Earlier today, an acquaintance of mine in a Facebook group posted a link to a video from Fox News in which Tucker Carlson, wearing his usual, placid, mentally-challenged-manatee face that clearly says "I hear the noises coming from your face hole, but I don't know what they mean," claimed that the infamous FISA memo contains information damaging to Democrats, and it is being squelched for that reason (forget that the memo is classified and nobody in the media has actually seen it ... that's irrelevant). On the same day, the Palmer Report posted an article detailing how donald trump thinks that FBI Director Andrew McCabe was bribed by Hillary Clinton to ... well, they aren't really clear on that.
Both of these pieces of dreck got me to wondering where the reliable reporting is these days? And from there it was a short hop to "What are these guys trying to do, anyway?"
The media these days has become so partisan, so charged, that it is virtually impossible to find truly balanced reportage. More and more we are seeing "news" outlets like the Daily Caller, the Drudge Report, OccupyDemocrats, and so on producing content that is not so much news as it is propaganda. Items are being disseminated that do not seek to inform; rather, they seek to indoctrinate.
Now we are getting stories about missing text messages between FBI agent Peter Strzok and FBI lawyer Lisa Page. Apparently there were "anti-trump" messages in there while they were part of Mueller's team. Natch, this story is being reported in widely disparate ways:
Reuters reports the following:
- The text messages were recovered using forensic techniques.
- "Inspector General Michael Horowitz said he would not object if the Justice Department shares with congressional committees the messages."
- The text messages in question also contained anti-Hillary statements.
- Strzok was taken off the Mueller probe and reassigned last summer when the messages were discovered.
- Page left the team in July at the conclusion of a 45 day assignment.
Now, let's look at some other outlets ...
- Fox News (right): Sean Hannity says the text messages "are proof of an anti-trump conspiracy at the DOJ."
- ThinkProgress (left)*: An article there mentions the recovery of the messages, but one of the main points is that trump got the number of text messages wrong in a tweet.
- The Washington Examiner (right): Strzok is misidentified as a "lead investigator" on the team investigating Hillary Clinton (he wasn't; he was actually assigned to the Mueller probe into Russian collusion), and states that he was "demoted" last summer. Page's position is also made purposely ambiguous, stating that she "also was previously a member of the special counsel team" but fails to mention that her assignment was of fixed duration.
- TruePundit (right): Claims that the missing 50,000 (stated with certainty even thought the exact number is unknown) text messages contain threats of violence against trump, and it is implied that there is a conspiracy within the FBI to assassinate trump. Naturally, being this outlandish, InfoWars picked it right up and ran with it.
The idea behind rational debate is that one side presents their arguments, the other side presents an opposing view, but both sides have a basic agreement as to what reality is. For example, with the recent tax law that was signed by trump, a liberal outlet might point out that most of the tax cuts going to the top 1% would not trickle down as promised, but merely bolster executives' stock portfolios. Meanwhile, a conservative outlet might maintain that this is actually a good thing, by giving more money to "job creators." However, the fundamental underlying fact -- that the majority of tax relief is going to the top 1% -- would not be in dispute.
No longer.
In today's climate, left wing outlets cite the tax structure as proof that a) Republicans hate poor people, and b) that there is an active conspiracy to eliminate them, implying that Republicans will be hunting minorities for sport. Meanwhile, right wing outlets say, with no hint of irony, that a) the tax cuts are going to the middle class, and b) Republicans would love to help the poor, but gosh darn it, we just can't afford it, and c) so what? Hillary's emails.
What we end up with is a bunch of people yelling at each other instead of talking to each other; online "debates" that are little more than excuses for either side to belittle and berate the other, and very few people who are willing to even entertain the notion that they might be mistaken about something.
In this climate, is it any wonder why there is such hostility on either side toward the other?
We need to dial it back, folks. Yes, engage in online debate, but be civil. We each need to respect the right of other people to have their own opinions, to voice those opinions (provided it is done in a respectful, civilized manner), to disagree.We must -- must -- be willing to allow others to be "wrong" in our view. The chances of actually swaying someone to one side or the other in any online debate is very slim; the idea is to expand everyone's worldview and take into account information they might not be hearing from their usual sources.
Above all, however, we need to be vigilant and stop propagating bullshit. For every AP, Reuters, or BBC that provides responsible reportage, there is an InfoWars, Palmer Report, RedState.org, or OccupyDemocrats spewing balderdash. If we see someone spouting nonsense -- even if it is nonsense in which we would like to believe -- we must not hesitate in calling it out as malarkey.
I gotta lie down.
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*It is important to note that I was unable to find any reference to this story on many left-leaning sites. I can only surmise this is due to an editorial choice on their part to dismiss this as a non-story.
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