Monday, December 10, 2007

Journal 2-5 Max Bardowell 12-10-07

The Power of Editing

Answer to last entry’s question:

Since the late 1960s, Flint has suffered from disinvestment, deindustrialization, and depopulation. Initially, this took the form of the "white flight" that afflicted many American towns and cities, but the decline was exacerbated by the 1973 oil crisis and subsequent collapse of the U.S. auto industry. In the 1980s, the rate of deindustrialization accelerated with local GM employment falling from a 1978 high of 80,000 to under 23,000 by the late 1990s. Many factors have been blamed, including Reaganomics, outsourcing and exporting jobs abroad and to non-union facilities, unionization, exorbitant overhead, globalization, and most recently, a dramatic decline in General Motors sales. These rationales are often strictly applied along lines of political orientation, and labor remains the most divisive and polarizing local issue.

The recent decline was highlighted in the film Roger and Me by Michael Moore (the title refers to Roger B. Smith, the CEO of General Motors during the 1980s). Also highlighted in Moore's documentary was the failure of city officials to reverse the trends with entertainment options (e.g. Six Flags' AutoWorld) during the 1980s. Moore, a native of the area, revisited Flint in his later movies, including Bowling for Columbine and Fahrenheit 9/11.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flint,_Michigan


While I was working on the documentary due in place of our midterm exam for ethics class, I received a unique lesson on the effects documentary filmmakers have on their subject’s reputations, and how debilitating the films they produce could be for said individuals. It was a lesson I could not have gotten while in the class room, as I had to feel the power of the camera for myself and experience what it is truly like when you control the images of others, especially when there is no moral limit on what you are allowed to do. As I was experimenting with Windows Movie meker and some of its features with the interview footage we had acquired, I began to form the outline for a “test trailer” of sorts, one that would eventually evolve into a full lenth trailer, although our group would later decide against using the clip, for fear of how many of the teachers would react. The trailer begins with this message, contrasted in white lettering over a black screen, “Throughout our time as students we have gotten the same safe, tactful messages when we have asked our teachers about drugs.” From there it cuts to a series of frames where Mr. Doyle comically states those same, iconic messages we have received over the years, in a deep, cartoonish voice, “Drugs are bad. Drinking’s Bad. Smoking’s Bad.” His statements are said nervously, almost in an attempt to diffuse the earlier question, which was one regarding the legalization of marijuana, although the viewer never sees the question, so it seems as if Mr. Doyle is making light of the situation.

The next screen of text shows a new message, again in black and white, “What if we knew the truth?” This implies that the teachers have been misleading us or with withholding information about the drug issue from us as students. The trailer then shows Wil Gould asking Mrs. Mansfield the question, “Have you ever had any personal experiences with the drug?” The trailer then cuts to Mrs. Mansfield doing a reenactment of a time when her brother was high on marijuana. It is accurate, and she displays many of the typical stereotypes that define the traditional image of a “stoner”, including cliché phrases such as “open your mind, man.”, and, “expands your mind.” The way the trailer is cut though implies that Mrs. Mansfield is drawing from her own personal experiences to answer the question, which is unethical, and could have negative repercussions for her as a teacher of high school students.

Although my group prudently decided against using the trailer, it still shows how much power filmmakers have over the images of their subjects. It is a scary thought.


Question: What editing software does Michael Moore use for his films?

Monday, December 3, 2007

Journal 2-4 Max Bardowell 12-3-07















Micheal Moore- Justified?

Answer to last entry’s question:

By the end of 2004, the U.S. government claimed that two-thirds of the top leaders of al-Qaeda from 2001 were in custody (including Ramzi bin al-Shibh, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, Abu Zubaydah, Saif al Islam el Masry, and Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri) or dead (including Mohammed Atef). Despite the capture or death of many senior al-Qaeda operatives, the U.S. government continues to warn that the organization is not yet defeated, and battles between U.S. forces and al-Qaeda-related groups continue.

In the meantime, autonomous regional branches of al-Qaeda continue to emerge around the world.

Since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, average yearly incidence of attacks world-wide have increased by 607 percent. 91 percent of foreign policy experts say the world is becoming more dangerous for Americans and the United States, according to a survey conducted by the Center for American Progress and Foreign Policy. 84 percent of those experts believe that the U.S. military is not winning the war on terror, and 92 percent believe that the war is further endangering U.S. security.


While I was unfortunately sick for our previous two class meetings, I was able to watch the first minutes of Fahrenheit 9-11. It seems to be more of Michael Moore’s traditional filmmaking, using every unethical and immoral weapon he has at his disposal to distort the truth behind the narrative of the film. While his films are entertaining and at times very humorous, they leave a signature bad taste in my mouth, as if I have just watched some sort of B rate horror film and I couldn’t properly follow the script. Knowing what I know from this class about the methods he employs has distracted me from hearing the true messages behind his films. In his frenzy to exploit the American public, Moore has vilified his own character, pulling the audience away from his view point, which might not be wrong, if we could only see it in clear, un-muddied English, not through the grainy focus of his camera lens. He might have some good points, if I could only respect him as a documentary filmmaker and as a human being. At first glance it seems he has quite simply taken a noble profession with a history of provoking change and covered it in controversy and criticism. But is there more to his results?

Though his methods are untrustworthy, they have perhaps instilled some change, maybe not in the broader issues that he confronts, maybe not even in the main issues he focuses on, but within an instance of urban decay that is most likely held very deep in Moore's heart. Perhaps there is still some good that can come from Michael Moore? A recent article in The Economist, a British weekly news magazine, sited Michael Moore’s film as a possible prompter of change in the community of Flint, Michigan, as Moore spends a good amount of time profiling Flint’s economic and social problems in his documentary, Bowling For Columbine. The community, which could possibly see an economic turnaround, seems to be improving, due mostly to the dedicated work of a few devoted citizens, but possibly in part due to the publicity gained by the city’s presence in Moore’s film. Hopefully, the city can breathe again.

The article is below.

Question: What is the history of Flint’s economic depression?


Back from the dead

Oct 25th 2007 | From The Economist print edition

CLEVELAND AND FLINT

Glimmers of hope in two of America's industrial cities

FLINT, Buffalo, Dayton, Saginaw—for years these names have read like tombstones in the graveyard of America's rustbelt. But something is changing in Flint, Michigan, the symbol of industrial gloom. Like other rustbelt cities, Flint's population rose on the back of manufacturing (Flint was the birthplace of General Motors). Then came the white exodus to the suburbs and deindustrialisation, with Flint's ruin made famous in a film by Michael Moore. Flint's population is now just more than half what it was in 1960. One-third of its residents are officially poor.

But there are glints of progress, and not just because GM is building a new factory. Construction workers are beginning to transform the downtown area. There is a heated contest for mayor: Dayne Walling, a Flint-born Rhodes scholar brimming with good ideas, is challenging Don Williamson, the incumbent, in November's election. Flint is trying to chart its own course. And it is not alone. A faint spirit of change is wafting through some of the rustbelt's grimmest streets.

Scholars at the Brookings Institution, a Washington, DC, think-tank, argue that America's old industrial cities can indeed rise again. Big cities such as New York and Chicago have experienced a rebirth, thanks in part to fine mayors and a surge of immigration and new business in the 1990s. Most rustbelt cities have had a more modest revival or none at all. But urban optimists insist that the renaissance can spread: cities are the natural centres of the new knowledge economy and will only grow more appealing to young people and ageing baby-boomers, who want amenities near their homes.

Still, there is much work to be done. Key to any revival are basic improvements: a city must be safe, its rubbish collected, its schools adequate. How to make a city viable in the long term is an unresolved question. But a few places are trying to provide answers.

An early task is to address the physical problems. Some 16m people live in America's old industrial cities; they will not stay if their downtowns look abandoned. In Flint a shrinking population and high foreclosure rates (not a new trend in this town) mean you can hardly go a block without seeing a decrepit house. Blighted buildings are like cancerous cells: they spread crime and lower nearby property values, gnawing away at Flint's shrunken tax base. Many cities share this problem. In Youngstown, Ohio, the mayor plans to tear down blighted areas so he can save threatened but still viable neighbourhoods.

A small band in Flint is following a less radical but still imaginative strategy. Dan Kildee, the county treasurer, founded a land bank in 2002 that acquires abandoned buildings through foreclosure, then readies them to be sold and returned to the tax rolls. The bank, which won Harvard's innovation award in September, claims to have increased property values by more than $112m so far.

Also in Flint are LISC, part of a national non-profit group that channels grants and loans toward community work, and Uptown Developments, which is using so-called “baklava financing”—layers of private investment, loans, grants, federal and state tax credits—to build residential lofts as well as retail and office space downtown. Together, these groups are trying to make Flint liveable, a city that might lure a start-up or retain its students after graduation. Mr Williamson has helped by repaving hundreds of miles of roads. Mr Walling, if elected, plans to harness this work under a broader plan for downtown, its surrounding neighbourhoods, three local colleges and medical centres.

The physical task is serious enough. Addressing the rustbelt's structural economic problems is a much thornier question. Cleveland is slowly experiencing the physical renaissance sought in Flint, with new museums, a university building designed by Frank Gehry, a plan to reclaim the lakefront and another to improve transport between downtown and a hub of universities and hospitals. But to tackle its larger economic woes, the city is tying its fate to the rest of north-east Ohio.

Making use of the hinterland

A more regional approach can benefit not only inner cities, but their surroundings as well. For decades cities and suburbs have competed for jobs, residents and state and federal aid to ill effect. To change this, the Fund for Economic Future, an alliance of foundations in north-east Ohio, worked with civic and business leaders from 16 counties to launch a regional scheme in March. The plan includes supporting companies that build on local strengths, such as Cleveland's universities and medical centres (the Cleveland Clinic is America's leading hospital for cardiac care), and improving workforce training for high-tech manufacturing, health care and other understaffed sectors.

The Fund is also exploring ways for the region's various governments (754 in all) to share revenue and rationalise services. Tax-sharing schemes have helped other struggling cities, including Dayton, Ohio and Rochester, New York. Cleveland and some surrounding towns have already agreed to split taxes from businesses that move within the area; in exchange, Cleveland is providing water services.

These schemes to revive Flint, Cleveland and cities like them are making progress, but it is slow and uneven. Improvements in Cleveland in the 1990s were then threatened by recession, and the subprime crisis has not helped. Jennifer Vey of Brookings argues that local efforts could be bolstered by state support, which has been meagre. She points to Pennsylvania as a state with a strong urban agenda—Pennsylvania has the advantage of a governor, Ed Rendell, who was mayor of Philadelphia.

Even the most avid urban optimist does not expect these cities, having declined for decades, to recover overnight. Flint's home prices dropped by a startling 21% so far this year. On a recent afternoon in Cleveland, a “Believe in Cleveland” banner was matched by a nearby beggar with a sign that just read “Hungry”. But there are hints of progress where there was none. William McMickens, a cab driver and son of a factory worker in Cleveland, pointed to construction along Euclid Avenue: “When this is done, the whole city is going to change.” In these cities, long left for dead, a hard hat is a sign of hope.


Saturday, November 24, 2007

Journal 2-3 Max Bardowell 11-24-07

Al Qaeda- A New Enemy

Answer to last entry’s question: I could not find a full biography of Stephen Greenstreet, the Director of This Divided Sate, but I did discover that he has directed two documentaries in addition to This Divided State and he has been involved in the production of over a dozen other documentaries.


Al Qaeda, the Base, the sum of American fears. They are a new form of enemy, one which does not have a traditional form of organization which we are used to combating, but is fluid, and adaptive, and draws it resources directly from the people themselves. Because it is fueled by the passions and movements of the people, it is lasting and hard to eliminate and track. That is why Al Qaeda is scary, because they cannot be seen. Yes, they have leadership and front-men, but their attacks and soldiers remain unpredictable and invisible. How do we fight them?

First we must understand them. It is a difficult task, as they are a people very different both in religion, politics, and culture, but we must first know our enemy before we are able to defeat them or, if possible, reconcile our differences and achieve a lasting peace. It is a challenge that has been compared to Martin Luther King’s uniting of the Black and White people of America during the civil rights movement in the 1960’s, for how do you convince someone that is ready to kill you for your beliefs not only to listen to you, but to see you first as a human, and second as an American or a Christian. We have a long and rough road ahead of us, and our fates will be decided not by our strength of arms but by our willingness to listen and our ability to hope.


Question: What is the current state of Al Qaeda?

Monday, November 19, 2007

Journal 2-2 Max Bardowell 11-19-07

This Divided State

Answer to last entry’s question: The Student Press Law Center, the American Civil Liberties Union, and the First Amendment Center all have valuable resources that students can use if they fear they have been victimized by censorship.


To put it lightly, I was very troubled by what I saw in the documentary in this Divided State. When the petty political divisions of our nation spill over into a collegiate arena, and threaten one of the most treasured freedoms in our nation, it is certainly cause for alarm no matter to who you owe your political allegiances. To compare the situation surrounding the Utah Valley State College speakers to a media blackout in a totalitarian regime is not far fetched, and this fact alone is disturbing. By silencing the views of others we deny knowledge to ourselves, hindering our development, not only as individuals, but as a nation as a whole. It is a gross manipulation of our constitutional rights and cannot be allowed, lest we be included among the less developed countries of the world.

It was ironic that a citizen’s rights to free speech would be challenged within a community of higher education, an institution founded upon the principles of freedom of expression and the communication of ideas. It is also ironic that those who denounced Michael Moore’s right to talk on religious grounds, did so while under the protection of the first amendment. They acted against the very law that gave them the ability to do so. Such half hearted hypocrisy, betrays their true ignorance of America’s founding ideologies. Forgive my harsh words, but this is one issue that truly makes me angry.

Question: Who produced and directed This Divided State? What is their educational and political background?

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Journal 2-1 Max Bardowell 11-13-07

The First Amendment

Answer to last entry’s question: the act of moving forward (as toward a goal)

The issue of 1st amendment rights has laced American history from the most potent civil rights movement to the most petty office strike. Free speech saturates the American ideal, freedom of expression is as essential to our way of life as every blinking traffic light. Still these rights are questioned and challenged yearly, and, when the press is concerned, the very functionality of our democracy is confronted, and we must decide between censorship and truth.

Recently at the NSPA conference in Philadelphia, I was able to attend several sessions that discussed the nature of debates surrounding 1st amendment issues, and one in particular stood out. In 2002, 18-year-old Joseph Frederick was suspended from the high school where he was a senior after he displayed a banner reading "BONG HiTS 4 JESUS" across the street from the school in Juneau, Alaska, during the Winter Olympics torch relay. This event evolved into the case of Morse v. Frederick, in which the Supreme Court of the United States held that a school principal may, consistent with the First Amendment, restrict student speech at a school event when that speech is reasonably viewed as promoting illegal drug use. As Frederick was at a school sanctioned event, and his sign was clearly a reference to illegal drugs, the schools decision was viewed as justified.

The decision did somewhat limit my rights as a student journalist, however, unless I am planning to promote the use of illegal drugs, I can see no instance where this event can be sued to censor my writing. Fortunately, the staff at James River is very open about the student publications, and the Principle has a strictly hands off policy when it come to prior review. That is an uncommon luxury, and our newspaper has no problem in taking full advantage of that fact.

Question: What resources are available to support students victimized by censorship?

Monday, October 29, 2007

Journal 1-7 Max Bardowell 10-29-07

Progress

Answer to last entry’s question: Three.

I have always believed that we, as a nation, need a very progressive president, not necessary with any strong political alliances, but a very progressive and innovative mentality about running the nation and developing policies to better the people. Our nation cannot be held down by traditionalist mindsets any longer. We must break free from the tyranny of repetition. We must challenge the established practices and question the current methods of both our politicians and our diplomats. Only then can we move forward. This ideology unfortunately tends to favor a more Democratic viewpoint as opposed to a Republican one, however, it will take the united strength of both parties to create the kind of progressive change that is needed to drastically jumpstart the heart of our governmental systems.

Fortunately, the change has already started. With the flourishing growth of the internet and the inclusion of it and youtube into the presidential spectrum, we are seeing both technology and intuitive new ways of leveling the presidential races enter into our political fields. Still, we must not forget that to sacrifice the needs of the people to force a mindset committed to progression will not create lasting change. It is imperative that at the end of the day we still remember that a politician can consider himself truly victorious if he has only succeeded in making one single person’s day a little brighter. In the end, it’s all about helping others, together, with the strength of a unified government and a devoted populous.

Question: What is the definition of progression?

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Journal 1-6 Max Bardowell 10-20-07

For The Greater Good


Answer to last entry’s question: There is some debate over which publication was the first newspaper because the definition of a newspaper has been flexible. In ancient Rome, acta diurna, or government announcement bulletins, were made public by Julius Caesar. They were carved on stone or metal and posted in public places. During the Tang dynasty in China (618-906), the Kai Yuan Za Bao also published government news; it was painted on silk and mostly read by government officials. However, the World Association of Newspapers recognizes Johann Carolus’s Relation aller Fürnemmen und gedenckwürdigen Historie, published in 1605, as the world’s first newspaper. The Dutch Courante uyt Italien, Duytslandt, &c. of 1618 is also considered by some to be the first modern newspaper since the Relation looks more like a book than what is now considered a newspaper. The newspaper Opregte Haarlemsche Courant from Harlem, first published in 1656, is considered by some to be the oldest continuously published newspaper, though it was forced to merge with the newspaper Haarlems Dagblad in 1942 by the German occupier. Since then the Harlems Dagblad appears with the subtitle Oprechte Haerlemse Courant 1656 and considers itself to be the oldest still-publishing newspaper in the world.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newspaper

The world is, with each passing day, becoming more and more volatile. This is not due to an increase of violence; in fact the world has certainly seen worse times. Entire continents and cultures have warred for millennia, and every time a border manifests itself regardless of whether it is linguistic, geographical, religious, or cultural, it soon grows red hot with conflict. Unity on a global scale seems impossible, while unity within a smaller social or cultural group is relatively common, thus we have many small groups of devoted followers all thrown in together, and the results are present in every daily international news headline. It seems that human nature dictates that we fight and die for our principles, consequently we find both our greatest strength and our greatest weakness. But the world has always operated in this way. So why is the world more dangerous? The world is more volatile, simply because it has grown smaller.

While this carries a certain seed of optimism, humanity does not easily cooperate under the same roof. We will undoubtedly soon find ourselves in situations when we must resort to the justification that it was done for the greater good. A worthy example is the Iran- Contra incident, as Lt. Col. Oliver North was forced to make questionable decisions based on the hope that his actions benefited the grater good, in this case the good being the hostages kept prisoner in Iran. But, is this in fact a truly justifiable founding principle for our culture? Can we hide our morals under the sheen of this generalized statement? What actions are we willing to take in order to protect American lives? These are questions which we will have to answer in the coming years if we are to maintain both our moral conscience and our national security. How far are we willing to go?

Question: How many hostages did North’s actions truly save?

Monday, October 15, 2007

Journal 1-5 Max Bardowell 10-15-07

"Outfoxed" An Industry in Uproar


Answer to Last Entry’s Question:

  • medianation.umb.edu
  • mediamatters.org
  • newswatch.org
  • mediaresearch.org


I was very intrigued by the flow of discussion that too place in the class after the completion of the “Outfoxed” documentary. Not only did the class talk about the nature of corruption and bias in the media, but the conversation reached a new level of complexity when we began to look at the debate from an industry wide perspective and began to apply the logic of the “pendulum effect” to the circumstances of the issue. The class reasoned that Fox’s allegiances to the conservative mindset will eventually force change within the information industry. The public will confront the issue and realize that perhaps the press needs more balanced perspectives, causing them to shift their viewing to other, more respectable news organizations. This would then become a perfect example of what a truly magnificent self-maintaining and self-regulating machine the industry is, as each boundary and standard is governed by the eyes of the people themselves and thus constantly buffeted by both change and innovation. The people never stop advancing. We are too impatient to stagnate. While I do not believe that advocates of ethical journalism should ever stop keeping news organizations in check, I do believe that the system itself will eventually correct any flaws through a consensual determination to change it by the people. They will simply stop watching. We are a proud group, and much of the American public is disgusted by lies and indecency. That fact alone should ensure that our press will remain, on the whole, a pure source of information.

Question: How long have newspapers been in existence?

Sunday, October 7, 2007

Journal 1-4 Max Bardowell 10-7-07

Unethical Media Editing Practices


Answer to Last Entry's Question: While I couldn’t find an exact listing of government sponsored charities, I did find a list of the largest charities by revenue. Please donate.

Mayo Foundation

YMCAs in the United States

United Way

Cleveland Clinic Foundation

Catholic Charities USA

American National Red Cross

Salvation Army

Goodwill Industries International

New York-Presbyterian Hospital

The Arc of the United States

http://www.forbes.com/2005/11/18/largest-charities-ratings_05charities_land.html



Over the past weeks of reviewing documentaries and national news media clips, a new question has begun to evolve: What is reality? It seems to me that much of the information that reaches us through mainstream media is tainted, each image presented with a systematic intent, every word laced with bias and diverted focus.

We are a nation troubled by the same laws that secure our freedoms. Free Speech. Freedom of the Press. Right to assembly. All provide us with the necessary tools to maintain an effective form of democracy, and yet, these same freedoms, if corrupted, can threaten to destroy us as easily as the rigors of oppressed freedom. A war rages beneath the surface of mass media, and the American public is caught in the cross fires of a hundred firefights. While many media releases are altered, these techniques were not as much stumbled upon as they were investigated and uncovered through countless hours of analysis and scrutiny by many experts in the communications field. The sophistication of the various altering techniques is matched only by that of the systems developed to stop them. Using advanced tools such as digital manipulation detecting computer algorithms and vast research databanks full of previous media editing infractions, these media “watchdogs” have been able to see through the petty methods that lace a once honorable field.

Hopefully, with a devotion to the ideas of our constitution, without mutilating them to serve as functions of profitability, we will learn that all our stories and narratives ever need to sell is, in fact, the one most compelling motivator of inspiration and wonder on the planet after all: Truth.


Question: What are some popular media “Watchdog” websites?

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Journal 1-3 Max Bardowell 10/2/07

“It’s a Wonderful World.”


Answer to Last Entry's Question: Moore was brought up Roman Catholic and attended St. John's Elementary School for primary school, as well as a Diocesan seminary at age 14. He then attended Davison High School, where he was active in both drama and debate, graduating in 1972.


After dropping out of the
University of Michigan-Flint (where he wrote for the student newspaper The Michigan Times) and working for a day at the General Motors plant, at 22 he founded the alternative weekly magazine The Flint Voice, which soon changed its name to The Michigan Voice as it expanded to cover the entire state, which Moore later regretted. In 1986, when Moore became the editor of Mother Jones, a liberal political magazine, he moved to California and The Michigan Voice was shut down. Moore stayed at the magazine for only a short while, before working for Ralph Nader.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Moore#Biography



The messages displayed in Michael Moore’s “Its a wonderful world” montage bring into light the question of whether the United States should have the right to, in essence, police the world. This is not a newly created question, as shortly after the enduring success of the Iraq War became doubted, many had lasting emotional feelings as to whether the US can “meddle” in the affairs of other countries, and the debate carried over into the subsequent elections and has now permeated the critical arguments against the foreign policy of the Bush administration. Historically though, the US, and the world for that matter, has followed the established patterns of a pendulum in full swing, and perhaps the next administration to come to power will no longer take an active role in the preservation of US interests abroad, whether they be the preservation of human rights or the security of national natural resource reserves. It is nearly impossible to predict whether adopting the “isolationism” methodology of Washington will prove in the best interests of the US, but I will dare to predict what its impact will be around the world.

We are a species of extreme contradiction, a people laced with paradox, and that fact seems to define us far more readily than the alternative. Across the breadth of our history, the same neighbors we warred with last century have become this century’s economic allies. Those we live side by side with in one country we call enemies in others. The religion that drives one man to his knees in servitude is the heresy of another. Conflict exists in the same trailing moments as peace. The spinning, ignited filaments of our collective conscious can not be contained in a single line of pulsing life. We are beings of motion, we are not creatures of limit, always an unnatural fusion of many lives, many ideals. We seem to thrive on the defiance of natural law, the rejection of the balance and harmony instilled upon us by this world. It gives us our humanity. As much as we struggle and slaughter and convert, we do need each other. As much as the US’s interference in the world is debated, we do many good things. To remove that desire to bolster another’s spirit is to sin against our most basic instincts. We can not stop helping. It is as solid in our minds as the bedrock of this earth, and it must be preserved at all costs. So, no matter how much the nation changes this election year, hold on to that thought, cling, like the thirsty, high-mountain plant, to the folds of its logic, the pathos embedded in its message. It is our identity. It makes us whole.

Question: What are the top ten charities sponsored by the US Government?

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Journal 1-2 Max Bardowell 9/23/07

Fallacies and Media Distortion Techniques

Answer to Last Entry's Question: Propaganda has been a human activity as far back as reliable recorded evidence exists. The Behistun Inscription (c. 515 BC) detailing the rise of Darius I to the Persian throne, can be seen as an early example of propaganda. The Arthashastra written by Chanakya (c. 350 - 283 BC), a professor of political science at Takshashila University and a prime minister of the Maurya Empire, discusses propaganda in detail, such as how to spread propaganda and how to apply it in warfare. His student Chandragupta Maurya (c. 340 - 293 BC), founder of the Maurya Empire, employed these methods during his rise to power. The writings of Romans such as Livy (c. 59 BC - 17 AD) are considered masterpieces of pro-Roman propaganda.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propaganda#History_of_propaganda

After viewing an episode of Michel Moore’s show I began to realize that, no matter how obnoxious his personality or how extravagant his methods, the breadth of his career could be a very relevant example of how effective and balanced a democratic society is. It would seem that the very system of government Moore is criticizing is the same system that allows him to have employment to begin with. His actions represent one if the core values that allow democracy to thrive: freedom of speech. The fact that his voice is heard at all is a very progressive sign for our nation, especially as many of his view points and methods are considered radical or even unethical. As a nation founded on and whose growth has been shaped by the philosophy that one of America’s mandates is to stamp out the fires of oppression and suffocated ideas. For democracy to exist at all it is essential that the entire spectrum of the nation is displayed for the nation to see. This fact has manifested itself all the way from democracy’s humble beginnings within the shining marble halls of Athens, when the voices of all the citizens of the city were able to contribute to the policies being created. This process evolved from the amphitheater to the newspaper, and from the newspaper to the Internet and the world of blogging, and then finally to this year’s presidential debates, where the candidate’s questions were submitted not by a team of political experts who traditionally design the questions to be predictable and one-dimensional, but by the people themselves, through the youtube phenomenon. In order for America to adapt to this new world where the boundaries of nations are blurred and people from across the globe are connected with the touch of a button, we must preserve that fragile system. It is vital to our survival. It is vital to our way of life. Without it we can not survive. Unfortunately, it’s that simple.

Question: Where did Michael Moore receive his education?

Monday, September 17, 2007

Journal 1-1 Max Bardowell 9/17/07

Critical Thinking, Ambiguity, and Loaded Language

After watching and reading both President Bush’s speeches and the Democratic Party’s responses earlier this week, I realized that our media is laced with propaganda. It is subtle, but when a politician’s speech is analyzed or a news clip is explored deeper, it is fairly easy to discern what messages within the text are written to provoke an intended response. While initially I was offended by the governments attempt to influence my mindset without my knowledge, after consideration it seems as though this has been a practice of governments for hundreds of years. Can I blame them for using such an established and effective practice? No, I can not. It is the people who are to blame for providing the fuel for this partly unethical system. As a collective, Americans are highly receptive to forms of perception shifting methods put forth by companies and our government, and it is this national gullibility that provides the motive for said groups.

Propaganda is the deliberate, systematic attempt to shape perceptions, manipulate cognitions, and direct behavior to achieve a response that furthers the desired intent of the propagandist. (wikipedia.com) As a nation we must read through the propaganda and find the reality behind it. If it is in fact spreading lies we must not allow ourselves to succumb to the weak spirited acceptance of everything we hear. We must fight for truth.

Question: How was propaganda created and developed?