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APRIL 14, 2009 9:51AM

Rick Santelli is "Very Proud" of Tea Party Movement

Rate: 11 Flag

stevesantellirant 

In a heated discussion with Steve Liesman yesterday morning on CNBC, Rick Santelli revealed that he was "very proud" of the Tea Party Movement that he helped to spawn. In the classic debate, Liesman took the perspective of avoiding systemic risk while Santelli was the continued advocate of avoiding moral hazard. The balance between moral hazard and systemic risk is at the heart of the debate of the roll of government in trying to salvage the economy. Moral hazard argues against socializing losses because you remove any incentive for private parties to be cautious and prudent in the long run. Systemic risk argues that the value of getting involved overwhelms moral hazard because the fallout of private failure will have massive social cost with collateral damage (beyond the private parties directly involved) which will result in an indirect and greater socialization of losses anyway. From the perspective of informing the viewer, this debate was good to have.

But the missing debate was the role of the media in "creating news" by virtue of spawning a movement. Santelli's open espousal of the Tea Party Movement (though he said he did not plan to attend any of the estimated 1700 tea parties on April 15th) reveals the complete blurring of reporting and editorial efforts. When pressed for a moment on the issue by Liesman, Santelli said he was "very proud" of spawning the movement.
 
If we compare the current economic crisis with the run up to the Iraq war (and we note that Warren Buffet has called the current crisis an "economic Pearl Harbor"), then surely the media has taken very different approaches in providing a voice to opposing viewpoints to those of the folks in control of the White House. Both Phil Donahue and Bill Maher essentially fell from grace after making comments in reference to 9/11 that did not jive with the general war footing of the country. Phil Donahue's anti-war sentiments did not seem to jive with the public mood (and that was likely reflected in his ratings as well).
 
In contrast, within one day of Santelli's on-air rant; CNBC was running ads promoting the "Revolution" Santelli's rant was advocating. And of course, many folks have discussed Fox's open promotion and advocacy of the Tea Party Movement through its commentators and free coverage which has morphed into advertising (though the irony of Fox picking up on a trend created by a division of NBC, the network perceived to be the den of liberal treachery, is not lost upon anyone).
 
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That Fox runs its promotions of the Tea Party coverage with its catch phrase "Fair and Balanced" is at best an inside joke. The network has done a decent job cleaving its news division from its heavy editorial content which dominates its prime time line up. But that prime time coverage, in the end, serves to establish the network's conservative credentials. The Tea Party Movement creates an event that its viewership has keen interest in. The parties are perfect in that they create events that can be covered. In other words, news events can be manufactured for which there is known and to some extent controllable demand. Fox has essentially become a concert promoter.
 
 
Beyond the humours comparison with "teabagging" that have dominated the blogosphere, the media's complicity...actually open advocacy...seems to be an analog for a recent article written by Simon Johnson in The Atlantic called the Quiet Coup. In that article, Johnson argues that a small group of oligarchs has developed an overly cozy relationship with the government. In his discussion, the oligarchs he is referring to are influential members of the financial services industry. Similarly, the media has started to develop cozy, deep, and institutionalized relationships with the political parties and/or political movements. Bias is one thing, open advocacy is another. Bias suggests a skewed lense through which events are interpreted in most cases unknowingly by the observer/reporter- a sort of Heisenberg principle of journalism. Advocacy is different. It's open espousal of a perspective. That advocacy by large media behemoths has created new set of oligarchs. Just as Wall Street has failed us, the media may be chalked up as the next institution that failed America.
 
Special Post Script Note:  We're not suggesting that policies not be aggressively questioned.  We could have, of course, used more of that prior to the Iraq war and during it.  In addition, we certainly are not arguing against substantial coverage of opposing view points.  Specfically, we are arguing against open espousal of a perspective unless those espousals are openly and frankly disclosed.  You can't be an open adovocate of a viewpoint and then apply a disclaimer such as "Fair and Balanced."   Similarly, you can't be the financial news network of record and then promote specific economic policy as part of your brand identity outside your editorial commentary.
 
Update: Both Melissa Francis and Larry Kudlow are talking up the Tea Party Movement this morning.  Francis has gone so far as making two specific points: 1. she's drinking tea all day and 2. she doesn't want to pay corporate taxes because she doesn't agree with what the government is doing.  She may have forgotten about the concept of representative democracy.
 
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Kudlow especially talked up the bubble.  After the network was chastened by Jon Stewart on the Daily Show, little seems to have changed.  Questioning policy is one thing, open and derisive commentary is quite another.   

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libertarius has a similar post on Fox News crossing the line into advocacy.

Great post--there is nothing worse, imo, than a complicit media. It should be completely free and independent. I'm not sure I even agree with you that Fox does a decent job cleaving its editorial and news divisions; the contempt of Brit Hume for anything liberal is palpable.

This tea party thing is just a vague, faux populist indulgence of discontent. It reminds me a bit of the WTO protests, where many participants don't have a good handle on the substance of economic policy. Fox promotes it for strictly partisan purposes: The enemy (CNBC, populists) of my enemy (Barack Obama, the Democratic Party) is my friend.
Lainey- excellent points!
FOX News: Perfecting the art of Daniel Boorstin's Pseudo-Event.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudo-event
"You can't be an open adovocate of a viewpoint and then apply a disclaimer such as "Fair and Balanced." Similarly, you can't be the financial news network of record and then promote specific economic policy as part of your brand identity outside your editorial commentary."

Absolutely. We are all being held hostage by the myth that the news media are somehow more objective when they attack anyone who has a less than ideologically conservative agenda, but they are somehow 'fair and balanced' when they assume that conservatism is safer or more responsible for making policy.

The great thing about Open Salon is that it reminds us of what a free and independent press is: people can report, they can editorialize, they can argue, they can praise the ethical foundations of our democracy, and they can express absurdist arguments. But best of all, we can tell the difference between foaming-at-the-mouth ideologues and people who are trying to talk about reality.

It goes without saying that FOX News is trying to sell us on the opposite, in order to reduce the amount of real information available and not expand it.
Lainey, you have a good point. Of course, the idea that populism and socializing loss are contrary is another distortion of the FOX-engendered fog-brain mindset. Populism is about what's good for the people; it's not really a strict ideology. There are reports of terror scares linked to 'tea party' mailings to members of Congress. Imagine if MSNBC had so aggressively expressed support for a specific fringe movement engaging in intimidation tactics and sending threats to members of Congress. Imagine how the onetime Republican majority would have reacted; imagine the fair and balanced headlines FOX would be running.
Thanks Skewz. Media Matters has released a detailed report on Fox News open cheerleading for the Tea Party Movement.

But it's not just the big networks. Community newspapers (aka, the only ones doing ok these days) are overwhelmingly conservative. Many openly support this movement as well. I think I'm doing a decent job covering the events in my area, but it's already been a front page story twice for my thrice weekly paper.
It seems incoherent, just 'I don't want to pay'. But everyone needs to pay, unless changes are made to spending. Even then there will be some taxes always.
And they don't talk about solutions.
'Bias suggests a skewed lense through which events are interpreted in most cases unknowingly by the observer/reporter- a sort of Heisenberg principle of journalism.'

When will the end of misinterpreted physical analogies arrive? I have been waiting so long!
This is a great topic, skewz; I wish more people would join in.

Great article, Edgar. You wrote that? I like that you included the quote from Krugman; his take on the fake roots of these "grassroots" events is especially important given his difference of opinion with the Obama administration.

On the addition to your post: So Melissa Francis doesn't want to pay taxes because she doesn't like what the government is doing? I wonder how that would have flown if major media talking heads had taken a stand against taxes used to pay for the immoral, illegal Iraq War. I can't stand the hypocrisy.
Fox News: Faux reality.