The Flood of Trivial Information is More Deleterious Than Authoritarian Controls
...in the Age of Television, our information environment is completely different from what it was in 1783; that we have less to fear from government restraints than from television glut; that, in fact, we have no way of protecting ourselves from information disseminated by corporate America; and that, therefore, the battles for liberty must be fought on different terrains from where they once were.
For example, I would venture the opinion that the traditional civil libertarian opposition to the banning of books from school libraries and from school curricula is now largely irrelevant. Such acts of censorship are annoying, of course, and must be opposed. But they are trivial. Even worse, they are distracting, in that they divert civil libertarians from confronting those questions that have to do with the claims of new technologies. To put it plainly, a student's freedom to read is not seriously injured by someone's banning a book on LongIsland or in Anaheim or anyplace else. But as Gerbner suggests, television clearly does impair the student's freedom to read, and it does so with innocent hands, so to speak. Television does not ban books, it simply displaces them.
The fight against censorship is a nineteenth-century issue which was largely won in the twentieth. What we are confronted with now is the problem posed by the economic and symbolic structure of television. Those who run television do not limit our access to information but in fact widen it. Our Ministry of Culture is Huxleyan, not Orwellian. It does everything possible to encourage us to watch continuously. But what we watch is a medium which presents information in a form that renders it simplistic, nonsubstantive, nonhistorical and noncontextual; that is to say, information packaged as entertainment. In America, we are never denied the opportunity to amuse ourselves.
Notes:
Folksonomies: new media critical theory media literacy
Taxonomies:
/law, govt and politics/politics (0.885315)
/society/unrest and war (0.717610)
/law, govt and politics/government/government contracting and procurement (0.647282)
Concepts:
Libertarianism (0.923512): dbpedia_resource
Civil liberties (0.920616): dbpedia_resource
Liberty (0.849539): dbpedia_resource
United States (0.833250): dbpedia_resource
Authoritarianism (0.821756): dbpedia_resource
Acts of the Apostles (0.795809): dbpedia_resource
Technology (0.665557): dbpedia_resource
Mass media (0.574600): dbpedia_resource




