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Thursday, November 22, 2007
Herman Cain :: Townhall.com Columnist
Media Consider American Businessmen ‘Bad Company’
by Herman Cain
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What was the biggest suprise of Election Day?



The American dream is alive and well, though you wouldn’t know it from watching the network news.

Liberal election rhetoric is counting on middle-class Americans believing someone is out to get them – and that they need the government’s protection. Recently we’ve seen this in media coverage of lenders, which ABC News called “the home wreckers.”

“Locking families out of the American dream by offering mortgages too good to be true,” was anchor Charles Gibson’s description.

Sure, there are unscrupulous lenders out there. But to describe an entire class of businesspeople in such a way is unforgivable.

If it were not for hard-working businessmen and women, we would not have grocery stores stocked with food, cars, our computers, houses or any of our comforts of life.

There’s an old African proverb that says it takes a village to raise a child. Well, it takes a whole country full of businessmen to sustain America. They keep America – and others around the world – eating, driving, playing, and building homes.

But many Americans don’t view businessmen that way. A 2007 Harris Poll revealed that in a list of occupations rated for “very great prestige,” businessmen came in 15th place, after farmers and lawyers. Those specifically in the financial sector ranked even lower – stock brokers, accountants and bankers came in 19th, 20th and 21st, respectively.

The unfortunate truth is that the crimes and scandals of a few – like Enron and WorldCom – have tainted the nation’s view of all in the same profession.

The news media have been the constant bearers of bad news and negative portrayals of businessmen. Yes, Enrons do happen, but very few executives are involved in such scandals. Watching CNN, however, you might think crime was practically a job requirement. On CNN’s “Lou Dobbs Tonight” in 2006, 76 percent of the show’s portrayals of businessmen were negative. The program had criminal businessmen seven times as often as it featured businessmen-philanthropists.

That interesting nugget comes from a study by the Media Research Center’s Business & Media Institute, which looked at an entire year of evening newscasts. It found when businessmen were included in the news, they were often under attack.

This in-depth study, which took thousands of man-hours, identified journalists’ portrayals of businessmen and women and evaluated those that had a tilt toward the positive or the negative. Of those, it found 57 percent were negative. Businessmen were described as “fat cats” or “another corporate crook,” and stories were laced with worries about “stratospheric sums” of “CEO pay run amok.” Continued...

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About The Author

Herman Cain is the National Chairman of the Media Research Center’s Business & Media Institute. He is the former president and CEO of Godfather’s Pizza, Inc., and currently is CEO and president of T.H.E. New Voice, Inc., a business and leadership consulting company.

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debate this, lily
http://home.comcast.net/~cls.home/alceu.garcia.htm.htm

http://home.comcast.net/~cls.home/socialist.liberal.htm

Business is what built this nation
I still can't figure out why so many people turn to socialism and the government to generate efficiency, solve problems, raise the standard of living, etc. They have never done any of that. It is the business man (read: entrepreneur) that does all of this and more. When clever and courageous individuals (which liberals view as greedy or selfish) see a need or an inefficiency, they set out to make that part of the world a better place by solving those problems with a business solution. If they generate a solution or create greater efficiency, that is represented by a profit in the form of money in the bank; otherwise it is a failure and the business does not succeed. But the profit does not stop with the entrepreneur--the consumer also receives a profit. The consumer gets a product or service at a greater convenience or lower cost than what he can provide himself.

The deeper lesson is that if you go around to wealthy or prominent members of the community to solicit financial assistance for a worthy cause, odds are that concerned business leaders will make up the lion's share of the benefactors. Do you wanna make a bet? I am all-in every single hand. The truth is that if we could get the same caliber of people into office that actually run this nation's economy, we would turn everything around in less than a decade. Sadly this will never be the case because as has been said by a popular commentator: "I won't take that big of a pay cut." And when they do run, they are flatly rejected because the election process is too akin to voting for high school superlatives--a popularity contest rather than a vote on principles.

Next time you hear people complaining about business interfering in government issues or the election process, correct them. The only problem on their part could be not being involved enough.
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