Quiddity
Scandal
Z Staff
Somewhere in the
tawdry mire of the “Clinton Crisis” there are interesting issues commentators
could address. For example, what is the proper role of a Grand Jury and have Grand Juries
become tools for prosecution and persecution for political or material gain, rather than
tools for protecting and enlarging people’s rights and opportunities? What does it
mean when we allow cases to be made against folks based on intimidating and bribing
witnesses? Does lying in response to a question about private matters that had no right
being asked in the first place even constitute a minor sin, much less a major crime
against humanity? You have to wonder, if Hilary and Chelsea stand by their man and if all
the interactions were consensual, why is the detailed nature of Clinton’s sexual
proclivities or assignations anyone else’s business? Moving on, regardless of whether
Clinton’s instances of perjury are reason for impeachment or not, commentators could
sensibly discuss whether Clinton’s policies regarding bombing other countries,
destroying our best chance for National Health Care, decimating the welfare system,
reducing rights of the disabled, enabling NAFTA, promoting MAI, and trying to destroy
social security are good reasons for impeachment. Of course, such discussions would put
substantive issues rather than trivia on the table for democratic debate.
But, there is
another element of this mess that is interesting, too: the media’s role. And we don’t
mean the fact that they are rapid lapdogs, changing masters at the flip of a condom, in
pursuit of more profits and stature, by the only acceptable route: detailed, thorough,
tasteless reporting of inconsequential, mind numbing non-events. Rather, we mean the power
of publicity.
Why is publicity so
powerful? Why, for example, against what polls show people’s actual interests to be,
do people tune in so universally? We don’t think it is always, or even often, because
publicity conveys previously unknown information. Take this case. Is there anyone anywhere
who wouldn’t have said, “Oh sure, what else?” had the documents been
entirely private, and had they met the person who Xeroxed them and been told the contents
in a bar, say? After all, what do the documents convey—that Clinton had an affair,
that he lied about it, that he lied again, that the affair involved gifts and sex, and so
on. Yes? Anyone home? Is there some revelation in that? Once you get past the affair,
where is the surprise? On the one hand, the idea of the president risking all for an
affair seems stupid and irresponsible. On the other hand, given the probability of
powerful men with egos that weigh more than Olympus having affairs, what did the publicity
tell us that we didn’t already know? Nothing. So what is publicity’s power?
Publicity on a grand enough scale organizes, legitimates, and coordinates. Publicity
promotes and facilitates people’s intercommunication. What is unsaid or said randomly has
little impact, regardless of its actual importance. But with enough publicity, even trivia
can generate in people a symphony of shared reaction with the potential emergence of a
shared agenda.
This is media’s
power: Not so much revelation—though that can certainly be a part of it when there
are real secrets and insights to be conveyed. But, more often, coordination, getting folks
onto the same topic and aware of one another’s interest in it and in tune enough to
have a shared agenda, is publicity’s true power. Surely this is why the left needs
its own mass media