Chattanooga Times Free Press

A FREE PRESS CAN NEVER BE TAKEN FOR GRANTED

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Earlier this month, President Trump addressed a group of so-called “digital leaders” invited to a social media summit at the White House.

The guests included far right social media activists linked to white nationalis­ts who spew out racist and anti- Muslim messages. They included individual­s who produce fake videos, use hoaxes to smear Democratic candidates, and disseminat­e dangerous conspiracy theories.

“The crap you think of,” Trump said to the group, “is unbelievab­le.” He meant this as a compliment. This from a president who constantly denounces fact-based media as

“fake news.”

You need only look at this White House

“summit” to understand why real news, produced by independen­t, fact-based media, is so essential right now.

We are living at a time when social media already blurs the line between fact and fiction. Without a press that speaks “truth to power,” demagogues can sell their falsehoods unhindered.

“Our liberty depends on freedom of the press,” Thomas Jefferson famously said. Yet media freedom has been deteriorat­ing in recent years not only in places you’d expect, such as China and Russia, but also in some of the world’s most influentia­l democracie­s.

And President Trump’s constant denunciati­on of the “mainstream media” is taking its toll here.

“It has become painfully apparent that a free press can never be taken for granted, even when democratic rule has been in place for decades,” according to Freedom House’s 2019 Freedom in the World report. This organizati­on tracks benchmarks of freedom around the world each year.

In authoritar­ian countries journalist­s are killed or jailed, or silenced with physical threats, or thrown in jail for criticizin­g their leaders (see Turkey) or murdered for exposing drug cartels when their democratic government can’t protect them (see Mexico).

But even among 16 countries considered wholly “free,” Freedom House says 19% “have endured a reduction in their press freedom scores over the past five years.”

Freedom House examples are sobering: In Hungary and Serbia, illiberal leaders have consolidat­ed media ownership in the hands of their cronies. In Austria, the leader of the far-right Freedom Party, until recently part of the governing coalition, tried to collude with Russians to purchase the largest national newspaper and control its coverage. And in weaker European democracie­s such as Slovakia and Malta, journalist­s who tried to track corruption to top leaders were murdered.

Not to mention Israel, a democratic ally of the United States, where Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faces corruption charges for “allegedly offering regulatory favors to two major media firms in exchange for positive coverage.”

Which brings us to the impact of Trump’s determined demonizati­on of the fact-based press.

From the time he announced his candidacy in 2016 through his second year in office, Trump pushed out 1,339 tweets about the media that were critical, insinuatin­g, condemning, or threatenin­g, according to the Committee to Protect Journalist­s’ U.S. press freedom tracker. At every opportunit­y, he hammers mainstream media, and certain named journalist­s, as “fake” and “enemies of the people.”

The constant vilificati­on by Trump, in an already polarized media environmen­t, “is accelerati­ng the breakdown of public confidence in journalism as a legitimate, fact-based check on government power,” writes Freedom House President Mike Abramowitz.

While previous U.S. presidents have criticized the press, none have done it with such relentless hostility. And by inviting social media fraudsters and extremists to the White House, Trump elevates them to a par with honest journalist­s.

“A free press which holds powerful people accountabl­e is truly essential to the functionin­g of a democracy” says Abramowitz, rightly.

Those who care about U.S. democracy need to think now about how to protect press freedoms and how to support independen­t media.

 ??  ?? Trudy Rubin
Trudy Rubin

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