Sun.Star Cebu

‘Snake tactics’

- NINI CABAERO ninicab@sunstar.com.ph

Fake news started even before the election of President Rodrigo Duterte or American President Donald Trump. That, we knew. What most people didn’t know was it went as far back to the time of Adam and Eve. Only Pope Francis could authoritat­ively point to the connection between the temptation of fake news and the biblical tale of Adam, Eve, the snake and forbidden fruit.

The Pope said in his annual World Communicat­ion Day message held on the feast day of Francis de Sales, the patron saint of journalist­s, last January 24, that the snake was the “first fake news” when it fooled Eve. “We need to unmask what could be called the ‘snake-tactics’ used by those who disguise themselves in order to strike,” the Pope said.

The term “fake news” was popularize­d as a phrase by Donald Trump after his election in 2016. The term was also used after Duterte’s election in the same year to describe social media posts and news stories that are actually invented and used as political propaganda. Those accused of resorting to fake news include journalist­s, media organizati­ons, political leaders and their supporters, bloggers and other online users.

An Agence France Presse report said Pope Francis used the story of Adam and Eve, from the Old Testament’s Book of Genesis, to highlight that “there is no such thing as harmless disinforma­tion; on the contrary, trusting in falsehood can have dire consequenc­es.” In the story, the snake convinces Eve and then Adam into eating the forbidden fruit from the tree of knowledge of good and evil, an act which leads to God expelling them from the Garden of Eden.

What is fake, the Pope said, is one that mimics real news, to seem plausible, and provokes quarrels, foments division, or encourages resignatio­n. Truth, on the other hand, promotes “informed and mature reflection leading to constructi­ve dialog and fruitful results.” He called on journalist­s to be “protectors of news” who should promote a “journalism of peace.”

“I mean a journalism that is truthful and opposed to falsehoods, rhetorical slogans, and sensationa­l headlines,” the Pope said.

One viral online activity last week was the creation of memes on Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Operations Office Assistant Secretary Mocha Uson’s mistake of saying that the erupting Mayon Volcano is located in Naga City. She then corrected herself and said the volcano is in Albay province. Yet images of the Mayon Volcano in Singapore, the United States and many places were created and shared to pick up on Uson’s blunder.

To be fair to Uson, her Mayon statement was not fake news and she wasn’t being a snake in the context of the Pope’s statement. It was an honest mistake. It was a hiccup that could have passed, especially with her apology, but netizens feasted on it because Uson had been a source of fake news in the past.

If there’s a lesson here it is – try not to be a snake because what you do might bite you.

Of course I’m in favor of that. The problem here with our drivers is they lack discipline. Not just in Cebu City but in all parts of the province.

CEBU GOV. HILARIO DAVIDE III, ON CEBU CITY MAYOR TOMAS OSMENA’S MOVE TO STRICTLY ENFORCE THE LAW AGAINST COUNTER-FLOWING ON THE CITY’S ROADS

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