How to Tell a Lie Well: Scream

Polls are coming at us fast and furious these days. But two stood out to me this week as proving, once again, all you have to do to make a lie into the truth is repeat it loud enough and often enough. Suggested Reading The Root 100 – 2024’s Most Influential African Americans Post #3…

Polls are coming at us fast and furious these days. But two stood out to me this week as proving, once again, all you have to do to make a lie into the truth is repeat it loud enough and often enough.

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Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach

First, the Pew Research Center for People & the Pressโ€™ weekly survey of news watchers finds 30 percent of those polled still believe the โ€œdeath panelsโ€ nonsense, and another 20 percent donโ€™t know if itโ€™s true. Yeah, thatโ€™s half. Sure, many of these folks are Republicans and Fox News viewersโ€”47 percent of Republicans and 45 percent of Fox watchers said the proposed reforms would create โ€œgovernment organizations that will make decisions about who will and will not receive health services when they are critically ill.โ€ But whatโ€™s more striking is how many Democrats, independents and viewers of every other news channel believe it, too.

Democratsโ€”20 percent say itโ€™s true; 16 percent donโ€™t know

Independentsโ€”28 percent say itโ€™s true; 21 percent donโ€™t know

MSNBC viewersโ€”27 percent say itโ€™s true; 19 percent donโ€™t know

CNN viewsโ€”26 percent say itโ€™s true; 20 percent donโ€™t know

Network news viewersโ€”25 percent say itโ€™s true; 23 percent donโ€™t know

WTF?! Those are depressing numbers, not just for the health care debate, but for the prospect a functioning democracy in general.

Second, Kaiser Family Foundation finds that the blur between truth and lie has left seniors in particular confused. One of the ironies of this debate is that seniors, who report overwhelming support for Medicare, nonetheless are most likely to distrust government involvement in the broader market. This dissonance may be due to the fact that seniors just donโ€™t know what to make of the whole discussion. In Kaiserโ€™s survey, 62 percent of people over the age of 65 said they felt โ€œconfusedโ€ about the plans being debated, compared to 43 percent of people under 65.

Whatโ€™s all this add up to? The alliance of rightwing media, corporate lobbyists and the Republican Party has succeeded in making an informed, intelligent discussion about health care in America impossible.

โ€”KAI WRIGHT

Straight From The Root

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