You Are the Target Audience (Gulf War I): Difference between revisions

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To protect itself from criticism, the News indulges in its own analysis, admitting the small error to hide the greater sin. The News might publicly examine the fact that it airs only Pentagon-approved footage, or offer a forum about its own frustration with censorship. The military calls this a preemptive strike.
To protect itself from criticism, the News indulges in its own analysis, admitting the small error to hide the greater sin. The News might publicly examine the fact that it airs only Pentagon-approved footage, or offer a forum about its own frustration with censorship. The military calls this a preemptive strike.
<iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/hugh-dandrade-on-first-gulf-war-protests" width="640" height="480" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe>
'''Hugh D'Andrade reminisces about his experiences during the 1991-93 anti-Gulf War protest movement, and about halfway through (8'30") he compares it to the [[“STAY STRONG, THIS WAR IS LONG!” THE BATTLE OF SAN FRANCISCO|2003 anti-Iraq War protests]].'''
''Video: Leslie Valentine''


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[[Anti-Persian Gulf War Movement Covered by Paper Tiger TV-West|Prev. Document]]  [[Give ??? a Chance (Gulf War 1991) |Next Document]]
[[Anti-Persian Gulf War Movement Covered by Paper Tiger TV-West|Prev. Document]]  [[Give ??? a Chance (Gulf War 1991) |Next Document]]


[[category:Dissent]] [[category:1990s]] [[category:military]] [[category:anti-war]]
[[category:Dissent]] [[category:1990s]] [[category:military]] [[category:anti-war]] [[category:Oral History]]

Revision as of 18:23, 4 October 2020

Primary Source

by Arch D. Bunker (Linda Wiens)

Polbhem1$target-audience-arch-d-bunker.jpg

The Arch D. Bunker posters (Persian Gulf War "Target Audience" here), featured over the next few pages, were the work of a loosely affiliated band of San Francisco radicals during the anti-war agitation.

Design: Arch D. Bunker

More Posters-->

There are many wars being fought in the Middle East The war of torn and bleeding bodies. The war of Pentagon analysis. The war of media dramatization. Like most Americans, we are privy only to the electronic spectacle of war, safely distanced from the horrific screams and severed limbs. This is the war brought to us by the Network News.

What we call Network News is really a hybrid of electronic journalism and entertainment. But it is the motive of this broadcast hybrid that concerns us. The news is Big Business and like any other big business, it is involved in alignments of power and influence. So when we see the Gulf War reported and dramatized, we must wonder: What's at stake here? And: Whose interests are being served? After all, broadcast journalists are not civil servants, they are highly-paid emcees for corporate history. Next time you watch the coverage of the Gulf War, think about this:

The Shared Conspiracy

When you watch the News, you are invited to enter into a pact. You are expected to believe in the same system, share the same values and goals. The broadcasters promise to reinforce your beliefs, if you promise to rely on them. Under the terms of this pact the News pretends to press the government for answers.

Emptying Language

"Surgical Strike," "Collateral Damage," "Carpet Bombing," "Friendly Fire": The TV viewer is fed the new vocabulary of war. Familiar catch phrases--their meaning depleted by repetition--make reports of war palatable, and insure audience retention. These vacant terms only masquerade as information. The frightening reality is replaced by a lullaby of empty cliches.

Saddam-Hussein.jpg

Graphic: Chris Carlsson

Picture This

Using selected images, TV News pretends to transport you to the heart of the action, creating the dizzy sensation that you can be anywhere, informed and powerful, an active player in global politics--while you 're sitting at home safe and going nowhere.

More Is Less

The cheapest version of reality is the one that relies on charts and maps. It presents knowledge not as understanding, but as volume. Under the gaze of the News, quantity vanquishes quality. Because quality attests to the presence of surprise, of emotion, of suffering. To protect us from the unpredictable, the News delivers war as a factor of inventory depleted. But where there are only numbers, there is no quality of life.

The Pollsters

By second-guessing public opinion, broadcasters can tailor-fit the news to taste. What better way to see the world than as a reflection of your own views. But polls measure something other than opinion--they measure the degree to which the public has forfeited its democratic participation.

When the Generals Talk

Parading out the experts is a two-fold diversion. Initiation into the technical details of a specialty, in this case warfare, is a method of producing a false sense of privilege. It is also a way of masking the absence of real news. Generals (ret.) command a rhetorical skill that quickly fills dead air time--it's known as generalization.

Them and Us

Like any theatrical presentation, the news thrives on conflict. Often the News will help the process along, stirring controversy, fabricating hostility. Pinpointing the enemy, the Them against Us, is basic to this drama. The enemy can be an oil spill, an Iraqi civilian, an anti-war activist anything that generates tension. Only the News and its vested interests are above suspicion.

Auto-Analysis

To protect itself from criticism, the News indulges in its own analysis, admitting the small error to hide the greater sin. The News might publicly examine the fact that it airs only Pentagon-approved footage, or offer a forum about its own frustration with censorship. The military calls this a preemptive strike.

<iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/hugh-dandrade-on-first-gulf-war-protests" width="640" height="480" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Hugh D'Andrade reminisces about his experiences during the 1991-93 anti-Gulf War protest movement, and about halfway through (8'30") he compares it to the 2003 anti-Iraq War protests.

Video: Leslie Valentine



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