Trump will demonize the media no matter what they do. So why not do
the right thing?
In Trump's fevered imagination, this is what's coming... |
Fearing
the subject was too “political,” the broadcast networks declined, plying viewers instead with The Big Bang
Theory and Bones.
Few Americans saw the speech. Immigration reform withered on the vines, which were then burned to the ground in the next election.
Few Americans saw the speech. Immigration reform withered on the vines, which were then burned to the ground in the next election.
Flash
forward to January 8, 2019.
At 8:31 a.m., President Trump tweeted — again — that the “Fake News Media” was “truly the Enemy of the People.” Hours later, at 1:44 p.m., he announced that he was going to give a speech on the “National Security crisis on our Southern Border.”
...Except this is the reality |
By
9 p.m. the next night, all major networks, derided only the day before
as “the real Opposition Party,” were carrying the speech.
How
Obama’s address was “too political” for Big Bang Theory night
but this one — in the middle of a government shutdown of the president’s own
creation — wasn’t is beyond me.
Much
worse than the inconsistency, however, is that networks aired the obviously
political speech knowing perfectly well it would be chock full of lies.
As of last October, The Washington Post counted, Trump was telling 30 lies a day, especially about immigrants.
As of last October, The Washington Post counted, Trump was telling 30 lies a day, especially about immigrants.
And so it was. The first lie in Trump’s Oval Office address on the need for a border wall, The Post noted, “came in the first sentence,” and the lies continued “over the course of his nine-minute speech.”
The
president complained about “a security crisis at the southern border,” even
though undocumented crossings are at a 20-year low.
He warned darkly that immigrants were shedding “American blood,” even though immigrants commit crimes at far lower rates than native-born Americans.
He warned darkly that immigrants were shedding “American blood,” even though immigrants commit crimes at far lower rates than native-born Americans.
He
seemed unaware that most drugs come through legal ports of entry, or that most
unauthorized arrivals overstay their visas, rather than sneaking across the
border. A wall would help… how, exactly?
Fully
57 percent of people apprehended at the border are families and children, most
fleeing violence and poverty and trying to (legally!) seek asylum.
Trump has greeted them with tear gas, violence, and cages, and blamed desperate parents when their children die in his custody.
Trump has greeted them with tear gas, violence, and cages, and blamed desperate parents when their children die in his custody.
But
facts are beside the point. The point is systematic disinformation, to the
point that facts mean nothing.
And besides state violence, The Nation’s George Zornick notes, this kind of climate encourages all manner of private violence.
And besides state violence, The Nation’s George Zornick notes, this kind of climate encourages all manner of private violence.
The
man who killed 11 Jews in Pittsburgh cited the congregation’s work settling
refugees as a motive.
Around the same time, three men in Kansas were arrested for plotting to murder Somali immigrants before the election.
Around the same time, three men in Kansas were arrested for plotting to murder Somali immigrants before the election.
Hate
crimes have increased for three years straight, the FBI notes — continuously since the
Trump campaign.
Mainstream
media outlets can fact check false claims all they want — that’s their job. But
if they’re giving a free platform to those lies in the first place — across
every network! — then Trump may have a point that they’re not acting in the
best interest of the people.
The
president is going to demonize the media no matter what they do. So what do
they have to lose by doing the right thing?
That means not airing one second of lies calculated to misinform, spread hate, and justify violence against desperate families. For once, airing Big Bang Theory reruns would have been a public service.
That means not airing one second of lies calculated to misinform, spread hate, and justify violence against desperate families. For once, airing Big Bang Theory reruns would have been a public service.
Peter
Certo is the editorial manager of the Institute for Policy Studies and the
editor of OtherWords.org.