You
would think I would have lots of material, because I was visiting with a friend
and we were talking about politics for about two and a half hours (in between
holding her kids upside down; kids love that), but it’s almost like I got everything
out. Still, I have some sense of commitment here.
I
remember seeing at least one of those masked magician specials once, back in
the day, and although I never actually figured out how they did the trick
before it was shown, I usually got pretty close. Sometimes it was was because
there was something different, like the assistant was wearing loosely draped
clothing instead of tight revealing clothing. At other times, it was just so
clear that they wanted your attention in one place, then obviously something
important was happening in the other.
With
magic shows, there is an expectation that it is a trick, and the fun comes from
not knowing how they did it. This is a mutually agreed upon bargain. The
audience is there to be mystified, and if they are not, the magician is a
failure (or perhaps a success as a comedian).
In
non-entertainment venues, this should be more frowned upon, but it isn’t
always. Let’s take a look at the work of Andrew Breitbart. It’s not that he
never contributed anything valuable, necessarily, I guess, but there were big
things where he lied.
He
selectively edited video of Shirley Sherrod’s speech, taking a story about
overcoming prejudice and turning it into a story about celebrating prejudice
that could have ruined her career.
With
ACORN it was worse. This was a group that was doing good things, and through
deception, it was brought down. The deception was not just a sting operation,
as it was initially portrayed—it was selective editing and lying to make it
look like the organization was corrupt in ways that it was not.
Now,
ACORN had organizational and leadership problems, and that probably made it
easier for them to fall under adversity than to rise again. However, you have a
group that is working to empower the poor, and they are brought down by lies
that people don’t even remember are lies for the most part. The lies win over
the truth because the lies had better publicity. And even though Breitbart
himself is dead, the organization lives on. I don’t know that they have pulled
off anything major lately—perhaps they needed their leader for that—but really,
either one of those things should have taken away all of their credibility.
As
education loses funding, there has been a tendency to focus on only the most
practical skills, to prepare people to be good laborers, but what about being
good citizens? Yes, I want people to have exposure to arts and music so they
can be better able to appreciate beauty and find means of personal
self-expression. Yes, physical education is important so that people can be
healthier. But also, civics is important. Rhetoric is important. Texas GOP
notwithstanding, critical thinking skills are important. Yes, sometimes knowing
more about the world and life may cause children to question their parents, but
if they are good parents, that can probably be worked out amicably. And if they
are demon seed children, well, they will be questioning authority regardless,
so at least give them the tools to make it productive.
Maybe it’s just the nerd in me talkng, but I think
facts matter. I would like to see facts used more in decision making. I even
get that in a free country people can peddle lies. However, I would like to see
more people quit buying them. The burst of smoke is over here because there is
a trapdoor over there, and this is not a show.
No comments:
Post a Comment