That would be every time
Trump speaks or tweets
“Truth isn’t truth” according to Rudy Giuliani, a
statement he made on August 19th on NBC’s “Meet
the Press.”
The phrase was immediately condemned widely as
embodying the Trump administration’s complete disregard for the facts.
Yet a closer look at Giuliani’s underlying message shows an
underlying and deeply strategic approach to undermining the truth.
Namely, he deployed tactics similar to those used by “scientists” producing industry-sponsored studies rejecting human-caused climate change and links between tobacco and cancer.
Namely, he deployed tactics similar to those used by “scientists” producing industry-sponsored studies rejecting human-caused climate change and links between tobacco and cancer.
The transcript of the exchange reveals
that Giuliani made his verbal blunder in the context of defending Donald
Trump’s unwillingness to testify in front of a grand jury for Robert Mueller's
Russia investigation.
According to Giuliani, “I am not going to be rushed into having
him testify so that he gets trapped into perjury. And when you tell me that,
you know, he should testify because he’s going to tell the truth and he
shouldn’t worry, well that’s so silly because it’s somebody’s version of the
truth. Not the truth.”
The moderator, Chuck Todd, responded: "Truth is
truth."
Then, Giuliani said: "No, it isn’t truth. Truth isn’t
truth."
Giuliani went on: “Donald Trump says I didn’t talk about Flynn
with Comey. Comey says you did talk about it, so tell me what the truth is” and
then added “we have a credibility gap between the two of them. You’ve got to
select one or the other. Now, who do you think Mueller’s going to select? One
of his best friends, Comey, or the president”
For once, Fox News got it right in this caption |
Let’s unpack that exchange. Giuliani’s first statement conveyed
that there are many versions of the truth, and denied the existence of any
underlying factual reality.
Todd pushes back, saying: “Truth is truth”—referring to truth as
what physically happened in reality, independent of anyone’s interpretation or
spin.
Giuliani disagrees, stating “truth isn’t truth”: he denies the
existence of anything that really happened, implying that it’s all about
different interpretations and the one who determines the interpretation wins.
He uses this denial of factual reality to defend his reluctance
for Trump to testify. After all, once Trump’s testimony is on paper, the
president can be charged with perjury if his version of the truth does not win
out. Giuliani then suggests that the Mueller is biased and will side with his
friend Comey over Trump, leading to Comey’s version winning out.
It’s telling that this exchange occurred just as the
Environmental Protection Agency under Trump is looking to reverse the long-standing position
of the EPA that there is no safe level of fine particle pollution.
This reversal is occurring regardless of the lack of science
behind the new position and the extensive research showing that exposure to
fine particles contributes to asthma and heart attacks.
Likewise, the Trump administration is planning to repeal the Obama
administration’s Clean Power Plan, which aims to cut carbon dioxide emissions,
with no credible science behind this repeal.
What are the parallels behind these seemingly different events?
The strategy widely used by climate change deniers—and now adopted by the Trump
administration—of casting doubt on truth as a way of promoting their political
agenda.
A widespread consensus among climate
scientists exists on the reality of substantial human-caused climate change.
Unfortunately, less than 20 percent of Americans are
aware of this consensus, despite extensive communication about this consensus
by scientists.
Why? Research shows this low level of
awareness comes from economically and politically motivated challenges to the
reality of climate change from groups with substantial access to resources that
influence public opinions. Most notably, the fossil fuel industry has funded the research of a tiny
minority of scientists in order to cast doubt on human-caused global climate
change.
Why do people believe this tiny minority of scientists? Because
the fossil fuel industry then used its enormous financial and political
resources to spread this paid-for “research” widely.
People who are not experts in climate change are thus exposed
extensively to false information due to the huge megaphone of the fossil fuel
industry.
Such exposure triggers the “illusory truth effect,” a psychological phenomenon where the
more we are exposed to a lie, the more likely we are to believe in. Indeed,
research on climate denialist messaging demonstrates that exposure to such
information substantially reduces both people’s belief in human-caused climate
change and the truthfulness of climate science.
These tactics used in climate change denialism are part of a
broader pattern of science denialism perpetrated by groups with economic and
political interests in casting doubt on credible research as well as
undermining belief in scientific truth more broadly.
Thus, many of the same “scientists” who are
now at the forefront of climate change denialism produced
research denying the links between smoking and lung cancer, coal smoke to acid
rain, and CFCs to the hole in the ozone layer.
As a tobacco executive wrote, “doubt is our product”—no doubt the same kind of product peddled by fossil fuel executives funding “research” denying climate change.
As a tobacco executive wrote, “doubt is our product”—no doubt the same kind of product peddled by fossil fuel executives funding “research” denying climate change.
Giuliani is in the same boat of peddling doubt as a strategy.
His denial of an underlying truth of reality uses the same strategy used by
deniers of climate change and links between smoking and cancer. By conveying
that there’s no truth, whether in the courtroom or in the lab, peddlers of
doubt like Giuliani destroy our ability to make the kind of sound decisions on
which democracy relies.
To preserve our democracy from destruction by such tactics
requires an organized effort to unite all who care
about truth across the political spectrum. Regardless of what Giuliani
states—or what the industry-funded “scientists” claim—truth is truth, and it
must be protected for the sake of our shared future.