"The tragedy of journalism now is that it is demand driven. And when you 
ask people what they want, we're like one of those rats that have a lever 
to push and cocaine comes out. And once that happens one time, they'll stay 
there till they die, until more of the drug appears. We can't help loving 
lurid stories and suspense and the kind of sex and violence which the news 
is now made up of," Marty Kaplan 
<https://www.facebook.com/pages/Marty-Kaplan/220259631346836> tells Bill in 
this interview.  
http://billmoyers.com/segment/marty-kaplan-on-the-weapons-of-mass-distraction/

"The power of mass distraction" is an interesting notion, and I find that 
it is much easier for people to look away from a problem than to contribute 
to a solution. Part of that may be disagreement on what the solution is. 
Much of it may be the overall malaise of "nothing I can do about it" as 
most of us feel we have no real influence on the larger world problems. In 
the past four years I've seen a dramatic drop in public demonstrations in 
downtown Detroit and most of the demonstrations that happen are of the "for 
hire" variety, with the same nationally based organizers who are making a 
buck off the movement (big time) and choose the causes carefully to 
insure that.

I demonstrated during the Vietnam demonstration era and found that many of 
my pier group became social organizers afterward, not organizing 
demonstrations but organizing communities from within, more of social 
service than social activism as we know it today. There are huge 
demonstrations going on all over the world but not many here in the US. 
Does this mean we are giving into distraction and looking away from 
solutions waiting for the action to implement? Or is there a different 
social organization emerging, one more of collaboration than dissension? Or 
something else?

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