FROM CARCINOGENIC TOOTHPASTE to world arms sales and lost
spaceships of plutonium, the award-winning media-watch program
Project Censored continues to deliver news and information the
American public had little or no chance of seeing in their daily
paper or on the nightly news.
In March, for the 22nd year in a row, the Sonoma State University
student and faculty program announced the conclusion of its annual
search for little-reported news stories of major significance.
The top 25 "censored" or under-reported stories of
1997 are fully reported and documented in the project yearbook,
Censored 1998: The News That Didn't Make the News.
And once again, the project, twice honored for publishing the
best alternative political issues book in the country, has cast
the spotlight on stories that many Americans have never heard
of but need to know about. They include, among others:
- The United States is the world's principal arms merchant,
providing weapons in almost every conflict worldwide, and in the
process fanning a never-ending cycle of arms sales and arms development.
- Many cosmetics and health products routinely used by consumers
are not regulated by the Food and Drug Administration, yet are
often contaminated with carcinogenic byproducts or products that
when combined create carcinogens.
- The academic freedom and independence of America's university
and college system is being compromised by the increasing practice
of big business and industry creating endowed professorships,
funding think tanks and research centers, sponsoring grants and
contracting for research.
"These and other stories in our annual yearbook provide
continuing and convincing evidence that mainstream media in the
United States is failing to provide the public information it
needs in order to function in a democracy," said Sonoma State
University Prof. Peter Phillips, director of Project Censored.
"Alternative media, newspapers and magazines, are doing
the job, but unfortunately many Americans don't see the alternative
press. As a result, much vital information is censored simply
because it is not available in the papers and television news
most people routinely see," he said.
Phillips said every year Project Censored runs head-on into the
egos and interests of mainstream media simply because of the project's
use of the word "censorship."
"They don't like to hear the suggestion that by not covering
certain stories they are effectively censoring the news. But that's
exactly the case," said Phillips. "Project Censored
defines censorship as the interference with the free flow of information
in our society." The concept of news censorship is more complicated
than a government official or industry "spin doctor"
simply stamping CENSORED on information and hiding it from the
public, according to Phillips.
"There are a variety of factors that go into censorship
in an otherwise democratic society, including the tendency to
report entertainment, sex and celebrity news rather than the harder
more serious issues of the day," he said. "Increasingly,
we believe the leading factors are the conglomeration of media
chains and the ownership and control of media giants like NBC
and CBS by corporations like General Electric and Westinghouse.
"A reporter for NBC is less likely to investigate nuclear
energy issues when he or she knows the corporate boss is chairman
of the board of nuclear energy giant General Electric," he
said. "That subtle but very effective influence is increasingly
the case in newspapers and on television throughout the country."
Project Censored routinely takes a lashing from mainstream media
over the notion of censorship in the United States. Phillips received
a double-barrel blast during an hour-long interview on National
Public Radio's Talk of the Nation last year when Bernard
Kalb of CNN and Marshall Loeb of Columbia Journalism Review
challenged the suggestion that corporate or commercial considerations
come to play when editors make decisions. But within weeks of
that program, Loeb's own CJR criticized the San Francisco
Examiner for killing a column critical of Nike lest it offend
that corporate sponsor of an Examiner annual run across
San Francisco. And Newsweek published a report outlining
how Time Warner unsuccessfully leaned on Steven Brill, founder
of Court TV and the American Lawyer, to kill a profile
on an Federal Trade Commission official because of concerns it
could damage the Time Warner-CNN merger that was then under FTC
review.
"Those two examples are not unusual," said Phillips.
He contends several factors clearly show the public is hungry
for the information that Project Censored highlights in its annual
yearbook. First, he noted that two years in a row the American
Association of Wholesale Independent Booksellers named Censored:
The News That Didn't Make the News as the best alternative
political book of the year.
"And second, we learned that last year's protest movement
against NASA's launch of the Cassini space probe with 72 pounds
of plutonium on board was organized in many regions by people
who didn't even know about Cassini until they read about it in
our book," he said. Phillips also thinks mainstream media
pays attention to Project Censored, too, but rarely will admit
it. "Before our book was published last year there was virtually
no mainstream coverage of the Cassini mission. But given the widespread
attention the story got after our book was in bookstores across
the country, most Americans knew about the mission and its controversial
plutonium payload," he said.
However pleased he is with Project Censored's success in drawing
attention to stories contained in its annual yearbook, Phillips
is not gloating. "That's what the students and faculty involved
in the project are working for. To point out the shortcomings
of the press and encourage mainstream reporters and producers
to take the challenge and perform the service we know they are
capable of doing if given the chance by their editors," he
said. "If we help to inform the public and to cause the media
to do a better job, then we will have done our job."
This year's yearbook, published by Seven Stories Press of New
York, is the culmination of work by 125 students, faculty and
community experts based at Sonoma State University in Rohnert
Park in Northern California. The top 25 censored stories are culled
from more than 600 stories nominated by reporters and editors
and readers from throughout the country. Each story is reviewed
by student researchers and faculty experts to determine the veracity
and significance of the report and to what extent the subject
was covered by mainstream media. The final list is submitted to
a panel of national judges (see sidebar) who vote to determine
the order of significance. The top 25, led by a report on the
Clinton Administration's aggressive promotion of U.S. arms sales
throughout the world, include:
1. CLINTON ADMINISTRATION AGGRESSIVELY PROMOTES U.S. ARMS SALES
WORLD WIDE.
THE UNITED STATES is now the principal arms merchant for
the world. U.S. weapons are evident in almost every conflict worldwide
and reap a devastating toll on civilians, U.S. military personnel,
and the socio-economic priorities of many Third World nations.
Most U.S. weaponry is sold to strife-torn regions such as the
Middle East. These weapons sales fan the flames of war instead
of promoting stability, and put U.S. troops at growing risk. The
last five times U.S. troops were sent into conflict, they found
themselves facing adversaries that had previously received U.S.
weapons, military technology, or training. Meanwhile, the Pentagon
uses the presence of advanced U.S. weapons in foreign arsenals
to justify increased new weapons spending--ostensibly to maintain
U.S. military superiority.
On June 7, 1997, the U.S. House of Representatives unanimously
approved the Arms Transfer Code of Conduct. This Code would prohibit
U.S. commercial arms sales or military aid and training to foreign
governments that are undemocratic, abuse human rights, or engage
in aggression against neighboring states; yet the Clinton administration,
along with the Defense, Commerce, and State departments, has continued
to aggressively promote the arms industry at every opportunity.
With Washington's share of the arms business jumping from 16 percent
worldwide in 1988 to 63 percent today, U.S. arms dealers currently
sell $10 billion in weapons to non-democratic governments each
year. During Clinton's first year in office, U.S. foreign military
aid soared to $36 billion, more than double what then-President
George Bush approved in 1992.
Given that international arms sales exacerbate conflicts and
drain scarce resources from developing countries, why does the
Clinton administration push them so vigorously? The most plausible
motive is the drive for corporate profits. It is no small detail
that U.S. global arms market dominance has been accomplished as
much through subsidies as sales. In return for arms manufacturers'
huge political contributions, much of the U.S. arms exports are
paid with government grants, subsidized loans, tax breaks and
promotional activities.
Sources: The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, October 1996,
"Costly Giveaways," by Lora Lumpe; In These Times,
August 11, 1997, "Guns 'R' Us," by Martha Honey
2. PERSONAL CARE AND COSMETIC PRODUCTS MAY BE CARCINOGENIC.
DO YOU USE toothpaste, shampoo, sunscreen, body lotion,
body talc, makeup or hair dye? These are among the personal care
products the American consumer has been led to believe are safe
but that are often contaminated with carcinogenic byproducts,
or that contain substances that regularly react to form potent
carcinogens during storage and use.
Consumers regularly assume that these products are not harmful
because they believe that they are approved for safety by the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA). But although the FDA classifies
cosmetics (dividing them into 13 categories), it does not regulate
them.
An FDA document posted on the agency's World Wide Web home page
explains that "a cosmetic manufacturer may use any ingredient
or raw material and market the final product without government
approval." (This is with the exception of seven known toxins,
such as hexachlorophene, mercury compounds and chloroform). Should
the FDA deem a product a danger to public health, it has the power
to pull a cosmetic product from the shelves, but in many of these
cases the FDA has failed to do so, while evidence mounts that
some of the most common cosmetic ingredients may double as deadly
carcinogens.
Examples of products with potential carcinogens are: Clairol
"Nice and Easy" hair color, which releases carcinogenic
formaldehyde as well as Cocamide DEA (a substance which can be
contaminated with carcinogenic nitrosamines or react to produce
a nitrosamine during storage or use); Vidal Sassoon shampoo (which
like the hair dye, contains Cocamide DEA); Cover Girl makeup,
which contains TEA (which is also associated with carcinogenic
nitrosamines); Crest toothpaste, which contains titanium dioxide,
saccharin, and FD&C Blue # 1 (known carcinogens).
One of the cosmetic toxins that consumer advocates are most concerned
about are nitrosamines, which contaminate a wide variety of cosmetic
products. In the 1970s nitrosamine contamination of cooked bacon
and other nitrite-treated meats became a public-health issue,
and the food industry, which is more strictly regulated than the
cosmetic industry, has since drastically lowered the amount of
nitrosamines found in these processed meats. But today nitrosamines
contaminate cosmetics at significantly higher levels than were
once contained in bacon.
The FDA has long known that nitrosamines in cosmetics pose a
risk to public health. On April 10, 1979, FDA Commissioner Donald
Kennedy called on the cosmetic industry to "take immediate
measures to eliminate, to the extent possible, NDELA (a potent
nitrosamine) and any other N-nitrosamine from cosmetic products."
Since that warning, however, cosmetic manufacturers have done
little to remove N-nitrosamines from their products, and the FDA
has done even less to monitor them.
Individual FDA scientists are speaking out. The FDA's Donald
Harvey and Hardy Chou proclaimed that the continued use of these
ingredients contradict what should be a social goal: keeping "human
exposure to N-nitrosamines to the lowest level technologically
feasible, by reducing levels in all personal care products."
Sources: In These Times, February 17, 1997, "To Die
For," by Joel Bleifuss; In These Times, March 3, 1997,
"Take a Powder," by Joel Bleifuss
3. BIG BUSINESS SEEKS TO CONTROL AND INFLUENCE U.S. UNIVERSITIES
ACADEMIA IS BEING auctioned off to the highest bidder.
Increasingly, industry is creating endowed professorships, funding
think tanks and research centers, sponsoring grants, and contracting
for research. Under this arrangement, students, faculty, and universities
serve the interests of corporations instead of the public--in
the process selling off academic freedom and intellectual independence.
Although universities often claim that corporate moneys come
without strings attached, this usually not the case. A British
pharmaceutical corporation, Boots, gave $250,000 to the University
of California at San Francisco (UCSF) for research comparing its
hyperthyroid drug, Synthroid, with lower-cost alternatives. Instead
of demonstrating Synthroid's superiority as Boots had hoped, the
study found the other drugs were bioequivalents.
This information could have saved consumers $356 million if they
had switched to a cheaper alternative, but Boots took action to
protect Synthroid's domination of the $600 million market. The
corporation prevented publication of the results in the Journal
of the American Medical Association, and then announced the
research was badly flawed. The researcher was unable to counter
the claim because she was legally precluded from releasing the
study.
University presidents often sit on the boards of directors of
major corporations, inviting conflicts of interest and developing
biases that undermine academic freedom and interfere with the
ability of the university to be critical or objective.
While university presidents and chancellors gain from their corporate
activities, industry and business are returned favors. University
boards of trustees are dominated by captains of industry, who
hire chancellors and presidents with pro-industry biases. New
York University's board includes former CBS owner Laurence Tisch,
Hartz Mountain chief Leonard Stern, Salomon Brothers brokerage
firm founder William B. Salomon, and real estate magnate-turned
publisher Mortimer Zuckerman.
Federal tax dollars fund about $7 billion worth of research,
to which corporations can buy access for a fraction of the actual
cost. This is largely the result of two 1980s federal laws which
allow universities to sell patent rights derived from taxpayer-funded
research to corporations--encouraging "rent-a-researcher"
programs. The result of these changes has been a covert transfer
of resources from the public to the private sector and the changing
of universities from centers of instruction to centers for corporate
R&D.
Sources: Covertaction Quarterly, Spring 1997, "Phi
Beta Capitalism," by Lawrence Soley; Dollars and Sense,
March/April 1997, "Big money on Campus," by Lawrence
Soley.
4. EXPOSING THE GLOBAL SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM.
FOR OVER 40 years, New Zealand's largest intelligence agency,
the Government Communications Security Bureau (GCSB), has been
helping its Western allies spy on countries throughout the Pacific
region. Neither the public nor the majority of New Zealand's
top elected officials knew about these activities--activities
which have operated since 1948 under a secret, Cold War-era intelligence
alliance between the United States, Britain, Canada, Australia,
and New Zealand (the UKUSA agreement).
But in the late 1980s, in a decision it probably regrets, the
U.S. prompted New Zealand to join a new and highly secret global
intelligence system. Author Nicky Hager's investigation into this
system and his discovery of the ECHELON Dictionary has revealed
one of the world's biggest, most closely held intelligence projects--one
which allows spy agencies to monitor most of the telephone, e-mail,
and telex communications carried over the world's telecommunication
networks. It potentially affects every person communicating between
(and sometimes within) countries anywhere in the world.
The ECHELON system, designed and coordinated by the U.S. National
Security Agency (NSA), is one of the world's biggest, most closely
held intelligence projects. Unlike many of the Cold War electronic
spy systems, ECHELON is designed primarily to gather electronic
transmissions from nonmilitary targets: governments, organizations,
businesses, and individuals in virtually every country. The system
works by indiscriminately intercepting very large quantities of
communications and using computers to identify and extract messages
of interest from the mass of unwanted ones. Computers at each
secret station in the ECHELON network automatically search millions
of messages for pre-programmed keywords. For each message containing
one of those keywords, the computer automatically notes time and
place of origin and interception, and gives the message a four-digit
code for future reference.
Computers that can automatically search through traffic for keywords
have existed since at least the 1970s, but the ECHELON system
was designed by NSA to interconnect all these computers and allow
the stations to function as components of an integrated whole.
Using the ECHELON system, an agency in one country may automatically
pick up information gathered elsewhere in the system. Thus, the
stations of the junior UKUSA allies function for the NSA no differently
than if they were overtly NSA-run bases located on their soil.
The exposure of ECHELON occurred after more than 50 people who
work or have worked in intelligence and related fields--concerned
that the UKUSA activities had been secret too long and were going
too far--agreed to be interviewed by Hager, a long-time researcher
of spying and intelligence. Materials leaked to Hager included
precise information on where the spying is conducted, how the
system works, the system's capabilities and shortcomings, and
other details such as code names.
The potential abuses of and few restraints around the use of
ECHELON have motivated other intelligence workers to come forward.
In one example, a group of "highly placed intelligence operatives"
from the British Government Communications Headquarters came forward
protesting what they regarded as "gross malpractice and negligence"
within the establishments in which they operate, citing cases
of GCHQ interception of charitable organizations such as Amnesty
International and Christian Aid.
Sources: Covertaction Quarterly, Winter 1996/1997, "Secret
power: Exposing the Global Surveillance System," by Nicky
Hager.
5. UNITED STATES COMPANIES ARE WORLD LEADERS IN THE MANUFACTURE
OF TORTURE DEVICES FOR INTERNAL USE AND EXPORT.
IN ITS MARCH 1997 report entitled "Recent Cases of
the Use of Electroshock Weapons for Torture or Ill-Treatment,"
Amnesty International lists 100 companies worldwide that produce
and sell instruments of torture. Forty-two of these firms are
in the United States. This places the U.S. as the leader in the
manufacture of stun guns, stun belts, cattle probe-like devices,
and other equipment which can cause devastating pain in the hands
of torturers.
According to the Amnesty International report, the following
are some of the American companies currently engaged in the production
and sale of such weapons: Arianne International of Palm Beach
Gardens, Florida; B-West Imports Inc., of Tucson; and Taserton,
of Corona, California.
Arianne International makes the "Myotron," a compact
version of the stun gun. B-West joined with Paralyzer Protection,
a South African company, to produce shock batons that deliver
a charge of between 80,000 and 120,000 volts. Taserton was the
first company to manufacture the taser, a product which shoots
two wires attached to darts with metal hooks. When these hooks
catch a victim's skin or clothing, the device delivers a debilitating
shock. Los Angeles police officers used the device against Rodney
King in 1991.
These weapons are currently in use in the U.S. and are being
exported to countries all over the world. The U.S. government
is a large purchaser of stun devices--especially stun guns, electroshock
batons, and electric shields.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and Amnesty International
both claim the devices are unsafe and may encourage sadistic acts
by police officers and prison guards--both here and abroad.
"Stun belts offer enormous possibilities for abuse and the
infliction of gratuitous pain," says Jenni Gainsbourough
of the ACLU's National Prison Project. She adds that because use
of the belt leaves little physical evidence, this increases the
likelihood of sadistic, but hard-to-prove, misuse of these weapons.
In June 1996, Amnesty International asked the Bureau of Prisons
to suspend the use of electroshock belts, citing the possibility
of physical danger to inmates and the potential for misuse.
Manufacturers of electroshock weapons continue to denounce allegations
that use of their devices is dangerous and may constitute a gross
violation of human rights. Instead, they're making more advanced
innovations. A new stun weapon may soon be added to police arsenals--the
electroshock razor wire, specially designed for surrounding demonstrators
who get out of hand.
Sources: The Progressive, September 1997, "Shock
Value: U.S. Stun Devices Pose Human-Rights Risk," by Anne-Marie
Cusac.
6. RUSSIAN PLUTONIUM LOST OVER CHILE AND BOLIVIA.
ON NOVEMBER 16, 1996, Russia's Mars 96 space probe broke
up and burned while descending over Chile and Bolivia, scattering
its remains across a 10,000-square-mile area. The probe carried
about a half pound of deadly plutonium divided into four battery
canisters, and no one seems to know where they went!
Gordon Bendick, Director of Legislative Affairs for the National
Security Council, states there are two possibilities: Either the
"canisters were destroyed coming through the atmosphere (and
the plutonium dispersed), or the canisters survived re-entry,
impacted the earth, and...penetrated the surface...or could have
hit a rock and bounced off like an agate marble."
This amount of plutonium has the potential to cause devastating
damage. According to Dr. Helen Caldicott, president emeritus of
Physicians for Social Responsibility, "Plutonium is so toxic
that less that one-millionth of a gram is a carcinogenic dose."
She states: "One pound, if uniformly distributed, could hypothetically
induce lung cancer in every person on earth."
Dr. John Gofman, professor emeritus of radiological physics at
the University of California, Berkeley, confirms the increased
hazard of lung cancer which would occur if the probe burned up
and formed plutonium oxide particles.
On November 17, when the U.S. Space Command announced the probe
would re-enter the earth's atmosphere with a predicted impact
point in East Central Australia, President Clinton telephoned
Australian Prime Minister John Howard to offer "the assets
the U.S. has in the Department of Energy," to deal with any
radioactive contamination. Howard placed the Australian military
and government on full alert and warned the public to use "extreme
caution" if they came in contact with the remnants of the
Russian space probe.
In the first of a series of blunders, the day after the space
probe had fallen on South America, the Space Command remained
focused on Australia. Later they reported the probe had fallen
in the Pacific, just west of South America. A Russian news source
put the site in a different patch of the Pacific altogether. Major
media in the United States reported the probe as having crashed
"harmlessly" into the ocean. On November 18, 1996 The
Washington Post ran the headline: "Errant Russian Spacecraft
Crashes Harmlessly After Scaring Australia."
On November 29, U.S. Space Command completely revised its account.
It changed not only where, but also when the probe fell. The final
report placed the crash site not west of South America, but directly
on Chile and Bolivia. The date of the crash was also revised from
November 17 to November 16, the night before. Apparently, U.S.
Space Command had initially tracked the booster stage of the Russian
craft, and not the actual probe itself.
The New York Times mentioned the incident on page 7 under
"World Briefs" on December 14, 1996. The Russian government
has been uncooperative, still refusing to give Chile a description
of the canisters to aid in retrieval efforts.
Source: Covertaction Quarterly, Spring 1997, "Space
Probe Explodes," by Karl Grossman.
7. NORPLANT AND HUMAN EXPERIMENTS IN THIRD WORLD LEAD TO FORCED
USE IN THE UNITED STATES.
LOW-INCOME WOMEN in the United States, and in the Third
World, have been the unwitting targets of a U.S. policy to control
birth rates. Despite continuous reports of debilitating effects
of the drug Norplant, women here and in the Third World who have
received the implantable contraceptive have had difficulty making
their complaints heard, and in some instances have been deceived,
according to our resources.
In the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) documentary The
Human Laboratory, Joseph D'Agostino reports the U.S. Agency
for International Development (USAID) acted in conjunction with
the Population Council of New York City to use uninformed women
in Bangladesh, Haiti and the Philippines for tests of Norplant.
Many of these women were subjects in pre-injection drug trials
that began in 1985 in Bangladesh, one of the world's poorest countries.
Norplant is a set of six plastic cylinders containing a synthetic
version of a female hormone. It is intended to prevent pregnancy
for five years. Surgery is required for removal--at a cost far
beyond the reach of low-income women, whether in Bangladesh or
the United States, if the removal is not subsidized.
The BBC documentary said the women stated they'd been told the
drug was safe and not experimental. Implantation was free. One
woman interviewed in the documentary said that after implantation,
suddenly her body became weak, and that she couldn't get up, look
after her children, or cook. Other women reported similar problems,
stating that when they asked to have the Norplant removed, they
were told it would ruin the study.
The documentary's narrator, Farida Akhter, recounted that when
another woman begged to have the implant removed--saying, "I'm
dying, please help me get it out"--she was told, "Okay,
when you die, inform us, we'll get it out of your body."
Many women who were used in the trials have suffering from eyesight
disorders, strokes, persistent bleeding and other side-effects.
Now Norplant devices are figuring in reproductive rights policies
in the U.S. as well. Journalist Rebecca Kavoussi reports that
the reproductive rights of women addicted to drugs or alcohol
have once again become the focus of legislation. Senate Bill 5278,
now under consideration in the State of Washington, would require
"involuntary use of long-term pharmaceutical birth control"
(Norplant) for women who give birth to drug-addicted babies. Under
this proposal, a woman who gives birth to a drug-addicted baby
would get two chances--the first voluntary, the second mandatory--to
undergo drug treatment and counseling. Upon the birth of a third
drug-addicted child, the state would force the mother to undergo
surgery to insert the Norplant contraceptive.
Jennifer Washburn focuses on Medicaid rejection of Norplant removals
in the U.S. State Medicaid agencies, for example, often generously
cover the cost of Norplant insertion, but don't cover removal
before the full five years. Although Medicaid policy may cover
early removal "when determined medically necessary,"
medical necessity is determined by the provider and the Medicaid
agency, not the patient.
Sources: 7 November/December 1996, "The misuses of
Norplant, Who Gets Stuck?" by Jennifer Washburn; Washington
Free Press, March/ April 1997, "Norplant and the Dark
Side of The Law," by Rebecca Kavoussi; Human Events,
May 16, 1997, "BBC Documentary Claims That U.S. Foreign Aid
Funded Norplant Testing On Uninformed Third World Women,"
by Joseph D'Agostino.
8. LITTLE-KNOWN FEDERAL LAW PAVES THE WAY FOR NATIONAL IDENTIFICATION
CARD.
IN SEPTEMBER 1996, President Clinton signed the Illegal
Immigration Reform and Responsibility Act. Buried at approximately
page 650 was a section that creates a framework for establishing
a national ID card for the American public. This legislation was
slipped through without fanfare or publicity.
The law establishes a "machine-readable document pilot program"
requiring employers to swipe a prospective employee's driver's
license through a special reader linked to the federal government's
Social Security Administration. The feds would have the discretion
to approve or disapprove the applicant for employment.
In this case, the driver's license becomes a "national ID
card." The government would have comprehensive files on all
American citizens' names, dates and places of birth, mothers'
maiden names, Social Security numbers, gender, race, driving records,
child-support payments, divorce status, hair and eye color, height,
weight, and anything else they may dream up in the future.
Another part of the law provides $5 million-per-year grants to
any state that wants to participate in any one of three pilot
ID programs. One of these programs is the "Criminal Alien
Identification Program," which is to be used by federal,
state, and local law enforcement agencies to record fingerprints
of aliens previously arrested.
The author of the national ID law, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif.,
stated in a Capitol Hill magazine that it was her intention to
see Congress immediately implement a national ID system whereby
every American would be required to carry a card with a "magnetic
strip on it on which the bearer's unique voice, retina pattern,
or fingerprint is digitally encoded."
U.S. Rep. Dick Armey, R-Tex., among others, has strongly denounced
the new law, calling it "an abomination, and wholly at odds
with the American tradition of individual freedom."
Source: Witwigo, May/June 1997, "National I.D. Card
is Now Federal Law and Georgia Wants To Help Lead The Way,"
by Cyndee Parker.
9. MATTEL CUTS U.S. JOBS TO OPEN SWEAT SHOPS IN OTHER COUNTRIES.
THANKS TO THE North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), U.S. toy
factories have cut a one-time American workforce of 56,000 in
half and sent many of those jobs to countries where workers lack
basic rights.
In the past decade Mattel, the makers of "Barbie,"
bought out six major competitors, making it the largest toy manufacturer
in the world. Employing 25,000 people worldwide, Mattel now employs
only 6,000 workers in the U.S. NAFTA has freed Mattel to further
reduce its American work force and take advantage of repressive
labor laws in other countries.
In the Dynamic factory just outside of Bangkok, 4,500 women and
children stuff, cut, dress and assemble Barbie dolls and Disney
characters. Many of the workers have respiratory infections, their
lungs filled with dust from fabrics in the factory. They complain
of hair and memory loss, constant pain in their hands, neck and
shoulders, episodes of vomiting, and irregular menstrual periods.
Metha is a militant woman in her 20s who tried to start a union
at the Dynamics plant. She claims the company not only fired her
but threatened to shut her up "forever." She developed
respiratory problems and was hospitalized. She expresses her fear
to talk to a reporter by saying, "Barbie is powerful. Three
friends have already died. If they kill me, who will ever know
I lived?"
Though separated by distance, these Mattel workers are intimately
connected by experience, as are those of countless other abused
workers in toy factories in Thailand and China, where Mattel now
produces most of its toys.
Under pressure, the industry adopted a code of conduct, which
conveniently calls upon companies to monitor themselves. There's
little evidence, however, of any changes in these abusive practices.
Sources: The Nation, December 30, 1996, "Barbie's
Betrayal: The Toy Industry's Broken Workers," by Eyal Press;
The Humanist, January/February 1997, "Sweatshop Barbie:
Exploitation of Their World Labor," by Anton Foek.
10. ARMY'S PLAN TO BURN NERVE GAS TOXINS IN OREGON THREATENS
COLUMBIA RIVER BASIN.
DESPITE EVIDENCE THAT incineration is the worst option
for destroying the nation's obsolete chemical weapons stockpile
at the Umatilla Army Depot, the Oregon Environmental Quality Commission
(EQC) gave the green light to the Army and Raytheon Corporation
to spend $1.3 billion of taxpayer money to construct five chemical
weapons incinerators. Despite strong protests, on February 7,
1997, the EQC made its final decision to accept the United States
Army's application to build a chemical weapons incineration facility
near Hermiston, Oregon.
Some examples of the chemicals to be incinerated include nerve
gas and mustard agent; bio-accumulative organochlorines such as
dioxins, furans, chloromethane, vinyl chloride, and PCBs; metals
such as lead, mercury, copper and nickel; and toxins such as arsenic.
These represent only a fraction of the thousands of chemicals
and metals that potentially could be emitted throughout the Columbia
River watershed. The resulting toxic ash and effluents could pose
a significant health threat to those relying on the region's aquifer.
Contrary to what incineration advocates claim, there is no urgent
need to incinerate, since the stockpile at Umatilla has small
potential for explosion or chain reaction as a result of decay.
A 1994 General Accounting Office report estimates these weapons
could be safely stored for 120 years, rather than the 17.7 years
originally estimated by the National Research Council.
Thus, the timeline for action could conceivably be lengthened
until all the alternatives--such as chemical neutralization, molten
metals, electro-chemical oxidation, and solvated electron technology
(SET)--are considered.
A delay is supported by a National Academy of Sciences report,
entitled "Review and Evaluation of Alternative Chemical Disposal
Technologies," which states there has been sufficient development
to warrant re-evaluation of alternative technologies for chemical
agent destruction.
Source: Earth First, March 1997, "Army Plan to Burn
Surplus Nerve Gas Stockpile," by Mark Brown and Kayrn Jones.
Censored 1998: The News That Didn't Make the News will
be released in bookstores this month.
Project Censored Judges
Dr. Donna Allen, president of the Women's Institute for
Freedom of the Press.
Ben Bagdikian, professor emeritus and former dean, Graduate
School of Journalism, UC Berkeley.
Richard Barnet, author of 15 books and numerous articles
for The New York Times Magazine, The Nation and
the Progressive.
Susan Faludi, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author
of Backlash: The Undeclared War Against American Women.
Dr. George Gerbner, dean emeritus, Annenberg School of
Communications, University of Pennsylvania, and author of Invisible
Crises: What Conglomerate Media Control Means for America.
Juan Gonzalez, New York Daily News columnist.
Aileen C. Hernandez, long-time civil- and human-rights
worker and labor organizer, former commissioner on the U.S. Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission, second national president of
the National Organization for Women, lifetime member of NAACP.
Dr. Carl Jensen, founder and former director of Project
Censored, author of Censored: The News that Didn't Make the
News and Why, 1990-96, and 20 Years of Censored News.
Sut Jhally, professor of communications and executive director,
The Media Education Foundation, University of Massachusetts.
Nicholas Johnson, professor, College of Law, University
of Iowa and former FCC Commissioner.
Rhoda H. Karpatkin, president, Consumers Union, non-profit
publisher of Consumer Reports.
Charles L. Klotzer, editor and publisher emeritus, St.
Louis Journalism Review.
Judith Krug, director, Office for Intellectual Freedom,
American Library Association.
Frances Moore Lappe, co-founder and co-director, Center
for Living Democracy.
William Lutz, professor, English, Rutgers University.
Julianne Malveaux, Ph.D., economist columnist, King Features
and Pacifica radio talk show host.
Jack L. Nelson, professor, Graduate School of Education,
Rutgers University.
Michael Parenti, political analyst, lecturer, and author
of The Politics of News Media and Make-Believe Media.
Herbert I. Schiller, professor emeritus of communications,
University of California, San Diego.
Barbara Seaman, author, The Doctors' Case Against the
Pill and co-founder of the National Women's Health Network.
Holly Sklar, author, Chaos or Community and Seeking
Solutions Not Scapegoats for Bad Economics.
Sheila Rabb Weidenfeld, president, D.C. Productions, Ltd.;
former press secretary to Betty Ford.
How Stories Are Selected
SELECTING THE "MOST-censored" stories of the
year is a complex task involving hundreds of people nationally.
This year, close to 1,000 nominated news stories were screened
by Project Censored staff. The nominations came to us from supporters
all over the world. Also, in cooperation with the Data Center
in Oakland, California, we monitored more than 700 alternative/independent
media sources, looking for important under-covered stories.
After screening (we set aside purely op-ed items and news stories
not fitting our October 15th annual cycle), we referred 610 stories
to 68 faculty and community evaluators, using a standardized grading
sheet to weigh the story for importance and credibility. The 160
highest-rated stories are researched by Sonoma State University
students for levels of coverage in the mainstream press. The top
50 stories with the highest importance rating and lowest coverage
levels are read by faculty and students, and, in November, the
vote is tallied. Finally, the top 25 stories are ranked by our
judges for their national significance.
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