They Call This The News?
My cousin thought I must be having anger management issues.
She and her husband Paul had flipped through the satellite dials and settled on the McLaughlin Group on the European edition of CNBC. And there on screen sat four weighty U.S. news commentators, two on the right, two on the left, screaming at each other over the underlying social causes of the tragic, but largely inexplicable Virginia Tech slaughter. In the middle sat the wrinkled and ever-earnest John McLaughlin, the "moderator," interjecting occasionally to throw another log on the fire.
After four months in the tranquility of Provence, France, where passionate discourse virtually never crosses the line into vitriol, this TV food fight, billed as a "public affairs" journalism, ratcheted up my blood pressure.
"How can you watch this crap?" I snapped at my cousin Stephanie. "It's made-for-TV muck -- soap opera, not news." And with that I stormed out to separate the trash from the recyclables.
By the next morning, we could both laugh about my meltdown. But I was left to wonder just what had pushed my button so hard. It isn't Steph that I was mad at; it is how far my profession, the news business, has fallen in this era of all-noise, all-the-time. Because no one should mistake 24-7 television with all-news, all-the-time. The McLaughlin Group, after all, is considered relatively refined as food fight journalism goes. It takes on serious issues. Most of its regular and guest commentators are well-established journalists.
Yet it's format -- you scream at me and I'll scream back -- wouldn't be carried on European news channels, not on the BBC, not on France's TV5 or even, from what I can tell, on local commercial French television. Television news in Europe may be a bit dull, but content still seems to count. From what I can tell through the barrier of language, political talk shows -- and there's a presidential election going on here today -- are lively but still leave the speaker time to finish a sentence. Stories on the news tell not just about France, Iraq and the United States, but also about such places as Albania, Nigeria and Vietnam.
As it turns out, lots is happening in those places. But I doubt that half of my students in Boston could find them on a map, let alone discuss developments there. And with good reason. The U.S. media spends so much time examining America's navel that it neither has the time nor inclination to look at the global body politic. (Nor, of course, in this era of profits and consolidation, does it much want to spend the money to do so.)
Ironically, in fact, all-news, all-the-time seems to have brought Americans less content and less knowledge of all serious topics, American and foreign, not more. It fills the airwaves and print websites with endless redundancy of information and endless opinion with little context. Consider the findings of a recent report from the Pew Center for the People and the Press. Released in mid-April, it found that, "on average, today's citizens are about as able to name their leaders, and are about as aware of major news events, as was the public nearly 20 years ago."
Before, that is, the advent of the Internet and all-noise, all-the-time. A second look suggest that the words "about as able" paper over hints of a decline in knowledge. In 1989, the report notes, 74 percent of Americans were able to identify Dan Quayle, as lightweight a vice-president as has held the office in modern times. Today, just 69 percent of those polled could name Dick Cheney, arguably the most powerful vice-president in American history and a man, civil libertarians would argue, who has consistently consolidated power in the executive branch, often at the expense of constitutionally guaranteed checks and balances. In 1989, some 47 percent could identify the president of Russia. Today 36 percent can.
Are Americans, faced with an unending assault of screaming pundits, simply checking out?
Or are they so consumed by wall-to-wall news coverage of exploitative stories such as the death of Anna Nicole Smith that they haven't looked up from their screens long enough to notice the rights of our democracy eroding around them?
In either case, the news media must shoulder a significant portion of the blame: The evidence suggests to me that all-noise, all-the-time helps undermine America's security and democracy.
* When cable and network news ignore most of the world and sanitize much of the death and mayhem in Iraq, Americans lose the capacity to understand why and how deeply the rest of the world, including our allies, doesn't like us. And that's dangerous. (The topic was explored this morning here as part of a documentary -- on the BBC.)
* When the cable and broadcast networks salivate endlessly over the sensational, whether it is the sad but trivial such as Smith's death or the serious, devastating but ultimately distracting, such as the Virginia Tech mayhem, Americans lose sight of the myriad ways the Bush administration has eroded civil liberties, from the politicized firings of its own appointees in the Justice Department to the elimination of habeas corpus for foreign nationals picked up under the Military Commissions Act. (Or, as Jonathan Evans, a conservative British member of parliament, said on that same BBC special, it is essential in hunting terrorists that we "maintain our belief in democracy and human rights.")
* And when journalists compensate for lack of original reporting by simply putting on loud-talking representatives of opposing viewpoints, they obscure the facts and blur the truth.
There is considerable evidence that Karl Rove and the Bush Administration have long known how to exploit this. One of my favorite examples, reported by Ron Susskind in the October 2004 New York Times magazine, is of an exchange he had with a "senior adviser" to the president. That adviser sneered at what he called the "reality-based community" represented by Susskind and his questions.
''That's not the way the world really works anymore,'' he reportedly told Susskind. ''We're an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality."
Yet instead of pointing out just how illusory this "reality" continues to be, the media even today give the administration and its representatives ample and equal time to voice it. One repeated example is the platform that Dick Cheney still gets with regularity to assert that Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda had close ties before the Iraq War. Never mind that top-level government reports, from that of the 9/11 Commission to leaked CIA documents, have consistently discredited this repeated assertion.
We live in a world of point-counterpoint, shout-countershout. It's the format in which all-noise, all-the-time feels most comfortable. And like the Bush Administration, it creates its own reality, a world of talking heads and wagging fingers, too often, I fear, to quote the great bard, "Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury. Signifying nothing."
Jerry Lanson is a professor of journalism at Emerson College in Boston. He can be reached at jerry_lanson@emerson.edu.
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37 Comments so far
Show AllQuality TV news is available on Link TV, Free Speech TV, C-Span, and Bill Moyers is back on PBS beginning tonight (April 25)
yabut, Bush got the NASCAR vote.
Which proves that you can give anyone beer, get them to watch things go in circles till their dizzy, and they will vote fer ya.
Why bother debating, the Dems and Republicans are basically on the same team, have slight differences, but yell at each other so as to fool us into thinking they are doing their job, which they are, which is self serving. They all are still in the money. The whole slate needs cleaning.
Yeah I know . . . 30 million watch ABC . . .
30 thousand watch Link TV . . .
Its a numbers game folks and there is a long, long, long ways to go . . .
"Throw away your television
Recreate your supervision
Take the noose off your ambition
reinvent your INTUITION...NOW"
------ RHCP
Messages are getting thru.
It is up to us to be AWAKE enough to hear/ see them when they present themselves. Throw away your televisions!!!!!
TURN ON THE MUSIC! One of the only forms of TRUTH we have left. (one of a very few.)
One more thing, I turned the cable ( what a scam!) off my TV when my daughter was 9 yrs old, she was becoming a zombie! we have a dvd player for movies and documentaries etc.... BUT let me tell ya, it was the best thing I ever did!!!!!!!! She is 21 now, no TV since she was 9.
She did the most amazing thing when I turned that CRAP OFF!
She went outside and played, she started to draw and is now an amazing artist, she started to write stories and screenplays and read and BY GOD STARTED TO USE HER IMAGINATION!
even now in her own apartment, she has her DVD player, BUT NO EFFING CABLE TV CRAP! it is ALL garbage. TRUST ME ON THIS! It works! and the news is all state owned anyway, so they just say what they are told to. Turn it off! Just call the Cable Co ( notice you cant get crap w/ out cable?)
and tell them, "turn it off,.....NOW PLEASE!"
C'mon peeps take control of your lives, dont let that box control you! Just for the record, when I did turn it off 12 yrs ago, she did come home from school and freak out for about a day, then, like I said, she went out to play.
IT IS WONDERFUL NOT HAVING THAT STUPID THING ON IN THE HOUSE! try it and see what happens. :D I promise, you wont be disappointed.
For everyone on this chat who's commented there's no being real news available, I have good news for you....there is REAL news on Cable and DirectTV-it's Link TV-channel 375 on DirectTV and it's independent journalism at it's finest.
Democracy Now! with Amy Goodman is on every night-6 I think and at 10pm it's Mosaic-news from the Middle East and you'll only need to see it once to know it's authentic.
Peace
One of my favorite channels is PBS.
One of my favorite things on PBS is anything from BBC.
Comedy shows, and especially the world news.
I find their concise, and professional approach very refreshing.
It's also amazing, almost scarey, to hear/read "news" here, and then listen to the same news, when they get to the US, over THERE, bacuase they ARE so accurate and professional, and it shines a horribly bright light on the ghastly EXCUSE for news that we, the consumers, here, have allowed ourselves to be spoon fed, and have accepted.
Seems to me that the technique of shouting at people for hours on end is used by military, religious, and other cults as an effective technique designed to disorient the individual experiencing it. For other cult techniques, check out this website, which I found on my first Google search under "cult techniques":
http://www.culthelp.info/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=8&Itemid=5
Now, here is where critical thinking comes in. Whereas those deemed "enemy combatants" at Guantanamo Bay are subjected either to sensory deprivation or sensory overload without their assent, thereby overriding their ability to regulate what stimuli theuy receive, humans in America still have the power to turn off the tube. For now at least, subject to change without notice at the next Executive Order or implant of the RFID microchip.
If we're going to engage in a shouting match, I prefer a forum such as this, where I also have my chance to shout. Most of us who are informed and fairly well-educated are at least as capable of any of those shouting heads at making cogent points. In fact, many of the points that pundits miss, such as my own point about "cult behavior," are points we can, should, and do make in an exchange of opinions such as this.
As long as individuals like us are alive, critical thinking is not dead. Here are a few ways to make the lost art come back to life:
1. Consider resurrecting the dinner hour discussion around the family table as a means of reestablishing communication as a two-way street.
2. Spend more time with interactive media such as the internet and blogosphere, less time watching a bunch of fat, ugly, white men in suits with views to match.
3. Try having a discussion with informed friends, the operative term here being "informed." That may not necessarily include your bigoted brother in-law who rants at Thanksgiving dinners about "locking 'em all up and throwin' away the key..."
I always content that lively discussion between critically thinking individuals can be life-affirming. What's more, if we can still shake hands before we walk away, agree to disagree when we don't see things the same way, we may end up with more diplomacy and less war. That's what I was always told was the greatness of America.
All this is why I took the simple way out. My family no longer watches broadcast or cable television. Period. I think that each family in America that takes this exit is another small blow toward some positive change. And of course my personal benifit is I never see President Shit-for-Brains's face in my house any more.
PaulMagillSmith,
I have to agree with you concerning arguing with Republicans. It is a waste of time. I have tried it on numerous occasions and my experiences were similar to those you described. It is a bridge too far, and the attempts to cross that gap are almost always fruitless. That is why progressive websites like Commondreams are so refreshing in that they allow progressives to discuss issues where some agreement and common understanding can be achieved.
My cable bill was $200 dollars last month. I am not even home to watch it and if I were I would not care to.
People should think about what there is to actually watch before they sink the $30000 or more into a big screen television.
I live in France and only listen to the talk radio which is very sedate and in-depth. And, yes, I am worried that a Sarkozy victory will take France closer to the Anglo-American model, but I trust the French themselves to resist that in terms of culture. I think television everywhere is aimed at the kids or the infantile.
Armybrat is right. France is not immune to this shouting match. The arrival of various forms of corporate tele-lobotomy is a bit slower in europe, but it's coming. Spain has "Survivor" and Germany has had it's "Big Brother." I've observed a kind of reflexive feeling in France that the American media sickness will not take hold easily there, but a Sarkozy reign would probably bring France farther into that world than people would have cared to imagine a decade ago. For my part (in New York City), I've found I'm happier without a TV.
TV news sucks? What tipped you off, Sherlock?
If you have ever had a political discussion (read argument) with a Republican you will realize what a joke it is. When you start making valid, objective, statistically verifiable points they either start a filibuster in an attempt to shout you down with dogmatic mantras they have been programmed with, or they completely change the subject to something banal & unrelated. It is difficult, but reduces stress levels if we learn not to argue with fools. Fortunately, fools sooner or later glean themselves from the gene pool. Unfortunately, it might consume the better part of our lifetimes for this to happen AND will probably take quite a number of the non-foolish down along with them.
I know it's difficult to cope when beset on all sides by idiots, but the virtue of patience is about to be rewarded. The Republican gangsters are self-destructing more & more with each passing day, and our side is gaining...not to imply the Democrats, who (except for a few Diogenes would select) are in cahoots with big business & political expediency as much as the Repugnants. Our side is the 'we the people', and we have a couple plus points on our side.
First, we have truth on our side, a powerful ally that eventually is not denied (even with the little bit that slips through right-wing corporate MSM censorship). Ever hear the axiom that word of mouth is the best form of advertisng? Our duty, as gaurdians of liberty, justice, and the democracy we intuitively believe possible, is to speak up & out whenever we can AND REFUSE TO BE SHOUTED DOWN OR DISTRACTED BY THESE TRAITORS.
Second, we vastly outnumber politicians & pundits, and without us they are nothing. No longer should we ask; we must start demanding. Since the primary leverage we have with the media is ultimately the control of their financial 'bottom line', we must let them know we are sick of the crap they are ladeling out to us. The vehicle to accomplish this is a massive letter, phone call, and e-mail campaign letting them realize we not only will not watch their shows, but will also not buy the products of their advertisers. Signals of discontent must also be sent to the advertisers as well. Loss of revenue is something both of these entities understand so we must hit them where it really hurts, their wallets, to get the desired reaction.
Do you think Imus was fired for offending the sensibilities of a minority group? Not on your life. It was because the sponsors of his show responded to potential boycotts of their products, and withdrew funding for his show. A dribble became a raging stream and the network pulled the plug---See ya, Imus, don't want ta be ya.
As far as the politicians go concerted activism is turning the tide. Keep in mind a tide is not a tsunami, but a slow encroachment. In the words of my sister, when advising me of a bad situation I had gotten myself into, "Paul, it took quite some time to dig the hole you're in. It's going to take a long time to dig yourself out."
Constant oversight & investigations of what has been transpiring under the Bush attempt at monarchial/dictatorial overthrow of our Constitutional Democracy is the order of the day.
For concerned citizens who want to make an impact turn on C-Span 1, 2, & 3 and find out what your congress & senate people are doing. Send notices of support to those working in our behalf and chastise those going against our better interests. Praise the truthful and damn the liars.
The ultimate trump card you possess is your vote, but you must let it be known you refuse to have it compromised by items like voting machines without verifiable paper trails. We can ill afford more debacles like the 2000 & 2004 presidential elections. Frankly, I believe the return of Congress to the Democrats was the direct result of public pressure & scrutiny. They couldn't outright steal with so many eyes looking on, but they tried other unscrupulous means. If you divert your gaze for an instant these crooks will try anything we let them get away with. You can count on that, and as far as MSM is concerned the piper will play the tune of whomever pays (or prevents them getting paid). Without funding they are irrelevant and off the air, right?
"Television news in Europe may be a bit dull, but content still seems to count."
This speaks volumes. "News" no longer exists in the U.S. It's tabloid-style entertainment wrapped up in a sound bite.
This is simply the current state of the development of television...reality or consensus news..you hear two seconds of real news and then the news anchors and invited political set-ups argue both sides of the issue and the loudest one wins. This is what the public wants to hear...people don't want to synthesize data and as the arguments continue the news reality changes...
"""""So 31% of the population cannot identify Dick Cheney? """""
That's because Cheney shot them in the face so they can't see him to identify him
At least these pundits have to earn their own bread unlike the so called experts on BBC who are paid by the taxpayer's money. It is an outrage that in this day and age the government requires their citizens to pay for "TV licence". So much for a free press in the UK.
For the record, Clinton did not lie under oath. The constant drumbeat that he did is just another Repugnican lie. This has been so well documented that it need not be repeated here. Just don't let the reactionaries keep repeating that lie as if it were true. Bush violated his oath of office and the Repugnicans don't care about that.
I think the shouting heads is a tactic that the Repugnicans have deliberately created and exploited in order to AVOID serious discussion. After all, this did start with the right wing talk show hosts like Rush Limbaugh. It is sad to see the demise of left wing or even moderate commentators in MSM, apart from Keith Olbermann.
It is part of the tactic that created the "great divide," the "red" and "blue" states, and all the rest of the bs that passes for political discourse in the US. The idea is to completely demonize the other side so that no matter how small the majority you may command, it is still a majority.
It is a great way to avoid serious discussion of issues. If that were to occur, it is not very likely that average people would vote for Repugnicans.
What continues to irritate me no end is the specious notion that the news must be balanced; that every issue has two equally valid viewpoints. If the media reports a fact that the right wingers don't like. and declines to report their bogus spin, it is taken as gospel by the boobs that the media are liberally biased. It never occurs to them that 1) the media is corporately owned for the most part, and none of the owners are. liberal, 2) because of the above, it doesn't make a bit of difference what the political leanings of the reporters, anchors, or editors are. When it comes to a disagreement between the person who deposits the paycheck and the one who signs it, the signer almost always wins. And 3) they don't espouse liberal policies or support liberal politicians JUST BECAUSE THEY ARE LIBERAL. Supporting a good idea that also happens to be liberal does not make one a liberal or show liberal bias. Bias is what O'Reilly, Hannity, and Limbaugh spread. What they do not spread is the truth. Even the networks that don't blatantly lie like the Faux Noise channel still practice deception when they allow to stand without comment a statement they know to be false, just because the president or VP said it. Why IS Cheney allowed to continue lying about Iraq and al Qaeda?
Anyone with a shred of objectivity knows the media that tried to pillory Clinton for lying about a blowjob, while Bush lies about war with impunity is not a liberal media. And please, let's have no cries of "But Clinton lied under oath!" BFD. So did Bush. He has repeatedly violated his oath of office, and then claimed it was so he could do his job,which is "to protect the American people" Bullshit. The Constitution protects us. His job is "to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States of America, and he violates that oath every day when he lies about practically everything. What Clinton did and is said to have done is perjury. What Bush does to the Constitution is the exact oppositeof preserving, protecting and defending it, and that's much worse than perjury. That's damn near treason, and is certainly an impeachable offense. That statement is a fact. There is no debate. There is no valid right wing position, no "fair and balanced" position opposing impeachment.. There is only the truth, and if one's position does not serve the truth, regardless of where in the political spectrum the truth falls, then there is no reason for the media to report that position, and rather than whine about liberal bias in the media, if one can't show where the reporting deviates materially from the truth , regardless of the leaning of the reporter, then one should probably seriously consider changing one's position.
Or at least remaining silent.
The good news is that hardly anybody watches CNBC. The question is: why do so many fellow Americans continue to enable Big Media to aid and abet the destruction of the country they live in? And, P.S. - a paycheck is not an acceptable excuse, when so much is at stake.
What continues to irritate me no end is the specious notion that the news must be balanced; that every issue has two equally valid viewpoints. If the media reports a fact that the right wingers don't like. and declines to report their bogus spin, it is taken as gospel by the boobs that the media are liberally biased. It never occurs to them that 1) the media is corporately owned for the most part, and none of the owners are. liberal, 2) because of the above, it doesn't make a bit of difference what the political leanings of the reporters, anchors, or editors are. When it comes to a disagreement between the person who deposits the paycheck and the one who signs it, the signer almost always wins. And 3) they don't espouse liberal policies or support liberal politicians.
Anyone with a shred of objectivity knows the media that tried to pillory Clinton for lying about a blowjob, while Bush lies about war with impunity is not a liberal media. And please, let's have no cries of "But Clinton lied under oath!" BFD. So did Bush. He has repeatedly violated his oath of office, and then claimed it was so he could do his job,which is "to protect the American people" Bullshit. The Constitution protects us. His job is "to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States of America, and he violates that oath every day
A Day In The Life
I read the news today oh, boy
About a lucky man who made the grade
And though the news was rather sad
Well, i just had to laugh
I saw the photograph
He blew his mind out in a car
He didn't notice that the lights had changed
A crowd of people stood and stared
They'd seen his face before
Nobody was really sure if he was from the house of lords
I saw a film today oh, boy
The english army had just won the war
A crowd of people turned away
But i just had to look
Having read the book
I love to turn you on.
Woke up, got out of bed
Dragged a comb across my head
Found my way downstairs and drank a cup
And looking up, i noticed i was late
Found my coat and grabbed my hat
Made the bus in seconds flat
Found my way upstairs and had a smoke
Somebody spoke and i went into a dream
Ah
I read the news today oh, boy
Four thousand holes in blackburn, lancashire
And though the holes were rather small
They had to count them all
Now they know how many holes it takes to fill the albert hall
I'd love to turn you on
"They" all want "us" to buzz out--don't do it turn off the McNews!
Such is the myopic lens of this corporate imperium, a wasteland of Roman circuses.
We would all be better served if we were to concertedly yank the plug on these mental encoders, and focal distracters'. Why do you suppose it's referred to as programming?
Peace, Best Wishes and Hope
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tk1vEuhBuEU
Thank goodness for the internet. Just when things are about to plunge fully into the abyss, something comes along to balance them out again.
Meanwhile, TV- not just news- is destroying western civilization. I guess that's alright in the long run.
Any distraction is a good escuse not to ccever what matters. It's "Hokie Journalism." We should bombard all our local papers and corporate media outlets with complaints demanding real news. A media feeding frenzy around the crimes of this administration would be worthwhile but that might expose the hypocrisy of their complicity in supporting those crimes.
As Minow so rightly predicted, television has become an even greater wasteland than ever. There is no such thing as The News on television.
The shouting is wearisome; especially when the topic is genuinely important. The VA tech situation genuinely reflects something significant about our culture, and deserves serious discussion. Not only is all the shouting awful, but the over-coverage is awful. Once the story-of-the-week emerges you can flip from news channel to news channel and get no other story. You start to recognize the "ordinary" people who keep giving the same interview to everyone.
One tragic result is that even Americans who think of themselves as informed are not; many who try to be more informed are not well informed.
Obviously (if you are reading this) there's the internet. I feel like we're on this island like in Brave New World, where the people who couldn't get along were allowed to live without bothering everyone else happy with their "soma". Everyone knows the "blogosphere" is "liberal"--safely contained away from the real "discussion".
Meanwhile, I've rediscovered C-Span. It helps. A bit.
Any topic that bothers powerful commercial and political interests will not be permitted on TV. Therefore, the list of acceptable topics is always growing shorter, and the focus on the trivial increases.
Good independent video coverage is out there, but you need to seek it out and support it. Do a web search for videos on important topics, support the producers, and show them to others.
I don't have a TV, precisely because of it's lack of informed content (even Discovery/History/etc channels sadly repeat pax Americana lies though historians are showing otherwise today).
News/history on TV is entertainment, not researched journalism. I get my news from PBS/community radio, newspaper and the internet. There I can choose my content, not have it rammed down my throat in between advertisements for Audis and diamonds (and other stuff "necessary" for my survival).
The internet is now our only hope and because of what we have let happen the last 10 years we have to work to find any real news. It's not easy any more folks. If you want Democracy your going to have to work for it. Americans have sold their soul for the comfort of consumerism . . . "Shop Til You Drop" then go to bed and we'll take care of everything . . . Trust Me . . . In 30 minutes our Hero will come and save us. Tune in at 11 for details.
As a Bostonian now permanent resident in Europe there's not money in the world to get me go back to the insanity of the US. Anna's baby, Alex's parenting, Imus -- well he should have been taken off years ago as a big bore, all take away the real news, the financial problems of the US, the terrible working conditions, the lack of health care, and of course a war that should leave Bush et al at the Hague, but oh yes, we don't sign treaties that would add to world peace be it the child soldiers, land mines, etc. etc. As beautiful as Back Bay is you should give it up for the sanity of France
I think you're asking too much, Jaded Prole. I'm sure many journalists and reporters would love to mention those who refute Cheney's bald-faced lies, but don't dare. Those who do lose their jobs. The best journalist we have, Greg Palast, is blackballed in this country. I can only guess that Seymour Hersh is printed because The New Yorker must be independently owned. So far.
Whoever owns the news controls the public discourse and we know who owns the news. We lost our democracy when the news got concentrated into the hands of five corporations. And now we have Time-Warner's ploy to use the postal service to wipe out the independent news magazines. Maintaining freedom isn't just a case of eternal vigilance, as I've read. It's an eternal fight. And the public, as we see in the article above, is being steadlily dumbed down. When I took Civics in high school (which I hear they've dropped due to budget cuts!), I was taught that public servants had to avoid even the potential for impropriety. My, how times have changed. Now we have Bush praising Gonzales for his fine Congressional hearing perfomance because he never actually admitted any wrongdoing.
And that presidential senior advisor said more. I read that he said "We create reality and you react to it and then we recreate reality and you react to that". I think Karl Rove studied Goebbels.
Jaded Prole, I agree and the most hokie example of all is Fox New"s continual monitoring of the "terror alert status." Whenever it is elevated I wonder: "What are they trying to distract us from now?"
My concern with the stupifying lack of coherence and balance in American news reports is it's contant emphasis on creating a news product for mass consumption. Corn flakes,cars,naked woman, terminal illnesses,gossip, war,poverty, human values,etc have all been commodified.
This makes only the fastest, sexiest and most one-sided responses, the major vehicle for transmiting information about events that have present meaning and historical significance, which should be investigated and de-coupled from the power of capital, as a way to educate our population about the diversity of views that exist.
So 31% of the population cannot identify Dick Cheney? I wonder what percentage of people with "support our troops" ribbons on one side of their SUV bumper and "Got Jesus?" on the other side are in that 31%? I would suspect nearly 100%. After all, it takes a complete brain-disengaged nincompoop to love Jesus and war at the same time. (I see that combination of bumper stickers here in the Tampa Bay area every day).