There are
three things that have happened recently:
- A bomb was planted outside the office of the Colorado Springs chapter of the NAACP.
- Two men shot up a magazine office in France, killing 12 and wounding eleven others.
- Boko Haram massacred people in Nigeria. The death toll may be as many as 2000, but counting has been difficult.
The first
question would be which has gotten the most news coverage, but that's too easy.
The first significant coverage of the NAACP bombing was how people were upset
that it wasn't covered, starting about two days after it occurred. The Boko
Haram story has been seen on a news crawl across the bottom of the screen, but
Charlie Hebdo is getting major coverage of the incident itself, the response by
other cartoonists, the social media response, think pieces about the social
media response, the protest march, and stories about how the leaders at the
protest march staged a fake photo opportunity.
That makes
the question "why"; how do the news channels choose what to cover?
There is a
saying, "If it bleeds, it leads." Based on that, the NAACP bombing
isn't that big a story. Fortunately the gasoline can did not detonate, so there
were no fatalities. However, still based on that, the priority story should
have been Nigeria. There are a lot more dead, and the
threat of much more destruction, because the Charlie Hebdo shooters are dead
now but Boko Haram is still active.
Of course, Nigeria is very far away from the United States, and Boko Haram is not a direct
threat, perhaps, but based on an elevation of domestic interests, then the
NAACP should have been the lead story. That is terrorism on our native soil,
because when an anonymous bomber targets an organization working for social
good, what else could you possibly call it? Yes, the Charlie Hebdo shooting was
an assault to freedom of the press, but the NAACP bombing is a general attack
on civil rights. That sounds important, right? But that's not how it played
out.
It is
possible that the story of brown people shooting white people was considered
more urgent and important than a white person trying to blow up black people or
black people massacring other black people. I don't want to think that's how it
goes, but it's possible.
I mean, you
can't give equal coverage to every story, but you will still cover a lot of
stories and combined together they will create some kind of narrative about the
world. So let us consider that in light of this:
An Indiana man got riled up by Fox News before
setting fire to a mosque.
I don't
doubt that the beer played a role, but reading his responses to the judge, he
knows no Muslims, or anything about Islam, only what he hears on Fox News and
on the radio.
"Every
day you turn on the TV, you see Muslims trying to kill Americans."
But you
could see Muslims killing other Muslims, which might lead you to believe it
wasn't merely a matter of race and religion, or you might see racists trying to
set back civil rights, both by crude methods like bombing and more
sophisticated methods like rolling back sections of the Voting Rights Act.
There are a lot of different potential stories out there, but this is the one
he received.
Which is of
course one reason why it is important to have more than one source of news, but
it might also be something for each individual source of news to think about.
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