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THE MEDIA CARES ABOUT TRUMP'S EFFECT ON BUSINESS MORE THAN IT CARES ABOUT HIS EFFECT ON DEMOCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS

  

Category:  Op/Ed

Via:  john-russell  •  2 days ago  •  4 comments

THE MEDIA CARES ABOUT TRUMP'S EFFECT ON BUSINESS MORE THAN IT CARES ABOUT HIS EFFECT ON DEMOCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS
Our major media outlets don't think they need a front-page tab for democracy and human rights in America, even though that's a subject that needs to be covered every day now. There's good work being done on this subject in most major news outlets, but it's needs to be forced onto the front page, and often it doesn't linger for very long.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


nomoremister.blogspot.com   /2025/04/the-media-cares-about-trumps-effect-on.html

THE MEDIA CARES ABOUT TRUMP'S EFFECT ON BUSINESS MORE THAN IT CARES ABOUT HIS EFFECT ON DEMOCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS


3-4 minutes





Back in February, when I went to my first protests at the Tesla dealership in downtown Manhattan, I was disappointed in the turnout. At one of the demonstrations, only about fifty people showed up. We stood and chanted for an hour in the cold anyway.

And then we got a surprising amount of media coverage.

At first, it wasn't in most major news outlets. It was in publications that focused on business, tech, and cars --   Fast Company ,   The Verge ,   Electrek . But eventually the coverage went national, in a way that protests for Mahmoud Khalil, for instance, haven't.

The Tesla protest movement got attention because it was a   business   story. Our scruffy little band (which became much bigger in the ensuing weeks) threatened the financial well-being of rich people, especially the richest man in the world, so our protests mattered.

Flash forward to today. Here's the front page of the   New York Times   website as I type this:

Screenshot%202025-04-13%20120401.png

Here's   The Washington Post :

Screenshot%202025-04-13%20120316.png

Tariffs are a huge story right now, but they're not the   only   story. Right now the Trump regime is   dishonestly insisting   that it can't do anything to extricate a wrongly renditioned man from a Salvadoran torture prison, in defiance of the Supreme Court and lower federal courts. The Department of Homeland Security has just   told   a number of people, including at least one U.S. citizen, that they should self-deport. Harvard professors are   suing   the Trump regime over threats to cut billions in federal aid. Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez just   denounced oligarchy in front of a crowd estimated at 36,000 people   in Los Angeles.

And that's just a partial list of current news stories. But at the   Times   and the   Post , the important news is tariffs, tariffs, tariffs.

The media cares what happens to rich people. News about business reaches a large audience of well-to-do readers and readers who want to be well-to-do someday. That's why there's a lot of business coverage in the most prestigious news outlets, and there are many publications devoted to business.

The media cares somewhat less about what happens to ordinary citizens. Every major newspaper has a section devoted to business, and a permanent "Business" tab on the website, but none have sections devoted to issues affecting working people. Labor issues don't get daily coverage, the way they did fifty years ago.

Our major media outlets don't think they need a front-page tab for democracy and human rights in America, even though that's a subject that needs to be covered every day now. There's good work being done on this subject in most major news outlets, but it's needs to be forced onto the front page, and often it doesn't linger for very long.

For those of us who oppose Trump, there's a lesson here: The media cares about money a lot more than it cares about human rights. So we need to keep protesting Tesla. We need to talk about the way Trump is damaging the economy. And we should accept the reality that while we also need to talk about Trump's horrific human rights abuses, they'll probably never get as much attention as a fluctuation in the bond market or a trade deal that changes the price of an iPhone. That sucks, but that's reality.



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JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JohnRussell    2 days ago

totally correct

 
 
 
Robert in Ohio
Professor Guide
2  Robert in Ohio    2 days ago

John

It seems that people are willing eat a lot of crap and endure a lot crap, if only they are making a buck!

 
 
 
Dismayed Patriot
Professor Quiet
2.1  Dismayed Patriot  replied to  Robert in Ohio @2    19 hours ago
It seems that people are willing eat a lot of crap and endure a lot crap, if only they are making a buck!

Perhaps those in the MAGAverse will start to pay more attention when they realize their proctologist Dr. Trump has both of his tiny hands on their shoulders... Nah, who am I kidding, they'll just grunt and go back to sleep, you know how much they hate to be woke.

 
 
 
Jack_TX
Professor Quiet
3  Jack_TX    19 hours ago
Back in February, when I went to my first protests at the Tesla dealership in downtown Manhattan, I was disappointed in the turnout. At one of the demonstrations, only about fifty people showed up. We stood and chanted for an hour in the cold anyway.

Tell me you're a complete raving nutjob without telling me you're a complete raving nutjob. jrSmiley_86_smiley_image.gif

We need to talk about the way Trump is damaging the economy.

Or.... you could leave that to people who understand it.

 
 

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