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controlling the narrative.....Declaration: In publishing this article, Croakey Health Media acknowledges that our future is at stake in these discussions, and also that our analysis comes from a particular standpoint of viewing public interest journalism as an important upstream determinant of health, while corporate media often undermine the determinants of health. In the interests of transparency, our positions on key media reform questions are publicly declared in our submissions to various inquiries. Melissa Sweet and Marie McInerney write:The health implications of media policy are wide-ranging but not usually front of mind in national debate, whether for governments, communities or even the health sector. However, the Albanese Government’s argument that gambling advertising is needed to sustain free-to-air broadcasters, while deeply problematic, is also an opportunity to acknowledge and address the unhealthy state of media policy in this country. It’s an opportunity to highlight why media policy reform needs to centre the needs of communities, especially under-served communities, and their imperilled rights to safe, reliable and relevant news and information. The Albanese Government has inadvertently reminded us that media policy has for too long been driven by the interests of corporate media and associated interests, rather than the public interest. As Senator Sarah Hanson-Young, The Greens spokesperson on communications, told an Australia Institute event yesterday, the excuse put forward by the Government that gambling ads are needed so people can watch local news in regional and rural Australia is “absurd”. “If the cost of local journalism is gambling addiction, we’re broken, we really are,” she said, suggesting that we have to “up our ambitions” in approaches to funding public interest journalism. Timely momentWith a range of media policy options currently in play – from a tax on Big Tech to a funding pool for public interest journalism – we are in a timely moment for wider civil society, including the health and social sectors, to contribute to these debates. Media policy is too important to leave to media companies and associated commercial determinants of health. This has always been the case but is especially so in an era of the Artificial Intelligence juggernaut and toxic market power of Meta, News Corp et al. While the focus in recent weeks has been on gambling, it’s hard to think of a public health concern that isn’t affected by media policy, whether declining social cohesion and its twin, growing inequality, the marketing of harmful products, punitive justice policies, or the spread of misinformation and disinformation. Eric Beecher’s new book, The Men Who Killed the News, reminds us that one of the legacies of Murdoch’s global media empire has been the dissemination and normalisation of climate science denialism. Subtitled, ‘The inside story of how media moguls abused their power, manipulated the truth and distorted democracy’, the book also reminds readers that many of the concerns associated with social media companies – including invasion of privacy, the amplification of bigotry, misinformation and propaganda, tax avoidance, and the harmful exercise of corporate power – have a long tradition in legacy media organisations. The critical question driving many media policy developments is how to fund public interest journalism at a time when its business model is broken. Unfortunately, as Croakey has pointed out in various submissions, there has been much less attention to measures to grow media diversity and to support innovative models seeking to better meet communities’ needs. That is especially important for rural and other under-served communities. Research by the Public Interest Journalism Initiative (PIJI) shows regional and rural Australia has been most adversely affected by news cutbacks, with emerging gaps in news coverage of local councils, courts and communities. PIJI’s Australian Newsroom Mapping Project shows that, in the last three years, there has been a net loss of 121 news outlets across Australia, a sharp acceleration from previous Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) data that showed 106 news closures over a 10-year period (2008-18). Regional Australia accounts for 67 percent of outlet closures and 91 percent of service decreases. The PIJI data also identifies 32 local government areas without any local print or digital news, all in rural or remote Australia. These data do not address journalism job losses, of which we’ve seen yet more this week, or other factors diminishing the quality of journalism (for example, the Australia Institute event heard of newsroom decision-making being driven by what’s trending on Google rather than public interest concerns, as well as concerns about the impact of under-funding of the ABC and SBS). News Media Bargaining CodeWe are currently waiting to hear how the Federal Government will respond to Meta’s refusal to renew media funding agreements under Australia’s innovative though flawed News Media Bargaining Code, amid threats the tech giant will ban news from Facebook and Instagram and uncertainty about Google’s longer-term intentions. Media analyst Tim Burrowes has reported, in his Unmade newsletter, that advice on the Code from the ACCC and from the Treasury is now on the desk of Treasury Minister Stephen Jones. While the Code is problematic and has delivered neither long-term sustainability nor diversity to the Australian media landscape, Hanson-Young made an important point at the webinar that it had shown “those bastards” at Meta and Google that governments were prepared to stand up to them. If Australia had folded then, she said, there would be no way we’d be having a conversation now about protecting intellectual property in arts, journalism and other sectors from AI. • In Croakey’s submission on the Code earlier this year, we called for the Government to review its impact and to explore alternative policy processes and outcomes. We noted that it is arguably having the unintended consequence of discouraging digital platforms from sharing news content, which is “a problem for media sustainability, democracy, and for tackling the spread of misinformation and disinformation”. We strongly cautioned against the designation of Meta or other digital platforms under the Code, given the likely impact upon communities’ access to news and the sustainability of independent media organisations. We supported the Local and Independent News Association’s (LINA) recommendation that if the ACCC does designate Meta or other digital platforms (that is, force it into negotiation with media companies), the Government should provide funding to local and independent news publishers as compensation for its decision. Digital tech taxPrime Minister Anthony Albanese has indicated the Federal Government is considering a digital tech tax, as are other nations like New Zealand and Canada, warning the big tech companies shouldn’t be allowed to “essentially ride free” on the backs of traditional media. Calls for such a tax, backed by the Greens, have been made locally and globally for some years, including by Nobel laureate Professor Joseph Stiglitz. The former World Bank chief economist told an Australian Institute webinar in 2020 that he admired Australia’s efforts to get Google and Facebook to help fund journalism under the Code, but warned it should tax them if they make good on their threats to boycott Australian news over the move. Their market power was proving “absolutely devastating” for public interest journalism and democracy, and it may be time for governments to fund public interest journalism as a public good, in the same way they fund important scientific research, he told the webinar. Such a tax has the potential to help tackle wider public health concerns, such as misinformation and disinformation, and the power of Big Tech to undermine democracy and health. But, as has happened with the Code, there would be potential to reinforce the dominance of corporate media, which often contribute to misinformation and disinformation. One of the lessons from the Code is the importance of transparency, equity and accountability in the distribution of any such tax. We know little about the distribution of moneys under the Code under commercial in confidence agreements – how much went to fund public interest journalism, shareholders or overseas. • Croakey’s submission to a Senate Select inquiry into the future of public interest journalism in 2017 recommended the establishment of a production fund to support independent public interest journalism. Potential funding mechanisms included tax offsets for investors, direct government support, incentives for philanthropists and a levy on Google, Facebook or other companies that profit from the advertising revenue that used to fund mainstream media, but pay little tax. Funding mechanismsMedia organisations have been waiting for some time for details on the Government’s long-promised News Media Assistance Program (News MAP), which Communications Minister Michelle Rowland has described as “a principles-based program informed by evidence to support quality, diverse public interest journalism and media diversity”. The News MAP public consultation paper developed by the department has sought feedback on a range of potential measures to support public interest journalism, including government advertising and tax-based incentives. • Croakey’s submission on the paper in February urged the Government to act quickly: “The urgency of the matters at stake relates not only to the sustainability of organisations like ours. As democracies and societies around the world are undermined by coordinated and polarising disinformation campaigns, it is increasingly urgent that governments play their part in supporting a diverse and thriving news and media ecosystem. We cited LINA’s submission to the consultation, which stated: “The COVID-19 pandemic and the referendum on an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice to Parliament provide recent examples of matters impacted by coordinated mis-and disinformation campaigns which have affected the health and social cohesion of Australian society.” Croakey’s submission encouraged the Department and Government to recognise the right of all Australians to have access to public interest journalism – as both contributors to news and consumers of news. “It is also important to recognise that people do not have to be involved in the news process, as either contributors or consumers, to derive benefits, for example, through greater accountability of corporations, governments, and other power-holders. “We also encourage the Department and Government to explicitly consider how the News MAP can support responses to the ever-increasing proliferation of misinformation and disinformation and to help build social cohesion. “Taking this wider public policy perspective would mean ensuring the News MAP is not only supporting existing media organisations but is proactive about supporting innovation and the development of new models of public interest journalism to end ‘news deserts’ and to ensure all communities are well-served. It would also mean engaging more proactively with communities that are currently under-served by public interest journalism as part of the policy process.” Supporting innovationSupporting and growing the not-for-profit sector has potential to address many of the gaps and problems with the current media landscape. The Productivity Commission’s recent inquiry into philanthropic giving was an important opportunity for developing policy to better support the NFP journalism sector. The PIJI submission noted that developing a not-for-profit journalism sector in Australia has been repeatedly recommended and considered in parliamentary and regulatory inquiries over the past decade. “There is evidence from overseas, particularly the United States, to suggest that a NFP news sector would increase media diversity and address market failure in commercially unviable practices such as investigative journalism or in geographical, cultural, and linguistic markets of undersupply.” However, the Communications Minister’s office has confirmed to Croakey that neither Minister Michelle Rowland nor her Department made a submission to this inquiry, despite its significance to the NFP journalism sector. Her spokespeople did not respond to our question of ‘if not, why not?’. Perhaps if the Minister and her Department had engaged with this inquiry, the Productivity Commission might have recommended public interest journalism as a standalone category for Deductible Gift Recipient (DGR) status – a recommendation that was put to the inquiry by LINA, the Community Broadcasting Association, Croakey and others. • Croakey’s pre-budget submission in January 2023 urged the Government to support innovation and growth in the NFP sector by developing a comprehensive policy framework and funding an implementation strategy over the next five years. This could address multiple areas of concern across a number of portfolios, and would contribute to greater media diversity and innovation, more diverse economies, and support engaged, participatory communities. Other developmentsSome further policy directions may come in the next few weeks from a Joint Select Committee on Social Media and Australian Society. It was set up earlier this year to inquire into a range of issues including: the use of age verification to protect Australian children from social media, the impact of social media on mental health and sexual abuse, Meta’s abandonment of the Code, and “the important role of Australian journalism, news and public interest media in countering mis and disinformation on digital platforms”. Having conducted five public hearings, and received 217 submissions, it was due to publish its interim report last week but announced it could not now do so “because of changes in the office holders of the committee”. It will now present a substantial interim report in the coming weeks, and hold several further public hearings to inform its final report in November. Trust mattersCircling back to the gambling ads imbroglio, the financial problems of public interest journalism are also closely related to declining public trust in the media, as this week’s Australia Institute discussion made clear. It was interesting to hear the politicians on the panel (Minister for Science and Industry Ed Husic and Senator Hanson-Young) speak about how important the public’s trust in media is for their work, in communicating with the public. In undermining the social licence of media organisations by arguing gambling advertising is needed to sustain the media, the Government is thus also undermining its own credibility, in addition to the damaging optics of its support for commercial interests over public health. The webinar also heard calls for MPs to become more digitally literate to ensure effective and appropriate regulation of digital platforms. “Social media has become an essential service, but it’s not regulated like an essential service,” said Senator Hanson-Young. If we also believe that public interest journalism is an essential service, then it’s time for all sectors, including civil society leaders and organisations, to develop their media policy literacy and advocacy, as well as critically reflecting upon how they can contribute in this space. https://www.croakey.org/a-call-to-civil-society-its-time-to-reframe-media-policy/
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hopelalah....
We need a no-holds-barred attack on corporate power to meet global threats.
Humanity cannot — now — avoid troubled and turbulent times. Extreme events will powerfully influence the course ahead, the shape of things to come after the turmoil. They could help or hinder: provide the moral force for urgent action, or preoccupy us with crisis management.
Writers like Rebecca Solnit have described the revelatory, and potentially revolutionary, nature of disasters. Not only can they bring out the best in us, and connect and empower us, but they also lay bare the social conditions and choices that often cause or contribute to disasters, delivering a societal shock that makes change possible. But will disasters, piling one upon another, do this?
The next 20 years will settle this issue (if it isn’t settled already). We will know by then the extent to which we are locked into global crises, and if so, what we can do to minimise their impacts and to shape the world that lies on the far side. We may no longer be able to get out of the mess we’re creating for ourselves, but we can get through it. There is still plenty to dream of, and to strive for.
I made these comments in a 2012 essay, Whatever happened to Western civilisation?, published in The Futurist, the magazine of the US-based World Future Society. The essay was itself a reflection on a 1993 essay, The West’s deepening cultural crisis.
Well, we haven’t had to wait 20 years to see the choice we have made between deep, systemic change and the management of specific calamities. As I feared, governments have become shockingly irrelevant in failing to match their responses to the magnitude of the challenges facing us (what I call a scale anomaly or discrepancy). This is despite the growing evidence and the insistent warnings by experts that we risk societal and civilisational collapse – even that collapse has already begun. They have, instead, become ever more preoccupied with trying to deal with a growing cascade of natural, social and political upheavals, many arising from global threats such as climate change.
This situation has made me reconsider what we should do about our predicament. One theme of my work has been culture and its neglect in thinking about global threats and risks. Cultures define and describe how we see the world and our place in it – and so how we live and behave. In a sense cultures “permit”, and so limit, what we can do.
We need to remake Western culture if we are to meet the challenges confronting us. The magnitude of this transformation is akin to that from the Middle Ages to the Enlightenment, from the medieval mind to the modern mind. We face another rupture or discontinuity in our view of ourselves, in what it is to be human, that will change profoundly how we live.
However, I now accept that window has closed. The shift in political consciousness to focus on dealing with specific disasters and calamities – fires, floods, wars, economic upheavals – means there is no longer scope for a deep dialogue about cultural transformation. We need a new emphasis.
I feel the same way about the recommendations of the recent roundtable report, “A world call to action”, by the Club of Rome and the Council for the Human Future. I agree with its summation that, “Humanity is facing its greatest emergency, a crisis consisting of many, interlinked, catastrophic risks”; that, “The crisis is already here, and will get worse”; that “Together, these risks endanger our ability to maintain a civilisation, possibly even to survive as a species”.
The report’s recommendations include a World Plan of Action, a UN People’s Assembly, an Earth System Council, an Earth System Treaty, and an Alliance of Partners for the Planet, People and Peace.
However, one of the roundtable participants seems to repudiate its aim, saying: “Calling for action to prevent collapse requires ignoring or downplaying the last eight years of data, which indicate modern societies worldwide are already at various stages of fracture and there is a momentum in their trajectories.”
The times now demand a much sharper, simpler, more radical focus: an all-out revolt against the power of corporations. I have no doubt that many activists already see themselves doing this. But it is not the way debate and action are framed in mainstream politics, the media or science. This new awareness has the advantages that it is already in public consciousness and the structures and procedures of action already exist; they just need to be massively scaled up.
The evidence that fossil-fuel companies have been working behind the scenes to delay the transition to renewable energy, including spreading false stories about electric vehicles, is just the latest example of the relentless and ruthless efforts of industry after industry to defend themselves against evidence of harm by sowing scientific doubt about the evidence, buying influence, and shifting blame. They use the tactics and strategies developed by tobacco companies in countering smoking restrictions.
The fossil-fuel industry has been doing this for decades in denying human-caused climate change. The arms industry, through the military-industrial complex, promotes and profits hugely from war, including in Ukraine and Gaza. On a matter I don’t fully understand, the banks (whose practices caused the Global Financial Crisis, but which escaped penalty) are contributing to what one banking expert has described as a “ticking time bomb” or “casino” based on financial derivatives valued as high as several quadrillion (1,000 trillion) dollars. This far exceeds global GDP, which was about US$100 trillion in 2022. Investor Warren Buffet famously labelled derivatives as “financial weapons of mass destruction”.
More broadly, a massive and growing media-marketing complex culturally “manufactures” modern, high-consumption lifestyles, which are inimical to the environment and to human health and well-being. Increasingly the mainstream media have become agents of propaganda for failed government and unhealthy, unsustainable lifestyles.
We must use every (non-violent) means — legislation, legal action, protest, civil disobedience, public humiliation — to reduce, even eliminate, the political power of corporations, especially the huge global corporations, which wield so much sway over democracy, government and our lives, and so often act against our common interests.
Some of their actions should be considered crimes against humanity, in that the term has been used to condemn acts that ‘shock the conscience of mankind’. These acts include human-made environmental disasters, with the intention either to register moral outrage, or to suggest that they be recognised formally as legal offences.
The link between my interest in culture and corporate malfeasance is through ideology. Culture has been said to exert a pervasive, but diffuse, influence on actions, providing the underlying assumptions of an entire way of life. In unsettled times, cultural change can become focused into an ideological contest, in which ideologies exert a powerful, clearly articulated, but more restricted, basis for social action. Today we are dealing, in the West, with the dominant influence of neo-liberalism (a variation of capitalism), which has captured Government in the interests of those with money and power.
From the 1970s onward, we have declared each decade to be a decade of reckoning for Earth’s environment, a time when humankind must deal decisively with growing global crises. And as each decade passed without the necessary action, we deferred the reckoning to the next decade. Climate change became a focal issue, scientifically and politically. Now, it is the 2020s that we claim to be the last chance to avert catastrophic consequences. We are in the sixth decade of “the reckoning”.
And yet, hope remains, unreasonable, hanging by a thread.
https://johnmenadue.com/fiddling-while-the-world-teeters-on-the-brink/
AS THEY SAY OF A CRUMMY HOUSE, THE WALLPAPER IS CRAP BUT THE BONES ARE GOOD.... OUR LEADERSHIP IS CRAP BUT WE ARE GOOD.... THE WORLD PLAN OF ACTION IS TO TAME WESTERN OVER-AGGRESSION AND LET THE GLOBAL SOUTH ALONE... BUT NO WE WANT TO DICTATE THE COLOUR OF THE ROOF...
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.