Patroklos wrote:Media is a product for consumption like any other. Sometimes that means making more of the same to satisfy demand as you said, but sometimes that means creating new products or markets stimulate demand.
The ideal condition for a large corporation is the ability to sell a product that stimulates its own demand, so that the more you sell, the greater the brand loyalty others have to your product. Tobacco is the dream example because it's actively addictive, but lesser examples like Microsoft software or automobiles apply too.
If enough people use your software, there are hidden benefits to adopting it for compatibility's sake... until it becomes the universal standard. If enough people buy and use cars, they start living in towns laid out for cars, and now they MUST buy cars, even if they're planned-obsolescence hunks of junk.
Recognizing how we've gotten caught in a cycle of dependency with a product that we consume in ways that hurt us is not enough to fix the problems caused by the cycle. But it helps- if nothing else, it helps us realize that modern politicians aren't refusing to compromise because they're somehow stupider or more evil... they're doing it because we
select for congressmen who are more terrified of looking weak than they are of national disaster. Or who can convincingly show confidence that nothing is really wrong, even as things fall apart.
bilateralrope wrote:Ok, I see how that can be a problem.
A more flexible redistricting scheme as we know it would tend to divide the state into "communities of interest."
What happens when these communities of interest overlap. For example, if a minority group is evenly dispersed among the population ?
Since the Constitution of the United States requires that all electoral districts for the House be defined geographically, there's nothing to be done about it. On the other hand, the only 'minority'* I can think of that is evenly distributed throughout the population is women. Who, well, it turns out
do have a problem getting represented; we have debates on women's health issues in committees in Congress where
no women are present.
But we can't fix that without drastically, radically changing the Constitution in a way that very few Americans actually feel any desire for.
*In the sociological sense of the word 'minority.'
What if the algorithm tried to draw districts to group people of similar incomes together ?
Poor people inside a city and poor people on a farm have very different interests.
I'm not sure if it's even possible to have a way to define districts that is 'fair' enough for my satisfaction under a first past the post system.
In that case, revise your expectations. Or privately draft a document on your opinions about 'best' government... but then recognize no real nation will suddenly shout "hurrah!" and adopt your dream constitution overnight.
Siege wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:Well, the argument is that the very existence of the media as we know it, as opposed to the media of the '70s and earlier, has changed the dynamic.
Sure 24 hours a day news channels have changed the dynamic. So have the Internet, smart phones and a host of other things. What I am disputing is that the media are at the core of the problem, because I don't think that they are.
Fair enough.
It's reasonable to argue that a stupid electorate is the root of the problem. Me, I tend to try to figure out
how the electorate got so stupid. People are not, on the whole, actually less educated or intelligent than they were thirty or forty years ago. Not even in the US. So I look for external forces that might explain why we're not using our damn brains.
See, this is the bit I disagree with. I think you're drawing the wrong conclusion. Because media would not build up an issue for days, much less weeks, when there wasn't an audience that gobbles that shit up for such extended periods of time. In commercial media ratings are king: you don't sell advertisements if you don't have an audience, and in a world where there's 55 channels or more to zap to with the press of a button it's more difficult than ever draw in and retain that audience...
The problem therefore isn't the media, it's the audience. Because without the audience, the media wouldn't exist at all. And the only way to change the audience is by educating it, not by berating the media it consumes.
Hm. My perception is that the modern form of news media has played a large role in miseducating and de-educating Americans on how government is supposed to work. There are now thirtysomethings and fortysomethings who've basically grown up on a diet of wingnut talk radio that tells them everything they know or believe about how politics and the owrld work.
BUT that is a perception based on history, not a perception about how to fix things.