How do we deal with Fox media lies?

This post is a response to a question posed in its complete format: “How do you deal with a family member who believes everything that Fox News says?”

I remember as a kid how futile it was to explain to my parents that wrestling on television was fake.

They would point to the blood they saw and use it to prove it was real.

It didn’t matter in the least what was said to them or what was pointed out as an obvious ploy or staged athletic move; they refused to acknowledge the truth of the fraud the rest of us kids saw in the wrestling performance.

Making matters more convincing that it wasn’t an argument worth pursuing was how their agitation quickly escalated into anger if we persisted past the point of their capacity for maintaining patience with their annoying children. We learned that once we detected visible signs of anger, it wasn’t worth the effort to push them any further. By that point, the conversation had escalated into a frightening experience.

We eventually gave up and decided there was no harm in letting them believe whatever they wanted to believe.

Fox is an entirely different matter because its effect on their audience has contributed to a nightmare affecting the world.

I suggest one does not bother addressing the issue with one’s family because even if one succeeds in helping them accept reason, that victory has little impact on the severity of the problem Fox poses in society.

Addressing Fox as a threat to national stability and security is essential. There could be several approaches to addressing this problem, and one of them could be an aggregated accounting of behaviors exhibited by Fox adherents, collected by family members to construct a compelling argument for affecting legal change and influencing the media as a whole for the benefit of society.

My view on news media in society is that there is no justification for consolidated enterprises serving a profit motive. The Fourth Estate is a critically important entity within a democratic society that must be capable of earning and maintaining the public trust. That is impossible when their mandate is to serve the billionaires who are the existential threat to our democracies that we now face.

Let us take a page from the peer review process applied within the scientific community, ensuring integrity throughout the science discipline and the scientific community.

Matching the scientific community’s level of granularity in self-policing is as simple as breaking up large news media enterprises into community-based and locally-owned operations.

The more numerous the entities that represent the Fourth Estate, the more able they can become in ensuring the public is well served with a diversity of perspectives that can achieve a far more objective delivery of information than is possible through the lens of a billionaire who controls the dissemination of information with a self-serving agenda.

Funding for individual operations could be coordinated through a crown corporation that provides administrative services, such as an access point for advertising and a payment system modeled on existing systems, like Medium, where payments are distributed based on readership and engagement. Graduated access levels could be permitted, and stories can be assessed on a scale of widespread need for distribution versus content catering to niche markets. Public and subscription-based funding could support a system for disseminating critical information to broader audiences, ensuring everyone can access news crucial to their lives.

Has editorial integrity and independence been compromised?

This post is a response to a question posed in its complete format: “Do you think that the editorial integrity and independence of the Washington post has been compromised by the current owner, Jeff Bezos?”

Billionaires have compromised all news media. The Fourth Estate has long been corrupted and serves its primary function of informing the public only tangentially. Their mandate has been perverted by a profit-driven mentality that prioritizes the interests of capitalist owners over ensuring the public is aware of and informed about issues that can dramatically affect their lives.

This has been a long and slippery slope of degradation begun by Ronald Reagan’s repeal of the Fairness Doctrine and then the installation of Rupert Murdoch’s Fox Network.

Meanwhile, the American public participated in the destruction of its lifeline to crucial knowledge by choosing entertainment via rage porn than any objective analysis of issues that would help them make the best decisions for themselves and the nation.

Had this corruption not become so complete as to allow Fox to continue publicly referring to itself as a news organization while declaring themselves an entertainment organization in the courts, Donald Trump would not now be wreaking havoc on the nation.

The problem has been that the changes have been subtle and incremental over time, on such a level that the public merely shrugs its shoulders while remaining blissfully unaware of the long-term implications of allowing their lifeline to knowledge to become so polluted with noise.

Here’s an example of a non-issue that should have pissed off the public enough to be radically vocal but it was just another day and another shrug of the people’s collective shoulders while a significant proportion of the population has been so condition by this degradation that they see nothing fundamentally wrong with it in the same way that a Stockholm Syndrome sufferer sees nothing wrong with their abuser’s abusive behaviour.

Along with all the other numerous acts of restoration required for the nation, what needs to happen is the breaking up of big media into community-based and locally owned enterprises that can collectively function like the scientific community’s peer review system to ensure integrity is restored to the Fourth Estate.