Don’t Blame Dan Rivers

In the past week I’ve written about my concern at how foreign media is covering the events in Thailand.  At first my concerns were focused mainly on the way they made the entire city look like a war zone which, at the time, it wasn’t.  My growing concern has been how the foreign media is making the United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (“Red Shirts”) look like the struggling underdogs fighting against a repressive government. 

I’ve also read some people’s comments saying things like, “Oh, how awful – the government troops firing on those poor unarmed protesters!”  Let me tell you from the perspective here in Thailand that that isn’t an accurate representation of this conflict.

Of all the networks, it seems like Al Jazeera English has actually done the best job of covering the story in a balanced manner.  While Americans are often quite skittish about Al Jazeera, they are an excellent source of journalism that will give you quite a different perspective on the world than you’ll find from US media.

5-20-2010 9-12-49 AM 5-20-2010 9-10-15 AM

So this is what pro-democracy demonstrators look like?

Yesterday, The Nation blogger and Bangkok Symphony Orchestra conductor Somtow Sucharitkul wrote an entry yesterday about how we can’t really blame the foreign media for getting it wrong.  As a communication major, I found it to be a pretty insightful analysis of the situation.  I put the link on Facebook and was going to share it with you here. 

Unfortunately, it seems like the link has been severed and instead of his column there is just the picture of a verdant leaf.  Censorship from within Thailand?

5-20-2010 9-09-20 AM

This is a shame because I think you would benefit from reading this analysis.  Thankfully, another blogger posted the full text of the column, which I will go ahead and share with you here.  It is a  bit long, for which I apologize.  The bullet points are the key points – the ones that the foreign media has largely not included in their coverage.  I would encourage you to read them, to provide some perspective to what you have read and/or seen on your local media coverage.

Originally posted at this link on Somtow’s World:

Don’t Blame Dan Rivers

Now, let us consider the redshirt conflict.  Let’s not consider what has actually been happening in Thailand, but how it looks to someone whose worldview has been coloured with this particular view of history.

Let’s consider the fact that there is pretty much nothing being explained in English, and that there are perhaps a dozen foreigners who really understand Thai thoroughly. I don’t mean Thai for shopping, bargirls, casual conversation and the like. Thai is a highly ambiguous language and is particularly well suited for seeming to say opposite things simultaneously. To get what is really being said takes total immersion.

When you watch a red shirt rally, notice how many English signs and placards there are, and note that they they are designed to show that these are events conforming to the archetype. The placards say “Democracy”, “No Violence,” “Stop killing innocent women and children” and so on. Speakers are passionately orating, crowds are moved. But there are no subtitles. What does it look like?

The answer is obvious. It looks like oppressed masses demanding freedom from an evil dictator.

Don’t blame Dan Rivers [CNN reporter who has come under some criticism for his coverage], et al, who are only doing what they are paid to do: find the compelling story within the mass of incomprehensible data, match that story to what the audience already knows and believes, and make sure the advertising money keeps flowing in.

A vigorous counter-propaganda campaign in clear and simple English words of one syllable has always been lacking and is the reason the government is losing the PR war while actually following the most logical steps toward a real and lasting resolution.

If the foreign press were in fact able to speak Thai well enough to follow all the reportage here coming from all sides, they would also be including some of the following information in their reports. I want to insist yet again that I am not siding with anyone. The following is just information that people really need before they write their news reports.

  • Thaksin was democratically elected, but became increasingly undemocratic, and the country gradually devolved from a nation where oligarchs skimmed off the top to a kleptocracy of one. During his watch, thousands of people were summarily executed in the South of Thailand and in a bizarre “war on drugs” in which body count was considered a marker of success.

  • The coup that ousted Thaksin was of course completely illegal, but none of the people who carried it out are in the present government.

  • The yellow shirts’ greatest error in moulding its international image was to elevate Thaksin’s corruption as its major bone of contention. Thai governments have always been corrupt. The extent of corruption and the fact that much of it went into only one pocket was shocking to Thais, but the west views all “second-rate countries” as being corrupt. Had they used the human rights violations and muzzling of the press as their key talking points, the “heroic revolution” archetype would have been moulded with opposite protagonists, and CNN and BBC would be telling an opposite story today.

  • The constitution which was approved by a referendum after the coup and which brought back democracy was flawed, but it provided more checks and balances, and made election fraud a truly accountable offense for the first time.

  • The parliamentary process by which the Democrat coalition came to power was the same process by which the Lib Dems and Tories have attained power in Britain. The parliament that voted in this government consists entirely of democratically elected members.

  • Noone ever disputed the red shirts’ right to peaceful assembly, and the government went out of its way to accede to their demands.

  • This country already has democracy. Not a perfect one, but the idea of “demanding democracry” is sheer fantasy

  • The yellow shirts did not succeed in getting any of their demands from the government. The last two governments changed because key figures were shown to have committed election fraud. They simply did not take their own constitution seriously enough to follow it.

  • The red TV station has a perfect right to exist, but if foreign journalists actually understood Thai, they would realize that much of its content went far beyond any constitutionally acceptable limits of “protected speech” in a western democracy. Every civilized society limits speech when it actually harms others, whether by inciting hate or by slander. The government may have been wrong to brusquely pull the plug, but was certainly right to cry foul. It should have sought an injunction first. Example: Arisman threatened to destroy mosques, government buildings, and “all institutions you hold sacred” … a clip widely seen on youtube, without subtitles. Without subtitles, it looks like “liberty, equality, fraternity”.

  • The army hasn’t been shooting women and children … or indeed anyone at all, except in self-defense. Otherwise this would all be over, wouldn’t it? It’s simple for a big army to mow down 5,000 defenseless people.

  • Snce the government called the red shirts’ bluff and allowed the deputy P.M. to report to the authorities to hear their accusations, the red leaders have been making ever-more fanciful demands. The idea of UN intervention is patently absurd. When Thaksin killed all those Muslims and alleged drug lords, human rights groups asked the UN to intervene. When the army took over the entire country, some asked the UN to intervene. The UN doesn’t intervene in the internal affairs of sovereign countries except when requested to by the country itself or when the government has completely broken down.

  • Thailand hasn’t had an unbreachable gulf between rich and poor for at least 20 years. These conflicts are about the rise of the middle class, not the war between the aristocrats and the proletariat.

  • Abhisit, with his thoroughly western and somewhat liberal background, shares the values of the west and is in fact more likely to bring about the social revolution needed by Thailand’s agrarian poor than any previous leader. He is, in fact, pretty red, while Thaksin, in his autocratic style of leadership, is in a way pretty yellow. Simplistic portrayals do not help anyone to understand anything.

  • The only people who do not seem to care about the reds’ actual grievances are their own leaders, who are basically making everyone risk their lives to see if they can get bail.

  • The King has said all that he is constitutionally able to say when he spoke to the supreme court justices and urged them to do their duty. The western press never seem to realize that the Thai monarchy is constitutionally on the European model … not, say, the Saudi model. The king REIGNS … he doesn’t “rule”. This is a democracy. The king is supposed to symbolize all the people, not a special interest group.

The above are just a few of the elements that needed to be sorted through in order to provide a balanced view of what is happening in this country.

There is one final element that must be mentioned. Most are not even aware of it. But there is, in the western mindset, a deeply ingrained sense of the moral superiority of western culture which carries with it the idea that a third world country must by its very nature be ruled by despots, oppress peasants, and kill and torture people. Most westerners become very insulted when this is pointed out to them because our deepest prejudices are always those of which we are least aware. I believe that there is a streak of this crypto-racism in some of the reportage we are seeing in the west. It is because of this that Baghdad, Yangon, and Bangkok are being treated as the same thing. We all look alike.

Yes, this opinion is always greeted with outrage. I do my best to face my own preconceptions and don’t succeed that often, but I acknowledge they exist nonetheless.

Some of the foreign press are painting the endgame as the Alamo, but it is not. It is a lot closer to Jonestown or Waco.

Like those latter two cases, a highly charismatic leader figure (in our case operating from a distance, shopping in Paris while his minions sweat in the 94°weather) has taken an inspirational idea: in one case Christianity, in the other democracy, and reinvented it so that mainstream Christians, or real democrats, can no longer recognize it. The followers are trapped. There is a siege mentality and information coming from outside is screened so that those trapped believe they will be killed if they try to leave. Women and children are being told that they are in danger if they fall into the hands of the government, and to distrust the medics and NGOs waiting to help them. There are outraged pronouncements that they’re not in fact using the children as human shields, but that the parents brought them willingly to “entertain and thrill” them. There is mounting paranoia coupled with delusions of grandeur, so that the little red kingdom feels it has the right to summon the United Nations, just like any other sovereign state. The reporters in Rajprasong who are attached to the red community are as susceptible to this variant of the Stockholm syndrome as anyone else.

The international press must separate out the very real problems that the rural areas of Thailand face, which will take decades to fix, from the fact that a mob is rampaging through Bangkok, burning, looting, and firing grenades, threatening in the name of democracy to destroy what democracy yet remains in this country.

But this bad reporting is not their fault. It is our fault for not providing the facts in bite-sized pieces, in the right language, at the right time.

Originalkly posted by Somtow Sucharitkul (S.P. Somtow) at 3:41 PM

 

0 thoughts on “Don’t Blame Dan Rivers

  1. That’s a pretty interesting insight into the Thai culture and current political impasse. I do agree with most of the points in the article though. What do you think will happen next?

  2. I’m glad you posted this. I haven’t seen anything like this from NYT or our Globe and Mail site. I don’t think any of the journalist have the deep understanding of the politics and history. While they technically might be doing their jobs. The focus of the reporting seems to be on the fighting, violence, deaths and history. There isn’t a lot about how it got to this stage, how it was organized – all those things that really require investigative journalism. That type of news doesn’t really sell anymore.

  3. That is one of the best, if not the best, insight into the situation!  I did not know the King had asked the Supreme Court to do its job.  Anyway, it is still a messy situation.

  4. Thank you, Chris, for posting this information. As an observer of the German speaking press, I can tell you “they” also have no clear clue of what’s going on.

  5. This is such a great insight into what is really happening. I used to think that the commercialization of the media which is resulting in incorrect, lopsided coverage of world events was just an Indian phenomenon… but I guess not!

  6. tks for posting this……well the general journalists are yes in someways just doing their job….using all the juicy stuff to attrack more viewer and to generate their cash flow….another bad side of the our over commercialized world?

  7. What a marvelously insightful article!!! I especially agree with the paragraph in which he discusses the “typical western view” of  “third world country”!!! We were discussing this and other world situations at work this week and it always amazes me, the “world viewpoint” that people who have had little or no exposure to foreign countries, bring to the table!! I would imagine that the military wives who were so miserable during their time in Bangkok had the same idea, that the American way of doing thing was the only one that “really” counted.  They were surely the losers because of it. Thank you for sharing this article with us…but I have to wonder why it was taken down from it’s original site, you would think that the Thai people would want the world to undestand what is really going on there, from an insiders’ perspective!!! Ruth Ann

  8. Wonderful article. Total immersion is really the only way to truly understand citizens of another country. Since most don’t have that option, keeping an open mind to the difficulties those citizens face in living their lives is extremely important.

  9. I’m an avid watcher of the news and it has been interesting to see how the whole situation is being covered over here in the States versus how you are covering it. There is such a disconnect. I find myself wondering if the news people are simply trying to make the story “sexy” as they are want to do with so many stories. I would say for most people who don’t have a good understanding of Thai politics, the situation is being displayed very differently than what is actually going on and therefore there are opinions being formed on bad information. So much about understanding politics and situations like this is also understanding the context in which the situation is occurring in. It’s very interesting.

  10. Good idea Chris. The more information we have the better off the world will be. Through my travels it has been very interesting to see and hear “the real story”. Thanks for the post.

  11. I can tell just by reading a few others entries on your blog that you are very much a pro-government, yellow-shirt-leaning type of guy. Sorry to make personal accusations but I absolutely have to call bias when I see at least a hint of it. There will always be some foreigners that think that when they move to a foreign country they should kindly follow what the main “government” is saying. Thus you do not have the ability to offer or see any part of the legitimacy the Red Shirts have, and you follow along with the current Thai government and simply criticize all foreign media who do not tow the Thai Government policies and perspectives but instead do like any journalist should and go down to the scenes of violence and report back their own impressions. Thusly, you shouldn’t make blog posts attacking journalists. If you don’t agree with their perspectives, then just state your own and allow right and wrong to fall into light rather than complaining that foreign journalists aren’t “attuned” enough to your slim politically shaped perspectives. What’s next, do you want to shut them out completely, so we can have one-sided selective news?

  12. @joseph – Thank you for your comment.  Three points: First, I think what you can tell about me and my supposed political leanings just by reading a few other entries is didly-squat, especially based on the conclusion you drew.  If you look at my entire coverage of events ranging back to the coup, you’ll see that I’ve been very skeptical of the justification of Thaksin’s overthrow, the manner in which the current constitution was implemented, and the way in which the current government came to power.  Second, your admonition that I shouldn’t make blog posts attacking journalists is very funny, given your subsequent concern that we might end up with one-sided, selective news.  As a consumer of the journalists’ work, I have every right to critique it, especially given that this is my personal blog.  To somehow prohibit me from expressing my informed opinion is tantamount to removing another side, or view, of the discussion.Finally, I appreciate your constructive, respectful comments and your opinion, but this is my blog and I don’t take kindly to those who tell me what I “shouldn’t” blog about.

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