2[Edited on September 17, 2006 at 10:48 PM. Reason : .]
9/17/2006 10:47:56 PM
9/17/2006 11:02:17 PM
9/18/2006 2:12:56 AM
a) i walked an old lady across the street todayb) a man shoots five people in a Circle Kwhich will be on the news?
9/18/2006 9:47:16 AM
ooo ooo is it b?[Edited on September 18, 2006 at 10:51 AM. Reason : no it must be a]
9/18/2006 10:50:52 AM
^^ Dentaldamn's is an EXCELLENT question worth asking ourselves. Why do we select (b) for our news consumption?The state has more than a little control over our media, but less over our news, which is left primarily to be competed over by corporations--who are subject to many competing ideologies. Those corporations found years ago that more people watch the news when it contains stories of violence than "feel good stories." Since corporation's incentives are behind turning profits, not always promoting a psychologically healthy and intelligent society, they went with what brought people to the television.That's the history. Plain and simple. The rest is speculation on why it happens, and how its effects can be seen in the media.In basic terms, I'd argue that Chomsky nailed it on the head in many respects in some of his work on the state of modern media.The biases available in our media isn't liberal or conservative per se, so much as it is: competing ruling force (a) vs. competing ruling force (b) vs. competing ruling force (c) vs. (d), (e), (f), ad infinitum. I argue that those competing ruling forces can be viewed as government--who protects you from abroad, from individuals, from religious ideology, and from corporations--and corporations--who protect you from government, and because of it protect you from religious ideology--and religious institutions--who ideologically protect you from the influences of different combinations of the other two.Often the competition between these forces takes place within the individual in subtle forms. The individual can be an editor, news journalist, news junkie, anchorman, broadcasting corporation's CEO, US policy advisor to the President, or anyone affected by the news or who could impact the news.These leads to biases construed as liberalism or conservatism in varying times because those paradigms of allegiance to corporation, government, and religion vary at minimum in our society every eight years when the constituents of government goes through vast changes. Messages from government and corporation tend to vary more widely than those from religious institutions. Messages from corporation and government seem to covary.As such, biases that reflect the interplay of these roles within the individuals who write from different ideological orientations affect what these messages become. More stories about liberal bias will be charged when liberals aren't in charge of something worth bitching about. More stories about conservative bias will be charged when conservatives aren't in charge of something worth bitching about. This is just fundamental psychology at work, people.The argument about liberal bias and conservative bias in the news is just smoke and mirrors, people.[Edited on September 18, 2006 at 2:34 PM. Reason : ...]
9/18/2006 2:33:44 PM
9/18/2006 4:51:05 PM
Corporations also use government to reduce the tax rate.I'm sure you're no crybaby when that happens.Certain corporations have been rather effective at teaching the public something they weren't aware of, and wouldn't have learned much about in public schools (most of the public, you'll recall, doesn't go to college, finish college, get higher education, etc). It's usually lost in the debate, but the existence of bias within the media wasn't as seared into our consciousness as it is today until a corporation aiming to disseminate news emerged using "bias" as a differentiative market strategy. I'll give Rupert Murdoch the ups he deserves for at least making that much clear.Investigative journalists have also been responsible for the unearthing of scandals within the governments, at times better at exposing them than the government by themselves. Certain CIA prisons come to mind, as do certain provisions leading to the tapping and taping of private phone calls. There's literally a treasure trove of information we've only learned of from the private sector, and never would've had it been up to the government.[Edited on September 18, 2006 at 5:12 PM. Reason : ...]
9/18/2006 5:07:42 PM
9/18/2006 5:14:14 PM
Right.Which means that when the politically-connected--if the current intermarriage of Capitalism and Democracy is the best way for society to operate--are the ones receiving most of the benefits, it's the best of all possible worlds. To admit otherwise, implies that man is corruptible, subject to self-interest, driven by power-motives. Going further by advocating abolishment of government would suggest that corporations just need more direct control over the ability to wield their resources in capacities beyond the comprehension of the individual, and without oversight.This is where the argument reduces to some form of: "Because no evidence that a better system currently exists to distribute or enable the conditions of freedom and equality to people anywhere on Earth, there can not be such a system, and it's silly to speculate that such a thing could exist." That just doesn't hold water. Ask, or read Candide.So what's the solution, if not simply the abolition of government? What emerges from decades of operating under that hypothesis--a virtually unchecked oligarchy of unimaginable power to conceal information and deceive the public--isn't particularly pleasing. Clearly, the issues involved in arguing against government would be involved in future arguments about the shared pacts between monopoly CEOs...
9/18/2006 5:23:51 PM
9/18/2006 5:55:52 PM
Let me tell you how some of our systems founders solved the problem you're talking about.They made it so the nation elected literally thousands of representatives. You know why? They knew it'd be corrupted. They just wanted it to be VERY difficult, and VERY expensive to do so, or to maintain.What's fundamentally wrong with asserting we make a change in that direction?
9/19/2006 1:27:44 AM