
Amy Goodman - United States

Ode To Amy Goodman
by Joyce Marcel
www.commondreams.org, November
9, 2005
O Amy Goodman, how do I love thee? Let
me count the ways.
First, you are the anti-Judith Miller,
the discredited New York Times reporter who beat the drums for
Bush and Cheney's illegal war, who embedded her journalistic integrity
for a chance to play with the big boys. Were they really that
big, Judy? Really?
You, Amy Goodman, sneer at the very word
"embedded." You treasure journalistic independence.
For twenty years, first as news director of WBAI in New York,
one of Pacifica Radio's flagship stations, and since 1994 the
lovely and formidable one-non-blonde eye at the center of the
growing whirlwind of horrible truths that is "Democracy Now!,"
you have reported news free of corporate underwriting.
"The media should be like a huge
kitchen table that stretches across this country, where we discuss
life and death, war and peace - and anything less is a disservice
to this country," you said at Keene (N.H.) State College
this past weekend, to an enthusiastic crowd of over 600 people.
"My mission is to make dissent commonplace in this country."
Day after day, "Democracy Now!"
reports the news to a growing audience on some 400 non-commercial
radio stations, public access stations, on the Dish satellite
network and DirecTV (on Link). The show also podcasts on the Web
(democracynow.org) so "people around the world can have access
to the news from the grassroots level."
You are often branded as "far left,"
but it's hard to know exactly what that means. You are for freedom
and democracy, and isn't that exactly what our adrift president,
George W. Bush, is trying to spread across the world?
You have proved your bravery as a reporter
in the field. In East Timor you had guns pointed at your head
and watched innocent people slaughtered. Your friend's skull was
shattered as the Indonesians made a last-ditch grasp to keep their
power. You barely escaped with your life. You were rewarded with
a trip back to see the Timorese, having paid such a high price
for freedom, celebrate its return.
And now your dark and deadpan eyes are
focused with the strength of lasers on the lies and corruption
of the Bush administration. You are on the side of the angels,
standing shoulder to shoulder with Cindy Sheehan and the other
mothers who have lost their sons and daughters to this despicable
war.
"These young people who died would
have been our future leaders," you said. "Who will our
leaders be now?" And your answer? "The mothers!"
The run-up on television to the Iraq war,
as you pointed out, was "a video war game" full of dramatic
images of battleships, barricades, missiles pointing at the sky,
planes zooming through the air at the speed of sound, fireworks
in the night, soldiers dramatically backlit by the setting orange
sun.
"If we had a state-run media, how
would it be any different?," you said. "I am accused
of advocacy journalism. If that is true, then the mainstream media
is my model."
Every night you show us the real pictures
of war - children burned, women with their arms and legs blown
off, houses destroyed, American soldiers maimed for life.
"I really do think that if for one
week in the United States we saw the true face of war, we saw
people's limbs sheared off, we saw kids blown apart, for one week,
war would be eradicated," you said. What is your goal? Nothing
less, it seems, than a movement , like the one inspired by one
of your heroes, Rosa Parks.
"She is always portrayed has a tired
seamstress who just wanted to sit down," you said. "But
she was a troublemaker. She had been an activist for years. She
was very brave. She had committed her life to opposing segregation.
Rosa Parks said she was part of a movement. And to understand
movements is to understand how history is made."
The news you report every night is brutal.
Torture camps, Abu Ghraib, our use of chemical weapons - napalm-like
substances and white phosphorus that burns bodies to the bone,
the massacre at Fallujah, Bush saying in Panama "We do not
torture" while Cheney openly searches for ways to exempt
the CIA from anti-torturing legislation. My only question is how
you keep from slitting your wrists in despair.
"I'm inspired by the people I cover,
the people I work with," you said when I called you to ask.
"People in the most difficult circumstances. In East Timor,
in the middle of the slaughter, they always had hope, had the
belief that things can be better. In the US in the middle of these
difficult times, people continue to organize. Think of Rosa Parks
and what she faced and what African-Americans have faced for centuries.
She made the right move by not moving. At a moment, something
like that can launch a movement. What's the alternative? To give
up hope is like breathing, You really have no choice."
Joyce Marcel is a free-lance journalist
who lives in Vermont and writes about culture, politics, economics
and travel. Reach her at joycemarcel@yahoo.com.
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