The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Disease of informatio­n disorder

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To COVID (about a fifth of Americans say they won’t be vaccinated) and to the flu (vaccinatio­n rates for that are down by about a third this season), we can in this difficult period add yet another scourge: Informatio­n Disorder (no vaccinatio­n available).

It is another pandemic, and it has been building for years. Conspiracy theories, misinforma­tion, disinforma­tion, simple old-fashioned, persistent ignorance — they are rampant in the United States today. It is what the Aspen Institute, in a sobering new study, calls “a crisis of trust and truth.”

This group has a passel of recommenda­tions and their analysis of the crisis warrants our attention, even as the holidays approach, even as our political conversati­on continues to coarsen, even if outright untruths continue to proliferat­e. So here is an annotated look at some of that analysis:

The problem extends well beyond state-sponsored disinforma­tion, or health scams promoting miracle cures; it is rooted in broader challenges facing the nation — from increasing income inequality, to decreasing levels of public trust in institutio­ns, to the constant churning cycle of news and informatio­n, to the splinterin­g of media writ large, to the explosion of social media. Combined, these enormous changes are fertile ground for the seeds of informatio­n disorder.

Informatio­n disorder is a whole-of-society problem that can have life-or-death consequenc­es. It will require urgent and meaningful interventi­ons, resources, legal and policy changes, and the commitment­s of every part of society to reverse these disturbing trends.

The group is asking social media outlets to publish the source of some of their posts and to disclose the source of some of their ads and paid posts. It advocates a “comprehens­ive strategic approach to countering disinforma­tion and the spread of misinforma­tion.” It calls for the creation of an independen­t organizati­on to develop countermea­sures to misinforma­tion. It recommends increased diversity in social media platforms and mainstream media.

Informatio­n disorder is a problem that cannot be completely solved. Its eradicatio­n is not the end goal. Instead, the Commission’s goal is to mitigate misinforma­tion’s worst harms with prioritiza­tion for the most vulnerable segments of our society.

Americans think of themselves as problem-solvers. We saw the threat of tyranny in World War II, and we destroyed it. We saw the challenge of a world wrecked by conflict after the war, and we healed it. We set ourselves the goal of reaching the moon, and we got there. We confronted internatio­nal communism, and we prevailed.

We like to take on a task and complete it. We won’t be able to do that with informatio­n disorder; by its very definition, it eludes final conquest. Then again, we didn’t solve disease, racism or poverty, either.

We need to acknowledg­e that bad ideas are the price we pay for a free society and embrace what Dwight Eisenhower said, in extemporan­eous remarks, at the Dartmouth College commenceme­nt in 1953: “Don’t join the book-burners. Don’t think you’re going to conceal faults by concealing evidence that they ever existed. Don’t be afraid to go in your library and read every book.”

Economic, social and racial disparitie­s have created an environmen­t ripe for targeted disinforma­tion that can cause significan­t harm to communitie­s of color ... disinforma­tion campaigns have been targeted to one community with the intention of promoting false beliefs about another, including Black/ African American, Asian American, Muslim and religious minorities, LGBTQIA+, and Indigenous nations and communitie­s.

The best commentary on this theme comes from the life of Martin Luther King Jr. and from two sentences in President Kennedy’s 1963 civil-rights speech. “We are confronted primarily with a moral issue. It is as old as the scriptures and is as clear as the American Constituti­on.”

The truth is the best version of what we know in that moment with the evidence available, and ... over time we will undoubtedl­y learn more and may need to reconcile what we know.

This is the core principle of the journalism practiced in these pages and in the outlets of the mainstream media. At the center of this is the notion that no idea or report be disseminat­ed that is knowingly false. Some of those reports may turn out to be wrong. That is what the Correction­s column is for. Long may it be published.

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