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American public discourse is increasingly “vulnerable to the kind of rope-a-dope strategies that Exxon Mobil and their brethren have been employing for decades now,” argues Al Gore. For example, a recent survey of 21 nations found that Americans are “among the least anxious” about global warming, “even though their nation is the top source of greenhouse gases.” In a ranking of 34 countries, the United States ranks near the bottom in the public acceptance of Charles Darwin’s mainstream theory of evolution. Nearly half of the public still believes that Saddam Hussein was responsible for the 9/11 attacks, despite unequivocal refutations of that claim. In his new book, The Assault on Reason, which will be released tomorrow, Gore explains “why logic and reason and the best evidence available and the scientific discoveries do not have more force in changing the way we all think about the reality we are now facing.” He sharply criticizes the television media for covering trivial excess and politicians for alienating the public, many of whom believe “that no one in power listens to or cares what they think.” American democracy “is in danger of being hollowed out,” writes Gore. “In order to reclaim our birthright, we Americans must resolve to repair the systemic decay of the public forum.” THE ‘WELL-AMUSED AUDIENCE’: Americans watch television for an average of four hours and 35 minutes each day, which is 90 minutes more than the average in the rest of the world. But much of this viewing time is devoted to coverage of “serial obsessions,” such as the Michael Jackson trial and the Laci Peterson tragedy. Gore warns that the “well-informed citizenry” is in danger of becoming the “well-amused audience.” Only one in four Americans can name more than one of the First Amendment freedoms, but more than half can name at least two members of the Simpsons cartoon family. On Aug. 17, 2006, a federal judge in Michigan issued “a sweeping rebuke of the once-secret domestic-surveillance effort the White House authorized following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.” The ruling was “a significant blow to Mr. Bush’s attempts to expand presidential powers.” Yet on that day, the evening news programs on all three television networks devoted significantly more airtime to the JonBenet Ramsey case. According to an analysis by The Progress Report, in the most egregious instance, NBC devoted 15 times more airtime to the JonBenet story. Similarly, on March 2, The Progress Report found that MSNBC and Fox News devoted more coverage to Anna Nicole Smith — three weeks after her death on Feb. 8 — than they did to the multiple developments involving the neglect and deplorable conditions at Walter Reed military hospital. Fox News’s John Gibson, who offered continuous coverage of Smith’s death, attacked reporters who were ignoring the story to focus on the Iraq war as “snobs.” Even bodies such as the U.S. Senate “don’t feel that what they say on the floor of the Senate really matters that much…because the news media seldom report on Senate speeches anymore,” notes Gore. Both ABC and CBS even ignored former deputy attorney general James B. Comeys recent Senate testimony of what NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams May 15 “called a rare glimpse of a high-level, late-night power struggle over the National Security Agency’s warrantless domestic wiretapping program.” BARRING CITIZEN VOICES: “In the world of television, the massive flows of information are largely in only one direction, which makes it virtually impossible for individuals to take part in what passes for a national conversation,” writes Gore in The Assault on Reason. Ordinary citizens are now trying to purchase short ads to express their views on television. For example, in 2004, MoveOn.org attempted to buy an ad for the Super Bowl broadcast “to express opposition to Bush’s economic policy, which was then being debated by Congress. CBS told MoveOn that ‘issue advocacy’ was not permissible. Then, CBS, having refused the MoveOn ad, began running advertisements by the White House in favor of the president’s controversial proposal. So MoveOn complained, and the White House ad was temporarily removed.” Yet as Gore notes, the Bush administration then complained, and CBS reinstated the White House ad but still refused to air the MoveOn ad. More recently, CBS fired Iraq war veteran Gen. John Batiste as a consultant after he appeared in a VoteVets ad criticizing the Iraq war. A CBS spokeswoman argued that the network’s consultants are barred from engaging in “advocacy.” Yet it continues to employ Brookings Institute scholar Michael O’Hanlon — who has advocated on-air in favor of Bush’s escalation — and Nicolle Wallace, a former White House communications aide and staffer for Sen. John McCain’s (R-AZ) presidential campaign who has repeatedly aired pro-Bush administration and pro-McCain positions. RIGHT WING ATTACKS GORE AS A ‘BOOB’: Right-wing pundits have already gone after Gore and The Assault on Reason, lobbing personal attacks rather than reasoned critiques. Macsmind.com, a blog which provides “conservative commentary,” called Gore an “uninformed and downright ignorant boob.” EconoPundit.com said that Gore’s book “has the same level of economic sophistication as pre-WWII arguments about Jewish bankers causing WWI.” The conservative American Thinker magazine argues that Gore must have had a ghostwriter, but admittedly couldn’t find any proof. SAVE THE INTERNET: Whereas television often suppresses public debate, Gore believes that the Internet encourages it. He writes that it “has extremely low entry barriers for individuals. It is the most interactive medium in history and the one with the greatest potential for connecting individuals to one another and to a universe of knowledge … It’s a platform, in other words, for reason.” While the majority of the major television networks ignored Comey’s testimony, blogs continue to cover it. Online watchdogs are holding the media accountable for responsible reporting. Presidential candidates are increasing their presence on the web, with several candidates allowing users to interact with each and give feedback to the campaigns. Ordinary citizens are able to submit questions to candidates during presidential debates. But as Gore warns, there is still just a “very small number of broadband network operators” who have an “an economic incentive to extend their control over the physical infrastructure of the network to leverage control of Internet content. If they went about it in the wrong way, these companies could institute changes that have the effect of limiting the free flow of information over the Internet in a number of troubling ways.” Help Save the Internet by telling Congress to preserve net neutrality here.
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Is in danger of becoming? It’s already happened!
Most foreigners know more about what’s going on in America than most Americans. Americans are too lazy to search for information. They watch a half hour of news and claim they are informed or else they proudly claim that they don’t bother watching the news, like that’s something only old people with no lives do.
All I can say is thank the information gods for the Internet. Without it we would all be dumbasses. We must demand that it stays free from corporate and government censorship, at all costs! Also, satellite TV stations such as LINK TV and FSTV deserve our support also, they are the other lone source of information besides the Internet.
I can’t believe we have to fight for information…how sad is THAT?
In Rome it was Bread & Circus, in USA it is TV and junk food.
The principle is the same however.
Poul-Henning
(from Denmark)
It’s so convenient and facile to blame the media, television, etc!! It’s blaming the messenger! But if all the people who actually see through the half-truths, rubbish and lies purveyed in the media actually joined together to create a movement to change society and take over the corporations which actually control the media then the world would change overnight!
This is what www.aworldtowin.net argues for.
While neither I or your other commentators have read Mr. Gore’s book, it can be assumed that it was written by Mr. Gore. He has a talent for this type of writing.
Thankfully the U.S. media is not state owned and is therefore not responsible for airing what Mr. Gore thinks should be aired. The dumbing down of the American people is due to their watching TV, at its best junk food for the mind, not what they watch.
Americans are less and less responsible for their own acts. Mr. Gore’s statist, nanny state approach is all too familiar to most of us. He is selling the victim mentality in his book that has been sold to so many in our country. This is greater narcotic than any imported substance. The result is a country filled with people growingly convinced they are not responsible for their own acts. Mr. Gore feeds this belief.
The internet is the open channel for the people, but the problem with it is that people lock on to the blogs with which they are in agreement. Accordingly, there is not much hope that public enlightenment and wise decisions will come via the internet.
Finger pointers should point at our education system and not the media. A well educated public wouldn’t even own a television set.
To see what were trying to do correct the situation you may wish to look at www.leaders-for-liberty.org.
Robert Sprinkel
Yes, it is the education of youth that matters but “the system” cannot take the blame. It is the parents that must take responsibility. Adults must be role models. Teachers are basically wardens and parents will not let them have discipline in the classroom unless the kids are in private schools.
No child left behind is a government attempt to control information. By its dogma, there is a right question and a right answer.
What a child needs is critical thinking skills so the child can evaluate what makes sense, is logical, is reasonable, is backed by evidence, can withstand argument and debate on some intelligent level.
As Neil Postman said, America is entertaining itself to death. Today he might add that we are also feeding ourselves to death.
Reason has not been assaulted; it has been bludgeoned and beaten to near death.
Commentary and opinion are alive and well. What we are missing is discourse - the exchange and evolution of ideas to form a reasoned response. I’m tired of vegetative position spewers who do nothing but fill the room with noise.
Where do I find a news channel or website that examines arguments against fact and then forms reasoned opinions and acts upon them. Give me that and you can save this country. Otherwise we are doomed to heart disease from junk food politics.
Al Gore tries to do that but to be honest its hard reading. I’ve been bounced out of the book five times already by his unengaging, pedantic arguments. Surely reason can be presented in a more entertaining way. Or maybe it can’t - and thats really the problem.
By Danny Schechter
As millions of homes are foreclosed upon, as unemployment grows and inflation mounts, it is time to understand the origins of the crisis and the need to fight for economic justice.
Written by veteran media critic and Emmy winner Rory O'Connor, Shock Jocks features unsparing profiles of the ten worst conservative radio talkers in America, including Michael Savage, Bill O' Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, Don Imus and the rest.