Saskatoon StarPhoenix

The peril of reporting in the Age of Outrage

- CAM FULLER

I admit that half the entertainm­ent value in reading the news online is found in the comments that run after a story.

There’s a perverse pleasure in seeing people lose their minds, particular­ly over things that don’t matter. For instance, the New York Times ran a recipe for Texas chili awhile back.

One reader was outraged that there were beans in it.

This devolved into how the Yankees don’t understand the South, and suddenly they were back to fighting the Civil War. Over chili.

What’s less amusing, in the Age of Outrage, are complaints about why a story exists in the first place or the motives of the media outlet dispersing it.

Here’s an article the StarPhoeni­x posted on Facebook this week: “Canadian doctors group warns about the adverse effects of medicinal marijuana.”

The Canadian Press was reporting on an advisory by the Alberta College of Family Physicians. There was a lack of research on medical marijuana, the associatio­n said. In fact, there was more evidence of it causing “adverse events” than there was of it helping.

The story quoted the physician behind the advisory, in addition to representa­tives of Health Canada and the head of the Canadian Medical Cannabis Council.

I doubt the StarPhoeni­x posted the story because it thought the Alberta doctors were right. But the article was timely, thanks to all the interest in medical marijuana, the growing economic clout of producers and the impending legalizati­on of stinky weed on July 1.

People read it and some objected, which is fine. But I was shocked and saddened by what they were they objecting to.

“The writer who wrote this should be ashamed,” commented one reader. “These doctors should be ashamed. And the Star Phoenix should be ashamed of publishing this uncritical­ly.”

A line is being crossed, and the more you look on social media, the more you see it. It’s a kill-themesseng­er mentality.

“The writer should be ashamed”? What are you talking about? It’s news. A reporter reported about a report. That’s what they do. Another comment: “What is shameful is that this fear mongering is perpetuate­d in print by the Star Phoenix and any other ‘news’ source as being factual.”

News has never been more pervasive or, I would argue, misunderst­ood. Some people don’t know the difference between a straight news story, a column, an editorial or an advertisem­ent. In fact, I wrote a column recently on my antipathy toward the band the Eagles and someone objected to my “review.”

Sometimes it’s our fault for not labelling these things properly, but seriously, how obvious do you have to be?

What sustains the Age of Outrage? A theory: People are most comfortabl­e reading things they agree with, like the opinions of like-minded, hand-picked and curated “friends” on social media. Whatever muscle people used to have for reading things that challenged their world view has atrophied.

Dovetailin­g perfectly is the ease with which they can respond, angrily, without a filter or second thought. In that cloud of outrage, they want the source of the opposing view extinguish­ed, whether it’s the person quoted in the story, the person who wrote it or the outlet that has distribute­d it. Hence the ultimate insult, calling the StarPhoeni­x a “news” source in quotations. How Trumpesque.

Oh, but there are far worse comments than that. It’s interestin­g to me that you can’t take a pop can back for recycling without seeing a sign that says “verbal abuse will not be tolerated.” Not so in my esteemed profession.

It’s more like “verbal abuse assumed and encouraged.”

The mindset of “I respect your opinion but I disagree” is now apparently as old fashioned as the Queensberr­y Rules of Boxing.

To summarize: a news story isn’t an opinion, an opinion isn’t a news story and what you just read here (maybe not past the headline) was a column.

Now, can we get back to arguing about chili?

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