The Corporate Media's Commitment to 'Both Sides' Coverage Is Dangerous

Authored by commondreams.org and submitted by 2big_2fail
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The Washington Post (12/16/22) had a recent headline: “Can Politics Kill You? Research Says the Answer Increasingly Is Yes.” And the lead of the article, by Akilah Johnson, told readers of two studies that reveal what it calls “an uncomfortable truth”:

The toxicity of partisan politics is fueling an overall increase in mortality rates for working-age Americans.

But when you read further into the article, you find that politics is not really the problem here. One of the studies, the Post reported, found that “people living in more conservative parts of the United States disproportionately bore the burden of illness and death linked to Covid-19.” The other found that “the more conservative a state’s policies, the shorter the lives of working-age people.”

So the problem is not so much “politics” as it is conservatism. Indeed, the article noted that one of the reports found “if all states implemented liberal policies” on the environment, guns, tobacco, and other health-related policies, 170,000 lives would be saved a year.

Still, the analysis in the piece centered around the idea that it is not right-wing ideology, but lack of bipartisanship, that is to blame—as in, “The division in American politics has grown increasingly caustic and polarized.”

You know what would actually benefit politics in the United States? A media system that was willing to point out who was causing demonstrable problems, rather than pretending that “both sides” are always to blame.

Reporting like that could actually save lives.

mcconnells_gocccp on December 26th, 2022 at 17:55 UTC »

One of my favorite takes on what journalism should be is the whole - if one person tells you it’s raining and another tells you it isn’t, your job isn’t to share both sides; your job is to open a window and see for yourself. Then you report.

h3r4ld on December 26th, 2022 at 16:33 UTC »

"[I]f the entire congressional Republican caucus were to walk in to the House and propose a resolution stating that the Earth was flat, the Times would lead with 'Democrats and Republicans Can't Agree on Shape of Earth '."

Beneficial-Buy3069 on December 26th, 2022 at 16:31 UTC »

Midway between some sanity and batshit fucking insanity is still insanity.