A couple weeks ago, Florida Frontier co-writers and I decided to hold a counter-protest against the usual Iraq War protestors at the Turlington Plaza on the University of Florida campus. Our sign said we supported our troops and we were winning the war. To my dismay, we were outnumbered about 10-1 and were faced with a strong liberal opposition. With spit and obscenities flying, I couldn’t help but wonder: Why aren’t more Americans supporting America?
To many a disappointed liberal, the military surge has improved security, American casualties are down 71 percent since May and Al Qaeda in Iraq has become severely damaged. Attacks in Baghdad have fallen 80 percent in the past twelve months and deaths among Iraqi military forces and civilians have dropped by more than two-thirds.
Yet the media repeatedly show us images of exploding buildings and carnage without context. They have no interest in showing the upside of the Iraq War and what the U.S. has accomplished since its occupation.
Analysts at the Media Research Center have studied TV news coverage of the Iraq War from when the first bombs fell on Baghdad in March 2003. The record shows the networks have trumpeted bad news — setbacks for the U.S. coalition and allegations of misdeeds by American troops — while minimizing good news such as the success of the 2007 troop surge and acts of heroism by U.S. soldiers.
Our liberal attackers on Turlington Plaza argued we’re not winning the war in Iraq and we haven’t made any progress.
This assumption is clearly delusional. Operation Iraqi Freedom Coalition Forces have successfully liberated 25 million Iraqis from the brutal dictatorship of Saddam Hussein. In three years, Iraq has gone from enduring a tyrannical regime to electing a provisional government to ratifying a new constitution written by Iraqis to electing a permanent government. In each of these elections, the number of voters participating has increased significantly — from 8.5 million in the January 2005 election to nearly 12 million in the December election — in defiance of terrorists’ threats and attacks.
If we retreat now, there is every reason to believe terrorists will fill the vacuum. Turning our backs on postwar Iraq today would be the modern equivalent of handing postwar Germany back to the Nazis.
According to Congressman Jack Kingston, extremists in the Democratic Party have embraced a new strategy for the war on terrorism: Lose, leave and wait. They want us to dishonor the sacrifices of our soldiers. They want us to cut and run, and signal to the world that the United States no longer stands for freedom, democracy and the defense of human rights in the face of terrorism.
When did Anti-Americanism become the new Americanism?
In Bernard Goldberg’s Bias, he reports that a 1996 Freedom Forum and Roper Center survey of Washington media found that 61 percent of journalists characterized themselves as “liberal,” compared to 9 percent that said they were “conservative.”
In the 2003 American Freshman Survey conducted annually by UCLA, 28 percent of college freshmen nationwide identified themselves as liberal or far left while 21 percent identified themselves as conservative or far right. The year before, 30 percent had identified themselves as liberal or far left, the most since 1975.
But the public is NOT overwhelmingly liberal like the media or college students. A 2006 Gallup poll showed that 54 percent of Americans surveyed identified themselves as “conservative” and only 34 percent said they were “liberal.”
I used to believe college students were more liberal because the large majority of them don’t work. They don’t pay taxes. They don’t have families to care for. The majority of them have not yet voted. In other words, they have not been through the life experiences required to wipe away the idealistic view that everything should be equal. But upon my research I’ve realized it’s a more inexcusable reason for their ignorance: laziness and indifference. The correlation between a liberal press and a liberal campus is more than just a coincidence. College students tend to jump on the liberal bandwagon because they don’t take the time to explore different media outlets and simply just don’t care enough to think independently.
They’re not being informed. They’re being manipulated.
Instead of relying on a partisan press to balance its news, it’s time for college students to take responsibility in seeking alternative news sources. The 18-25 demographic needs to choose C-SPAN over Jon Stewart’s “The Daily Show” every once in a while.
Bad news in Iraq is promoted by most mainstream media. It is causing a division in the American people and is helping the enemy win. It’s time to take social responsibility back. Honesty in reporting is vital to an interlocking and free society. A partisan press combined with an uninterested public will cause us to lose a global fight.