This
decline did not start in 2016 nor did its effects.
My dad
pointed out the start of this trend about 20 years ago. It was reinforced to me
when I lived abroad and listened on shortwave to foreign radio stations and
noticed how differently they covered issues.
The
decline is essentially the increasing emphasis on polls and “analysis” and
opinion at the expense of in-depth factual reporting. Journalism has become
less about revealing what’s going on beneath the surface and mostly dominated
by parroting of superficial conventional wisdom. It’s shallow b.s. and the
media that pats itself on the bdack as watchdog is suffocated by it.
For the
last several years, Nate Silver has been canonized by adherents of the analysis
school of “journalism.” I think only a week before the election, I checked his
site. It said that Hillary Clinton had at least a 95% chance of winning (might
have been 99%). It said that she had 268 electoral votes in the bag and Trump
210. And that basically Trump had to win every single swing state, bar none, to
win the election. Clinton will end up far short of even that 268 that Mr.
Infallible predicted. He epitomizes the failure of modern journalism. He’s a
statistician yet the media treated what he did as journalism.
Trump/Pence’s
fascist bigoted agenda was only endorsed by one of every four Americans. Trump
is our president but the overwhelming majority did not endorse his agenda. Only
one of our four
Nearly
half of all Americans did not vote. This shows how sick our democracy is far
more so than the identity of the winning ticket. The media only reports on two
choices. And despite overwhelming disgust with those two, they almost
completely ignore the two (national ones) that offer something meaningfully
different. “Conventional wisdom” was that you were wasting your vote if you
voted for a smaller party candidate. Even on those rare occasions a smaller
party candidate gets media attention, there is NEVER an occasion where s/he
isn’t asked about being a “spoiler” or chances of winning or other horse race
garbage. S/he is lucky if meaningful policy discussion is even half of the
interview.
So when
you are told that your choices are to waste your vote on a good candidate or
support someone you find morally repugnant, it is any surprise nearly half of
Americans said “the heck with all this”? When they find out that the person who
gets the most votes doesn’t win – unlike EVERY OTHER OFFICE IN AMERICA – it
makes the process seem even more pointless. When “experts” and the professional
pundit class tell them must vote for the “lesser of two evils” and to vote for
A because B sucks even more, does that really inspire them with a deep sense of
patriotic and civic pride?
If you
want those half of Americans to actually vote, don’t lecture them. Don’t
condescend to them. Give them a positive reason to do so.
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