The Student Newspaper of Mississippi State University

The Reflector

The Student Newspaper of Mississippi State University

The Reflector

The Student Newspaper of Mississippi State University

The Reflector

    Beware of media spin

    My personal understanding of chaos simply entails the inability
    to decipher conflicting messages that I encounter while roaming the
    earth, seeking peace and beauty and the American dream. The problem
    here lies in my ability to decipher the things that I hear, and my
    willingness to trust various modes of communication and the
    communicators’ specific intentions and meanings. While language and
    the study of language seems like a dead art sometimes, it becomes
    increasingly important at this moment, while our nation is under a
    barrage of “messages” and “speeches” and whatever else they’re
    sending us from “on high” (e.g. Capitol Hill). While I do not wish
    to discuss the war business, I’d like to discuss the underlying
    pretenses of what is happening to us, communicatively, as we listen
    to the things that our leaders tell us about everything.
    In our media-frenzied society, we subscribe to a number of
    different voices-from the television, magazines, radio and
    newspapers. We see headlines, we catch snippets of press
    conferences, we hear an opinion that fits what we want to believe
    and we run with it. While we have full choice to do this, and thank
    goodness for that choice, we also make ourselves vulnerable to some
    very crafty people who practice the art of twisting words to
    comprise new meanings.
    People place implications on words and cause us to view
    situations in a skewed manner, or, more accurately, they place new
    names on old situations. This can result in the metamorphosis of
    our opinions about those old situations. So when the language used
    in media broadcasts and articles has pushed around our opinions, we
    have a problem. That problem being the fact that, on the surface,
    we think that we have a unique opinion and loyalty to some specific
    concept when in actuality we’re just, under a new name, supporting
    something that we previously did not support. This is chaotic. It’s
    not just the deception; it’s the fact that most of us don’t know
    our right from our left. We don’t know what words mean. We get
    emotional and forget to look at the dictionary. For years, I have
    been listening to teachers telling students “LOOK IT UP”-I’ve taken
    vocabulary test after vocabulary test. Yet I still willingly
    believe whatever I hear from the newspaper because those people are
    smarter than I am and because they know what they are talking
    about-they’ve been around longer. While those things may be true,
    they are not necessarily true. Chances are, they started out
    writing ignorant opinion columns at their universities and got
    lucky enough to make it big and get their stuff in nationally
    circulating periodicals. Of course, they could be told what to say
    in the first place, which is worse than being ignorant. I’m sure I
    could make a ton of money saying things for someone else, but I
    hope I would have the integrity to refuse that option.
    How, then, does one start to learn to decipher what they hear?
    How can someone stop being ignorant? How can we begin to gain some
    control over what we listen to and then believe? We’ve got to start
    looking stuff up. We’ve got to stop creating our own definitions,
    or thinking that we know what we mean when we say words that sound
    intelligent. We’ve got to read, skeptically, from both sides of
    whatever story. Those people aren’t smarter than we are; they just
    know how to write sentences and manipulate meanings. However, that
    does not mean that we have to take all of their “truths” at face
    value.
    Joy Murphy is a senior English major.

    Leave a Comment
    More to Discover

    Comments (0)

    All The Reflector Picks Reader Picks Sort: Newest

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Activate Search
    The Student Newspaper of Mississippi State University
    Beware of media spin