I remember a story I told out of Stockton, California, last year. A local blog that trafficked in misinformation was filling the hole left behind by the city’s newspaper. That blog became the go-to source for much of the community. And some of its work was honest, but it also trafficked in racist memes and manufactured political scandals. I remember one official who lost his election because of these lies. He told me that he knocked on 4,000 doors. Even people who knew him told him, "I like you, but I’m reading all this stuff online and I’m not sure." He warned that Stockton was a harbinger of what could happen nationally. He warned that lies will become the truth if something isn’t done about disinformation. The demonization of fact-based journalism and the slow blurring of lines between truth and fiction is sinister; a very effective way, in my opinion, to decimate democracy and stifle our ability to hold those in power to account. It's worth noting that before I reported on that official in Stockton, the first person telling stories about that local blog was a reporter from CapRadio, an NPR station in Sacramento. |
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