Lee C. McIntyre: Post Truth | Future Hindsight S10 E1

Future Hindsight – 12 Jul 202029:40

Summary

Este guión presenta una discusión sobre la era de la ‘post verdad’ y su impacto en la democracia y el periodismo, con la participación de expertos como Lee McIntyre y George Lakoff. Se exploran temas como la negación científica, la manipulación de la información y el fenómeno de las ‘fake news’, y cómo estos factores han contribuido a un entorno donde la verdad es subordinada a la política. Además, se ofrece una perspectiva sobre la importancia de la verdad y la confianza en el discurso público, y se sugieren acciones individuales para promover la verdad y el entendimiento mutuo en la sociedad.

Takeaways

  • 👂 The podcast discusses the concept of post-truth and its implications for democracy
  • 😮‍💨 Decades of science denial paved the way for the post-truth era
  • 🤥 The tobacco industry used propaganda tactics that are now common in post-truth politics
  • 😠 False equivalence in media coverage confuses people about factual debates
  • 😈 Authoritarians use fake news and propaganda as weapons for social control
  • 😔 People are so overwhelmed by lies they stop believing there is such a thing as truth
  • ⏳ The coronavirus crisis may be a reckoning where lies meet reality
  • 👥 We need to start listening and talking to people with different views again
  • 💰 Supporting investigative journalism helps reinforce that truth matters
  • 🙌 Repeating the truth can be as powerful as repeating lies

Q & A

  • ¿Quién es el autor invitado en este episodio?El autor invitado en este episodio es Lee McIntyre, autor de Post-Truth y también investigador en la Universidad de Boston.
  • ¿Cómo define Lee McIntyre el concepto de posverdad?La define como la subordinación política de la realidad. Es una táctica que usan los autoritarios para corromper nuestra creencia en la verdad.
  • ¿Cómo contribuyó la negación de la ciencia al surgimiento de la posverdad?La negación de la ciencia en temas como el cambio climático creó un plano para lo que sería la posverdad, al mostrar que se podía negar la verdad sobre casi cualquier cosa.
  • ¿Qué es la equivalencia falsa y cómo se relaciona con los medios?La equivalencia falsa es cuando los medios presentan ambos lados de un debate como igualmente creíbles, incluso cuando no lo son, en nombre de la imparcialidad.
  • ¿Cómo define Lee McIntyre las noticias falsas?Las define como noticias que son intencionalmente falsas. Pueden tener varias motivaciones, como propaganda o ganancia financiera con clics.
  • ¿Cómo se relaciona la posverdad con el fascismo?Se ha dicho que la posverdad es pre-fascismo, porque controlar la información te permite controlar a la población, un elemento clave del fascismo.
  • ¿Cómo podemos apoyar la verdad en nuestra sociedad?Hablando entre nosotros, construyendo relaciones de confianza, apoyando económicamente al periodismo investigativo de calidad, y repitiendo la verdad.
  • ¿Por qué el coronavirus podría ser un momento decisivo contra la posverdad?Porque es una crisis donde la verdad importa, las mentiras tienen consecuencias reales, y la realidad no se puede negar tan fácilmente.
  • ¿Qué signos deberíamos buscar de que las cosas están mejorando?Cosas como que la gente no tolere los intentos de politizar la crisis o despedir a los expertos que contradicen al poder.
  • ¿Qué da esperanzas al autor de cara al futuro?Cosas como la comunicación y repetición de la verdad por parte de ciudadanos comunes, gobernantes locales, y la comprensión de que estamos todos juntos en esto.

Outlines

00:00 😃 Presentación del podcast Democracy Works

La presentadora Jenna Spinelli se presenta y presenta su podcast Democracy Works, que examina diferentes aspectos de lo que significa vivir en una democracia. Hablan de temas como la demagogia, el neoliberalismo y cosas más tangibles como el voto por correo. Invita a los oyentes de Future Hindsight a escuchar Democracy Works.

05:02 😮 Ejemplo de cómo las tabacaleras crearon dudas sobre los vínculos entre fumar y el cáncer

Lee explica cómo en la década de 1950, cuando surgieron estudios que vinculaban el tabaco con el cáncer de pulmón, las tabacaleras contrataron a relacionistas públicos para crear dudas sobre la ciencia. Esto sentó un precedente para negar verdades inconveniente sobre el cambio climático y otros temas.

10:02 🤔 El problema de presentar los dos lados de un tema como si fueran igualmente válidos

Mila y Lee discuten el concepto de “equivalencia falsa” en los medios, donde se presentan dos lados de un debate científico como si fueran igualmente creíbles, cuando en realidad uno tiene mucho más respaldo. Esto confunde al público en temas como el cambio climático.

15:02 😡 Explicación de por qué la posverdad es pre-fascista

Lee explica la cita “la posverdad es pre-fascista”. Básicamente, contaminar la esfera pública de información y alienar a las personas de la verdad facilita que los autoritarios controlen y manipulen a la población. Una población escéptica sobre los hechos es más fácil de gobernar.

20:04 💪️ Por qué el coronavirus podría ser un momento decisivo contra la posverdad

Lee plantea que el coronavirus podría ser el momento de ajuste de cuentas contra la posverdad, porque la pandemia es una dura corrección de la realidad que ni siquiera Trump puede negar o distorsionar totalmente. Las vidas están en juego, por lo que la gente anhelará la verdad.

25:06 😌 Consejos para individuos sobre cómo apoyar la verdad en la sociedad

Lee da dos consejos: 1) Hablar más con personas que no están de acuerdo para construir relaciones de confianza, 2) Apoyar económicamente el periodismo investigativo de calidad y las instituciones que defienden la verdad.

Keywords

💡post-verdad

El término ‘post-verdad’ se refiere a una era o situación en la que los hechos objetivos tienen menos influencia en la opinión pública que las emociones o creencias personales. En el video, se utiliza para describir cómo los políticos autoritarios pueden manipular la realidad y minar la confianza del público en la posibilidad de conocer la verdad.

💡negar

En el contexto del video, ‘negar’ se refiere a la estrategia de ciertos grupos (como las compañías tabacaleras) para sembrar dudas sobre hechos científicos incómodos como el cambio climático o los peligros del tabaco.

💡repetición

Según el video, repetir la verdad es una estrategia importante para contrarrestar la post-verdad y la desinformación. Cuanto más se repite la verdad, más probabilidades hay de que el público la acepte.

Highlights

Post-truth is defined as the political subordination of reality used by authoritarians to corrupt belief in truth.

Science denial over decades created a blueprint for post-truth by showing you could deny facts and manufacture doubt.

The rise of social media and decline of traditional media accelerated the spread of post-truth tactics.

False equivalence in media gives undeserved attention to fringe views, confusing the public on factual debates.

Transcripts

00:00

hey future hindsight listeners my name

00:03

is jenna spinelli and i am one of the

00:05

hosts of the democracy works podcast

00:08

every week we examine a different aspect

00:11

of what it means

00:12

to live in a democracy sometimes it’s

00:15

big topics like demagoguery or

00:18

neoliberalism

00:19

and other times it’s more tangible

00:22

topical things like voting by mail and

00:25

how

00:26

covid19 is impacting campaigning

00:29

and organizing if you enjoy future

00:32

hindsight i think you’ll enjoy

00:34

democracy works too you can check it out

00:37

at democracyworkspodcast.com

00:40

or by searching democracyworks in your

00:42

favorite podcast

00:44

app you can find new episodes of

00:46

democracy works every monday

00:48

again at democracyworkspodcast.com or by

00:51

searching

00:52

democracyworks in your podcast app

01:00

welcome to future hindsight i’m your

01:01

host mila atmos

01:04

each week i speak with citizen change

01:06

makers who spark civic engagement in our

01:08

society

01:09

our guest today is lee mcintyre he’s the

01:12

author of post-truth

01:14

and he’s also a research fellow at the

01:16

center for philosophy and history of

01:17

science

01:18

at boston university and an instructor

01:21

in ethics

01:21

at harvard extension school i’ve been

01:24

thinking about

01:25

how we have come to arrive at our

01:27

current post-truth era and what it might

01:30

take to get out of it

01:31

so we’re doing a whole season on how

01:33

news and information is presented

01:36

and manipulated in the media and our

01:38

larger public discourse

01:40

to get us started and frame our thinking

01:43

we spoke to lee

01:44

if you’ve ever been confused about the

01:46

difference between fake news and

01:48

propaganda

01:49

or you’re really not sure what

01:51

post-truth really means

01:52

and what its purpose is this is a

01:55

perfect

01:56

episode i define post-truth as the

01:58

political subordination of reality

02:01

i think that it’s a tactic that

02:03

authoritarians and their wannabes

02:05

use to corrupt our belief not just in

02:08

specific truths but in the idea that we

02:10

have a way to pursue truth outside of

02:12

political context

02:13

so i don’t think it’s really a failing

02:16

of

02:17

knowledge so much as one of politics

02:20

we discussed the role of decades of

02:22

signs denial and the rise of fake news

02:24

in ushering in this post-truth era

02:27

and what we can do to support the idea

02:29

that truth matters

02:31

and rebuild trust let’s listen in thank

02:36

you for joining us

02:37

thank you so much for having me so you

02:40

wrote this beautiful book post truth and

02:42

i like that your title gets straight to

02:44

the point

02:45

without a subtitle let’s go right to the

02:48

meat of the matter how do you define

02:51

post-truth there’s a lot of confusion

02:54

these days over what

02:55

post-truth means post-truth doesn’t mean

02:58

that

02:59

we don’t care about truth anymore it

03:01

means that we live in an era when truth

03:03

is

03:04

at risk i define post-truth as the

03:06

political subordination of reality

03:09

i think that it’s a tactic that

03:11

authoritarians and their wannabes

03:13

use to corrupt our belief not just in

03:16

specific truths but in the idea that we

03:18

have a way to pursue truth outside of

03:20

political context

03:21

so i don’t think it’s really a failing

03:24

of

03:25

knowledge so much as one of politics

03:29

how are we susceptible to this kind of

03:33

political manipulation of what we accept

03:36

as truth

03:38

post-truth didn’t come out of nowhere

03:40

there are several roots

03:42

the first one is science denial i talk

03:44

about how

03:45

the fact that we’ve had science denial

03:47

for the past 60 or 70 years

03:49

created a blueprint for what post-truth

03:52

was going to look like because

03:54

if you could deny the truth about

03:56

climate change or evolution

03:58

you could deny the truth about just

03:59

about anything like how many people were

04:01

at an inauguration or the path of a

04:03

hurricane

04:04

some other routes are cognitive bias

04:07

that’s built into

04:08

all of us through evolution and then

04:12

these days the decline of traditional

04:13

media and the rise of social media

04:16

really the internet has been the gas on

04:18

the fire

04:19

so it’s not that people have never lied

04:22

before or people have never tried to

04:24

manipulate reality for their own benefit

04:27

it’s that these days

04:28

it can happen much faster than it used

04:31

to be able to happen

04:32

more widespread can you give an example

04:36

for how we have

04:39

accepted some climate denial because

04:42

that’s the easiest one or even maybe

04:44

with tobacco and how

04:46

that has worked in creating

04:49

in our brains an idea that things are

04:52

not settled and therefore there is doubt

04:54

yeah the blueprint for post-truth was

04:58

60 or 70 years of science denial the

05:01

best example is maybe the one that you

05:03

bring up

05:04

where the tobacco companies

05:07

freaked out in the 1950s because there

05:09

was a scientific study that was going to

05:11

show

05:12

an all but causal link between cigarette

05:14

smoking and lung cancer

05:16

they hired a public relations specialist

05:19

who advised them that what they needed

05:21

to do was fight the science

05:23

and so they needed to manufacture doubt

05:25

where there was none

05:26

and what happened with this is that it

05:30

created the idea that you could

05:32

manipulate public opinion

05:34

simply by raising doubts they didn’t

05:36

have to be scientific

05:38

doubts what they did was they exploited

05:40

the idea

05:41

that lay people have about science which

05:44

is that science is about certainty and

05:46

proof that you need a hundred percent

05:48

certainty before you’re justified in

05:50

believing something and that’s not

05:52

actually the way that science works at

05:53

all so

05:54

and you see this ripple through climate

05:56

change you hear people say well

05:58

have you proven that climate change is

06:01

caused by greenhouse gases

06:03

you know are your models a hundred

06:04

percent can you tell me what the

06:06

temperature will be you know in five

06:07

years

06:08

aha if you can’t then they think that

06:10

they’ve got enough room for doubt

06:12

but that’s just the way that science

06:13

works science is about

06:15

warrant not about proof when we get

06:17

enough evidence

06:18

that it makes it reasonable to believe

06:21

something that’s when science moves

06:23

forward

06:23

people who are motivated not to believe

06:26

something

06:27

call themselves skeptics wait for 100

06:29

proof

06:30

and then they never end up believing

06:31

anything that they don’t want to believe

06:34

yeah it’s very convenient to do it that

06:36

way and

06:37

we’re seeing that we’re really seeing

06:39

that right now

06:41

in real life before we get there i

06:43

wanted to talk about

06:45

what you said on the demise of

06:48

traditional media

06:49

and the fragmentation of the news

06:51

industry

06:53

together with the rise of social media

06:55

but

06:56

let’s start with the idea

07:00

or the reality i should say that we now

07:03

have

07:03

partisan media outlets

07:06

and they pursue essentially

07:10

profit whereas in the old days it was

07:13

that the news was only half an hour of

07:16

a network’s time and they had

07:19

investigative reporting and they

07:21

basically told you

07:22

what’s right and what’s wrong and what’s

07:24

true and what’s not and once you had

07:27

cnn and fox news and msnbc

07:30

they have morphed into purveyors of

07:33

opinion as opposed to

07:35

facts and one of the things that they do

07:38

is they present

07:40

both sides of an issue and give false

07:43

equivalence can you explain what false

07:46

equivalence is because i think that’s

07:47

very ill understood

07:49

sure i think you’re absolutely right

07:52

about the the history of the way that

07:53

things have gone the news media

07:55

used to be that news was a loss leader

07:58

for the stations

07:59

they had news divisions because their

08:02

broadcast license said that they needed

08:03

to do

08:04

work in the public interest and the

08:06

entertainment is where they made their

08:08

money

08:09

after cnn they discovered well you can

08:12

make money on news and

08:13

let’s try 24 7 news well then all of a

08:16

sudden you’ve got to make money on it

08:17

it’s much more expensive to do actual

08:20

news

08:21

investigative reporting than opinion and

08:23

so the opinion

08:24

sort of took over and the false

08:27

equivalence that you talk about

08:28

is important especially for science

08:31

debates

08:32

if you look at the way that the news

08:33

media used to present

08:35

science topics and they still do to some

08:38

extent

08:38

you would find a split screen debate

08:41

where they would have

08:42

somebody from the national academy of

08:44

science talking about

08:45

the importance of climate change and

08:47

then you’d have some climate denier who

08:49

had a website and a following

08:51

and they would give them both equal time

08:52

to talk and then

08:54

at the end make it sound like it was a

08:56

debate and look at the audience and say

08:58

you decide

08:59

that’s maybe the worst possible way to

09:01

present it because they’re

09:03

making it seem as if there’s doubt where

09:06

amongst the scientists there really

09:08

isn’t any

09:09

one reason that this happens is because

09:11

the news media have always been

09:13

allergic to the idea that they would be

09:15

accused of bias and the

09:17

simplest way to show that you’re not

09:19

biased is to let both sides talk

09:22

but here’s the problem the halfway point

09:25

between the truth and the lie is still a

09:27

lie

09:28

yet objectivity in journalism doesn’t

09:30

mean that you’re indifferent between

09:32

truth and a lie it means that

09:35

you don’t want to leave your audience

09:37

less well informed after they finish

09:39

watching your program than they were in

09:41

the beginning

09:41

the media has changed a little bit the

09:44

way that they do science reporting now

09:46

but they still with factual matters

09:50

are bending over backward too far to

09:52

show that they’re

09:53

not politically biased and in some cases

09:56

not reporting the truth

09:58

yeah yeah so the media right now instead

10:01

of

10:02

facilitating the truth by

10:05

really doing objective reporting they

10:07

instead do

10:08

this both sizes in a reduced manner of

10:11

course but still when you do that you

10:13

confuse the public

10:14

so what would it actually look like what

10:16

would be good truthful

10:18

reporting let’s say on the signs of

10:21

climate change

10:23

okay there’s a brilliant psychologist

10:26

named george lakoff

10:27

who has a model called the truth

10:30

sandwich

10:31

where he said that when you are

10:33

reporting on a

10:34

factual matter that’s in dispute

10:37

what you should do as a journalist is

10:40

present the truth

10:42

then present what the person said that

10:45

was a lie

10:46

and then fact check the lie there’s a

10:49

way to

10:50

make it clear that you don’t present it

10:52

as if both sides are

10:54

equally credible writers had a story a

10:56

few months ago in which they found

10:59

that climate change was now at the five

11:01

sigma level which means that there’s

11:03

only a one out of a million

11:04

chance that the climate change deniers

11:07

are correct

11:08

so why would anybody give equal time to

11:11

that

11:12

if you think about it they don’t give

11:13

equal time to flat earthers

11:15

they don’t give equal time to people who

11:18

claim that we never went to the moon

11:20

there are other sides of all sorts of

11:22

debates where the

11:23

facts have been settled a long time ago

11:26

but the

11:27

other side if it’s not based on any sort

11:29

of warrant any sort of evidence

11:31

any sort of reason it doesn’t deserve to

11:34

be on the news

11:35

yeah well said i think this leads me

11:38

perfectly to my next question

11:40

about fake news what is fake news and

11:42

how does it fit in

11:44

with post truth these days some people

11:47

have said that we should stop using the

11:49

term fake news

11:50

and i push back against that some people

11:53

think that we shouldn’t use the term

11:54

because trump has made it a term of

11:57

derision that he uses against the

11:59

mainstream media

12:00

which is a tactic of post-truth i think

12:03

that we need to keep the term

12:05

but realize what it really is fake news

12:08

is news that is intentionally false

12:11

there are

12:11

several different motivations for this

12:13

and in the 2016 election we saw this

12:16

we saw propaganda out of russia we saw

12:19

fake stories created in the united

12:21

states about hillary

12:22

was dying or just things that people

12:25

make up out of whole cloth

12:27

and put it out there because they know

12:28

that a certain number of people are

12:29

going to click on it

12:31

you can never correct it fully once the

12:33

the misinformation has

12:35

gotten out into the mainstream and

12:36

that’s why fake news is so powerful

12:39

there’s a hidden danger to fake news

12:42

fake news is not just when you report

12:46

something that’s false and hope that

12:48

somebody will take it

12:49

as true just the very existence of fake

12:52

news can have an effect

12:53

where when the information stream is so

12:56

polluted with false stories

12:58

people can become cynical and just stop

13:00

believing that there’s any such thing as

13:03

truth at all outside of political

13:04

context and remember that’s the goal of

13:07

post-truth

13:08

the goal of post-truth is to make people

13:11

so cynical

13:12

and just so uncertain and used to the

13:15

chaos

13:16

that they begin to believe that they

13:19

really can’t find

13:20

the truth one of my favorite quotations

13:22

on this is by the

13:23

holocaust historian hannah aaron

13:26

who said in an ever-changing

13:28

incomprehensible world the masses had

13:30

reached the point where they would at

13:32

the same time believe everything and

13:33

nothing

13:34

think that everything was possible and

13:36

nothing was true

13:38

that’s the problem right fake news is a

13:41

tactic

13:41

of authoritarians you know within the

13:44

context of post-truth

13:46

to try to get people to give up on the

13:48

idea that they can know the truth

13:50

because then the population’s easier to

13:52

rule

13:53

it creates an environment that is not

13:56

conducive to democracy

13:58

that’s absolutely right if you’ll

14:00

indulge me i’ve got another quotation

14:02

from hannah aaron

14:04

she says the ideal subject of

14:06

totalitarian rule is not the convinced

14:08

nazi or the convinced communist

14:10

but people for whom the distinction

14:11

between fact and fiction true and false

14:14

no longer exists that’s a great quote

14:18

and i think people don’t realize that

14:21

most people are not

14:25

partisan and aren’t following politics

14:28

closely

14:29

or following civil discourse very

14:32

closely they’re just bombarded every day

14:35

with information that is both factual

14:38

and false and like you said when you are

14:41

in this onslaught of information you can

14:43

no longer discern what’s true and what’s

14:46

not it’s

14:47

really hard to say yes this is

14:50

definitely true

14:51

or this thing is definitely not true and

14:53

i cannot believe that

14:54

and i have to act accordingly and i have

14:57

friends who are

14:58

really well educated they’re just so

15:02

exhausted

15:03

to tell the difference that they give up

15:06

if you look at an authoritarian society

15:08

maybe they only have one media outlet

15:10

and so people become cynical that way

15:13

because

15:14

what they’re hearing on the radio or on

15:16

tv they know is a lie but they don’t

15:18

know what the truth is

15:19

but there’s another way to do that

15:22

suppose you live in a free society

15:24

where you have an independent media

15:26

remember back to those tobacco

15:28

executives

15:29

fight the science right the free media

15:31

is going to exist and they’re going to

15:33

be

15:33

doing their investigative journalism and

15:35

promoting truth

15:36

but if you create a counter narrative of

15:40

lies and propaganda then all of a sudden

15:43

the people

15:44

are not quite so sure which one is the

15:47

truth and which one is not

15:49

you can hide something by hiding it so

15:52

people can’t see it

15:53

but you can also hide it in plain sight

15:55

if you surround it with enough

15:57

disinformation and misinformation

15:59

i don’t know if you know the movie it’s

16:01

indiana jones and the holy grail

16:03

remember when he’s trying to find the

16:05

holy grail it’s not that

16:07

the holy grail is not sitting right in

16:09

front of him it’s surrounded by

16:11

a thousand other cups which also might

16:13

be the holy grail

16:14

one of the things that you say in the

16:16

book is that post-truth is pre-fascism

16:19

can you explain what that means yes i’m

16:22

not the one who said that

16:23

that was tim snyder in his book on

16:25

tyranny

16:26

so the idea that he comes up with the

16:29

post-truth is pre-fascism

16:31

is simply this idea that when you have

16:34

control over the information stream you

16:38

begin to have control over the populace

16:40

over the people another uh favorite

16:43

author of mine is jason stanley who’s

16:45

philosopher at yale

16:47

he has a book called how propaganda

16:49

works

16:50

in which he makes the following claim he

16:53

claims that propaganda

16:54

isn’t simply there to fool you

16:58

propaganda exists because it’s trying to

17:01

rule you it’s trying to show i’m so

17:04

powerful that i can say a false thing

17:06

and there’s nothing that you can do

17:07

about it

17:08

so that’s the sense in which i think

17:10

that snyder makes the claim that

17:12

post-truth is pre-fascism

17:15

because if you pollute the information

17:17

stream if you overwhelm the truth

17:19

you make people cynical about it and you

17:20

get them to believe that they

17:22

can’t know it the truth is unobtainable

17:25

then you’ve got an

17:26

enormously powerful weapon in

17:29

social control all of a sudden you can

17:32

tell lies even if you don’t make them

17:34

believe that the lie is true

17:36

you’ve overwhelmed their defenses and

17:39

like i said they’re easier to rule at

17:41

that point

17:41

that’s what i’m really afraid of

17:43

post-truth is pre-fascism that’s why i’m

17:46

so worried about it yeah we’re there now

17:48

i think

17:49

if i’m not mistaken i think people

17:52

no longer care so much about the truth

17:56

you know people can sometimes even

17:59

acknowledge

18:00

that the president lies and then they

18:02

shrug their shoulders

18:03

and say so what he’s getting away with

18:05

it is getting away with everything and

18:07

it doesn’t matter

18:09

this particular moment is quite an

18:10

interesting one because

18:12

to the person who wants to use

18:14

post-truth as a form of political

18:16

control

18:18

the one key is that they get away with

18:22

the lie

18:23

so when trump lied about how many people

18:25

were at his inauguration or

18:28

whether there was voter fraud so that

18:30

he’d actually had more votes than

18:32

hillary clinton

18:33

even when he lied about the path of

18:36

hurricane dorian

18:38

all of these lies you might say well

18:41

he wasn’t accountable for them you know

18:44

yes a lot of people knew that they were

18:45

lies

18:46

a lot of people believed it but there

18:48

wasn’t a moment of reckoning

18:49

there wasn’t any hard correction from

18:52

reality

18:53

that made him have to take account of

18:56

the fact that he lied

18:58

we’re also on the cusp of a hard

19:00

correction from reality through

19:02

coronavirus

19:04

this is a moment when this can’t be spun

19:08

this can be lied about but as you know

19:10

we saw from

19:11

what happened with the stock market what

19:13

happened with people

19:14

panicking even the people who are in the

19:18

grip

19:18

of believing a lie they will eventually

19:22

thirst for the truth and in this case

19:25

the truth can save our lives and i think

19:27

that this is

19:28

the moment of reckoning how to fight

19:31

post-truth

19:32

unfortunately this is one way i

19:35

prefer other ways through awareness and

19:38

the truth sandwich and other things that

19:40

i talked about but sometimes reality

19:42

provides its own antidote to post truth

19:45

the best example i can think of here

19:47

is back in the 1980s when the space

19:51

shuttle challenger blew up

19:53

there was political manipulation that

19:55

led them to launch the challenger on a

19:57

day

19:58

when they shouldn’t have launched it and

20:00

it blew up

20:01

there was an investigation afterward and

20:04

richard feynman said for a successful

20:06

technology

20:07

reality must take precedence over public

20:09

relations

20:10

for nature cannot be fooled and we

20:13

learned that when the space shuttle

20:14

challenger blew up

20:16

nature can’t be fooled now when trump is

20:18

saying

20:19

well the coronavirus will disappear like

20:21

a miracle

20:22

or we don’t have that many cases or the

20:25

test kits will be available next week

20:28

these are all things that are easily

20:30

fact checked

20:31

but they’re also things that affect

20:32

people’s lives so we’re awake

20:34

we’re watching this and i think that

20:36

unfortunately

20:38

this is the hard correction from reality

20:41

that trump has been

20:42

stalking for the past three years 14 15

20:46

000 lies

20:47

and he finally comes to a set of lies

20:49

where he’s going to be held accountable

20:51

he’s going to be held responsible

20:53

even by the people who have previously

20:55

been on his side

20:56

because suddenly their lives are at risk

20:59

yeah

21:00

it’s so true i think the challenger

21:03

example

21:04

is really perfect for our current crisis

21:08

with coronavirus because

21:11

also lives are at risk and it is

21:14

a hard truth of nature and physics and

21:17

science

21:18

that we cannot deny we cannot lie about

21:21

it

21:21

or he cannot lie about it i should say

21:25

i do hope that this will be

21:29

like you said a moment of reckoning for

21:32

all of us

21:32

to really embrace truth and go back to

21:37

objectivity so

21:40

for us as individuals what are

21:43

two things that i could be doing to

21:46

support truth in our society how can i

21:49

be one of the people to push back when

21:51

somebody

21:51

tells a naked lie a falsehood

21:56

i think there are two important things

21:58

that i could say

21:59

one is that we have to begin to talk to

22:02

one another again

22:03

we have to not just accept the fact that

22:07

our society is polarized and fragmented

22:09

and that we have competing news outlets

22:13

i think that if you look at how people

22:15

change minds

22:16

it’s through engagement it’s through

22:18

trusting relationships personal

22:20

relationships

22:21

and you know if you watch speeches in

22:24

congress these days

22:27

you see one person standing in a

22:28

microphone and all the chairs behind are

22:30

empty

22:31

i mean people in congress aren’t even

22:33

talking to one another anymore

22:35

and i think that as individuals we can

22:38

start to listen to one another again

22:40

to build those relationships to not shy

22:42

away from the hard conversations

22:44

a second thing that we can do is

22:46

individuals to support

22:47

the idea that truth matters is to

22:50

support the truth-tellers

22:52

i tell people that they need to buy the

22:54

subscription

22:55

if they are interested in supporting

22:57

good investigative journalism where

23:00

people disclose conflicts of interest

23:02

where people double source things where

23:04

there are standards

23:06

they need to actually buy the

23:07

subscription to make it clear

23:09

that we’re supporting truth tellers i

23:12

think that’s one of the most important

23:13

things

23:14

that we can do as you watch institutions

23:16

crumble

23:17

make donations to the ones that you

23:19

believe in help out the people

23:21

who are trying to get the word out i

23:23

think that’s very important

23:24

and those are things that i’ve done

23:26

myself i’ve engaged in conversations

23:28

with people who disagree with me

23:30

and i’ve started to not only buy

23:32

newspaper subscriptions but

23:34

to support organizations that i believe

23:37

in that i think are important in this

23:38

era

23:39

one of the things that you mentioned in

23:41

the book is

23:42

that repetition works repeating the

23:44

truth works and i think it’s really

23:46

important to say that just

23:48

like repeating fake news works

23:51

repeating the truth works also so we

23:53

really need to flood

23:55

the information sphere also with truth

23:58

and it will be easier

24:00

to find so let’s say the corona

24:04

virus is truly a moment of reckoning

24:07

what would be

24:07

a sign for you what should we be looking

24:10

out for

24:11

that things are really turning for the

24:13

better

24:14

i just heard a conversation where they

24:17

were talking about

24:18

that the people would rise up if trump

24:21

tried to

24:22

fire dr anthony fauci for

24:25

contradicting him i mean he’s certainly

24:27

done that in the past he’s

24:29

had people who he’s taken it out on when

24:31

they’ve told

24:32

things that he didn’t like in this

24:35

moment

24:36

i don’t think he could get away with it

24:38

i’m pleased to see

24:39

that people are not uh quite so tolerant

24:43

of the fact that there’s political spin

24:46

on this

24:47

my suspicion is that you know we’re now

24:50

at a moment where the stakes are so high

24:53

i think people are going to begin to

24:54

realize that

24:56

their future is really at stake here

24:58

again i think it’s absolutely

25:00

horribly unfortunate that it’s come to

25:02

this the one

25:04

good thing that will come out of it is

25:05

that people will have new respect for

25:08

the importance of truth

25:10

yes i hope you’re right looking into the

25:13

future

25:14

what makes you hopeful

25:17

we’re realizing that we’re in this

25:18

together i think that people

25:20

are talking people are listening people

25:23

are

25:24

communicating with one another about

25:26

what their fears are about what the

25:27

information that they have that is

25:29

truthful i’ve seen a lot of people

25:31

making a grassroots

25:33

effort state and local government but

25:35

also just individual citizens

25:38

to put the truth out there to gather the

25:41

facts and

25:42

as you said we’ve known for a long time

25:44

repeating a lie is a very effective way

25:46

to get people to believe the lie

25:48

but repeating the truth works as well so

25:51

the more people that we have in the

25:52

corner of truth the more people that we

25:54

have repeating the truth

25:56

reinforcing it getting that information

25:58

out there not just in the news media but

26:00

on facebook on twitter

26:01

the other things that people look at and

26:04

talking to family

26:05

who disagree with this making clear what

26:08

the facts actually are i think that’s

26:10

just very important

26:11

and i think that that’s something that

26:13

that does give me hope

26:15

and i think that’s the right track

26:17

that’s perfect

26:18

thank you very much thank you for being

26:20

on future hindsight

26:21

thank you so much it’s really hard to

26:24

swallow that despite

26:26

the realities of mounting covet deaths

26:28

and lack of testing

26:29

the absence of a vaccine or effective

26:32

cure

26:33

the administration continues unabated on

26:35

a campaign of obfuscation and lies

26:39

what’s more their bungling of the

26:41

federal response

26:42

has come to the point of looking like

26:44

it’s committing self-sabotage

26:46

on purpose with dr fauti testifying this

26:50

week

26:50

that reopening too soon may cause an

26:52

outbreak and some states

26:55

already reopening anyway it appears that

26:58

our public health is losing

27:00

and magical thinking is winning i’m not

27:04

confident

27:05

that the time of coronavirus will be the

27:07

reckoning moment of our post-truth era

27:10

although of course it should be

27:13

we can all make a difference here in

27:16

being the people in our network of

27:17

friends and family to respectfully speak

27:19

the

27:20

truth whenever we have the chance

27:23

it doesn’t sound like much and we know

27:26

it can be uncomfortable

27:28

and awkward but rebuilding trust in

27:30

public discourse

27:32

one conversation at a time is

27:35

essential we owe it to each other

27:39

as citizens in this society

27:42

together stand up for truth it matters

27:47

next week

27:48

our guest is george lakoff he’s an

27:51

emeritus professor of cognitive science

27:53

and linguistics

27:54

at uc berkeley who has been researching

27:57

the language of politics in which we

27:58

reside

28:00

his books include the all-new don’t

28:02

think of an elephant

28:04

who’s freedom and moral politics

28:07

if you negate a lie what you’re doing is

28:10

highlighting the lie

28:11

so if trump tells a lie and you simply

28:14

negate it

28:15

all you do is say no it’s not true that

28:18

blah blah blah what you’re doing

28:20

is you’re saying ah think of the blah

28:22

blah blah

28:24

you know you’re helping him whether

28:25

you’re for him or against him

28:28

if you just negate so what choice do you

28:30

have

28:31

the choice that you have is what i call

28:33

a truth sandwich

28:34

we talk about how the truth matters to

28:36

our democracy

28:38

why we must frame first and frame with

28:40

the truth

28:41

and how important repetition is for our

28:43

brains

28:44

to accept and believe the framing of any

28:47

issue

28:48

regardless of whether it’s true or false

28:51

until next time stay engaged i’m mila

28:55

atmos

28:57

thank you for listening to future

28:58

hindsight the executive producer

29:01

and host of this program is mila atmos

29:04

the audio producer and music composer is

29:07

peter fedec

29:08

the associate producer is miriam

29:12

additional production by brooke scion

29:15

listen to us online at

29:19

futurehindsight.com

29:21

or your favorite streaming service

29:29

[Music]

29:34

this podcast is part of the democracy

29:38

group


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