Blinders off

You also forgot your mouth, dude.
Image found on Youth Radio.

As is only appropriate, the day after April Fools Day is now International Fact-Checking Day, an observance that began last year. Someone has to be there to confirm that Burger King is not offering a Chocolate Whopper (dang it … and it looks really good!), and that Lego is not coming out with a vacuum designed to pick up those plastic bricks and sort them by size and color (sorry, parents, you’ll just have to keep stepping on them). I’m really disappointed that ManCrates’ Porch Piracy Protection isn’t real. I’m still ticked off by the idjit who stole my Christmas presents sent by a dear friend in Oklahoma.

But are those of us who believe people should verify stories before passing them on just fools?

Sometimes it seems we might be, but I’ll stick with my hope that we’re not. Some days, though, it’s pretty hard going. With rampant tribalism and confirmation bias all around us, it can feel like swimming in molasses. And I can’t swim, so …

Though there are plenty of people who want facts no matter their inconvenience to this political party or that one, there are also too many who want only what fits in their worldview. The blinders come on the moment something that might challenge their views appears.

Blinders belong on horses, not people.
Image found on tjs-labs.com.

A well-researched and sourced story may just fall by the wayside because it came from somewhere some believe to be a biased source. (How dare papers like the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal aim for accuracy!) Yes, there are biased sources out there on all parts of the political spectrum, and many put out cherry-picked stories that fall apart at the slightest touch. Yet they tend to be the ones—typically on the far ends on the spectrum—that those with blinders on seem to trust the most because they confirm what they already believe.

Where would they be without InfoWars and Addicting Info? Probably in a corner somewhere eating paper and talking to aliens in the wallpaper. And calling me. Repeatedly.

The 2016 election certainly didn’t help matters, especially when a charismatic campaigner who told followers exactly what they wanted to hear also told them that news that was less than glowing about him was fake. Jack Shafer and Tucker Doherty wrote on Politico: “To some conservatives, Trump’s surprise win … simply bore out what they had suspected, that the Democrat-infested press was knowingly in the tank for Clinton all along. The media, in this view, was guilty not just of confirmation bias but of complicity. But the knowing-bias charge never added up: No news organization ignored the Clinton emails story, and everybody feasted on the damaging John Podesta email cache that WikiLeaks served up buffet-style. Practically speaking, you’re not pushing Clinton to victory if you’re pantsing her and her party to voters almost daily.”

When you start with a candidate with so much baggage (some earned, some made up), you take your chances.
Editorial cartoon by Lisa Benson, Washington Post Writers Group.

Just like the traditional media did not ignore the rumors about Bill Clinton during the 1992 campaign. But you’ll never convince some people of that. (I’m thinking of one person in particular at the moment; he doesn’t live in our reality. How does he think people heard about it??) Or that Fox News wasn’t covering it from the first whisper even though it didn’t begin airing until October 1996.

And dang it, I can’t get that pantsing image out of my head. I think I need some bleach.

Some have attributed the perceived slant of news coverage to the percentage of media employees who identify as Republican or Democrat, and that the dearth of self-identified Republicans proves that the media is liberal. But not everybody identifies with a party (I certainly don’t), and at newspapers, the layers of editors between reporters and the readers generally keep the overall tone (excepting the opinion section), if not nonpartisan, more toward the center. That’s in danger, though, as newspaper jobs are cut.

The decline in journalism jobs points to another theory of why audiences have sensed bias in reporting, according to Shafer and Doherty. More of the national jobs, both in traditional and online media, are in the major cities and along the coasts than in “flyover country,” primarily because that’s where the power brokers they cover are. Local newspapers are more wedded to their territories, but as those papers close, we’ll see even more nationalization of our politics. The more there is of that, the more people will withdraw into their little echo chambers.

As long as it doesn’t make me mad, it’s good to go!
Image found on Patheos.

In the blinders many willingly put on to appease their confirmation bias, I see a little bit of a toddler digging in when caught in a lie. It doesn’t matter what the truth is if it doesn’t fit what you believe; if someone tries to tell you your information is wrong, you’ll become even more determined that it’s correct.

Plus, the other side is full of doodyheads.

A University of Winnipeg study asked 200 participants to read opinion they agreed with for a chance to win $7 in a raffle pool, or $10 if they read something with which they disagreed. Sixty-three percent of those participating chose the $7 option, suggesting that it’s unpleasant to deal with opposition views. Jeremy Frimer, who led the study, told Vox: “They don’t know what’s going on the other side, and they don’t want to know.” One of the study’s co-authors, Matt Motyl, called this “motivated ignorance.”

Nope, not a good look. And how do you expect to cross the street in that getup?
Image found on Pinterest.

“We tend to view the other side as immoral, or evil, or crazy,” Motyl said. “And when we do that, it doesn’t make sense to say, ‘I want to understand immorality, or a crazy person’s perspective, or an ignorant perspective.’”

But maybe we should … or at least try. Just because our neighbor has a different perspective doesn’t mean he’s wrong (and it is possible to be biased and correct).

Listen. Seek out the facts (no, not the “alternative facts”; those are called lies). Be open-minded.

And for God’s sake, take off those blinders. They make you look ridiculous.


That explains the bloodstains on the letter … and I thought it was ink.
Strange Brew by John Deering.

For my Arkansas readers, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette Voices page is in need of your letters thanks to the confluence of Easter, Spring Break and those upcoming taxes (yep, I’ve still got to do mine, but they’ll be simple since I don’t make enough money for the long form to be worth it).

Send me a letter about the evil of pollen (that’s on my mind for some reason), the inanity in D.C., or whatever else has your dander up, in 300 words or fewer, and send it by mail to Voices, P.O. Box 2221, Little Rock, Ark. 72203; by email to voices@arkansasonline.com; or through our Voices form.

Remember, keep it clean, don’t personally insult other readers, no personal or business disputes, and keep in mind that I fact-check.

Thank you!

13 thoughts on “Blinders off

  1. Someone urged us to listen in order to understand rather than to prepare a response. That hit me hard because I give killer responses. However, I’ve been forced to recognize that the ideas I disagree with make sense to the (expletive deleted) person expressing them, and I need to understand HOW they make sense. This connects to my realization that there’s a difference between argument and persuasion. I don’t like it, but so much for the aftermath of April’s Fool Day. Time to put away foolish things.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I almost never eat at Burger King and I prefer to eat my chocolate in the form of a candy bar of some type.
    Remember that there are too many people who stubbornly insist on holding on to the attitude (or the idea?) of: “My mind is made up. Do not confuse me with the facts.”

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    • I hardly ever eat out anymore because of my IBS, but I’d check out a chocolate burger. I’m not that choosy on forms of chocolate as long as it’s real.
      Facts are evil. Alternative facts are not. At least according to the current administration.

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    • I know the feeling. I find it very hard lately to keep from smacking some of the people who talk about abortion but have no idea what they’re talking about. As it is, I roll my eyes too much. 🙄

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  3. I think sanity is over-rated and it is better to be insanely crazy. Either that or crazily insane. Brenda you need to quit rolling your eyes and put them back in your head where they belong.

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