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This article © 2000 by Deborah Lagarde. Comments? E-mail:"mailto:dlagarde@suite101.com"
Last week I told you about three secret power elite organizations out to make policy for the rest of us "little people" to follow, or else. Naturally as Contributing Editor for "Media Issues" it is the media members of these groups and their media organs that would concern me here. According to "Who's Who of the Power Elite" by Robert Gaylon Ross, Sr. (© 1995), under media affiliation with the three groups (Bilderbergers, Trilateral Commission, and the Council on Foreign Relations), the overwhelming media organ affiliations are with the following: Under Magazines: American Spectator, Atlantic/Atlantic Monthly, Forbes Magazine, Harper's, Washington Times, National Review (including the arch-conservative Buckleys), New Republic, New York Times, New Yorker, Newsday, Newsweek, Reader's Digest, Time (almost half the list!), US News & World Report, Vanity Fair, Washington Post. Under Newspapers: Associated Press, Boston Globe, Christian Science Monitor, Knight-Ridder papers, L. A. Times, N.Y. Times, Wall St. Journal, Washongton Post (the vast majority of the members listed work for the last four on the list). There are several other local papers listed once. Under Radio and Television: National Public Radio, CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC, PBS Note: the book was published in 1995. Don't expect to see affiliations with cyber-journals and the proliferation of new cable-satellite networks. Now, in 2000, I am sure they have their representatives. Since the actual list of names is exhaustive, but... since this list dates back to 1994 and earlier, I will list only the names of well-known present-day media celebrities like million-dollar anchor person types and big-time columnists. Some of the names will definitely surprise you. No doubt, they were on the 1995 lists and still are, in 2000, members of these groups out to control world opinion and policy. Next Week! Go To Page: 1
The copyright of the article Just Who Does Corporate Media Serve? Part 2 in Media Issues is owned by . Permission to republish Just Who Does Corporate Media Serve? Part 2 in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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