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One side to every story: the mainstream media's blind spot on "free trade.".


THE MORNING OF JAN. 8, 2007, I WAS DRIVING ALONG A narrow twisting, two-lane highway through rural Kentucky. I'd delivered my oldest son to school. I was still on Christmas break and returning home to work on a book proposal. The newly elected Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown Sherrod Campbell Brown (born November 9 1952) is the junior United States Senator from the state of Ohio, and a member of the Democratic Party. Before his election to the Senate in 2006, Brown served as a member of the House of Representatives from Ohio's 13th district and as  was on the about "fair trade." It was morning in America "Morning in America" is the common name of an effective political campaign television commercial formally titled "Prouder, Stronger, Better" and featuring the opening line "It's morning again in America." The ad was part of the 1984 U.S. , and despite the grey, sleet sleet, precipitation of small, partially melted grains of ice. As raindrops fall from clouds, they pass through layers of air at different temperatures. If they pass through a layer with a temperature below the freezing point, they turn into sleet.  sky I was feeling a rosy patriotic glow. Then National Public Radio's Morning Edition co-anchor Steve Inskeep Steve Inskeep is one of the current hosts of Morning Edition on National Public Radio. He, along with co-host Renée Montagne were assigned as interim hosts to succeed Bob Edwards after NPR reassigned Edwards to Senior Correspondent after April 30 2004.  turned to analyst Cokie Roberts Cokie Roberts (born December 27, 1943) is an American journalist and author. She is the "Contributing Senior News Analyst" for National Public Radio. Background
Born Mary Martha Corinne Morrison Claiborne Boggs
 for a comment on the Brown interview, and I almost drove into a goat pen.

Naturally, Inskeep framed the issue as a horse-race question. "Is the notion of cracking down on free trade a winning issue for Democrats?" But Roberts brushed such petty considerations aside and turned loose an ideological tirade. "It is in some states and in some districts, but it's a long-term loser," she said. "It puts them essentially on the wrong side of history with globalization globalization

Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation
." Having declared the spirit of the age, she continued, "Even though labor unions often lose with trade agreements, consumers gain." Roberts signed off with a stern warning to Brown and anyone else who might buck the corporate trade agenda. "Democrats have to be very careful here...."

Roberts is, of course, the ultimate insider journalist, and her reporting usually repeats conventional Beltway wisdom. But she's not in the habit of issuing Hegelian pronouncements on the tides of history. Corporate globalization, however, is covered by a different set of journalistic rules. When it comes to the supposed benefits of "free trade," virtually all of the mainstream media have, for the past 15 years, shed their customary skepticism, embraced corporate economic orthodoxy, and brooked absolutely no dissent.

As Bill Moyers put it in his Jan. 12, 2007, speech to the National Conference on Media Reform in Memphis, "For over a decade, free trade has hovered over the political system like a biblical commandment striking down anything--trade unions, the environment, indigenous rights, even the constitutional standing of our own laws passed by our elected representatives--that gets in the way of unbridled greed. The broader negative consequences of this agenda, increasingly well-documented by scholars, get virtually no attention in the dominant media."

This has been true ever since "free trade" became a major issue with the debate over the ratification of the North American Free Trade Agreement North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), accord establishing a free-trade zone in North America; it was signed in 1992 by Canada, Mexico, and the United States and took effect on Jan. 1, 1994.  (NAFTA NAFTA
 in full North American Free Trade Agreement

Trade pact signed by Canada, the U.S., and Mexico in 1992, which took effect in 1994. Inspired by the success of the European Community in reducing trade barriers among its members, NAFTA created the world's
) in 1993. Back then the media watchdog group Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR) is a media criticism organization based in New York, New York, founded in 1986.

FAIR describes itself on its website as "the national media watch group" and defines its mission as working to "invigorate the First Amendment by
 (FAIR) studied coverage of NAFTA in The Washington Post and The New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times for four months at the height of the debate. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 FAIR staffer Jim Naureckas Jim Naureckas (born 1964 in Libertyville, Illinois) is the editor of Extra!, the magazine of FAIR (Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting).

He graduated from Stanford University in 1985 with a bachelor's degree in political science.
, the group's researchers identified 201 sources quoted by name in news stories about NAFTA and found that only six represented the environmental movement. The two papers quoted not a single representative of the U.S. labor union movement, which led the opposition to the agreement. Fifty-one percent of the sources quoted by the Post and Times were U.S. government representatives (including members of Congress). Among those, 81 percent were pro-NAFTA. Another 11 percent of the sources were foreign government officials, also pro-NAFTA. Corporate spokespersons comprised 13 percent of the papers' sources, and these were 85 percent pro-NAFTA. Only one NAFTA story (in the Times) quoted members of the general public who were likely to be affected by the treaty.

Also in 1993, the Washington Post op-ed page ran 48 pro-NAFTA pieces and only eight against. This gross imbalance in coverage came despite the fact that public opinion ran mostly against the treaty and the ratification vote in Congress was close.

Little has changed as the globalization era has worn on. In April 2001, FAIR revisited "free trade" coverage in a study authored by Rachel Coen during negotiations on (and demonstrations against) the Free Trade Area of the Americas The Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) (Spanish: Área de Libre Comercio de las Américas (ALCA), French: Zone de libre-échange des Amériques (ZLÉA), Portuguese: Área de Livre Comércio das Américas  Agreement (FTAA FTAA Free Trade Area of the Americas
FTAA Free Trade Agreement of the Americas
FTAA Florida Turkish American Association
FTAA Federated Tanners Association of Australia
FTAA Fixed Threshold Adaptation Algorithm
). Even after the Seattle protests of 1999 made corporate globalization a widely recognized issue, FAIR found that the bias of mainstream op-ed pages had changed very little. A search of the news database Nexis reported 25 opinion pieces essentially in favor of the FTAA and only nine opposing it, with four taking an ambivalent view. Daily newspaper editorials were unanimous: 34 to 0 in favor of the FTAA.

In 2001, FAIR again found "free trade" news stories to be largely devoid of critical voices. Typical, Coen wrote, was a New York Times article noting that "Mr. Bush and several other leaders now eagerly refer to the hemispheric trade proposal as an extension of NAFTA, which has already produced results." The article failed to explain what kind of results NAFTA had delivered, despite the fact that a few days earlier the Economic Policy Institute had released a report demonstrating that, after seven years, NAFTA had produced "a continent-wide pattern of stagnant worker incomes, lost job opportunities, increased insecurity, and rising inequality." FAIR found that only five newspaper stories even mentioned the EPI EPI

exocrine pancreatic insufficiency.
 study.

What's behind this persistent, systematic bias in media coverage of trade issues? Sojourners put that question to Dean Baker, an economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research
For the London-based centre dealing with European economics, see Centre for Economic Policy Research.


The Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) is a progressive [1] economic policy think-tank based in Washington, D.C.
 and author of the blog "Beat the Press," which analyzes media coverage of economic issues. "The reason that trade reporting Trade reporting

Dealer: In a trade between two registered Market Participants (MP), only the sell side reports the trade. Auction: In a trade between two member firms, only the sell side reports the trade.
 is so distorted," Baker said, "is that there is a huge class issue involved. While the owners of the media are generally among the group that has benefited hugely from the current path of globalization, most reporters and their friends and family also fall into this group. They are from the class of professionals that can get cheaper cars, clothes, restaurant meals, and household help because of this pattern of globalization."

Baker also noted that so far, higher-paid professional service workers have been protected from the downward pressures of globalization. "The reporters do not have to compete against low-paid workers in the developing world like autoworkers or textile workers do," he said. "It would be illegal for a newspaper or television station to replace their staff with a group of smart reporters from India who would probably do a better job and work for half the wages. However, the whole point of the current path of globalization is to make it as easy as possible for Wal-Mart to replace U.S.-made goods with low-cost goods from China."

Finally, there is the simple matter of human nature. As Baker put it, "Since reporters are among the winners, they want to believe that it is because of their talent and hard work, not because the deck was rigged in their favor. Therefore, they don't seek out anyone as a source for their stories who will claim that the deck was rigged."

Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz confessed to much the same bias when he told The Washington Monthly, "Most journalists don't hobnob hob·nob  
intr.v. hob·nobbed, hob·nob·bing, hob·nobs
To associate familiarly: hobnobs with the executives.
 with the sort of people who might lose their jobs under a trade agreement."

When reporters produce news stories on a complex subject, they usually turn to policy experts for clarifying comments. When the subject is trade, the experts are often economists. And most economists, academic and otherwise, are, as Baker put it, "almost religious fanatics in support of the current path of globalization." Baker also pointed out that as an economist, he is called with some frequency by mainstream media outlets seeking comments on issues such as Social Security and the housing market. "I have a pretty good track record on a number of these topics," Baker said. "For instance, I was warning about the stock bubble from 1997 and the housing bubble from 2002." Despite his demonstrated economic expertise and his ability to give clear, pithy pith·y  
adj. pith·i·er, pith·i·est
1. Precisely meaningful; forceful and brief: a pithy comment.

2. Consisting of or resembling pith.
 quotes, Baker said, "I am never asked about my views on trade and globalization."

Paul Krugman is an academic economist at Princeton who, as a New York Times columnist, has become a popular communicator and a powerful voice warning, among other things, about the danger of American's growing economic inequality. But he falls right in line on "free trade." In 2001, he wrote about anti-globalization protests at the Summit of the Americas The Summit of the Americas is the name for one of a sequence of summits bringing together the countries of the Americas for discussion of a variety of issues. These encounters are organized by a number of multilateral bodies led by the Organization of American States. , "Many of the people inside that chain-link fence [the policy-makers] are sincerely trying to help the world's poor. And the people outside the fence [the protesters], whatever their intentions, are doing their best to make the poor even poorer."

Thomas Friedman, the New York Times foreign affairs columnist, is the most unabashedly un·a·bashed  
adj.
1. Not disconcerted or embarrassed; poised.

2. Not concealed or disguised; obvious: unabashed disgust.
 partisan proponent of corporate globalization in all of the mainstream media. And from his lofty and influential perch, he is able to influence the agenda across the media landscape. Friedman's globalist vision was summarized in his book The World is Flat, which contends that corporate globalization is creating a world in which hierarchies among nations, and within enterprises, are being replaced by free-flowing peer-to-peer relationships. Friedman may come to regret that metaphor if, like the original "flat-earthers," he continues to cling to it despite all evidence. According to media critic Norman Solomon, Friedman admitted in a CNBC CNBC Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition (artificial intelligence)
CNBC Consumer News and Business Channel
CNBC Congress of National Black Churches, Inc.
 interview with Tim Russert last July that he wrote a column in support of the Central American Free Trade Agreement without even knowing what was in the treaty. "I just knew two words," Friedman said. "Free trade."

But maybe Friedman's on to something, because when it comes to "free trade," the facts don't seem to matter that much. Last year, on April 10, The New York Times devoted half of its op-ed page to an article titled "Globalizing Good Government" by two Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas covers the Eleventh Federal Reserve District, which includes Texas, northern Louisiana and southern New Mexico. It has branch offices in El Paso, Houston, and San Antonio.  employees, Richard Fisher and Michael Cox. According to FAIR, the article--and its accompanying charts--claimed to demonstrate that "more globalized" nations do better than the "less globalized" on measures ranging from average inflation to the rule of law. But, FAIR noted, the article and its supporting data left out "one obvious measure of economic health, the economic growth rate."

The Times piece argued that "the more globalized nations tend to pursue policies that achieve faster economic growth," while "the least globalized countries are prone to policies that interfere with markets and lead to stagnation Stagnation

A period of little or no growth in the economy. Economic growth of less than 2-3% is considered stagnation. Sometimes used to describe low trading volume or inactive trading in securities.

Notes:
A good example of stagnation was the U.S. economy in the 1970s.
, inflation and diminished competitiveness." But according to statistics from the U.N. Conference on Trade and Development, countries in the "most globalized" group (including the U.S., Canada, Australia, several European countries, and Singapore) had an average growth rate of 3.6 percent. Meanwhile, the countries Fisher and Cox classified as "least globalized" (including China, India, Russia, Brazil, and Venezuela) had an average growth rate of 6.3 percent.

AN ACQUAINTANCE OF mine who used to work at a Gannett-owned newspaper unfailingly refers to the chain's flagship, USA Today, as "Corporate America's Newspaper." And any doubt about the accuracy of that label was dispelled in a Jan. 15, 2007, article by USA Today economies reporter David Lynch. Like Cokie Roberts" NPR NPR

In currencies, this is the abbreviation for the Nepal Rupee.

Notes:
The currency market, also known as the Foreign Exchange market, is the largest financial market in the world, with a daily average volume of over US $1 trillion.
 analysis the week before, Lynch's news story sounded an undisguised ideological alarm at the swelling "fair trade" tide.

"At home and abroad," Lynch began, "globalization is under increasing stress. From Venezuela, where President Hugo Chavez announced plans last week to nationalize na·tion·al·ize  
tr.v. na·tion·al·ized, na·tion·al·iz·ing, na·tion·al·iz·es
1. To convert from private to governmental ownership and control: nationalize the steel industry.

2.
 critical industries, to Thailand, which has imposed new controls on foreign capital, countries are embracing long-discredited economic strategies" [emphasis added]. In his "Beat the Press" blog commenting on this article, Dean Baker noted that, especially in the case of capital controls, it's hard to call them a "discredited strategy" when they are used by such fast-growing countries as China and India, among many others.

But Lynch ranted on. "The backsliding back·slide  
intr.v. back·slid , back·slid·ing, back·slides
To revert to sin or wrongdoing, especially in religious practice.



back
 overseas comes as a new Democratic majority on Capitol Hill ... is getting down to work. Many of the new Democratic lawmakers campaigned on so-called fair-trade platforms and are deeply skeptical of the free-trade strategies pursued by Republican and Democratic presidents alike for a generation." The term "backsliding" is, of course, an unattributed un·at·trib·ut·ed  
adj.
Not attributed to a source, creator, or possessor: an unattributed opinion. 
 value judgment, but note especially that, to USA Today, fair trade is "so-called" while free trade gets no qualifier.

Then Lynch remembers the rules of reporting and turns to an expert for support. He finds a Harvard Business School Harvard Business School, officially named the Harvard Business School: George F. Baker Foundation, and also known as HBS, is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University.  professor who will say, "The idea of globalization and continued societal embrace of openness seems to be in a very deep sense of crisis." Here we should note the common conflation (database) conflation - Combining or blending of two or more versions of a text; confusion or mixing up. Conflation algorithms are used in databases.  of corporate economic globalization with the warm and fuzzy "embrace of openness." Only Neanderthals such as Lou Dobbs or Pat Buchanan (the only anti-globalization voices regularly heard in the mainstream media) could possibly stand against "openness."

Then American voters and ungrateful Third World types come in for a real scolding. "The ebbing enthusiasm for additional integration is particularly noteworthy," Lynch claims, "coming after four consecutive years of global economic expansion.... That's what makes the pervasive gripes gripe  
v. griped, grip·ing, gripes

v.intr.
1. Informal To complain naggingly or petulantly; grumble.

2. To have sharp pains in the bowels.

v.tr.
1.
 over globalization--the free flow of goods, services, and capital across national borders--so striking." I am not making this up. He really said "gripes." And he really defined globalization without reference to the movement of jobs.

If anyone doubts the importance of international trade policy, and the importance that U.S. elites attach to continuing the "free trade" path, they only need to look at this unprecedented pattern of deliberate distortion in the corporate media. From fall 2002 to summer 2003, as the U.S. rushed to war in Iraq, the mainstream media showed a similar obliviousness to facts and a lack of critical inquiry. But in that ease, when the American people turned against the war, the media did, too. "Free trade" is different. When it comes to trade policy, the customer is not right.

Danny Duncan Collum, a Sojourners contributing writer, teaches writing at Kentucky State University Kentucky State University (KSU, or less commonly, KYSU, to differentiate from Kansas State University) is a four-year institution of higher learning, located in Frankfort, Kentucky, the Commonwealth's capital.  in Frankfort, Kentucky.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Sojourners
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:SPECIAL ISSUE: TRADE JUSTICE
Author:Collum, Danny Duncan
Publication:Sojourners
Date:May 1, 2007
Words:2253
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