Life as a Spectator Sport

A proud member of the reality-based community


Tuesday, May 25, 2004

Where we (don't) get the news . . .

Along with being on the road for two days, I was away from the internet for two days, dependent on the radio and tv for news. I did catch Bush's self-serving excuse for a pep rally last night, for what that was worth (not much, we've heard it all before, including his bumbling inability to pronounce 'Abu Ghraib'). What made the biggest impression on me was the dearth in broadcast media of what I've come to consider news. You don't realize until you're net-deprived for a couple of days just how little information there actually is on radio and television, even when you listen primarily to public radio. Now that's scary.

Makes me wonder whether the reason Bush and Friends project such confidence even in the face of one crisis after another is that they think most Americans still get all their information from radio and tv. And I wonder whether they're right.

Kevin Drum had something to say in that vein, commenting on the president's use of the term "full sovereignty" in his speech:
It's true that Iraqis won't be fooled by this, but for that reason they aren't going to be disappointed either. Americans, however, are going to be fooled by it, and that's all Bush cares about. A hundred million people are going to hear that we're handing over "full sovereignty," and maybe 1% of them will read or hear an explanation of why that's not true. So it's a win for Bush.

The real danger is that it sets up Americans for disappointment, not Iraqis. The Iraqis will shrug their shoulders and continue to agitate for American withdrawl, and Americans will be left wondering why the Iraqis continue to be so ungrateful even though we've turned over full sovereignty to them just like we said we would. Of such things is American self-delusion born.
Or, less politely, as I said the other day, we're a nation of suckers. My tolerance for this continues to go down.
posted by Liz @ 8:59 PM     |


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