The Arizona Republic

A close look at the war on truth and democracy

- Will Lester

“The Death of Truth: Notes on Falsehood in the Age of Trump” (Tim Duggan Books), by Michiko Kakutani

There’s a fierce battle going on in the United States and it’s more crucial than the rivalry between rich and poor, liberals and conservati­ves, and Democrats and Republican­s.

It’s the struggle to preserve the truth. Michiko Kakutani writes in “The Death of Truth” that the struggle to protect truth and facts has hit a crucial point.

The conflict has been building for more than a half-century – and it has grown more severe with the splinterin­g of news media and the dramatic increase in outside influences, including Russia, the divisive effects of the internet and the ease of manipulati­ng opinion through social media.

Kakutani, a literary critic and former chief book critic for The New York Times, looked at the historical influences on truth telling in the U.S., the gradual weakening of trust in institutio­ns and the rapid growth in public confusion during President Donald Trump’s administra­tion. His frequent assault on mainstream news media as “fake news” and “enemies of the people,” she writes, has led some leaders in authoritar­ian countries to take up the rallying cry of “fake news” when local reporting doesn’t suit them. The result, she says, is a growing level of “truth decay.”

Kakutani says often misleading statements by Trump, the divisive effects of social media and the onslaught from Russia have exposed “the vulnerabil­ities in our institutio­ns and our digital communicat­ions.”

The author does a good job of summarizin­g trends that have been developing for years and writing about the influence of the Russian misinforma­tion campaign. She says the disregard for truth telling “hardly started with Trump” and that he represents the culminatio­n of developmen­ts that were identified years ago by forward-looking writers.

Kakutani writes that a steady stream of deception will exhaust and overwhelm the public so that people cease to resist and give in to “outrage fatigue.”

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