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320 pages, Hardcover
First published January 16, 2018
What discouraged Solzhenitsyn, who had been living in the United States for several years, was the media’s indifference to truth and their unwillingness to pursue it. “One gradually discovers a common trend of preference within the Western press as a whole,” he said. “It is a fashion; there are generally accepted patterns of judgment; there may be common corporate interests, the sum effect being not competition but unification.” As he saw it, the media were squandering their freedom.
The Federal Communications Commission, Lee explained, was always eager to shut Salem down, but the company had learned to negotiate around it. The media companies most vulnerable, I was learning, were those that were publicly owned and traded, especially those that lacked a genuine mission. With these companies, the threat of a major lawsuit, an FC action, or even a bluff from the Department of Justice could roil the markets and cost shareholders millions.
I have to sympathize with the publishers of Pravda. They were working with a gun to their heads. Their American counterparts have no such excuse.