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The Legacy Media’s Greatest Betrayal: What Saigon’s Fall Still Teaches Us 50 Years Later

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This week, on the 50th anniversary of the Fall of Saigon, Chad Prather delivered a searing critique of the American legacy media and its decades-long selective storytelling—a pattern with grave consequences for public trust and democracy itself.

The Day America Looked Away

April 30, 1975, marked not just the end of the Vietnam War, but also a media event that shaped the public consciousness in ways we’re only now beginning to understand. Prather argues that mainstream outlets, after relishing their pivotal role in exposing political scandals and chronicling anti-war movements, turned away just when truth-telling mattered most.

As desperate helicopters lifted the last Americans and Vietnamese allies from the embassy rooftop, millions watched. Then, according to Prather, the cameras blinked off. The stories of chaos—the betrayed allies, the refugees thrown into communist “re-education” camps, the silent horror of families clinging to hope in shark-infested waters—were largely ignored. History, he says, was sanitized for the sake of narrative closure.

Media Bias Isn’t New—It’s Just More Obvious

Prather draws a direct line from Saigon to recent moments when legacy media outlets have chosen agenda over accuracy. From the Nick Sandmann-Covington episode to the suppression of the Hunter Biden laptop story and the ongoing COVID-19 origins debate, he contends that selective amplification, distortion, and outright omission aren’t bugs but features of an agenda-driven press.

These “one-sided corrections,” often buried or begrudging, rarely heal the damage. Instead, the repeated pattern fuels public cynicism and division. “The press,” Prather insists, “lost the room” by shaping stories to fit preferred narratives and failing to hold themselves accountable.

The Consequences: A Crisis of Trust

Can a democratic society function if half its citizens assume the national press is lying? Prather’s answer is grim. Polls now show trust in the media at historic lows, particularly among conservatives, with many echoing language once unthinkable: that the media itself has become “the enemy of the people.” As facts become fragmented, debate devolves into dueling realities—each side dismissing the other’s sources out-of-hand.

Worse, this erosion doesn’t stop at journalism. It spreads, corroding trust in institutions and further polarizing civic life. In the vacuum, alternative media ecosystems rise—symptom and cause of the same broken trust.

What’s the Path Forward?

Prather doesn’t claim to have all the answers, but he insists the solution starts with accountability: prompt, public corrections, ideological diversity in newsrooms, and clear boundaries between reporting and narrative-spinning. With social media now the new battleground, he also calls for reforms to curb tech censorship and protect open debate.

The warning, above all, is that when the media blinks, human tragedies play out in the shadows. From Saigon’s abandoned allies to censored stories today, the lesson is as urgent as ever: democracy can’t survive without a press devoted to truth over narrative, and trust will not rebuild itself.

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