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The Top 10 Censored Stories of 2000 -

All The News the Major Media Neglected
By Tate Hausman, Don Hazen, Tamara Straus &  Karynn M. Fish.
Have you read the one about corporations planning to charge you

hundreds of dollars a month for your tap water? Or the one about military

"psychological operations" specialists manipulating viewers of CNN? What

about the highly skilled programmers in Silicon Valley who, because they

are immigrants, are laboring under sweatshop like conditions?
If none of these stories ring a bell, it's not because you've missed the

latest e-mail hoax. It's because these very real tales - and many others

like them  - weren't reported in the mainstream media. Instead, they were

among this year's Top 10 Censored Stories, according to Project Censored

(www.projectcensored.org) a veteran media-watchdog group.  Every year for

the past 25 years, Project Censored has tracked important stories that are

underreported or blocked out by the mainstream press. The articles are

honored with an award and them compiled in a book published by Seven

Stories Press.
The consistent theme is that our government routinely fails to protect our

rights, health & safety, especially if there's corporate money at stake.

While Americans often bad-mouth 'big government', we overwhelmingly favor

health & environmental regulations, and trust that they keep us safe.

Unfortunately, as these stories show, our trust may be misplaced.
As mainstream media outlets are increasingly dominated by large corporate

conglomerates, they become ever more beholden to the bottom line. Stories

that don't make money - either because they don't capture a large audience,

are too expensive to research, or might offend advertisers and investors -

often end up on the newsroom floor.
Reporters & editors quickly learn to play by the narrow rules of the game,

and to keep their stories within a certain range of ideas & topics. On top

of this self-censorship, the relentless pace of mainstream news outlets

rarely allows for anything more than simplified treatments of complex

subjects.
By honoring the Top 10 Censored Stories, the organizers hope both to

provoke mainstream media to cover these issues and to strengthen the

independent press.
"We must redevelop news  & information systems from the bottom up," writes

Peter Phillips, Project Censored's director and a Journalism Professor at

Sonoma State University, where the project is based. "Thousands of

alternative news organizations already exist. We just need to connect and

put their news on the breakfast tables of millions of working people."
Executing that vision is easier said than done, of course.  And while

annually highlighting underreported stories will hardly cause a media

revolution, it will keep more people informed about the pressing issues

that passed quietly by last year. So without further ado, the Top 10

Censored Stories of 2000 are:
1. World Bank & Multinational Companies Seek To Privatize Water.

The authors of this year's first-place story all started with the same

premise. Global water consumption is doubling every 20 years and by 2025,

the demand for fresh water is expected to exceed the amount of water

currently available by 56 percent.
This frightens environmentalists. But for officials at international

lending institutions and multinational companies, it's a business

opportunity. "Water is the last infrastructure frontier for private

investors," declared one banking official. Monsanto corporation certainly

agrees; it plans to earn revenues of $420 million and a net income of $64

million by 2008 from its water business in India & Mexico.
The Bechtel corporation is also on the case, but has botched its scramble

for blue gold. While attempting to privatize the local water systems of

Cochamba, Bolivia, not only did the company provoke mass strikes that

injured hundreds and shut down the city of 600,000 for a week, but Bechtel

sought to pin the blame for the uprising on narcotics traffickers.

Nevertheless, this bad PR has not stopped Bechtel - the company appears to

be positioning itself to privatize San Francisco's water system.
Award to: Jim Shultz, In These Times and This; Maude Barlow, International

Forum on Globalizaiton; Vandana Shiva, Canadian Dimension; Daniel Zoll and

Pratap Chatterjee, the San Francisco Bay Guardian.
2. OSHA Can't - Or Won't Help Powerless Workers.

Though focused on one particularly egregious scandal, the second place

winner is a broad indictment of the Occupational Safety and Health

Administration. As author Christopher Cook points out, OSHA has only 2,300

inspectors to cover 102 million workers in 6.7 million workplaces. That's

one inspector for every 44,348 workers. It would take OSHA 110 years to

inspect each workplace under its jurisdiction just once.
Even when OSHA finds violations of safety rules, the fines assessed are a

joke. In one case at Titan International, the manufacturing company

profited. OSHA imposed a paltry $10,000 fine after Titan's illegal

equipment, which lacked crucial safety features, killed a worker. For a

company raking in hundreds of millions of dollars a year, 10 grand is

laughable.
The net effect is that employers like Titan can ignore rules & regulations

designed to keep workers safe. While it would cost them plenty in the short

term to install safety guards and properly train workers, it will cost them

relatively little in fines over a long period if they do not. Their

workers, of course, are caught in the middle.

Award to: Christopher Cook, the Progressive.
3. Army Propaganda Team Worked at CNN.

The corporate media has long relied on government spinmeisters to produce

news during times of war. The Army has entire units, "psychological

operations" groups, devoted in part to spreading information (and

propaganda) to news organizations. From them, media outlets get inside,

official information without having to do much reporting.
But the military took the principle way too far in placing Army psy-ops

personnel at CNN's TV, radio and satellite bureaus during the Kosovo war.

Through a program called 'Training with Industry', the army stationed five

psy-ops soldiers as interns at CNN's Southeast bureau. Later, in a

closed-door Army symposium, a psy-ops commander said the cooperation with

CNN was a textbook example of the kind of ties the American army wants to

have with the media.
"The U.S. Army - confirmed to me that military personnel have been involved

in news production at CNN's news desks," said Abe DeVried, who first broke

the story in a respected Dutch newspaper. "I found it simply astonishing.

These kind of close ties with the army are, in my view, completely

unacceptable for any serious news organization."
As award-winner Alexander Cockburn speculated, "It could be that CNN was

the target of a psy-ops penetration and is still too naïve to figure out

what was going on."

Award to: Alexander Cockburn, Counterpunch.
4. Did the United States deliberately bomb the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade?

On May 7, 1999, U.S. fighter pilots bombed the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade,

Yugoslavia, killing three people. The Clinton administration apologized and

called it a "tragic mistake" resulting from an outdated map. Chinese

authorities rejected both the explanation and the apology and insisted the

bombing was deliberate. Five months later, reports in the Observer of

London and Copenhagen's Politriken alleged that the CIA had coordinated the

attack in order to destroy a Yugoslavian army rebroadcast center housed in

the embassy. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright dismissed the

allegations as "balderdash," and both stories were ignored by mainstream

news outlets in the United States.
In response to a campaign by media critic group Fairness & Accuracy in

Reporting, the New York Times finally ran an investigative story in April

of last year, reporting it found no conclusive evidence of a deliberate

attack - though the reporter, Times Pentagon correspondent Steven Lee

Myers, seemed to have his doubts. But the real issue was the reluctance of

the U.S. media to confront a story that was receiving serious attention

abroad.

Awards to: Joel Bleifuss and Seth Ackerman, In These Times, Oichi Shimatsu,

Pacific News Service.
5. U.S. Taxes Underwrite Nuke Plants Overseas.

"Here's a story you probably won't see on CBS."  So begins Ken Silverstein

and Ian Urbina's expose on the U.S. Export-Import Bank's foreign nuclear

power plant deals. The writers start smugly for good reason: Westinghouse,

which built unsafe and overpriced Ex-Im-backed nuclear power plants, owns

the CBS network. And sure enough CBS did not cover the story.
The U.S. Export-Import Bank is a government agency that underwrites exports

through tax-backed loans. As the writers document, between 1959 and 1993,

the bank spent $7.7 billion to help sell American-made reactors overseas.

The reason for this 'help', however, was not altruistic. U.S. nuclear

contractors such as Westinghouse, Bechtel and General Electric (which

happens to own NBC)  have watched their home markets shrink, as nuclear

power has become riddled with risks and uncertainties. So the companies

have searched for clients abroad. Since most countries can't afford to buy

nuclear power facilities, the contractors often provide financing backed by

Ex-Im and you, the taxpayer.
Often, contractors make windfall profits from such loans. In 1985,

Westinghouse built the Bataan nuclear power facility in the Philippines at

a cost of $1.2 billion, 150 % above projections!  The plant was situated

near an active volcano and never generated a single watt of energy.

Nevertheless, the Philippines pays $300,000 a day  in interest on the loan

that funded the project. Of course, none of this should be a huge surprise

- the leader of the council overseeing  Ex-Im loans is also the head honcho

of Westinghouse.
Now with the Bush Administration and Energy Director Spencer Abraham set to

launch a domestic energy policy, inside reports and recent Senate testimony

indicate they will be seeking to build at least 63 new nuclear reactors in

the United States.

Award to: Ken Silverstein and Ian Urbina, The Progressive.
6. U.S. Role in the Genocide in Rwanda.

In censored story No. 6, alternet.org

Columnist David Corn examines a low point of Bill Clinton's foreign policy:

the alleged U.S. collusion in the genocide of more than 500,000 Tutsi peope

by the Hutus in Rwanda.
Corn noticed a modest New York Times article which said that the

Organization for African Unity had issued a report critical of the United

States - especially of Secretary of State Madeleine Albright - for handling

the Rwandan genocide so poorly. "But the story did not go into details,"

Corn wrote, even though "the report demolished the Clinton assertion that

he had not been fully aware of the genocide when it had been under way."

Ellen Ray's lengthy article about the Congo in Covert Action Quarterly

echoed the condemning assertion.
Other mass killings have occurred during Rwanda's brutal history. However,

under the 1948 U.N. Genocide Convention, once a genocide is recognized, the

nations of the world are obligated to prevent the killings and to punish

the murderers. A story that strongly suggests that our government knew

about this horrible rampage and might have prevented it deserves

significant media follow-up.
Perhaps this is why the United Nations recently snubbed the U.S. by

declining to place it on membership of their Worldwide Human Rights

Committee.

	Awards to: David Corn, alternet.org; Ellen Ray, Covert Action

Quarterly.
7. Biotech industry censors critics of genetically engineered food.

In 1998, Scottish researcher Arpad Pusztai

found that genetically engineered (GE) potatoes seemed to be causing

sickness and impeding brain development in rats. When he went to the press

with his preliminary findings, the biotech industry - poised to make

billions of dollars from GE foods - came down on him like a ton of bricks.
Pusztai was quickly fired by his employer, the Rowett Research Institute,

while his research team was disbanded and his data seized. It later came

out that Rowett had received a $224,000 grant from biotech giant Monsanto

prior to Pusztai's firing.
Pusztai pushed his case in the media, creating a firestorm of controversy

in the British press. His main point: Why not continue the experiments to

determine the health risks of GE potatoes? Eventually, he found an ally in

Prince Charles, who wrote a widely publicized article in the Daily Mail

questioning the lack of safety testing on GE foods. In a highly unusual

move, British Prime Minister Tony Blair  - a biotech advocate - called

Charles to advise him to withdraw his opinion and refrain from any further

public comments. Just another startling illustration of how effectively

industry, in collusion with industry-friendly government officials, can

quash opinions or evidence that might threaten profit margins.

	Awards to: Joel Bleifuss, In These Times; Karen Charman, Extra!;

Ben Lilliston, Multinational Monitor.
8. Drug Companies Influence Doctors and Health Organizations to Push Medicines.

Advertising would seem an effective enough marketing tool for drugs, since

research shows that most patients who ask for a drug they saw on TV get the

prescription they want. But pharmaceutical companies are heding their bets,

spending billions each year to influence doctors and even bankrolling

"patients" groups to advocate on their behalf.
In "Drug Rush", Stephen Pomper describes how patients are left vulnerable

by an accelerated FDA drug-approval process and too few experts to monitor

problems reported about drugs, already on the market. The risk to public

health increases when pharmaceutical companies ply doctors with incentives

to turn them into salesmen for the latest medications.
Meanwhile, Ken Silverstein's research for Mother Jones revealed that the

National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI), a nonprofit advocacy group

that calls itself a "grassroots organizations for individuals with brain

disorders", received millions of dollars from pharmaceutical companies,

including a large chunk from Prozac manufacturer Eli Lilly.

"Mother Jones cracked the shell," David Oaks concluded in a follow-up story

for Dendron that connects the dots between the drug companies' largess and

a coercive medication-monitoring program sponsored by NAMI. "It's up to the

grassroots to finish the job."
Awards to: Stephen Pomper, Washington Monthly; Ken Silverstein,

motherjones.com; David Oaks, Dendron; Jacqueline Sparks Miller, Family

Therapy Networker.
9. EPA Planned to Dump Toxic Waste into Denver Sewers.

A year ago, the City of Denver planned to "clean" the nearby Lowry

Superfund site by pumping radioactive waste through the city's sewer system

and selling the sludge to commercial agribusiness concerns for use as

fertilizer on crops grown for human consumption.
The local EPA office said there's no credible evidence of dangerous levels

of radioactive waste at the site, but a group headed by local law professor

Adrienne Anderson said the plan stinks a mile high. Anderson's research

convinced 7,000 citizens to sign a petition that prompted the EPA's

inspector general to call for an investigation of the proposed cleanup

methods. After this story was published in the Progressive, the City of

Denver started, then stopped accepting liquid waste from Lowry, but the

program is slated to resume.
What do the local papers, the Denver Post and the Rocky Mountain News

(which merged this year) have to say about it? Not much, the story reports

- for many years, their companies contrributed their own toxic waste to

Lowry.

	Award to: Will Fantle, the Progressive.
10. Silicon Valley Sweatshops

There is a silver lining for employers who hire immigrant works on H1-B

visas. They are brought to the U.S. on individual contracts, and therefore,

unlike U.S. workers, have no legal protection to organize, sue for unfair

treatment or even demand salaries they are promised.
This is particularly true for high-tech workers from India and Pakistan

employed by Silicon Valley tech firms. Kim Singh, for example, received an

H1-B visa for a software engineer job. Upon arriving from India, he worked

for one company that withheld 25 percent of his and other immigrant

workers' salaries. At his second Silicon Valley job, he worked seven days a

week with no overtime compensation, and discovered only H1-B workers were

required to work weekends. His third employer rented him and three other

workers an apartment, charging each $1,450 a month, while holding onto

their passports. Complaints about this kind of treatment were met by

firings and deportations.
Such abuses have far-ranging effects. Silicon Valley tech companies have

lobbied Congress to increase the yearly number of H1-B workers to 300,000

as well as to lift the cap entirely, potentially increasing abuses. And

high-tech jobs that have gone to foreigners have curbed the need to train

American workers, whom companies would have to pay higher wages. "Contract

labor boosts corporate bottom lines," David Bacon reported, "but it has a

devastating impact on workers."

	Award to: David Bacon, Labor Notes, and the Washington Free Press.
Tate Hausman, Don Hazen, Tamara Straus and Karynn M. Fish are on the staff

of alternet.org.

 

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