|
|
|
|
|
by prewett
3816 days ago
|
|
I don't think anyone is saying there isn't propaganda/spin/marketing in the US. But to compare it to Goebbels or China is irresponsible, unless you have some serious sources. China bullys reporters (Chinese and foreign) [1], refuses visas to foreign reporters of papers that publish things that contradict the party line [2], jails Chinese reporters that contradict whatever the Party wants at the moment [3], blocked nytimes.com ever since it published an expose of Hu Jintao's (the president of China at the time) financial affairs [4], has been bullying Hong Kong newspapers that do not tow Beijing's line despite a promise to not control Hong Kong until about 2046 [unfortunately, can't find sources on this, as it is a bit subtle, but, for example, the South China Morning Post was bought by Alibaba executive; think it's going to publish anything out of line?] [1] http://www.poynter.org/2014/covering-china-for-foreign-and-d... [2] https://cpj.org/blog/2015/03/how-china-uses-j-visas-to-punis... [3] http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/8/27/chinese-jour... [4] http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/26/world/asia/china-blocks-we... |
|
Want to get access to high ranking officials? Same thing.
Instead of throwing anyone in jail it's a matter of strangling them of access so competitors gets important information first or gets to be the ones askin their questions.
Occasionally it doesn't work. Like when a newspaper gets hold of something important enough to be willing to risk their access (such as the Snowden documents). But for tilting the day to day reporting of politics these methods have been honed to a level where they are remarkably effective.