As facts start to come out and
scandals start to close in, I am reminded of the following phase that stems
from Soviet era Russia: “There is no
news in the Truth, and there is no truth in the News (В Правде нет известия, и в Известие нет правды).”
Actually, this stems from the two
Russian newspapers – Pravda and Izvestiye. Pravda, the official newspaper of the
Communist Party, was considered to be filled with lies even though its name
translates as “truth”, while the name Izvestiye, the other Soviet newspaper,
translates as “news” and was the official newspaper of the Supreme Soviet. The saying, at the time, was a joke because
all good Russians knew that they could not get the truth or the news from state-controlled
media.
Today Americans also have
difficulty obtaining news or truth. The
government is too often involved in dissemination and editing of what should be
accurate news and truth. The state of
the American media and Americans’ access to news, facts, and truth can be
summarized as:
Let me define truth, for the
purposes of this discussion, as that which is in accordance with fact,
evidence, and reality. News I will
define as new or noteworthy information in which an audience will likely be interested.
Editorial Discretion has become
Political Censorship
The mainstream media today is less
interested in providing facts to its readers, viewers, and listeners than it is
in pleasing government and elite powers by providing their narratives to audiences
rather than facts of a situation. And
audiences are often more interested in the entertainment rather than factual
aspects of a story. Hence, the truth (factual recitation) is not the news, and the news, because it is not factually accurate, is not the truth.
I am not talking about editorial
discretion which has always been part of news dissemination. What to print, where to place a story, how
much time/space to give a story – these have always been decisions for editors
and have always been colored somewhat by their biases, both conscious and
unconscious.
But today these decisions go far
beyond and are far removed from simple editorial discretion. We now have concrete evidence of state
involvement and control of what is/is not “truth” and what information will be
disseminated or hidden. Such
involvement has permeated both the actual “news” media as well as social media
platforms.
For example, House investigations
now provide documentation that Facebook confirmed to the White House that it was
working to accomplish “the administration’s directives” on suppressing content
that clashed with its COVID vaccine agenda.
There are processes by which the government can flag certain content on
social media and request it be suppressed.
There is also evidence that the White House wanted social media to
change its on-line algorithms so that users would see more information from
sources supportive of the White House agenda.
The News or Mainstream Media is now
also beholden to powers outside of the news itself. While news editors, as noted above, have
always made editorial choices, those editors ensured that the stories presented
in their news sections were factual; they left opinion for the opinion
pages. Not so anymore.
Today’s news sources clearly support
one or the other political party and every aspect of their “news” reflects
that. Not just the selection of which
stories to present, but the manner in which any story is presented.
The conservative and right-leaning
media will slant everything to support right wing positions and politicians
while the left-leaning media will slant in the opposite direction. Stories that cover the front pages of media
with one political leaning will be close to non-existent in the media of the
opposite political leaning. Indeed, we
now have proof of news sources such as the NY Times and Washington Post
deliberately omitting or revising facts of key stories such as the now debunked
Russian collusion or the now confirmed story of the Hunter Biden laptop. Stories that are presented will often be
filled with adjectives and other modifiers that, while perhaps appropriate in
opinion pieces, are blatant attempts to turn what should be a factual news
story into an opinion advocating a particular political position.
Consider the two big stories over
the past few days: the Trump indictments
and the concrete evidence of President Biden’s involvement in his family’s
influence peddling scheme that resulted in huge monetary payments to the Biden
family. To compare the coverage of
these two stories between right and left leaning news media is to read accounts
of two seemingly completely different worlds.
It is next to impossible to find a
full and objective account of the Trump charges along with the legal assertions
that they are politically motivated and/or a form of election
interference. Similarly, one can barely
find the Biden story in left-leaning media, and when one does it is downplayed
as simply some sort of Republican witch hunt, while the right-leaning media
perhaps over sensationalizes the clearly damning evidence of Biden’s quite
likely illegal interactions with foreign countries and the possibility of its
compromising of the President.
The “news” from the left leaning
media essentially has already found Trump guilty and Biden completely innocent
while the right leaning media takes the opposite view. This is not news. This is not truth. This is bias and propaganda. And in many instances it is guided by the
very people that we elect to protect us and our First Amendment rights.
Information, Not Censorship,
Heals and Sustains America
The First Amendment, a cornerstone
of our American democracy, demands a free and objective news media in order
that the people can voice and hear a variety of views and make their own
decisions. That others would decide what
the people should and should not hear and, worse yet, make judgements about
what information is made available in an attempt to do the people’s thinking
for them is in complete antipathy to the First Amendment and all it stands for.
When those who should be leading
our country become more concerned with their own power than their duty to the
country and the people they serve, they find ways to justify their censorship
and denial of free speech and the importance of narrative – their narrative –
over truth or news.
Suppression of information is often
done under the guise of protecting us from “misinformation” though as Robert
Kennedy Jr. well-articulated in his July appearance before the House Committee
regarding Censorship and Free Speech, the term is often rephrased as
“mal-information” – not incorrect but just bad as in information that the
government or its lackeys in the media have decided would be bad for the
populace to hear, usually because it contradicts the narrative of those in
power.
Our country is split into two camps,
and each wants to provide a narrative that benefits them. To establish that narrative, censorship of
truth and news becomes a temptation that is hard to resist. That, however, is the worst possible reaction.
Words from Kennedy’s opening
statement to the House Committee on Censorship are instructive. He responded to Democrats’ concern about “the
need to beat this toxic polarization that is destroying our country today and
how do we deal with that?” Kennedy stated: “This kind of division is more
dangerous for our country than any time since the American Civil War. How do we [deal with] that? Every Democrat on this committee, do you
think you can do that by censoring people?
I am telling you, you cannot.
That only aggravates and amplifies the problem.”
Recently Sen. Joe Manchin spoke and
wrote about the division in America, stating that the United States is “not
designed for” the level of division currently seen within the country, leaving
many “common-sense” Americans without a political home. He wrote:
The extremes on the left and right now control the Democratic
and Republican Parties, defining our politics and policy debates. These
partisan extremes are in the business of feeding political division and
dysfunction everyday – and their business is booming.
They want America divided – because they benefit greatly from
it. They want us to see each other as enemies because they feed off of it. They
attack our institutions, whether it is our Capitol, our elected leaders or our
justice system, without caring about the lasting damage it does.
In America, leadership is not a birthright but instead it’s the choice of voters after respectful debates of ideas. And partisan leaders on both sides of the aisle are increasingly threatened by the growing desire for debate.
To be clear, while both parties are to some extent responsible for resorting to narrative and aggravating division, it is the current Administration and the hard Left that are aggressively pushing censorship and even elimination of First Amendment freedoms.
Dialogue Is Our Humanity
But why does debate and this current censorship matter? Why not just pick a left or right bubble and live within it? Or simply allow the government and its media to tell us what to think? The answer is not only that this contradicts the very core of the 1st Amendment, a necessary cornerstone of our government and our way of life. It is not only that it furthers a nefarious goal of making the American people enemies of one another. These, of course, are serious problems, especially to those who believe in American democracy. But perhaps an even larger problem is that it works to destroy the very core of our existence.
Life in the end is a dialogue. We participate by speaking, asking questions, listening, writing, reading, responding, agreeing, disagreeing, learning. A dialogue cannot be open and honest if information is restricted or denied. With censorship we lose part of the dialogue, and we allow someone else to create a dialogue for us. We stop learning. We stop thinking. We stop speaking. And we lose part of our humanity. We become nothing more than a tool for those creating the dialogue for us.
Currently the government and others in power through pressure on private platforms are trying to shape our dialogue. The media gives us the stories they want discussed in a way that will create preordained narratives. But our information is limited and therefore our dialogue is limited and we are ultimately limiting our individual humanity as we delegate our power to dialogue to the state.
To retain our humanity and our freedom we must remember that goals of personal comfort and protection from negative narratives are not in the end in our best interest. Free thought and free dialogue are. We must remember that good dialogue requires others and their possibly differing and uncomfortable viewpoints. Those others are not enemies. Silencing and censorship are the enemy as is a state-controlled media.
As the mounting proof of
censorship and silencing becomes both truth and news we must demand that our
news media actually provide us with news that is truth and truth that is
news. All of it. Only then can we dialogue as fully engaged
free people.
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