Weekend Herald

The media have lost touch with too many

- John Roughan

IIf the world is not to suffer more populist disasters, possibly even an encore for Donald Trump, news media have to find an open mind again.

t may have taken just a few days to fumigate the White House but it is going to take much longer to disinfect democracy of a disease that is not confined to America. It used to be called political correctnes­s, but that was when it seemed harmless. Now that we’ve seen the reaction it can produce it needs to be taken more seriously.

First, it needs to be recognised by its spreaders, principall­y the news media. Many times over the past four years I’ve tuned into CNN to watch its discussion panels agonise over the latest appalling statement of their president. Invariably, sooner or later, someone on the panel would say America’s divided tribes were talking past each other and had to learn to talk to each other again.

The rest of the panel would nod in solemn agreement with that sentiment but none seemed to realise what it then required of them. The same sentiment pervaded the inaugurati­on of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris on Thursday but the new President offered no more than worthy resolution­s.

Restoring a democracy to health requires powerful people to acknowledg­e some validity in an opposing point of view. Trump was incapable of doing that. Biden and Harris should be able to do better.

Biden’s inaugural address began, “This is democracy’s day”, by which he meant it had survived the Trump mob’s invasion of the Capitol. He struck some conciliato­ry notes: “We need to start afresh. Let’s begin to listen to each other again, hear each other again, see each other again, show respect for one another again.”

Then some clanging notes. Opposing views were “political extremism, white supremacy, domestic terrorism . . . anger, hatred, extremism . . . racism, nativism, fear . . . facts that are manipulate­d, even manufactur­ed”.

Offering Trump voters a word of understand­ing, he decided they were worried for their jobs, their family’s healthcare and their mortgage. That’s one explanatio­n for Trump’s appeal.

The other is that voters relished his challenge to oppressive rules of public discussion.

The mob that ransacked the Capitol on January 6 also set about battering a line of cameras set up to cover their protest. Trump used to whip up his crowds’ antagonism to media covering his rallies and he wouldn’t have found it hard. I know people who admired Trump only because he offended people like me, and I understand that.

Many journalist­s have had a tertiary education in liberal arts and it shows. Some news angles reflect the values and explanatio­ns of a social science seminar where nobody’s misfortune can be attributab­le to poor personal decisions, society is always to blame, if an ethnic minority is underperfo­rming it is evidence of “systemic racism”.

Questions that arise in the minds of many readers, I suspect, do not appear to have been asked, perhaps because they imply scepticism that is no longer respectabl­e on these topics.

Some news organisati­ons have openly committed themselves to a certain view of subjects such as climate change, declaring the science is “settled” and closing their columns to contrary opinions. A New Zealand media company recently repented of all previous coverage of Ma¯ori by papers in its stable, finding it racist.

If the world is not to suffer more populist disasters, possibly even an encore for Donald Trump, news media have to find an open mind again.

It is not totally unreasonab­le to doubt that a 2-degree rise in global temperatur­e over the course of a century would be an unmitigate­d disaster. It is not anti-scientific to examine the published figures for Covid-19 deaths, notice the demographi­c proportion­s and wonder if they warrant a response as drastic as lockdowns.

It is not simply “racist” to think non-Western immigratio­n could undermine your culture. I don’t share that view but I can understand it. It’s a fear that needs to be addressed, not suppressed. Racism has more to do with fear than hate. The word needlessly antagonise­s people and makes them afraid to speak their mind unless they’re among friends.

If American Democrats and the country’s respected newspapers and television networks really would like to bridge their country’s cultural divides, rather than simply saying they do, they need to come halfway over the bridge. They need to overcome their aversion to certain views and respect the fact that a lot of people, about half the population, think that way.

At times during the inaugurati­on I flicked over to Fox where they were asking whether the Democrats really wanted to talk across the divide or merely hoped to “reprogramm­e” Trump supporters, “brainwash” them.

Biden and Harris are genuine, I think. They are moderates, capable of meeting people half-way. Media should make the effort too, not just in America but everywhere. They have lost touch with too many.

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