Tuesday, January 17, 2023

A Liberal Dose, January 12, 2022 "Today's News or Yesterday's History, Learn to Read Between the Lines"


A Liberal Dose

January 12, 2023

Troy D. Smith

“Today’s news or yesterday’s history, learn to read between the lines”

 

In recent weeks, John Gottlied has used his column, not only to encourage readers to think for themselves, but to be more discerning when evaluating news and social media. He has made some very good points about social media using algorithms to channel to users the news media that will buttress their own preconceptions. This has resulted in most of us walking around in our own echo chamber, with a completely different set of “facts” from those folks with whom we disagree. I was struck by John’s encouragement for us all to question WHY news and social media items are structured the way they are, and want to speak to that now.

I do my best to train history majors to interpret historical documents (like newspapers, for example). It is often necessary to be able to read between the lines if you are to move beyond the “what” and “how” and get to the “why.” This requires both critical thinking skills and familiarity with context, and it applies equally to today’s news (which will be tomorrow’s history). I often use two 21st century phenomena to demonstrate my point.

First: missing or murdered young women. Those few words alone embody unimaginable tragedy. From time to time a case will get national attention and the media will seem to talk about nothing else for days or weeks. We’ve all seen it. What do those cases have in common? It is always young white women. Plenty of non-white women suffer the same fate, but don’t make it on CNN. So is it about race? Well… large numbers of young white women are killed each year who may live in a trailer park, or work at Walmart or McDonald’s, and sometimes they don’t even make the news in their own town. It is young, white, middle-to-upper-class women who are given 24-hour news coverage. Again, no matter WHO it is, it is a terrible tragedy. But the fact is, most of that news media -especially on television -is supported by ad revenue. It is a vehicle to get you to watch commercials, with the goal of selling you something. Most of their audience is white, and from among that audience the ones they want glued to the TV are the ones with expendable income that might buy their stuff. Missing children who could have been THEIR children -that is going to compel them to watch.

Second: Native Americans protesting pipelines near their reservations, which could endanger their water supply. There are several such protests going on right now -have you heard about them? Probably not. The biggest such event happened in 2016, at the Standing Rock Sioux reservation in North Dakota. There were more Native Americans assembled together in one place since Custer’s Very Bad Day (seriously). That particular pipeline was supposed to go near Bismarck, but the citizens there were against it so it was rerouted along the edge of the reservation, passing beneath the tribe’s only water supply. Militarized police forces from all over the state were mobilized, and there were countless incidents of violence against the peaceful protesters. This went on for months. I was seeing it every day on the social media feeds of my indigenous friends, and on Native news outlets. But not one word from the news networks… until the very end, when many reported that the Natives had “provoked” the police into using force against them. Why was it not in the news the whole time -Fox, CNN, MSNBC, anywhere? Because there are not that many indigenous viewers, and they don’t have much money, but oil companies provide enormous amounts of ad revenue to all those stations.

If national news or social media is inundating you with something -or, sometimes, hiding something from you -someone, somewhere is trying to sell you something (or, in the latter case, make sure you keep on buying it).

Read between the lines.

--Troy D. Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at Tennessee Tech. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.

 

You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE

A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE

Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com

The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE



 

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