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15,000 reporters, but will we get the true story?
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
(Workday Minnesota)Commentary: 15,000 reporters, but will we get
the true story?
By Barb Kucera, editor,
www.workdayminnesota.org
In the years
I've lived in the Twin Cities, I've witnessed
some pretty high-profile events: a Super Bowl
and the visit of Soviet Premier Mikhail
Gorbachev. But nothing compares to the hype
surrounding the upcoming Republican National
Convention.
The official count is that
45,000 people – including 15,000 members of
the media – will descend on St. Paul for the
four-day convention Sept. 1-4. Those numbers
don't include thousands of protesters also
expected to participate in marches and
demonstrations.
What really caught my
attention was the huge number of media
representatives. What could they possibly
cover? How many different ways can one report
on John McCain's acceptance speech or President
Bush's more-than-likely brief and low-profile
appearance?
Of course Minnesota can
always provide colorful fodder for members of
the media from other regions of the country.
We've got Garrison Keillor and F. Scott
Fitzgerald, ice-fishing, hockey and curling.
We're the birthplace of Prince and Bob
Dylan.
Expect articles comparing
Minnesotans to the residents of the mythical
Lake Wobegon and references to the many Paul
Bunyan statues scattered around the
state.
All of which might make Americans
forget that serious business will be taking
place in the Xcel Center during those four
days. A party platform will be adopted;
candidates will speak about their vision for
the nation.
Knowing 15,000 members of
the media will be swarming this event, I will
be listening and watching for the real stories
– the ones that resonate with the lives of
working people.
Stories like
this:
What do the Republicans plan to do
to stem the flow of jobs out of the United
States and the stream of people forced to come
here by unfair trade? What do they plan to do
to create a just and fair global
economy?
When do the Republicans plan to
end the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan – so
working people, the children of working people
– and their grandparents – can stop
fighting and come home?
How do the
Republicans plan to fix our broken economy, end
the foreclosure crisis, stop the drunken
behavior of Wall Street (Bush's own words) and
create an economy that works for working
people? (And no, tax breaks for the wealthy
don't constitute a plan).
When will the
Republicans do something about a health care
"system" that leaves 50 million without
coverage, millions more underinsured and many,
many people just one illness away from
financial disaster?
And why do the
Republicans – advocates of the free market
– never propose unions as the best way to
raise living standards and build the middle
class? Unlike much of Corporate America, unions
don't get tax breaks and they're not dependent
on government handouts. At their best, they
function as highly democratic, proudly
independent organizations. (Maybe I just
answered my own question).
Anyhow, I
figure 15,000 TV anchors, reporters, producers,
newspaper scribes, photographers,
videographers, radio announcers and the like
ought to be able to ferret out the true stories
behind all these questions.
OK – if
you believe that, I've got a bridge over in
Minneapolis I can sell ya.
