Harvard's Crimson announced
it. Oprah will deliver Harvard's 362nd Commencement address.
President Drew Faust called her "journey from her grandmother's Mississippi
farm to becoming one of the world's most admired women one of the great
American success stories."
She's best known for her nationally syndicated talk show: The Oprah Winfrey
Show. In 2011, it ended its 25-year run.
It was broadcast in 145 countries. Annually it reached 40 million US viewers.
It featured guests ranging from celebrities to presidents. It won her
fame and fortune.
She owns Harpo Productions. It's Oprah spelled backwards. She has her
own cable channel: Oprah Winfrey Network. It's seen in 83 million households.
She's an African American billionaire. Forbes estimates she's worth $2.8
billion. It ranks her 11th on its 100 most powerful women's list.
She bested Queen Elizabeth, heads of state, other government officials,
corporate CEOs, and Harvard's Faust. Michelle Obama was 7th. Angela Merkel
and Hillary Clinton ranked one and two.
On May 30, Oprah will address the Afternoon Exercises of Commencement.
She'll appear in Harvard Yard's Tercentenary Theater. Last year she spoke
at Atlanta's Spelman College. Duke and Stanford invited her earlier.
She's connected to America's rich and powerful. Months before Washington's
2003 Iraq war, she promoted it on air. She had no business doing so.
She ran video clips featuring "experts." They included Richard Perle,
Douglas Feith and others. They lied saying America's "morally" obligated
to remove Saddam.
Oprah called doing so a humanitarian mission. She omitted salient facts.
She sold millions of viewers war. She did so with fabricated reasons.
She lied for power. It wasn't the first time or last.
In June 2011, In These Times headlined "Oprah's Celebrity Pyramid Scheme,"
saying:
"There's no there there." She's more infomercial than real. She's "one-dimensional."
"Winfreyism….leads ultimately (to) blind allies." She symbolizes "celebrity
divinity." She represents "a vision of universal celebrity as a pyramid
scheme." Her comments are "hollow and nonsensical."
A follow-up article headlined "Oprah-iate of the People," saying:
She's criticized for promoting self-help. Her message to middle-aged women
is "You're special. You have some flaws, but it's nothing some luxury
lifestyle can't fix."
American society reflects consumption and competition. Oprah's solutions
represent it. So does her background.
An African-American woman succeeded despite long odds. She sells false
promises. Viewers believe them. Hope takes a back seat to reality.
In December 2007, the Black Agenda Report headlined "Oprah & Obama:
Corporate Marketing for a Corporate Campaign," saying:
During Obama's presidential campaign, they "teamed up for a three-state
weekend extravaganza of vapid, substance-devoid entertainment posing as
presidential politics."
Doing so is Oprah's specialty. She appeals to America's lowest common
denominator. She's a "faux progressive." She has close wealth and power
ties. More on that below.
She teamed with Obama. They conned Americans. Uninformed ones were sold
false promises. The "Oprah effect" helped. She lied saying:
"Long before it was the popular thing to do, (Obama) stood with clarity
and conviction against the war in Iraq."
He supported it all along. He still wages it. It gets no headlines. It's
mostly covert. The war's 10th anniversary approaches. Oprah's lie was
her biggest applause line. What she said was false.
She either didn't know or care. She plays fast and lose with facts. She's
on the wrong side of major issues. She pretends otherwise. Charitable
giving doesn't erase support for imperial lawlessness.
"After years of dishing out celebrity gossip and advice on relationships,
decorating, cuisine, fashion and what books to read, Oprah fits nicely
into the corporate PR juggernaut behind the Obama campaign."
She "didn't become a billionaire by speaking truth to power. She is a
master marketer whose skill is assembling and influencing vast audiences
on behalf of her corporate sponsors."
She's orchestrated to stay on script. She worked well with Obama. They're
"accomplished manipulators."
She may end up one or two on a future Democrat ticket. Reading her lines
well is the main qualification for either job.
In June 2008, the Black Agenda Report headlined "The Age of Oprah, Cultural
Icon For the Neoliberal Era." BAR interviewed author Janice Peck. She's
University of Colorado Professor of Journalism and Mass Communications.
"(U)nderstanding (her) journey is to understand neoliberalism as a political
and economic project," she said. Claiming markets solve problems reflects
"the same message (she) sells us."
She's the messenger. Adjust or else. Get used to "minimal" "stripped down"
government and "maximum personal responsibility."
Oprah reflects the "neoliberal attitude we should have toward the world."
Her message is politicized.
She "disassociated herself from a lot of the political aspects of the
civil rights movement." She talks about MLK and other figures. It stops
there. She doesn't emulate them. She doesn't care. She's more white than
black.
Becoming popular requires not "mak(ing) too many people uncomfortable."
Ties to wealth and power interests preclude doing so. Oprah's well connected.
In May 2009, Irish Central headlined "Secret meeting of world's richest
people held in New York," saying:
A media blackout was imposed. Noted figures attended. They included David
Rockefeller, Bill Gates, Warren Buffet, George Soros, Ted Turner, Peter
Peterson, Michael Bloomberg, and Oprah among others.
It was held in Rockefeller University's President's Room. Major world
issues were discussed. Each participant got 15 minutes. Oprah was in "listening
mode."
Topics included world population control. Others were ones rich and powerful
figures prioritize. Oprah's well connected. She's welcome in high places.
She's a Council on Foreign Relations member. She may or may not have Trilateralist
and Bilderberg ties. The latter group's so secret it lacks an official
name. Oprah will have to disclose connections if any.
A Final Comment
Oprah promoted James Arthur Ray. She featured him on air. She discussed
his self-help advice.
He hosted an October 2009 "Spiritual Warrior" retreat. He led a sweat
lodge ceremony.
Three participants died. Eighteen others were hospitalized. They suffered
severe burns, dehydration, breathing problems, kidney failure, and hyperthermia.
They paid around $10,000 each to attend. Native Americans don't pay to
pray.
They fasted 36 hours. They abstained from water for 48 hours. It was part
of a vision quest exercise. It proceeded the sweat lodge ceremony.
A wrongful death lawsuit followed. It claimed negligence, negligent misrepresentation,
fraud, and other charges. Compensatory and punitive damages were sought.
In February 2010, Ray was arrested. Weeks later he was released on bond.
He settled for over $3 million.
He was prosecuted and convicted of negligent homicide. In November 2011,
he got two years in prison.
Oprah bears much responsibility. She promoted what she should have condemned.
She did so more than once. It's not accidental. She often featured disreputable
guests. Some were high-profile.
In May 2009, Newsweek magazine headlined "Live Your Best Life Ever!"
Oprah interviewed actress Suzanne Somers. She discussed her way of staying
young. She follows a risky regimen. It's over-the-top and dangerous.
She wants to live to 110, she said. She's doing all she can to do so.
"That was apparently good enough for Oprah," said Newsweek. Medical experts
said her way risks heart attacks, strokes, blood clots and cancer.
National Women's Health Network executive director, Cynthia Pearson, said:
"It completely blew me away that Oprah would go to (Somers) for advice
on this topic. I have to say, it diminished my respect."
Oprah featured fraudulent advice often. She did it for 25 years. She gained
ratings, fame and fortune. Unknown numbers perhaps suffered.
Imagine what she'll tell Harvard grads this May. Hopefully they're smart
enough to ignore her.
At issue is why she's invited in the first place. Drew Faust has lots
to explain.
Honoring Oprah shames Harvard. Its motto is "VERITAS." It's not invited.
It'll be persona non grata when she speaks.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago. He can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
His new book is titled "Banker Occupation: Waging Financial War on Humanity."
http://www.claritypress.com/LendmanII.html
Visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com.
Listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive
Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network.
It airs Fridays at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon.
All programs are archived for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour
|