Thursday, May 9, 2019

Because 'The House Is on Fire,' Naomi Klein Takes Centrism-Obsessed Media to Task for Failed Climate Coverage

Thank you to my husband for this deeply important article and video. And thank you Naomi Klein! There are authentic investigative journalists and truth-tellers our there!
There is an urgency to holding our mainstream media accountable, to not believing everything we are hearing, to knowing that only pieces are being presented (if at all) rather than crucial larger pictures, and to see the magnitude of their betrayal to our nation and to all of life on Earth by not having the ecological and climate crisis — and the facts about endless war, the facts about the vast redistribution of wealth upwards, etc., etc. — making headlines on a daily basis. Now we have squandered decades because of the corporate media's failures and their ties to Wall Street, the fossil fuel industry, the military industrial complex, and other large financial interests. And because of our own ignorance and lack of curiosity and a profound commitment to truth. We can no longer afford our illusions. May the awakening that emerges out of courage and disillusionment prevail. May our corporate media divest!! And may we all become fierce truth-seekers! — Molly


"You can't leave it all to the markets."
News coverage of the climate crisis can no longer rely on the false pretense of objectivity, writer and activist Naomi Klein said Tuesday. 

"There is a confirmation bias among the largest chunk of journalists out there who really pride themselves on being centrists," Klein said Tuesday during a town hall at the Columbia Journalism School in New York. "There's an absolute fetish for centrism, for seriousness defined by splitting the difference—and not getting too excited about anything."

The mainstream media is "profoundly distrustful of people who are saying 'actually, the house is on fire,'" Klein said, citing the impulse among many journalists to remain objective and hear both sides. 

"But guess what," said Klein. "The house is on fire."

The journalism school's publication, The Columbia Journalism Review (CJR), is joining with The Nation to launch an initiative, #CoveringClimateNow, to change coverage of the climate crisis.

In an essay describing the initiative from April 22, Mark Hertsgaard, environmental correspondent for The Nation, and Kyle Pope, the publisher of CJR, described how they see the journalist's job in the climate crisis as one of sounding the alarm.

"Instead of sleepwalking us toward disaster, the U.S. news media need to remember their Paul Revere responsibilities," wrote Hertsgaard and Pope, "to awaken, inform, and rouse the people to action."

Part of that mission, Klein said, is pushing back on conventional wisdom about the role of extractive technologies in furthering neoliberal economic development. 

"You can't leave it all to the markets," Klein said, laying out a vision of the future that leaves neoliberalism behind.

"You have to plan," Klein added. "You have to regulate."

Further, said Klein, the entire project of neoliberalism "falls apart" if the climate crisis is reality. 

Watch Klein's comments:


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