• Gullible Rightist Trumplings are Easily Conned, They Believe All Trump

    From RichA@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jun 9 22:43:16 2021
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, rec.arts.tv
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    It’s hard to understand Trump supporters’ willingness to excuse his
    blatant falsehoods

    There’s a part of human nature that, rather than wanting to know what’s accurate and true, wants to believe certain things, whether true or not.
    By Eric Black | columnist
    President Donald Trump President Donald Trump delivering his State of the Union address to a joint session of the U.S. Congress on Tuesday.
    REUTERS/Leah Millis
    Feb. 6, 2020

    Here’s a shocker: President Trump’s State of the Union message was riddled
    with falsehoods and exaggerations – obvious deceptions of the sort that
    clearly warn a careful listener of this obvious truth: You are listening
    to a liar. Sometimes he lies cleverly, by taking things out of context or
    using phony comparisons. Sometimes he only exaggerates, which is a common
    flaw of politicians, but he does it more often, more blatantly and more shamelessly than most. But fairly often he just flat lies. Says things
    that are provably untrue and that anyone paying attention knows are
    untrue. But he somehow, sorta, gets away with it.

    With the help of FactCheck.org, I’ll pass along below a link that will get
    you chapter and verse to on some of the untruths from the SOTU message.
    But allow me to get both philosophical and nostalgic for a moment first.

    I’ve been a professional journalist since 1973. You can do the math. (OK,
    I’ll do it. In August, I’ll celebrate my 47th anniversary of scribbling
    for a living.) MinnPost refers to me as a columnist, but for most of those years I was a “reporter.”

    Back in the ’70s and ’80s, the heyday of journalism’s “objectivity” model,
    that “O” word carried a fair bit of heft. It meant reporters reported
    facts and didn’t express their own opinions. Opinionizing was reserved for
    a relative few columnists and editorial writers.

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    The model, designed to prevent journalistic bias, was flawed. If reporters
    were biased, the bias could and very likely did influence which facts
    reporters reported, and which they didn’t, or in what order the facts were presented and how the facts were framed and described. All serious flaws.

    But as a veteran of several newsrooms where that model was enforced, I can
    also tell you that the power of the objectivity paradigm ensured the
    pretty much every statement asserted was based on a verifiable fact, and
    that when an issue that was part of some larger public debate was
    discussed, representatives of differing sides would be quoted, accurately
    and honestly, so that readers could decide for themselves which side they
    found more trustworthy or persuasive.

    That was the old religion, and it’s mostly gone. Even newspapers are
    mostly gone. Most “information” is now carried on the internet and social
    media platforms. TV news is divided substantially between righty and lefty shows. There are winners and losers in the new information economy, but
    one of the biggest losers has been the old religion about the importance
    of basic factual accuracy and what used to be called “balance.”

    I’m sentimental for the old system, even while acknowledging its
    shortcomings. I’m horrified by what has replaced it, which has quintupled
    the old demons called “selective perception” and “confirmation bias.”

    There’s a part of human nature that, rather than wanting to know what’s accurate and true, wants to believe certain things, whether true or not.

    I’m not one who thinks Donald Trump is a genius, but if he is a genius,
    his genius is rooted in his understanding of that above-referenced feature
    (or bug) of human nature.

    It’s not that he’s clever about it. He’s blatant. He lies all the time. In
    the age of fact-checkers, his lies are easily and quickly identified and publicized. But this easy access to a catalog of his lies has no apparent influence on the bond between him and the roughly 40 percent of the
    electorate that supports him or at least “approves” of him, as measured by approval polls.

    I assume, and more than assume, that some portion of his 40 percent knows
    that he lies a lot and wishes he would lie less, but doesn’t disapprove of
    that aspect of his leadership as much they approve of some of his
    policies. I don’t know, and probably can’t know, how many of his
    supporters view it that way. I try to respect their beliefs, which differ
    from mine, on many of these policy issues.

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    But – maybe it’s because I’m an old reporter indoctrinated in the
    importance of factual accuracy – it’s hard for me to understand a
    willingness to excuse such lying. Still, they are free to make that
    choice.

    I worry more about those, presumably most of his supporters, who cannot
    bring themselves to acknowledge the lying. It’s frightening. It’s cultish.
    It’s 1984-ish.

    And I assume that many or most members of that cult don’t read what I
    write. But if you do, and if you doubt the level of Trump’s mendacity as
    I’ve described it above, I offer two links, as promised at the top of this screed, from factcheck.org and the Washington Post’s “Fact-checker”
    operation, shedding a bit of truth onto some of Trump’s falsehoods from
    his lie-filled State of the Union address.

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