The "free press"
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By GEORGE MARION
NEW CENTURY PUBLISHERS: New York
Published by New Century Publishers, 832 Broadway, New York 3, N. Y. June, 1946 209 PRINTED IN U.S.A.
George Marion, the author of this pamphlet, was born and raised in the Middle West. A member of the Newspaper Guild (C.I.O.), he got his education in “free” journalism at first hand. His experience covers work in every department of news manufacturing, the modern process by which “marketable words and images” are produced. He is a veteran war correspondent and roving reporter, and his news background includes a period with the defunct semi-official French news agency, Havas; free-lancing in Europe, North Africa, and India; and front-line reporting of the historic conflict in Spain of the 1935–37 years, Hitler’s “dress rehearsal” for World War II. When this pamphlet went to press, he was on the staff of the New York Mirror .
Brooks Atkinson filed a peevish dispatch to the New York Times from his Moscow post not long ago. Atkinson, ex-dramatic critic, is a highly-civilized, able and honest correspondent whose reports from China and the Soviet Union have shown a certain respect for people as people. His cablegrams are often touched with humor. All the more striking was the humorless dispatch in which he complained:
The Soviet Union goes on coldly repeating Marxian myths about America—that we have no freedom of the press, that our democracy is formal but not real. Only the other day the Moscow Bolshevik was saying:
In the conditions of bourgeois democracy the workers do not have the minimum material requirements for actual use of the rights that are proclaimed. They do not have at their disposal printing presses and paper. Newspapers, clubs, theatres—all are the property of private individuals or groups.
George Marion
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CONTENTS
About the Author
Ask Marshall Field
Regimentation
This Is Monopoly
Pikers Barred
The American State
Private Power
Subsidies
What Is News?
True and Unbiased News
Remote Control
The Fascist “Fringe”
Part II: News—Arm of Empire
Lawful Spies
News Since Feudal Days
A Conflict Is Born
Peak of Reuter’s Power
Conquest of South America
Redividing the World
Battle for Asia
The Showdown
World Conquest
Responsibility of the Press
What Can We Do?
FOOTNOTES
Transcriber’s Notes