Mar 9th 2012, 21:51:56
Thought I'd pose this idea to people and see where people on both sides stand:
My belief is that the real problem in politics today is the overexposure of everything due to 24 hour news. Ideally, 24 hour news would mean greater transparency about what is going on both in politics and around the world. We could find out more in-depth information about stories from near and far.
Instead, 24 hour news has turned into a series of shouting matches and ideologically-inspired hatefests where a commentator gets on and either yells at someone who expresses the opposite viewpoint or bypasses the whole debate idea and simply tells the audience why someone is to blame for all their problems.
I think 24 hour news has simply increased sensationalism without actually increasing content, so instead of talking about the merits and drawbacks of major bills/laws or informing the public about international affairs, we pick on little sound bytes, which are often taken out of context (for instance, when Mitt Romney said he liked to fire people--I think the average person would agree with the sentiment of the overall speech, but when you take the one line out of context, it sounds terrible) and then built upon until it's completely out of control.
For this reason, I refuse to watch any show or listen to any host who seems to care more about ratings than reporting. As a liberal (those of you who have been arguing with me in the McCain/abortion/other threads surely know this by now), I absolutely detest people like Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh, but while I don't hate his general message as much, I really think Keith Olbermann does the same type of bullfluff and I'd be perfectly okay with him being shut down.
All that 24 hour news does in my opinion is force people further to the extreme than they'd probably otherwise be. I think there'd be far more cooperation between both Democrats and Republicans if Boehner wasn't dragged further to the right by public opinion dominated by Beck, Hannity and Limbaugh and by people like Pelosi and Reid if they weren't dragged to the left in the same way. This hurts the discourse, because I think bills like "Obamacare" could have been something that everyone was at least moderately happy with, but instead, Democrats were encouraged to go as left as they could with the bill and Republicans were encouraged to simply be the party of "no."
So I wonder: How many of you guys watch these sensationalist shows and get your main news content from them? Do you think of these sources as reliable? Do you agree or disagree that all they do is try to spread hatred?
I just wonder because sometimes these shows are so bad at interpreting what the truth is, that sometimes I find myself wanting to defend people that I cannot stand (for instance, I felt the need recently to defend Rick Santorum in a discussion over the "taking one for the team" votes he claimed while in the Senate--you can't be an ideologue on every single issue and get anything accomplished, after all). Anyway, I'll be curious to hear from some of the rest of you on what you think of this. Hopefully it didn't turn into too much of a ramble...
My belief is that the real problem in politics today is the overexposure of everything due to 24 hour news. Ideally, 24 hour news would mean greater transparency about what is going on both in politics and around the world. We could find out more in-depth information about stories from near and far.
Instead, 24 hour news has turned into a series of shouting matches and ideologically-inspired hatefests where a commentator gets on and either yells at someone who expresses the opposite viewpoint or bypasses the whole debate idea and simply tells the audience why someone is to blame for all their problems.
I think 24 hour news has simply increased sensationalism without actually increasing content, so instead of talking about the merits and drawbacks of major bills/laws or informing the public about international affairs, we pick on little sound bytes, which are often taken out of context (for instance, when Mitt Romney said he liked to fire people--I think the average person would agree with the sentiment of the overall speech, but when you take the one line out of context, it sounds terrible) and then built upon until it's completely out of control.
For this reason, I refuse to watch any show or listen to any host who seems to care more about ratings than reporting. As a liberal (those of you who have been arguing with me in the McCain/abortion/other threads surely know this by now), I absolutely detest people like Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh, but while I don't hate his general message as much, I really think Keith Olbermann does the same type of bullfluff and I'd be perfectly okay with him being shut down.
All that 24 hour news does in my opinion is force people further to the extreme than they'd probably otherwise be. I think there'd be far more cooperation between both Democrats and Republicans if Boehner wasn't dragged further to the right by public opinion dominated by Beck, Hannity and Limbaugh and by people like Pelosi and Reid if they weren't dragged to the left in the same way. This hurts the discourse, because I think bills like "Obamacare" could have been something that everyone was at least moderately happy with, but instead, Democrats were encouraged to go as left as they could with the bill and Republicans were encouraged to simply be the party of "no."
So I wonder: How many of you guys watch these sensationalist shows and get your main news content from them? Do you think of these sources as reliable? Do you agree or disagree that all they do is try to spread hatred?
I just wonder because sometimes these shows are so bad at interpreting what the truth is, that sometimes I find myself wanting to defend people that I cannot stand (for instance, I felt the need recently to defend Rick Santorum in a discussion over the "taking one for the team" votes he claimed while in the Senate--you can't be an ideologue on every single issue and get anything accomplished, after all). Anyway, I'll be curious to hear from some of the rest of you on what you think of this. Hopefully it didn't turn into too much of a ramble...