As a young man researching the murder of Frank Little in Butte, Montana, I knew I was going to have my work cut out for me. It would be a diet of microfiche readers at the library and old documents at the Butte Archives which is a wonderful repository for all things associated with the history of Butte.
But the real problem I was going to have was the source or reference material. In 1917, the only source of information was print media. Newspapers. In Butte, every newspaper was owned by the Anaconda Copper Mining Company or the ACM. The ACM had acquired every mining property on the hill and employed tens of thousands of miners. They didn't just run Butte and own a sympathetic and crooked police force, they ran the state of Montana. That is well documented. In town, everyone just called them the "company."
I discovered a couple of things. That history really is- told by the winners. The company filtered out any death or story that cast them in a bad light. Since Frank Little was a union organizer and fiery orator, they especially hated him. They slandered him and his organization. His murder not only went unsolved- it went un-investigated.
So that was it. Radio would not be around for another 15 years. Newspapers, hopelessly biased, were going to be my only source of information.
My father had been a news anchor on a small TV station in Williston, North Dakota in the late 1960's. Every night I would watch him report the local news and then I would watch the national news on one of two TV networks. Walter Cronkite was the anchor I remember most. I was about 8 years old. I have been a news junkie for over 55 years.
Cronkite was objective. There was no political bias or jaded subterfuge like today.
When networks reported the news in the 60's, 70's, and 80's- it appeared to be impartial and mostly truthful. There wasn't this heavily biased, editorialized opinions that we see today. Everything is suspect. Election rigging with no investigation. Fraudulent polls. Suspicious debates and moderators. Jaded celebrities offering platforms, endorsements, and liberal opinions. Unrelenting media hatred for one candidate and universal media love for the democratic party and whatever horrible candidate they conjure up.
So what changed? Who murdered decency and objective reporting?
It was called the "Fairness Doctrine" and it was officially destroyed in 1987 and buried by Barack Obama in 2011.
The demise of the Fairness Doctrine has been cited as the main reason for party polarization in the United States. So here it was. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairness_doctrine
Every contest has rules. Boxers, caged fighting, football, golf. Without rules and a fair playing field, there is simply cheating and chaos. So cheating and chaos now reign supreme on our political landscape. All sorts of illegal activities like importing votes via illegal aliens and blocking any effort to prove citizenship before casting ballots. Demonizing anyone who questions the breakdown of our system. Subjecting people to ridicule for simply questioning an outcome or refusing a shot. We even have the democrats trying to unseat justices on the Supreme Court for simply returning the abortion issue to individual states. No issue is more divisive than the abortion issue.
As a country, we are in pretty bad shape. We desperately need an intervention and a complete change in policy. Yet, I don't see anyone with that level of political courage. Trump has his hands full.
So maybe things just have to go the way they are going. And with luck, it will get so bad that good people will finally get off their asses and help. I don't think we can stop what's coming.
But we can sure as hell slow it down.