About us Login Get email updates
Research
Print

Beck guru Skousen's "story of slavery" suggests slave owners were "worst victims of the system"

September 30, 2009 2:28 pm ET — 36 Comments

Fox News' Glenn Beck has heavily promoted the writings of far-right activist W. Cleon Skousen, even making Skousen's book, The 5000 Year Leap, a central part of his 9-12 Project. Skousen is the author of several controversial works, including The Making of America: The Substance and Meaning of the Constitution, which presented as "the story of slavery in America" a passage from a book that attacked abolitionists for delaying emancipation; cast slave owners as "the worst victims of the system"; claimed white schoolchildren "were likely to envy the freedom of their colored playmates"; and claimed that "[s]lavery did not make white labor unrespectable, but merely inefficient," because "the slave had a deliberateness of motion which no amount of supervision could quicken."

Skousen: a fringe conservative embraced by Beck

Salon: "Skousen was not a historian so much as a player in the history of the American far right; less a scholar of the republic than a threat to it." In a September 16 article titled, "Meet the man who changed Glenn Beck's life," Salon's Alexander Zaitchik chronicled Skousen's controversial writings and associations, as well as the central role Skousen's writing plays in Beck's activities. According to Zaitchik, Skousen was "a professional anti-communist" who, according to FBI memos, "affiliated himself with the extreme right-wing 'professional communists' who are promoting their own anticommunism for obvious financial purposes."

Zaitchik also noted Skousen's links to the far-right John Birch Society and its founder, Robert Welch, writing that Skousen "aligned himself with Robert Welch's charge that Dwight Eisenhower was a 'dedicated, conscious agent of the Communist conspiracy.' " In 1963, Skousen wrote a pamphlet titled, "The Communist Attack on the John Birch Society," in which he argued that those who criticized the group "usually did so without realizing they were promoting the official Communist Party line."

Beck frequently touts Skousen's "divinely inspired" work. Zaitchik documented instances in which Beck "furiously promot[ed]" Skousen's books on his radio program, asking his guests if they had read any of Skousen's writings and exhorting his listeners to purchase The 5000 Year Leap, which Beck sells through his website. Zaitchik also noted that Beck authored a foreword for the 30th anniversary edition of The 5000 Year Leap, in which Beck wrote, "I beg you to read this book filled with words of wisdom which I can only describe as divinely inspired."

Skousen at the center of 9-12 Project. On the March 13 edition of his Fox News program, during which Beck announced the launch of the 9-12 Project, Beck told his studio audience: "Do we have the books? Where are the books? Underneath everybody's seat here in the audience, there are some books here. I've got a couple of books for you that you can start. This one is called The 5,000-Year Leap. It is fantastic. I want you to know I don't make any money on these things. The 5,000-Year Leap -- it is the 29 principles that our founders put together, and how they put this genius country together." Beck added: "You read these and you read them with your friends. And you meet once a week or, you know, a couple of times a month. And you start small, and you just really figure out what you believe in." [Fox News' Glenn Beck, 3/13/09, retrieved via Nexis]

The Making of America featured in 9-12 Project meetings. Several local chapters of the 9-12 Project have conducted seminars to discuss The Making of America. The seminars appear to have been organized in conjunction with the National Center for Constitutional Studies, which, as Zaitchik noted, was founded by Skousen in 1971.

Skousen's The Making of America advances controversial "story of slavery in America"

Skousen: "Slavery is not a racial problem. It is a human problem." In The Making of America, Skousen wrote of slavery:

In the history of the world, nearly every nation has had slaves. The Chinese kept thousands of slaves. Babylon boasted of slaves from a dozen different countries. The dark-skinned Hittites, Phoenicians, and Egyptians had white slaves. The Moors had black slaves. America had black slaves. The Nazis had white slaves. The Soviets still do, with several million white slaves wearing out their starved, near-naked bodies in slave labor camps.

So the emancipation of human beings from slavery is an ongoing struggle. Slavery is not a racial problem. It is a human problem. [The Making of America, page 728]

Skousen's "Story of Slavery" controversial when first published. In The Making of America, Skousen capped his analysis of the 15th Amendment by quoting several pages of historian Fred Albert Shannon's Economic History of the People of the United States (1934), saying that they "tell the story of slavery in America." [The Making of America, page 729] As Zaitchik wrote in his September 16 Salon article, Skousen's use of Shannon's work aroused controversy shortly after the book was first published in the early 1980s:

Toward the end of Reagan's second term, Skousen became the center of a minor controversy when state legislators in California approved the official use of another of his books, the 1982 history text "The Making of America." Besides bursting with factual errors, Skousen's book characterized African-American children as "pickaninnies" and described American slave owners as the "worst victims" of the slavery system. Quoting the historian Fred Albert Shannon, "The Making of America" explained that "[slave] gangs in transit were usually a cheerful lot, though the presence of a number of the more vicious type sometimes made it necessary for them all to go in chains."

Shannon's account of slavery sympathetic to slave owners, hostile to abolitionists, minimized suffering. The following are excerpts from Shannon's account of life in the antebellum South, as presented by Skousen in The Making of America as "the story of slavery in America." In them, Shannon claimed that children of slave owners envied the "freedom" of slave children and that "impermanent" marriages between slaves were a "blessing of slavery." Shannon also dismissed accounts of cruelty toward slaves as rare or unfounded but addressed in great detail the "fear" Southern whites had of slave rebellions against "white civilization."

  • Abolitionists at fault for delaying emancipation. "Gradual emancipation by legislative action was talked about in the South for two generations after the Declaration of Independence. A fierce contest, waged over this issue in the legislature of Virginia as late as 1832, was lost by the emancipationists largely because of resentment against the interference of Northern abolitionists and terror over the Nat Turner insurrection of the preceding year.

"Had the result been different the effect upon the border states, where slavery at best was of questionable value, may well be imagined. By too militant action the abolitionists themselves did much to perpetuate slavery in the northern group of the Southern states." [The Making of America, page 730]

  • Newly sold slaves "usually a cheerful lot." "The tendency was to sell families as units, if for no other reason [than] to keep the slaves contented. The gangs in transit were usually a cheerful lot, though the presence of a number of the more vicious type sometimes made it necessary for them all to go in chains. At the other extreme, when the Central of Georgia railroad company in 1858 equipped a Negro sleeping car to assist in the slave trade it set a standard not always maintained in a later generation. When on the block, the slave was as likely to hinder as to help in his sale. Some, out of a vain conceit in bringing a high price, would boast of their physical prowess, in which case an unwary purchaser would likely be cheated. Others would malinger, because of a grudge against owners or traders or in order to bring a low price and be put at less tiring labor. Dealers, also, adopted the tricks of horse traders to make their merchants more attractive -- the greasiest Negro was generally considered the healthiest." [The Making of America, pages 731-732]
  • Slaves hampered efficiency of white labor. "In the management of slave labor the gang system predominated. The great majority of owners, having at the most only one or two families of Negroes, had to work alongside their slaves and set the pace for them. Slavery did not make white labor unrespectable, but merely inefficient. The slave had a deliberateness of motion which no amount of supervision could quicken. If the owner got ahead of the gang they all would shirk behind his back." [The Making of America, page 732]
  • White schoolchildren would "envy the freedom" of "colored playmates." "Slave food, even if monotonous, was plentiful. Corn bread and bacon were the mainstays, with plenty of fruit and vegetables in season. In hog-killing time, countenances were unusually greasy. Clothing also was on the par with that of the poorer white people and no less adequate in proportion to the climate than that of Northern laborers. If [negro children] ran naked it was generally from choice, and when the white boys had to put on shoes and go away to school they were likely to envy the freedom of their colored playmates. The color line began to appear at about that time." [The Making of America, pages 732-733]
  • Cruelty rare, slave owners "the worst victims." "Excessive toil occurred only where the masters or overseers were feeble witted as well as brutal. A persistent rumor among abolitionists was that sugar planters followed a policy of working slaves to death in seven years as a matter of economy. The persons spreading such reports were as ignorant of Negro nature as they were of conditions in the sugar mills. Furthermore, they overrated the ability of the masters to know how to kill a slave in the given time instead of leaving him a broken-down burden to the plantation. When they set out to prove the accusation they returned with no evidence, but convinced that the practice existed in some obscure region which they had not succeeded in ferreting out. Harriet Martineau, after watching slaves go through the motions of work without tiring themselves, considered the planters as models of patience and observed that new slave owners from Europe or the North were prone to be the most severe. Numerous observers, of various shades of opinion on slavery, agreed that brutality was no more common in the black belt than among free labor elsewhere, and that the slave owners were the worst victims of the system." [The Making of America, pages 733-734
  • Broken marriages "one the blessings of slavery." "Negro weddings were attended by white people who joined in the celebration. If the marriages were of a rather impermanent nature, that fact was frequently considered as 'one of the blessings of slavery.' At church and camp meetings the Negroes, in their own section of the building or tabernacle, enjoyed the experiences immensely. They could shout without restraint, while the masters, in order to preserve their dignity, had to repress their emotions. It made little difference if religion was thrown off soon after the camp meeting dissolved -- backsliding was pleasant, and there was always a chance to get intoxicatingly converted again." [The Making of America, page 734]
  • "Negro preachers" warranted surveillance. "The worst offenses of slaves against the white men's code were rebellion and running away. Drunkenness, stealing, hiding out from work, personal filthiness, carelessness of property, fighting, and general brutality had various positions in the scale of misdemeanors. Negro preachers often bred discontent by their unnecessary restraint upon pleasure, and, if itinerants, had to be watched closely for abolitionist or seditious doctrines." [The Making of America, page 734]
  • Southern life a "nightmare" of fear -- for white people. "The constant fear of slave rebellion made life in the South a nightmare, especially in regions where conspiracies were of frequent occurrence. The extermination of white civilization in Santo Domingo was followed in the nineteenth century by several other bloody outbursts in the West Indies, which never failed to cause ominous forebodings in America. [...]

"In the nineteenth century, conspiracies headed by George Boxley and Denmark Vessey in South Carolina (1816 and 1822), and the Nat Turner insurrection in Virginia in 1831 were the outstanding examples. Boxley, a Negro with a sort of John Brown intelligence, escaped while six of his followers were executed. The Vessey plot, prematurely revealed, resulted in 130 arrests which culminated in the hangings of 35, deportation fo nearly as many, and imprisonment of 4 white participants. Nat Turner, a mystic type of Baptist preacher, set out to annihilate white civilization, and succeeded to the extent of 10 men, 14 women, and 31 children. He was finally hanged with several of his followers, but the after-effects of the uprising were deplorable." [The Making of America, page 735]

  • Southern slavery better than Northern freedom. "The free Negro had rather more opportunity for economic advancement in the South than in the North. The Southerner was bothered by the race problem but knew how to handle the individual Negro, while the Northerner professed a benign interest in the race so long as its members were as remote as possible. Neither section was willing to grant equal rights in education, suffrage, or legal standing, while many states of all sections had laws prohibiting the immigration of free Negroes. Abraham Lincoln could not have maintained his standing in the Republican party had he not been a staunch supporter of the Illinois exclusion law and a firm opponent of political and social equality. It was most difficult for a Negro to get a job in the North, except at the most loathsome of tasks. Some Negroes, having been freed and sent to any Northern state which would receive them, became so miserable as to solicit a return to slavery." [The Making of America, pages 735-736]
  • Emancipated slaves hated because of Civil War and "carpetbag regime." "This seemingly hopeless situation was by 1860 approaching a solution which was not allowed to materialize. The limits of slavery expansion either by purchase or conquest had been reached. The natural increase of slave population in a few decades would have checked the opportunities for profitable sale. It seems futile to believe otherwise than that, before the end of the century, the diminishing returns from slave ownership would have driven slave prices so low that, in self-defense, owners would have made tenants of their laborers, thrown them upon their own resources, and placed dependence upon rentals for profits. It likewise seems reasonable to believe that by this solution the Negro might have escaped the revulsion of feeling against him that resulted from forcible emancipation and the carpetbag regime." [The Making of America, page 737]
  • The end picture-caption. At the end of Skousen's extensive quotation of Shannon, The Making of America features an illustration of two dark, manacled hands with the accompanying caption: "In some ways, the economic system of slavery chained the slave owners almost as much as the slaves." [The Making of America, page 737]

slaves

Expand All Expand 1st Level Collapse All Add Comment
    • Author by shaggles (September 30, 2009 2:50 pm ET)
      14  
      If the slave owners were getting the worst of the deal then why own slaves? No one was forcing them to own slaves.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by Conchobhar (September 30, 2009 3:53 pm ET)
        5  
        They also had political power, at the national level, far in excess of their deserts because of the obscene 3/5 rule. One of the reasons they wanted to secede was the fact this power would be diluted as new, free, states came into the Union.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by mari2jj2970 (September 30, 2009 10:34 pm ET)
           
        Your question is faR TOO INTELLECTUAL TO BE GIVEN MUCH CREDENCE BY ANYONE AS STUPID AS sCOUSEN. aMAZING THE STUFF HE SPOUTED AND THE TERRIBLE MISINFORMATION HE PUT FORTH ABOUT SOME OF gOD'S CREATION. t
        Report Abuse
    • Author by wzwriter (September 30, 2009 2:52 pm ET)
      11  
      Why don't they just pre-empt Becky's TV pukefest one nigh and show D.W. Griggith's Birth of a Nation? Or have Beck himself sponsor a Steppin Fetchit Film Festival? You just KNOW one of those is coming next......
      Report Abuse
    • Author by draftedin68 (September 30, 2009 2:59 pm ET)
      3  
      Guilt by exhortation, not by association...

      Beck repeatedly provides textbook examples of guilt by association with his bizarre chalk-talks diagramming the evilness of anyone President Obama has ever spoken to, spoken about, or just about anyone on Beck's enemies list who's ever mentioned Barack Obama by name.

      When Beck exhorts his audience to "...read this book filled with words of wisdom...", he provides more than a little insight to the seeds of his twisted, paranoid, hateful, bigoted beliefs.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by manndan (September 30, 2009 3:00 pm ET)
      3  
      If not for Beck this goofball would have remained out of print and consigned to a well-deserved ash heap of history.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by bintx (September 30, 2009 3:16 pm ET)
      8  
      And Beck's not a racist???? Bull!
      Report Abuse
    • Author by ScienceBuff (September 30, 2009 3:23 pm ET)
      7  
      I'm just waiting to see if anyone tries to defend this author.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by ernie1241 (September 30, 2009 3:53 pm ET)
      4  
      Skousen also used anti-semitic sources to substantiate his assertions in a March 1971 article he wrote for Law and Order magazine entitled Home Grown Subversion.

      See my report on Skousen which is based upon his FBI personnel file and related material here:

      Your text to link here...
      Report Abuse
      • Author by Limit Corp. Ownership (September 30, 2009 4:23 pm ET)
        5  
        I would hope Time Magazine covered this sordid mess in their recent article on Rodeo Clown Beck?

        They did, didn't they?
        Report Abuse
      • Author by epkklk851 (September 30, 2009 4:27 pm ET)
        3  
        Actually, I read your report on Skousen a couple of months ago. I got to it through Richard Packham's website on Mormons. I found both your report and Mr. Packham's information to be very helpful in understanding Mr. Beck. His vision of American is not one I would choose for myself or anyone I like, love, or respect. Thank you for the work. For those of us here, I might recommend Mr. Packham's crash course on the Mormon faith. It is very enlightening.

        http://packham.n4m.org/skousen.htm
        Report Abuse
        • Author by ernie1241 (September 30, 2009 8:24 pm ET)
             
          Thanks for your kind words. I might note that I have added new material to my Skousen report since you first read it --- including scanned copies of several pertinent FBI memos concerning Skousen's misrepresentations.
          Report Abuse
    • Author by pezdrake (September 30, 2009 4:16 pm ET)
         
      It’s hardly surprising. The conservative emphasis since the sixties has been the push that white Americans (specifically white males) have not only never done anything wrong, but often been victimized by society and by all means have no reason to apologize or admit they have benefited from the subjugation or suffering of others.

      This comes from their rejection of ever having to apologize or sacrifice in any part for the sake of others or their country. The idea, I guess, is to appeal to those who feel they are put-upon to simply acknowledge that others may be suffering. That and of course convince people that everything they have is a result of what they deserve – that they got everything they have by their own hard work and help from no one else and those who are suffering are there due to their own actions and no one else contributed to it. It’s clearly seen in their opposition to taxes (unless they go to pay for something that benefits them in a direct way that they can see) but even a historical discussion of discrimination to them is a hot topic.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by nativeofsf (September 30, 2009 4:24 pm ET)
      5  
      It's another pukefest from that little-wonder, Glenn Beck. When are others going to wake-up & smell his doings!?
      Report Abuse
    • Author by fawltylogic (September 30, 2009 4:26 pm ET)
      7  
      Suddenly Beck's fear of Obama makes so much more sense.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by mattcable250650 (September 30, 2009 4:31 pm ET)
      5  
      If the marriages were of a rather impermanent nature

      What a very interesting comment! Gee, I wonder why a slave marriage would be "impermanent." Hmm, could that have something to do with people being brought and sold like cattle?!?!?
      Good grief, what a bunch of nonsense!
      Report Abuse
    • Author by Indy (September 30, 2009 4:40 pm ET)
      4  
      Just like the rich Southern aristocratic slave owners used printed newspapers to deliver propaganda to convince the hundreds of thousands of poor and middle class non slave owners in the civil war to prop up their crooked way of life, so goes the mega rich white media owners and complacent viewers. This time it's via rich shills like Beck doing the same to gen up false rage to aid an already skewed imbalance of wealth and grab for more power by the rich. Once again the poor, by comparison, duped converts rush into someone else's battle or Tea Parties thinking it's their own. Suckers.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by snoopy (September 30, 2009 4:48 pm ET)
      5  
      For reals? Talk about revisionist history and white victimhood wrapped up all in one!
      Report Abuse
    • Author by Renesme (September 30, 2009 5:08 pm ET)
         
      I wonder how Michael Steele is feeling.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by captfoster2 (September 30, 2009 5:23 pm ET)
      4  
      Skousen: a fringe conservative embraced by Beck

      I have to believe that this description of Mr. Skousen is giving WAY to damn much credibility to this moron!

      This piece of dirt is a slimy little bastard!.

      If Glenn were any kind of a decent human himself, he would not be hosting this bug, he'd be calling him out!

      Which certainly defines Glenn Beck and explains the kind of person Mr. Beck is.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by kknickerbocker7500 (September 30, 2009 5:42 pm ET)
           
        As a lifelong Mormon I feel inclined to state I have never read a single word that either Beck or Skousen have ever written. Both Beck and Skousen are fringe players on the American political scene as well as within the LDS church.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by GaryD (September 30, 2009 5:42 pm ET)
         
      Ummmmmmm anyone believe this crap? What was he smoking? They were powerful elitists!
      Report Abuse
    • Author by oneleft (September 30, 2009 6:10 pm ET)
      4  
      where are they? where are all the beck supporters? c'mon kids, nows no time to be silent.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by eweston8542983 (September 30, 2009 6:29 pm ET)
        3  
        Most of them seemed to concentrate on one thread yesterday.

        Most of the old south was run for the benifit of a few handfulls of angry old ladies. Who looked down their noses at the rest of the population.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by MichaelStoodUp (September 30, 2009 7:41 pm ET)
         
      Quick questions: Since W. Cleon Skousen was a Mormon and instructor at BYU and Glenn Beck is now a Mormon is it possible that their ideas about slavery and racism come from the church? Does the Mormon church support Mr. Beck's ideas? Is Beck the front man for another Mormon, Mitt Romney?
      At first I thought Mr. Beck was Rupert Murdoch's monkey. However, I'm starting to think Beck's believes he is doing the work of God. If so, whose God does he serve?

      Report Abuse
    • Author by pete592 (September 30, 2009 9:58 pm ET)
      2  
      Victimized by something they facilitated and willfully engaged in?

      I'm checking my backside for flying monkeys.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by fabucat58 (September 30, 2009 10:43 pm ET)
      2  
      Thank God MM has been tearing down Becky's facade to reveal the corruption and ugliness beneath it!

      This sort of thing wasn't mainstream in the '50s, except in the deep South. Now today Becky the racist is on the cover of TIME! Becky drives the news cycle the way Joe McCarthy did. At least McCarthy had had a decent education, as poisonous as he was, and he voted with Democrats on economic issues. Becky does not have ONE redeeming feature about him.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by zamfir273114 (October 01, 2009 1:39 am ET)
        2
      Very interesting article. I never heard of this W. Cleon Skousen until just now. Luckily, I found two of his books on Amazon. After I finish reading it, I will let you know what I think. Perhaps if you have not read it, before judging it, you should read it yourself.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by vysotsky (October 01, 2009 5:16 am ET)
           
        Fair enough, but I'm curious: what convinced you to buy these books? Beck's endorsement? The promise of learning the 28 or 29 principles of morality and faith upon which the country was built? A chance to read Skousen's take on slavery for yourself? What was the deciding factor in your choice to not just go check the books out at a library, but to actually buy your own copies without having heard anything previously about the author or the books?
        Report Abuse
    • Author by fishgimp (October 01, 2009 1:58 am ET)
         
      I cant believe i would say this but on one part he has a point i will not say he is correct.

      All countries did have to face emancipation and many do stuggle today with the aftermath. i dont mean any crackpot thing about slaves were better off before i am trying to say the slave freeing country that freed the slaves has to accept the guilt of their crimes and face the responsability to fix their problem they alone are responsible for, meaning they take care of the liberated including giving them a right to be citizens and equal, make sure that they are not victimised by people that hate of the newly free, and giving them a option if possible to return to their homeland.
      almost all counties that faced this challenge failed on at least one of the above. as you know the u.s. did as well.
      most countries at one time had to face this and not just the u.s., some of the people in these counties today also feel the way most of u.s. does and regrets the past but also make damn sure it is never forgotten.
      finally the term slave comes from the vikings and the raids to aquire their new slaves. they took so many of these people that the term "slave" was always to be remembered by these people; the slavs.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by eclare (October 01, 2009 8:32 am ET)
         
      I like the "forcible emancipation" line. The "Negro" was hated because the North forced him to be free. Nice.

      When I was in college, I was part of the University's Students for a Free South Africa group calling for the college's divestment from SA. One day an older gentleman walked past our makeshift protest shanty and started yelling at me, nearly in tears. "Don't you know those people cannot take care of themselves? Don't you understand that they cannot govern? You don't know what kind of danger that you are putting those poor souls in"!

      I found out later that he had been a professor of History at my University from 1930-1972. I felt kind of bad for him, but glad things had changed. Now they are changing back and it scares me to death!
      Report Abuse
    • Author by justjoe628 (October 01, 2009 12:32 pm ET)
         
      Certainly his writings are that of a bigot and racist. This is an appropriate time to use those words. But, isn't same kind of smear that the lefties complain about. Ya know, well this guy must be bad because he associates this guy i.e. Obama with Rev. Wright or Bill Ayers. I'm not defending Beck here, just pointing out the hypocrisy.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by benjr (October 01, 2009 5:12 pm ET)
           
        Wrong. Beck is teaching Skousen's lessons, whereas Obama only went to Wright's church. By the way, you do remember that Pres. Obama disassociated himself from Rev. Wright. When will it be Beck's turn?
        Report Abuse
      • Author by mikehuck1976 (October 02, 2009 1:49 pm ET)
           
        Wouldn't that make you a hypocrite, justjoe? Don't you attack Obama for being on a board with Ayers or belonging to a church that Rev. Wright was the pastor of? Any yet you think it is unfair to associate Beck with someone he openly advocates and shills for? I do see some hypocrisy. Do you?
        Report Abuse
    • Author by donwelty (October 01, 2009 6:21 pm ET)
         
      "In some ways the economic system of slavery chained the slave owners." Yes, it chained them to bigotry,to a belief that they were superior to another human being, and a number of other character flaws. It chained them to years of psychological problems masked by the fact that they were economically fairly well off. It chained them to a system that was not in the best interests of everyone involved.

      But those are not the thoughts you were having now, is it Mr. Beck? Do you also have some sympathy for the concentration camp commandants? in 1944? Didn't they get tired after a long day? How about the British soldiers who fired on the Indians at Amritsar in 1919? They may have had some heat issues in the hot Indian sun. What about the Turks who had to go out into the desert and may have gotten overexerted in herding Armenians to their deaths in the Armenian genocide?
      Report Abuse

my.MediaMatters.org

Login  Sign Up

Push Back

Phone calls, emails and letters from the public do make a difference. Remember that to be effective you must be polite, and professional. Express your specific concerns regarding that particular news report or commentary, and indicate what you would like the media outlet to do differently in the future.