Herald on Sunday

The problem bigger than fake news

- Janan Ganesh

Choosing a name more suggestive of an airline than a radio station did not help. Funding was always a problem, too, and by the time its most compelling broadcaste­rs started to leave, Air America was plainly nearing the end of its short life.

Launched with some bravado 15 years ago this month, the liberal challenger to conservati­ve talk-radio lasted all of six years before folding.

Given kinder circumstan­ces, it might have worked. But to what end, exactly? The premise was that embattled liberals (then midway through the George W Bush years) could find deliveranc­e in the media.

The voluble propaganda of the right had to be matched decibel for decibel. The truth would out, if only it were heard. It did not seem to occur that mass opinion might have a life of its own, or that the media only ever lands a glancing blow on the course of history.

I think of Air America whenever well-meaning people commit themselves to the war against “fake news”. It is another worthwhile mission on its own terms. Misleading informatio­n in the public realm should be challenged out of principle. But there is also that familiar danger of overrating the role of the media in politics, including the electoral shocks of recent years.

Even if every huckster website and malicious, foreign-funded bot were regulated out of sight, even if every respectabl­e news outlet quadrupled its audience, I suspect the current era of populism would still be happening.

The problem in western democracie­s is not mass confusion about points of fact. The problem is that, even when apprised of the facts, even when exposed to the most objectivel­y persuasive arguments, millions of voters remain unmoved. In a blurring of the line between politics and sport, they have picked their team, and that is that. To put our hopes for progress in the technical reform of news distributi­on is to rather downplay the psychologi­cal depth of what is going on.

Last week, the lawyer-fixer Michael Cohen gave sworn testimony to the US Congress about his former client, Donald Trump. After the opening fusillade — the president is a “racist” and a “conman” — Cohen added to existing allegation­s that Trump bought an adult film star's silence after an affair, knew in advance about a WikiLeaks cache of Democratic party emails, and tried to build a hotel in Moscow while running for president. In response to these claims, Congressio­nal Republican­s ventured, well, not a lot, other than attacks on Cohen's credibilit­y.

We can infer their response to special counsel Robert Mueller's eventual report on Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 US election, almost regardless of its contents.

In other words: my president, right or wrong. Some people have a priori biases that are not all that responsive to new informatio­n, fake or otherwise, which is why Trump's core voters remain loyal. This behaviour exists not just beyond the GOP (Democrats have been just as tribal), but beyond the US, too.

In Britain, after almost three years of Brexit developmen­ts — which have revealed its intractabi­lity, its potential costs — public opinion on the subject has only changed at the margins. Who believes that misinforma­tion via fringe news sources can account for such fixity of mass opinion?

The idea of fake news has become something of a comfort blanket for moderates. It allows us to interpret populism as an elaborate misunderst­anding, easily straighten­ed out with a betterinfo­rmed citizenry.

Just as Air America missed that the country's ferocious vein of conservati­sm was something rightwing shock jocks were tapping, not manufactur­ing, too much store today is put in the power of the media, both as a cause of nationalis­m and

as a potential way out of it.

None of which is to discourage the crusaders against fake news. Truth is worth pursuing as an end in itself. “Deepfakes”, which manipulate audio and video to show, for instance, a politician saying something they never said, really could unhinge our public life if not stymied early.

But it is possible to fight against all this and still be realistic about how much it is likely to achieve. No amount of media reform is going to correct for human foibles. There are voters who would disbelieve the Oracle at Delphi if it contradict­ed their views. Perhaps we dwell on fake news to avoid a much bleaker explanatio­n for all that is happening. Every so often, usually after decades of relative peace, voters lose their aversion to extreme ideas and rogue politician­s, even when they understand them perfectly well.

The important variable is not the news. It is us.

 ??  ?? Donald Trump bought an adult film star's silence after an affair, according to Michael Cohen, while public opinion on Brexit is still fevered after three years.
Donald Trump bought an adult film star's silence after an affair, according to Michael Cohen, while public opinion on Brexit is still fevered after three years.
 ?? Photos / AP ??
Photos / AP

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