Media analyst Norman Soloman, author of Unreliable Sources, speaks about the distorted press coverage of the Gulf War, 1990-1991. He points to the irresponsible reporting of Time Magazine, which said that civilian casualties should have picked a safer neightborhood; and the inhuman view of Iraqi soldiers. New corporations polute the airwave, he concludes, but we accept it as their First Amendment right. The media in the United States is dangerous and must be resisted, he concludes.|UNIDENTIFIED FLYING PROPAGANDA / Norman Soloman. - Media analyst Norman Soloman, author of Unreliable Sources, speaks about the distorted press coverage of the Gulf War, 1990-1991. He points to the irresponsible reporting of Time Magazine which said that civilian casualties should have picked a safer neighborhood, and the inhuman view of Iraqi soliders. News corporations polute the airwave, he concludes, but we accept it as their First Amendment right. The media in the U.S. is dangerous and must be resisted. - RECORDED: 1991.
