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14 January 2011

My First Rant...

“Truth” is defined as “the quality or state of being true”. That’s pretty obvious. More specifically, the truth is further defined as “that which is true or in accordance with fact or reality.” As a political science major and a total politics nut, the truth is very close to my heart. America has seen the consequences of its elected officials and its media personalities when they deviate from the truth, for whatever reason, and it’s typically not been pretty.
            In my opinion, the truth is essential to our democracy and the long-term survival of our nation. What value have we as a people if we decide that facts are negotiable and should only be paid any attention when it serves to further a certain agenda? The truth is really all we have as a people, American or otherwise. The truth is fact. It’s all the things we’ve learned and know without a doubt to be. It’s a rock upon which we can all rest.
            Of course, the truth can sometimes be subjective but nevertheless still remain truth. A classic example is from Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi when the ghost of Obi-Wan Kenobi explains himself in regards to his having hidden, from Luke’s perspective, the knowledge that Darth Vader was actually Luke’s father. In Episode IV: A New Hope, Obi-Wan told Luke that “a young Jedi by the name of Darth Vader betrayed and murdered [Luke’s] father [Anakin Skywalker].” In that instance, the views of the Jedi religion did support Obi-Wan’s later explanation that what he’d told Luke “was true…from a certain point of view” insofar as the Jedi believed that when one fell to the Dark Side that they ceased to be the person they were and become someone new entirely. And that’s the crux of this thing we call “truth”; it’s both abstract and concrete at the same time depending upon the context in which it is delivered.
            However, for the sake of this particular discussion, I’m going to address the more concrete aspects of truth vis-à-vis American media and politics. 
           While many would disagree, when I think of a modern-day truth-teller, I think of MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann. As I said, there are those who would disagree but I would submit that those people refuse to acknowledge the simple fact that while Keith may be an outspoken liberal and will interject his opinion into his news hour, that doesn’t mean that he isn’t basing his beliefs upon factual sources. More importantly, he strives to report that which is provable and, by definition, true. Simply disagreeing with his ideology doesn’t refute the facts he uses in putting together his show each night. Yes, sometimes his passion takes him over the line of truth into the realm of speculation but it speaks volumes that he almost always corrects the record and has frequently accepted blame for blurring the line between truth and opinion, apologizing, and working to prevent a repeat of that mistake.
            Meanwhile, and this is especially relevant in the wake of the Tucson tragedy, there are those who are considered Olbermann’s counterparts who consistently report opinion, conjecture, and speculation as fact. They utilize fear and anger to elicit a knee-jerk reaction from their audience, a concept known as “reaction over cognition.” The goal is precisely as the phrase implies: to say things that override the otherwise logical impulses of a person with a purely emotional reaction. For my money, no one media figure is as well versed in knee-jerk-reactionism than Fox News host Glenn Beck.
            There are too many examples of Beck either skating on the very thin ice of misinformation or outright plunging headlong into the icy waters of lying his ass off in order to terrify his viewers into subscribing to his political ideologies and the overall narrative of conservatives are far better than liberals…well, more “accurately”, liberals are far worse than conservatives. A brief example of Beck using fear and misinformation to stir up controversy is often implying that violence “is coming from the left.” Perhaps that’s the genius behind his efforts in that he rarely calls for his viewers to be violent (and he’s often implored them not to resort to violence), but it’s hard to imagine that he’s unaware of the fear-stoking that his constant warnings of a wave of impending “left-wing violence” could provoke right-wing pre-emptive violence.
            Yet, that doesn’t mean Beck hasn’t advocated violence, alluded to violence, or implicitly called for violence against those with whom he doesn’t agree.
-   On his Fox News program on 8/6/2009, Beck joked about putting poison in then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s wine during an absurd segment in which a woman is sitting with him wearing a Pelosi mask.
-   On his radio program on 5/14/2010, Beck claimed that there will be “rivers of blood if we don’t have values and principles.” He was referencing a quote by Thomas Jefferson with the “rivers of blood” bit, and continued on in his own words with the implication that violence will be the right’s solution to the actions of the current administration.
-   Shockingly, during a May 15th, 2010 commencement speech at Liberty University, Beck actually advised the graduates to “shoot to kill” in regards to the need for them to speak out. I guess that was easier for him to say than to suggest that the graduates be ready to fire word bullets from their mouth rifles.
            Those are just a microscopic sampling of Beck’s deluded ramblings in which he claims to know the future, a dystopian future in which the liberals/progressives/democrats have begun a civil war, placed dissenters into prison camps, enslaved the masses, or created some ill-defined global government that, too, is vaguely evil and delivered on air with a tone of voice that exudes Beck’s supposed fear and anger over his own delirious predictions. Of course, Mr. Beck is not the only public figure guilty of this recent bout of fearmongering, nor is the left-wing innocent of similarly dangerous rhetoric, but there will be plenty of time to explore this in the near-future.
            The point here is that the concepts of truth-telling and troublemaking are more complex than one would assume upon first glance as both can be forces for good or forces for evil depending upon who wields them and how they choose to wield them. The other point is that Glenn Beck's hold on reality is tentative at best...




NOTE: In case anyone reading this is confused, let me clear up a small contradiction that Beck and others like him constantly make in their fearmongering.
He lumps communists and fascists together often, and the president is typically accused of subscribing to both ideologies by his crazier opponents. The problem, and it's truly a minor one, is that fascism and communism are diametrically opposed to one other in the political spectrum.
I shall explore this further in a future post.

2 comments:

  1. I'm very impressed. It's good to see that you are backing up your opinions with facts and letting people know where these facts come from. It's sad that so many people are willing to listen to someone they like, whether it's left or right, and just repeat what they say without being concerned if they are telling the truth.
    Americans appear to be very gullible.

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  2. OK, I've bookmarked and I will try to comment AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE!!!! (Celebrate!) So here we go, I got this from a column by Ted Koppel, back in 11/10:

    We celebrate truth as a virtue, but only in the abstract.

    And BTW, you write very well.

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