If you have been watching the news media of
late you may have noticed that the entire world has come to an
absolute standstill while we all watch 24/7 coverage of the
happenings in and around Iraq. There have been no high profile
murders, robberies, rapes, abductions, fires or celebrity
breakups. The only two things on television are the fate of
Saddam Hussein and American Idol. Nothing else. America is left
to clutch at the edges of our seats wondering the fate of
Baghdad, Ruben, the Republican guard, Clay and the ever lovely
and limber Kimberly. All other concerns and worries have been
set aside. The 24 hour news powers, Fox, CNN, and MSNBC, hardly
pause to take a breath as they tell us over and over the same
set of events.
I am a news junkie. I keep at least one TV
tuned to Fox News whenever I am home. I read the little crawler
under the picture and often lose track of the story on the main
screen. The great thing about all this new technology in the
news is that Fox News eventually begins quoting itself on their
crawler. If I can't follow the main story because I am so busy
reading all the other stuff on the bottom of the screen, I can
simply wait a few minutes until the main story becomes the old
story that they are still repeating as the main story while I
read it. But I digress.
What bothers me most about the 24/7 coverage
is the fact that this war, like all wars, consists of long
periods of boredom punctuated by brief moments of terror.
Unfortunately for the viewer, the news services, like nature,
abhor a vacuum. So they fill the long periods of boredom with
repetitive renditions of the terror without mentioning to the
viewers that the helicopter crash they are reporting is the same
one that went down yesterday or the day before. They even have
special news alerts to inform us that something we learned about
three days ago hasn't undone itself in some sort of space time
fluctuation brought on by the mother of all sandstorms and the
miracle of digital satellite uplinks. A person with a short term
memory problem soon becomes convinced that the United States is
running out of helicopters.
I suspect that most of the 24/7 news outlets
are short of people with cameras. They have the two cameras in
the studio, one at the White House, one at the Pentagon, one
west of New York, and the rest are in Iraq or Kuwait. If
anything happens any place where there isn't a camera, no news
story. It didn't happen. ABC and CNN have better cameras in the
desert. Fox looks like they are filming with a laptop webcam and
transmitting the picture over their cell phones. I watched one
story on the main screen for almost an hour before I realized
that the weird spot in the middle of the picture was the top of
a tent fluttering in the wind. It looked like a picture of an
amoeba with the digital signal breaking up.
Listening to Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld, it is pretty evident that the United States and the
United Kingdom are winning this war big time. Listening to the
news stations, we are either bogging down in a quagmire like
Vietnam or getting ready to have to place a new helicopter
order. If you listen to the Arab nation's news outlets, we are
purposely killing off the Iraqi civilian population so we can
resettle the Jews there and have then all work for Texaco under
the direction of the Vice President. What amazes me is that the
Arab newscasters can deliver this twaddle to their audiences and
not break up into hysterical laughter. I was listening to an
excerpt from one of the Arab nation's news programs and there
was a guy in traditional Arab dress talking on camera about the
push by the United States "colonize" all of the Middle East and
steal Moslem oil. It was comical. The laughter dies away when
you consider that there is such a large population of people
living in the 21st century so easily fooled.