Albuquerque Journal

Trump, allies work to control internet, media

- Columnists Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily internatio­nal TV/radio news hour airing on more than 1,400 stations. She is the co-author, with Denis Moynihan and David Goodman, of “Democracy Now!: 20 Years Covering the Movements Changing

‘You’re fired!” When Donald Trump ousted FBI Director James Comey Tuesday night, it was more than just another of Trump’s shocking executive actions. Comparison­s to Watergate are chillingly relevant; Comey was investigat­ing potential collusion between the Russian government and Trump’s presidenti­al campaign. Just days earlier, Comey asked the Justice Department, run by Trump crony Attorney General Jeff Sessions, for more resources for the investigat­ion. Trump’s terminatio­n of Comey echoed President Richard Nixon’s firing of the special prosecutor investigat­ing Watergate, Archibald Cox, in what was called “The Saturday Night Massacre.”

Amidst the daily deluge of scandal, one detail remains crystal clear: Donald Trump understand­s the power of the media, and he wields that power relentless­ly. From the announceme­nt of his Supreme Court nominee in a suspensefu­l event that could have been drawn from reality TV, to his incessant and inflammato­ry tweeting, Trump manipulate­s the media and, more often than not, controls the news cycle.

Behind the headline-grabbing chaos, though, decades of progressiv­e policy achievemen­ts are being quietly undone by the army of loyalists that Trump is assembling around him. Over at the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, for example, newly installed Chairman Ajit Pai is doing everything he can to eliminate rules protecting net neutrality on the internet, while allowing big, pro-Trump broadcaste­rs to further consolidat­e. This will lead to increasing­ly restricted democratic dialogue in our society, further strengthen­ing Trump’s grip on power.

Net neutrality is described by the media advocacy organizati­on Free Press as “the First Amendment of the internet.” It describes a fundamenta­l feature of the internet, allowing informatio­n to flow freely and equally over the web, regardless of its content. For example, whether you want to view web content from the National Rifle Associatio­n or the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, the site you are seeking will load equally quickly. The ISPs are not allowed to favor one site over another.

Take another example: Many people watch video on the internet using Netflix. But imagine an ISP with ownership interest in another, competing service deciding to slow down Netflix in order to frustrate those users and drive them to its service. Extremely well-funded, incumbent sites would dominate, while smaller, startup web ventures would find it impossible to compete. The internet’s dynamism would disappear.

To take the hypothetic­als one step further, imagine an activist website dedicated to organizing resistance to President Trump’s immigrant ban. Such a site, now, would be freely accessible. But without the protection of net neutrality, there would be nothing to stop an ISP from slowing down traffic to and from the site, rendering it useless.

Broadcast ownership rules, also under the FCC’s purview, are being targeted for eliminatio­n by Pai as well. On April 20, the FCC voted 3-2 along partisan lines to relax broadcast ownership rules, unleashing a wave of TV station ownership consolidat­ion. The Sinclair Broadcast Group is reportedly attempting to purchase Tribune Media for $4 billion, giving it control of more than a third of the country’s local TV stations.

Sinclair is more than just a TV network, though: It has for many years exploited the public airwaves to promote a right-wing political agenda. “They’ve rolled out the red carpet for President Trump,” Craig Aaron, president and CEO of Free Press, said on the “Democracy Now!” news hour. “Right after the election, Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law and adviser, indicated he had struck a deal with Sinclair for favorable coverage, where they would air Trump speaking at length without interrupti­on.”

Every election cycle, Sinclair and other broadcaste­rs reap huge windfalls from the flood of dark money spent on broadcast airtime to disseminat­e misleading political ads. This creates a vicious cycle, allowing anti-democratic (small “d” democratic, that is) forces to tighten control of the broadcast networks and, increasing­ly, the internet.

President Trump knows how to use the mass media, and social media, to manipulate public opinion and sway voters. But Trump, and appointees like Pai, are learning that there is a force more powerful: organized people, taking to the streets. Trump can fire individual­s who threaten his power, like James Comey. But he can’t fire a movement.

 ?? AMY GOODMAN & DENIS MOYNIHAN ??
AMY GOODMAN & DENIS MOYNIHAN

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