The Daily Courier

Up to the individual to prove “fake

- DERMOD TRAVIS

Risky to confess such things – especially publicly – but there are a few things that get under my skin fast.

Eons ago, when I was in high school, it only took a single word.

It wasn’t the word itself so much, as it was the tone some used saying it that suggested you were getting flipped off more than you were communicat­ing.

Fast forward to 2017 and I’m happy to report that it now takes two words said in any tone – or used in any manner – that will do the same: fake news.

Grabbing a cab this past week, the driver was wellimmers­ed in a podcast of a national radio show where the host routinely used the term as he interviewe­d his guest.

My take away after a 10-minute ride was that it had something to do with dandelions, a medical study and Windsor, Ont.

The guest had evidently become the target of what might be called the fake news gang of natural medicine or western medicine, difficult to tell which coming in late to the podcast.

The host was highly sympatheti­c with his guest. But what really jumped out was how he nonchalant­ly used “fake news” in his questions, as though it had become a legitimate term to contrast opinions.

I suddenly felt the crying need for that school yard tone from eons ago.

Once all that was needed to dismiss a crack pot theory was simply to say, “more people believe Elvis is still alive than would fall for that,” and you would move on, but somehow we’re now party to a battle between rival fake news gangs. It’s not a term to legitimati­ze. It’s quackery. It’s as though the phrase is some magical pixie dust that makes everything disappear that runs counter to someone’s point of view.

As former U.S. senator, the late Daniel Patrick Moynihan, once said, “Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not to his own facts.”

But instead of checking facts, screaming “fake news” seems to suffice.

Case in point: In the ongoing debate over the Insurance Corporatio­n of B.C. and future rate hikes, a few are advocating for private insurance.

Fair enough, it’s a legitimate opinion to hold, but I tweeted a reply that they should be careful what they wish for; Ontario has the highest auto insurance premiums in the land and it’s 100 per cent private.

Backing up the tweet were inter-provincial analyses of auto insurance costs prepared by the Manitoba and Saskatchew­an government­s, the Insurance Bureau of Canada and the Consumers’ Associatio­n of Canada, all of which put Ontario out front by far and all dismissed as fake news.

Evidently, someone’s neighbour doesn’t pay the amount cited in the reports for premiums in Alberta.

By popularizi­ng the term, some are making it mainstream.

Earlier this year, the BC Liberal party was looking for digital warriors to help that party “combat fake news.”

Former independen­t MLA Vicki Huntington must have signed up. How else to explain her refuting the claim that the B.C. NDP had hacked the Liberal party’s website?

Someone else took issue with a New York Times article that IntegrityB­C tweeted and replied fake news.

My response: Prove the facts are incorrect or unfollow us.

Harsh? Admittedly, not one of my more diplomatic tweets, but it’s time to draw a line in the sand with those whose contributi­on to public debate is limited to the same two words.

When facts challenge your opinion, then reexamine your opinion.

In his farewell speech, former President Barack Obama noted: “For too many of us it’s become safer to retreat into our own bubbles… surrounded by people who share the same political outlook and never challenge our assumption­s.

“And increasing­ly we become so secure in our bubbles that we start accepting only informatio­n, whether it’s true or not, that fits our opinions, instead of basing our opinions on the evidence .... But without some common baseline of facts, without a willingnes­s to admit new informatio­n and concede that your opponent might be making a fair point, and that science and reason matter, then we’re going to keep talking past each other.”

Maybe that’s why TheGoodGod­Above tweeted a new commandmen­t: “Thou shalt stop calling everything you don’t like ‘fake news!’ Thou shalt attain a firmer grip on reality.” She has a point. Dermod Travis is the executive director of IntegrityB­C.

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