The truth shall make you mad
I’m writing this on a Friday morning with no particular topic in mind, threatening to be overwhelmed by a slurry of depressing and outrageous news flooding my inbox. As a news junkie, I get my foreign news in digests from the New York Times and the Washington Post, and of course I look up all the major local news websites. You’d think that would be enough, but of course I have to open CNN and the BBC online as well – and occasionally, when I feel obliged to do so, Fox News, if only to see what those people are saying. And then I turn the TV on to CNN, BBC, Al Jazeera and Channel News Asia for onsite reportage and commentary, especially from a non-Western perspective.
For all my efforts, this is what I got today, which I’m sure many of you did as well:
“Ugandan Olympian Rebecca Cheptegai dies after being set on fire by boyfriend” (CNN)
“Accused Georgia school shooter Colt Gray, 14, received gun used in massacre as Christmas gift from dad” (New York Post)
“Israeli attacks in Gaza kill 35 people as polio vaccinations continue” (Al Jazeera)
“Trump says he’d create a government efficiency commission led by Elon Musk” (AP News)
“Woman testifies husband drugged her for years, recruited dozens to rape her” (Washington Post)
“What was behind the viral photo of Guo, Abalos and Marbil?” (Rappler)
On a day like this, you have to ask yourself, “What has the world come to?” followed quickly by “Do I really want to know?” You emerge with a sense of a world gone mad, a moral universe you no longer recognize, playing by different rules for different people. Each one of those news items I mentioned above was enough to make me retch.
While the loss of human life naturally rises to the fore of our concerns, how does one diminish the horror of being abused while unconscious over 70 times for years, or the cruel irony of vaccinating children only to bomb them afterwards? On which planet is it all right for a father to buy his young son – already known and reported to be prone to violence – an AR-14-style assault rifle for Christmas? (Answer: Not Mars but the United States, thanks to lax gun laws and even laxer parental supervision.) And speaking of that country, what do Americans think they can expect from a government run by two egomaniacs?
Let’s go to that viral snapshot, which I saw with my morning coffee, when I was still half-asleep and not too sure of what exactly I was looking at – the secretary, the escapee and the police general seated on a sofa, all smiling into the camera, with a raft of refreshments on a table before them.
No, I immediately thought, surely this was from the recent past, when all was still peachy between Ms. Guo and the administration. Or could it have been another of those clever AI pastiches, mounted to embarrass our honest and hard-working officials in hot pursuit of a wanted criminal? How else could you explain Alice’s sweet smile and finger gestures, and the equally benign countenances of the gentlemen beside her? Where was even the slightest trace of the loneliness and fear that were said to have driven our favorite chinita into self-exile, which would have left her haggard and despondent?
Not having read anything else at that point, I almost made a comment on the first FB post of that image to the effect that “No, no, this can’t be true, this is all fake!” Providentially I held back, and looked for what I was sure would be a vehement denial from those concerned that the picture was ever taken. Instead, I found a story and a video of the good secretary explaining that he had no idea what Ms. Guo was doing as their “documentation” photo was being taken. Good Lord, I thought – if that wasn’t the chummiest picture I’d ever seen of captors and their captive, like something from a high-school reunion. So, OK, the smiles can be explained away – Alice was relieved that the Philippine police will now secure her from all threats; Abalos and Marbil were happy to have completed their mission. Does that call for refreshments, for a toast? Where did decorum go?
Sometimes I wonder if we read the news just to get all riled up – like poking yourself in the eye – as proof of life, or of our ability to still think and figure out right from wrong.
There’s a great article by Brett and Kay McKay on a website called artofmanliness.com titled “Is There Any Reason to Keep Up with the News?” It notes that “In The News: A User’s Guide, philosopher Alain de Botton draws on the ideas of Hegel to posit that in fact, the news in modern cultures has in some ways replaced ‘religion as our central source of guidance and our touchstone of authority.’
“Morning and evening prayers have been substituted with checking one’s news feed immediately upon rising and retiring to bed. While the faithful once sought inspiration in scripture, it’s now in the news ‘we hope to receive revelations, learn who is good and bad, fathom suffering and understand the unfolding logic of existence. And here, too, if we refuse to take part in the rituals, there could be imputations of heresy.’
“If the news represents a new kind of faith, it is surely one of our least examined. The media rarely does stories on itself – reports that might examine their actual worth and credibility.”
The article goes on to dissect our hallowed reasons for following the news – e.g., our desire for the truth and for the betterment of humanity – only to show how narrowed and pliable the truth can be, and how the news actually dehumanizes people (quoting Stalin: “The death of one person is a tragedy; the death of one million is a statistic”) rather than sharpens our humanity.
This I know: if the news is still the bringer of truth as I knew it to be, then this morning’s news has made me mad, in both senses of the word.
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Email me at [email protected] and visit my blog at www.penmanila.ph.
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