sexist and authoritarian.

    Hasn’t the time for public broadcasting passed? With cable, we get things like history channel and national geographic. I would think there are enough Americans interested in the kinds of things pbs broadcasts to attract advertisers. And personally, I’d rather see a station that knows its audience and isn’t subject to government pressure, that doesn’t pretend it’s not doing commercials when it runs sponsors ads, that doesn’t have pledge breaks that tell kids to go find their parents for this important message… the list goes on.

  • With cable, we get things like history channel and national geographic

    PBS is worse than all the alternatives.

    I get cable, too, but it costs.
    Cable per month is twice what a PBS membership costs per year, and you don’t need to be a member to watch PBS.
    A lot of people don’t have cable. A lot of them flat-out can’t afford it, or get basic cable, which lacks some of the very channels mentioned.
    And they’re supposed to be the same people whose lot we’re trying to better.

    Incidentally, the same argument can be made against libraries. After all, there’s Borders…

  • Comments are closed.