Comic Strip of the Day

CSotD: Amusing ourselves to (other people’s) death

Bo121119
Matt Bors on the lack of substance in American news coverage, and the lack of background with which we face the world.

I was streaming an Eddie Izzard concert the other day and was struck by a very funny throwaway line. He was saying something or other about the world and paused to interject, "You do know there are other countries?"

And it got a big laugh, but, then, of course it would. We're always willing to laugh at references to people who care about the Kardashians and Honey Boo Boo, because those other people, those ones over there, are so obsessed with foolishness.

Those other people! They are so superficial and stupid!

The only thing more obnoxious than someone who knows all about the Real Housewives and Billy the Exterminator are the people who proudly announce that they have no idea who these people are.

Oh, spare me.

I don't watch the stuff, but I see the promos. I also shop for groceries, which makes knowing something about the Kardashians pretty unavoidable. 

Samuel Johnson praised his friend and editor, Elizabeth Carter, saying that she "could make a pudding as well as translate Epictetus from the Greek, and work a handkerchief as well as compose a poem."

Being a well-rounded citizen of the world is nothing to be ashamed of, and that includes, among other things, knowing what a substantial number of people are talking about, even if it's something foolish.

And especially if it's not. 

Which brings us to Gaza and the media. 

A Facebook friend observed that he thought it showed unfair bias for someone in the media to have said that Hamas was "lobbing" rockets into Israel, but I responded that, while "launched" would be more neutral in tone, the lack of guidance and telemetry in these rockets does make the term "lob" fairly accurate. 

That's not politics. It's simply an observation based on the number of rockets launched compared to the number of buildings hit and injuries inflicted. The Qassam is a somewhat advanced bottle rocket: You fire it off and it goes somewhere and blows up.

Hamas has recently acquired some better rockets from Iran, but I don't know how much of an improvement they are. When more than 1,400 rockets result in three deaths, you have to question not just the efficiency of the rockets and the rocketeers, but the level of response they evoke.

"Targeting the homes of suspected militants" sounds a lot more like an act of revenge than a well-considered counterstrike.

But, whatever the relative merits of the militants, the Israeli army and the people in the middle, and whatever Matt's motivation for the cartoon, my motivation for re-posting it is this: You can't have an intelligent discussion when people are so cocooned within their four walls that they have absolutely no background.

And if a half-hour newscast spends most of that limited airtime talking about General Petraeus's penis and the on-again-off-again demise of the Twinkie, you're not providing viewers with the kind of perspective they need to analyze what is going on in other countries.

Some of which, in the grand scheme of things, actually matters more than extramarital coochy-coochy and creme-filled snack cakes.

The resulting lack of any background on the world not only leaves viewers vulnerable to the manipulation of both Israeli and Palestinian claims, but to all sorts of inaccurate, self-interested storytelling about Iran's nuclear capabilities, about the attack in Benghazi, about climate change, about the relative quality of our educational system, about nearly anything that requires them to know how the rest of the world functions.

Fat, drunk and stupid is no way to go through life. And it's sure no way to develop a competent electorate to govern and oversee the most powerful nation in the world.

But if you keep putting the free Jagermeister and cheeseburgers out on the counter, you really can't feign surprise over the results.

 

Matt's Kickstarter campaign has one more day to go. He's reached his goals, but you can still pledge and get yourself on the mailing list for copies of his books and other goodies.

Mike Peterson has posted his "Comic Strip of the Day" column every day since 2010. His opinions are his own, but we welcome comments either agreeing or in opposition.

Previous Post
Bill Watterson Original Calvin & Hobbes sells for $203k
Next Post
David Pope sweeps three categories including Cartoonist of Year

Comments 5

  1. It makes me think about “bread and circus”, and “the opiate of the masses”…
    We all want to be entertained by simple and enjoyable things, be it sports or scandals or other silly stuff. Even the people that do know about Gaza, or climate change, or other important stuff. We care more about the results of our favourite team than about people that die in some far away place.

  2. Problem is, we’re running out of “far away places.” And in most countries, the news organizations assume it.
    Though American cultural hegemony is a bit of an embarrassment … I’m often aghast to hear how our most insipid crap is part of life for people in Australia, South Africa and other places that I’d like to think had more interesting things to ponder of an evening after dinner.

  3. A nice merging of science and religion, Sherwood, because the question “Who is my neighbor?” has proven one of the more vexing in the New Testament — that is, there was a clear answer given by He Whom We Should Worship, but it was nothing anyone wanted to actually put into practice. And, yes, there is an interdependancy.
    On the other hand, our being able to get it all into one photo today does not change the practical distances that existed in the past, some of which had to do with physical travel and some of which were related to communication, because, until recently, there was little difference between the two.
    (And, if you insist on taking an astronomer’s perspective, that difference is almost immeasurably recent.)
    I used to use a Nast cartoon on the death of James Garfield in my presentation on political cartoons, and I would point out to the kids that we didn’t have radio and TV in those days, and the news of the president’s condition came once or twice a day, not every fifteen minutes.
    Moreover, I don’t think the post-Civil War notion of One Big Country had really kicked in yet, and people were not obsessed with the goings-on in Washington. They were more concerned with their own crops, their local government and the laws coming out of their state house, with the questions of coinage something of an abstraction for politicians and Big Business to quarrel and pontificate over.
    Here’s a major watershed: When the Sino-Japanese War happened in 1894-95, it was more a curiosity than a concern. Three years later, we had Dewey blowing up the Spanish fleet at Manila and now events on that side of the globe began to matter to us.
    IMHO, our entry into global imperialism is not a particularly admirable reason for having gained a wider perspective on these things, but there it was. However, we’d have gained it through the growth of communication even if we weren’t intent on sucking up everything we could reach with that advancing technology and corresponding shrinkage of distances, real and metaphorical.

  4. Off-topic, but spurred by your observations on the recent nature of instant communication:
    I like to point out to my students that we may be living in a very remarkable, short interval in the history of the species — one in which it is at least theoretically possible to have a real-time conversation with any other member of the species.
    If we ever do have human outposts on Mars or beyond, the finite speed of light (or any other form of electromagnetic radiation, such as radio) will make such conversations impossible. At a minimum for Earth-Mars communication, the delay between message sent and reply received will be eight minutes, and could be up to 40. Not exactly conducive to lively banter.

Comments are closed.

Search

Subscribe to our newsletter

Get a daily recap of the news posted each day.