Friday, Oct 24, 2014 06:00 AM CST
Why conservatives prefer propaganda to reality
A new Pew study on America's media
consumption offers a window into the right's collective mindset
Amanda Marcotte, AlterNet
This article originally appeared on
AlterNet.
Pew Research set out to find what’s behind what
it considers the increasing political polarization of
the United States; why the country is moving away from political
moderation and becoming more and more divided between liberals and
conservatives. Its first report on the phenomenon,
which examines where people are hearing news and opinion in both regular and social media, shows that this is happening for very different reasons among people moving to the right than for people moving to the left.
Or
that’s the charitable way to put it. The less charitable way is to say
Pew discovered that conservatives are consuming a right-wing media full
of lies and misinformation, whereas liberals are more interested in
media that puts facts before ideology. It’s very much not a “both sides
do it” situation. Conservatives are becoming more conservative because
of propaganda, whereas liberals are becoming more liberal while staying
very much checked into reality.
That this polarization is going on isn’t a myth.
Previous Pew research shows
the percentage of Americans who are “mostly” or “consistently”
conservative has grown from 18% in 2004 to 27% in 2014. During that same
period, the percentage of Americans who are “mostly” or “consistently”
liberal stayed a little more consistent, growing from 33% to 34% in 10
years. (These statistics don’t measure what you call yourself, but what
you rate as on a scale of beliefs about various issues.) While liberals
became more liberal, conservatives both became more numerous and more
rigidly conservative over time. What gives?
Enter right-wing
media, which has a nifty trick of convincing audiences it’s the other
guys who are the liars, all while actually being much less trustworthy
in reality. From
conservative screaming about
the “media elite” to Fox News’s old slogan “Fair and Balanced,”
conservative media is rife with the message that everyone is out to get
you, conservative viewer, and only in the warm blanket of right-wing
propaganda will you get help.
The
message, the Pew research suggests, has really taken hold. Pew
researchers gave respondents a list of 36 popular media sources and
asked how much they trusted each one. Some were liberal, like
The Daily Show or
ThinkProgress. Some were conservative, like Rush Limbaugh or Fox News.
Most of them are fairly straightforward news organizations with no overt
political agenda, like NPR, various network news, CNN, and the
New York Times.
The
findings were astounding. Out of the 36 news sources, consistent
liberals trusted 28, a mix of liberal and mainstream news sources.
Mostly, liberal respondents generally agreed, holding out a little more
skepticism for overtly ideological sources like Daily Kos or
ThinkProgress, but not actually
distrustingthem, either. The
only news sources liberals didn’t trust, generally, are overtly
right-wing ones, such as Fox News, the Blaze, Breitbart, or Rush
Limbaugh’s show.
Conservatives, on the other hand, saw betrayers
and liars around every corner. Consistent conservatives distrusted a
whopping 24 out of 36 outlets and mostly conservative respondents
distrusted 15 and were skeptical of quite a few more. The hostility
wasn’t just to well-known liberal sources like MSNBC. Strong
conservatives hated all the network news, CNN, NPR, and the major
national outlets, except the
Wall Street Journal. Respondents
who are mostly conservative fared better, but were still hostile to the
New York Times and the Washington Post, as well as skeptical of
mainstream organizations like CBS and NBC News.
The
fact that conservatives are this paranoid should be alarming enough, but
it becomes even more frightening when you consider who conservatives do trust
in the media. Consistent conservatives only trusted 8 media
sources–compared to the 28 liberals trusted–and of the eight, only one
has anything approaching respectable reporting or reliable information.
And that one, the Wall Street Journal, has good straight
reporting but has an op-ed page that is a train wreck of right-wing
distortions and misinformation. Most conservative people were a little
more open-minded, trusting USA Today and ABC News, but still were
supportive of openly distorting sources like Fox News or the Drudge
Report.
The trust conservatives put in conservative media is
utterly misplaced. For instance, both consistent and mostly conservative
people love Glenn Beck, though he’s a
well-known purveyor of outrageous conspiracy theories that
percolate up to him from fringe characters. Breitbart and Sean Hannity
also rated high, despite their shared history of championing right-wing
fringe characters like Cliven Bundy.
But what is really
frightening is the reach of Fox News. Fox News rated as the only real
news source for consistent conservatives, with 47% of them citing it as
their main source of news. Nothing even came close to touching it, as
the second most common answer, “local radio” was cited by only 11% of
consistent conservatives. Eighty-eight percent of consistent
conservatives trusted Fox News. Mostly conservative and even “mixed”
people also liked Fox News.
The problem with this is watching Fox
News actually makes you less informed than if you don’t watch any news
at all. In a 2012 study,
Fox News viewers rated the absolute lowest in ability to
correctly answer questions on a quiz about recent news events. People
who didn’t take in any news programs at all did better on the quizzes.
NPR listeners rated the best. Consistent liberals in the Pew research
were big fans of NPR, by the way. It was the second most common outlet
cited as a favorite by consistent liberals, topped only by CNN.
Fox
News is one of the main factors, possibily the main factor, driving
political polarization in this country. Huge chunks of this country
listen mostly or solely to a relentless stream of misinformation coming
from Fox News, coupled with warnings, implied or even baldly stated, to
avoid listening to other, more factually accurate news sources.
Unsurprisingly, then, more people are becoming conservatives and people
who were already conservative are becoming more hardline about it. If
you have any Fox viewers in your family, you probably already suspected
this, but now Pew has given us the cold, hard facts to confirm your
suspicions.
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