Monday, July 17, 2017
Real Fake Media
Our President is truly inspirational. Turbulent times inspire artists, writers, journalists and simple bloggers. This little essay was inspired by the President’s blustery relationship with mainstream media (MSM). The President’s hostility to the MSM has created an atmosphere of strong distrust for the Fourth Estate. His crude tweets and rants about fake media have had a stunning effect. The President, who himself has no relationship with truth, has managed to discredit the MSM to such degree that public trusts the MSM only slightly more than the President. The goal of these attacks is very clear and part of the typical approach to build an authoritarian rule. A dictator to be destroys the independent press to become the authoritative news source. That WILL convert news to propaganda, just like it was in the Soviet Union.
Propaganda is basically any information which comes from the people in power. Any White House press conference including presidents we love and respect is supposed to promote/defend the current occupant of the White House. The Soviets were not good in feeding population or creating a real economy, but they knew propaganda. They knew it from the time of October revolution when Lenin immediately understood necessity of taking over the means of communication and controlling the media.
When I was young in 70-80s, the Soviet media was a laughing stock because of the glaring gap between our everyday life and what we were reading or seeing in the news. But since we were not allowed to travel abroad, we knew nothing about life outside of the Soviet borders. The media coverage of the Western world, while not exactly trusted, was our only glance at the life outside of the iron curtain. The lies were not that obvious, since we could not see it for ourselves. One story about the US had a very strong impression on me. It turns out it was a very important story which had an enormous impact on many lives in Soviet Union and in the West.
For the younger readers and not Soviet immigrant, a little bit of context. The Literaturnaya [Literary] Gazeta targeted the most educated part of the Soviet population. It was also an outlet for the most sophisticated propaganda. The Gazeta was a weekly and was thicker than regular daily newspaper. Think about Sunday New York Times. It covered foreign news and had analytical articles about world events and culture and it was the most respected news outlet for Soviet educated elite.
In the Literaturnaya Gazeta of 30 October 1985, I read for the first time the story about AIDS. It was a full-page article covering the origin and current state of epidemic and potential impact on Soviet life. The roots of the epidemics were traced to a secret US military biological weapon program which was supposed to reduce population of prostitutes, drug addicts, blacks and homosexuals. I think it was a first article in Soviet press which acknowledged the existence of gay people, at least in the rotten capitalist West. It described the disease in all gruesome details and explained that it was transmitted mostly by needles used for drug injections. The second part of the article was trying to calm down scared readers, by explaining that disease like this is completely impossible in the USSR. Because of our perfect social conditions, women are not reduced to become prostitutes, we have no racial problems, drug addicts, and of course no gays.
Many other publications followed suite and described the situation the same way. Meanwhile deadly disease was killing Russians all over the country. The statistic of this epidemic in USSR are not available, because there was no data collection, since there was no recognition of the problem. After perestroika was on the way, it turns out that AIDS had a very significant epidemic in Russia (the estimate 10,000 cases reported in 1996). Nobody really knows the real number of victims.
Meanwhile in the US, media coverage of AIDS epidemics did not start out very well. The coverage was scattered and controversial based on ideological and political biases. While there was clear admission of the problem the ideological biases had a strong impact. The science community understood that epidemic came from Africa and how it was transmitted in the population. But among religious conservative the prevailing view was that the epidemic is plague and God’s punishment for the sins of sodomy. Therefore, no government intervention (tax $$$) in God’s act was needed. The religious conservatives were a major constituency for Ronald Reagan and he had no political incentives to put money into research or cures. But eventually the pressure from citizens, especially the well-organized gay community and their support in Hollywood turned the media coverage around. The film “Philadelphia” with Tom Hanks, Tony Kushner amazing play “Angels in America” lead to reporting of devastating personal stories in major newspapers. As a result, it created a public pressure to invest in research to help and cure the disease. The ridiculous and cruel story about God’s punishment died of natural causes.
This strange tale of two countries coverage of one deadly epidemic has many important lessons for our time. We [Soviet immigrants] should never underestimate the importance of independent media. Presidential tweets, White House press conferences, or the media outlets directly supportive of government are not the news. They are official propaganda. Just like Pravda or Literaturnaya Gazeta. Only fact checkers, investigations and analysis of serious media will keep the powerful in line with reality. Yes, the MSM makes mistakes, it has biases and bends under pressure of the powerful. But eventually, under scrutiny of critical and active citizens, the media does its job and truth comes out. While Fourth Estate checks the power, the citizens check the Fourth Estate. If fake news takes over the media, it is because we didn’t do our job, and it will be us who will bear the consequences of living in the alternative reality created by propaganda and fake news.
Stella, your post automatically reminds me famous Mark Twain's "If you don't read the newspaper, you're uninformed. If you read the newspaper, you're mis-informed."
ReplyDeleteOn a more serious note, your appeal to "critical and active citizens" is understandable and laudable. Unfortunately I cannot share your expectations that truth will come out due to the collective efforts of this group of citizens. The reason is simple and obvious: the tiny size of this group. Look around you. How many people do you know who really want to check facts, investigate and analyze? It requires very serious efforts and a lot of time and it's almost impossible to compete with sipping beer in front of TV. And it would be OK if these couch potatoes could admit their ignorance. As Andre Maurois said "The value of the average conversation could be enormously improved by the constant use of four simple words: "I do not know." But we cannot expect this kind of intellectual honesty from them. Pretty often they are very active, and (quoting von Goethe) "There is nothing more frightful than ignorance in action."
This is not just my personal impression. Here is a link to an interesting article, where one, but pretty meaningful fact is being analyzed:
https://nplus1.ru/material/2016/11/21/post-truth-world
Naturally, there is much more about this extremely important issue that can be said, questioned and discussed, but the format should be different.
Respectfully,
Yuriy Sapronov
Yuriy, thank you for very thoughtful comment. I agree with you, there is very little hope. But I feel we have to try. I loved the article, it described the symptoms very well. I just don't know what is the cure...
ReplyDeleteI prefer to believe that there is hope and that humankind moves in the right direction, but this movement is very slow, bloody and painful. And of course we have to try! And the very first step is to try not to be like the majority I've talked about.
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