Renamed this thread too.

Platt made the comment again about "left-wing media bias". I thought I'd expand
on this a little.

First, one should always remember the "media" is by definition the act of
mediating the interaction between "you" and "some event". Its why we call it
the "media". It is a medium, it mediates, it "goes between".

This act, of course, is also by definition always distortive. Like light
passing through a prism, it is redirected and sorted. We should always expect
some form of bias from any "mediating" event. As the information is filtered,
it is also sorted, like Pirsig's sand analogy, in particular ways, and for
particular motives, before it reaches us. The "myth of objectivity" in any
media (be it news, magazines, talk radio, movies, books, whatever) is a
hold-over from the days when, like Pirsig's anthropologists, people believed
they could "objectively" view and pass on information. It does not work like
that. What you view and what you select and how you pass it on alters and
changes and distorts the events in ways ranging from minimal to extreme.

I have always suggested to students I work with to seek exposure to a wide
variety of media channels, the more important the decision, the more channels
one should consult. Getting one's information from ANY one, singular channel is
dangeously naive, and falling into the trap that one's particular media channel
is "objective" (think "fair and balanced") is exponentially dangerous.

And I am not talking about flipping between CNN and FoxNews. My opinion? Kill
your television. Thrash it. Any of the channels are good for gleaning
more-or-less knowledge of factual events (a mine collapsed today, a hot air
ballon caught fire, so and so bomb exploded killing so and so). But for a true
understanding of complex, social, national and philosophical issues? For
anything else we have a "media" (and I use the word inclusive of BOTH NBC and
The Rush Limbaugh Program) that seeks at every turn to turn to complex issues
into divisive, polarizing and hopelessly simplistic caricatures.

The recent "border" issue is a good example. We are led to believe that one
must choose between being a "racist, anti-Mexican bigot" or an "enemy of the
constitution and hater of America". Same with the war on Iraq, same with
healthcare, same with any other issue facing American citizens today.

I am convinced that nothing will get done in this country so long as this
idiotic war rages. A war, Platt, that you continue to interject in all your
posts. 

"Libs lie", you say, but not "conservatives". Oh no sirreebob. It is this
polarizing rhetoric that I find so vile, and that your only recourse to attack
me (or anyone else it seems) is to rely on such deceptive propaganda is
appalling. 

But I am digressing. The point is, calling the media "biased" is like calling
the ocean "wet". Its rather pointless, and the solution (maximize exposure to
diverse channels of information) is glaringly obvious. However, calling only
certain media "biased" while clinging to one supposedly objective media channel
is simply the rehashing of propaganda, and it serves no one.




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