| Debunking
the Bunk
Alex Beech
www.alexbeech.blogspot.com
June 21, 2006
They keep coming.
Emails and articles loaded with arguments justifying
the silencing of a major television network in Venezuela.
The arguments, published on websites funded by the
Venezuelan government in Washington and elsewhere,
have been regurgitated throughout the country through
viral email campaigns mimicking grassroots efforts.
Here are a few, and my response.
ARGUMENT #1
The government's decision was "legal and legitimate
one based on their constitution which guarantees and
regulates the access and use of airwaves for the benefit
of the general public."
Legal and legitimate are loaded words, right? To keep
it simple, let's say that "legal" is following
the law. Here's a little legal information, just for
kicks: in May, 1987, the government published a decree
numbered 1577. This degree was published in an "official
gaceta", a document which contains all government
decrees. That document was numbered 33,796, in case
anyone is interested in reading the law. Included
inside that decree is an article which states that
licences (or concessions) shall be automatically renewed
for a period of twenty years, when "always and
when all regulations have been met." Automatically
is a pretty straightforward word, but for those out
there scratching your heads, "automatic"
means, "Acting or operating in a manner essentially
independent of external influence or control."
Call me crazy, but if the regulations were met, the
law is pretty clear. The licence should have "automatically
been renewed." Oh, says Glover and the Venezuela
Information Office. But the regulations weren't met.
What regulations? Under what legal system was the
evidence of a breach presented? In what court were
the "regulations" described? In what court
did RCTV exercise its legal right to defend itself?
There was no court case. There was no legal proceeding.
No one notified RCTV. It just happened. Legal and
legitimate what?
(By the way, a legal notification doesn't take place
on television. Yes, Chavez's threats don't count.)
ARGUMENT #2
RCTV "has not been silenced, for it can continue
broadcasting by cable, satellite and Internet!"
With a 20% inflation rate, asking the poor to subscribe
to cable, and/or buy a satellite dish, and/or buy
a computer and subscribe to an Internet service smacks
of...discrimination? RCTV's position on channel two
(Very High Frequency), combined with its transmission
equipment, guaranteed that anyone with a TV and an
antennae could see it. Around 35% of Venezuelans tuned
in every day, making it the most watched network in
the country. Where is RCTV today? Can any Venezuelan
with a television watch it? No.
That, my friends, is SILENCING.
ARGUMENT #3
The RCTV "programming has been sexist, racist
and pejorative."
Was it "sexist" when Caracas Metropolitan
Mayor Juan Barreto - a member of Chavez's (most) inner
circle - said, "You can't trust an animal that
bleeds every month when it hasn't been injured, the
woman."
Or when Chavez said on national television to the
former First Lady on Valentine's Day in 2000, "Prepare
yourself, Marisabel, because tonight you're getting
what's yours."
Or when Chavez addressed US Secretary of State Rice
by saying, "How are you? You've forgotten me,
missy ..."
Or, when in another speech, Chavez said Secretary
Rice, "continues to show she is a total illiterate.
It seems she dreams of me. I could invite her meet
with me to see what happens. First she said she was
angry. The next day she said that she felt sad and
depressed because of Chavez. Oh daddy! Forget about
me. That lady has such bad luck! I won’t make
that sacrifice for the country. Let someone else do
it. Cristobal Jimenez, Nicolas Maduro or Juan Barreto,
who is single”.
I can't imagine how those statements would be interpreted
as anything other than sexist and vulgar, and yet
these two men are televised on every network, and
no one has accused them of "sexism."
Concerning RCTV's purported racism, could there be
more diversity on television? Yes, in Venezuela and
everywhere, including the US. Is anyone protesting
in front of Univision, BET, Bravo, CBS, NBC, UPN,
ABC and Telemundo? Not the last time I checked. And
since when is race an excuse to silence a television
network?
Finally, the word "pejorative", which means
"having a disparaging, derogatory, or belittling
effect or force."
Never in the history of Venezuela has a president
belittled his own people as Chavez has. No, he hasn't
belittled his supporters, (I know what you were going
to say, Glover!) I mean, those who don't agree with
him, who signed against him, who voted against him
- all constitutional rights. He has called them, "squalids,
coup-plotters, CIA agents, brain-washed"...and
the list goes on. He called Bush and OAS Secretary
General Insulza "pendejo" - which literally
means pubic hair, and figuratively means asshole or
idiot. We may not like either men - but we may not,
as presidents, go around calling others "pubic
hair" without being "pejorative." And
yet no one has insisted that Chavez be removed from
television.
ARGUMENT #4
RCTV "actively participated in the 2002 coup
against President Chavez" because it "prohibited
its reporters to broadcast Chavez's reinstatement
in office."
To actively participate in a military coup, don't
you have to call the military to take up arms against
a president? Did RCTV call on the military to take
up arms against Chavez? Has any Venezuelan court determined
that those events were, in fact, a "coup"?
(I'll publish any court decision you send me stating
that the events were a "coup.") The other
privately owned networks also failed to report the
re-instatement of Chavez. Why were their licenses
renewed? Could it be because they changed their editorial
stance to favor the government? As government special
envoy Roy Chaderton recently said to Dow Jones in
Madrid, "with the other stations, we took a political
decision. They have rectified and the government considered
it positive for democracy." Does that sound like
the government was upset over a coup, or over an editorial
stance? Chaderton's words were repeated in New York
by Consul General Leonor Osorio, who said, "The
renter has behaved badly. His contract wasn't renewed."
This folks, is censorship and persecution.
According to one RCTV insider, there was a reason
that reporters didn't venture into the streets on
April 13th and 14th. After the shooting and killing
of demonstrators by snipers on April 11th 2002, the
country was in chaos, and many editors chose to ask
network news reporters to stay home until further
notice.
To date, the government hasn't created a "Truth
Commission" to determine what exactly took place
April 11-13, despite an accord reached between the
government and the opposition under the mediation
of the Carter Center and the Organization of American
States which called for a thorough investigation of
the sad events.
Finally, let's get real here. The government run and
controlled media doesn't cover opposition events,
including the student protests that recently roiled
the nation. Any time hundreds of thousands of protestors
crowd the streets, the government media uses the image
of one empty street or avenue to "depict"
the protest. Reporters from banned networks (Globovision,
and until recently RCTV) aren't allowed to enter many
government functions. Government leaders, including
Chavez, insult reporters who question them in any
way. Chavez takes over the airwaves whenever he feels
like it by forcing networks to broadcast his speeches.
This revolution has been televised and televised and
televised and televised and televised. Ad nauseum.
ARGUMENT #5
"The FCC in the US would have immediately shut
down a television network if it broadcast statements
calling for the removal of Bush."
Let's envision that scenario. Rosie O'Donnell goes
on National Television and starts saying that Bush
needs to be removed from office. Oh wait! That probably
already happened. Let's use another example. A prominent
general says that Bush needs to be removed from office.
He states, "I call on all soldiers to attack
the White House." Would the government go after
the network or after the general? And if, by chance,
Catie Couric joined the general in calling for the
removal of Bush, wouldn't the FCC investigate, and
possibly fine her network? And wouldn't Congress call
for hearings? And would there be lawyers and yes,
DUE PROCESS? Please stop saying that the FCC would
automatically shut down a television network. It's
simply false.
Conclusion
In an interview with the Philadephia Inquirer on May
17, actor/producer Danny Glover said that "a
foundation of democracy is due process."
Clearly, there was no due process in the RCTV case,
and therefore the government's decision was both illegal
and illegitimate.
In the same article, Glover states "In a democracy,
it is important that all sides of a situation are
heard not just the side that's coercively fashioned
for us to hear."
Unfortunately, by Mr. Glover's criteria, Venezuela
is no longer a democracy. Every VHF channel in Venezuela
now only airs one side, and that is Chavez's side.
Fortunately for Mr. Glover and Chavez's apologists
in the United States, it is the side that they ardently
defend.
Alex Beech
www.alexbeech.blogspot.com
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