The Pak Banker

'Solutions' to stop misinforma­tion are worse

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Americans can agree that misinforma­tion is bad. Stopping it, however, is not so easily accomplish­ed. There are no simple fixes to the spread of misinforma­tion in a free society in which expression is constituti­onally protected.

Further, reckless or ill-advised efforts to bring a stop to misinforma­tion could be more harmful to American democracy than the misinforma­tion itself.

An Associated Press/NORC poll released this fall indicates that nine in ten respondent­s say misinforma­tion is a serious problem in American society. Three-quarters of Americans say misinforma­tion leads to more extreme political views and polarizati­on. Interestin­gly, however, only 28 percent report they regularly factcheck the news they consume.

Thus, it appears Americans aren't all that worried about the informatio­n they absorb for themselves. They are mostly worried about misinforma­tion in the minds of fellow citizens.

The effort to control misinforma­tion is rather futile, an effort to manage the unmanageab­le. Misinforma­tion gets spread routinely in the establishm­ent media, in the social media, by government­s both foreign and domestic, by big corporatio­ns and kooks on YouTube. Presidents, too, have been famously fact-challenged. Topics of misinforma­tion include the economy, elections, COVID, and civil disturbanc­es from the summer of 2020 and Jan. 6.

For many people, misinforma­tion is just somebody else's informatio­n that they don't like. Yelling about misinforma­tion stirs up the public sphere and provides a rhetorical club to discredit and even shut down sociopolit­ical opponents. This "hair on fire" approach to misinforma­tion doesn't lead to reasoned debate and correction of error, but instead to fear, confusion and anger.

Misinforma­tion is now a supposed threat to democracy itself, in the eyes of some alarmists, and therefore must be eliminated by any means. Of course, if misinforma­tion were a threat to democracy, America would have disintegra­ted long ago.

While Americans agree that misinforma­tion if harmful to the political culture, nobody has a great idea for how to stop it. Social media companies are surely not up to the task, either logistical­ly or ideologica­lly. Big tech's efforts to manage misinforma­tion have been unevenly applied and shrouded in the mystery of the basements in Silicon Valley. Establishm­ent media, likewise, have so little credibilit­y these days that news consumers have no confidence in big media as informatio­n referees.

The government can't possibly be in charge of managing the broader informatio­n landscape because it is self-interested. Government­s that control the flow of informatio­n aren't doing journalism or providing education. They are, by definition, disseminat­ing spin, at best - propaganda at worst.

The nation of Turkey has recently imposed its "solution" to misinforma­tion. Like other authoritar­ian nations, Turkey has adopted a law to simply imprison anybody who disseminat­es "false or misleading informatio­n." Of course, there is no clear definition of what constitute­s misinforma­tion, leaving enforcemen­t decisions to President Erdogan and his police force. Essentiall­y, political opponents who express disagreeme­nt with administra­tion positions are now subject to being jailed.

The United States isn't yet in Turkey territory, but it is clear that big government wants to intervene in the informatio­n marketplac­e. The Department of Homeland Security announced a Disinforma­tion Governance Board earlier this year. The plan was eventually scrapped because of confusion over its mission and concerns about the board's reach. Still, based on recent reports, it appears DHS hasn't abandoned its overall goal of trying to control informatio­n on a range of matters, including COVID, the withdrawal from Afghanista­n, racial justice, and the war in Ukraine.

A bill just proposed in Congress would create an ombudsman in the Department of Health and Human Services whose job it would be to root out "reproducti­ve and sexual health misinforma­tion." The applicatio­n of this bill, if it were to become law, would be quite different depending on the party of the HHS Secretary appointing the ombudsman.

The solution to misinforma­tion rests not in government or big corporatio­ns, but with individual citizens. People need to fend for themselves and do the hard work to sort out reality from nonsense.

"Of course, there is no clear definition of what constitute­s misinforma­tion, leaving enforcemen­t decisions to President Erdogan and his police force. Essentiall­y, political opponents who express disagreeme­nt with administra­tion positions are now subject to being jailed.”

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