I'd like to add a bit more to what I said about this week's blog post:

https://mastodon.social/@Teri_Kanefield/112067724816108715

Invented Narratives and the Outrage Industry

It took me several years to understand what I was seeing.

At first, I thought the problem was Twitter algorithms. I thought that was the explanation for why what I was calling rage-inducing simplifications spread like wildfire.

1/

People so appreciated what I did, that I kept doing it.

I basically followed behind the rage merchants and then showed the truth behind the rage-inducing simplifications.

I could do this because I am trained in the law and I have a good grounding in American legal and political history (for example, I researched and wrote my Making of America series).

I blamed Twitter. I didn't understand what was happening with Cable News shows because I don't watch them.

2/

Over the past 6 months, reading the research of communications scholars, I began to understand.

As I came to understand, I grew testier and testier with what I was seeing.

When what felt like the millionth person would say to me, in an irritated voice, "Teri I agree with you in part, but the truth is that there are never any real consequences," I realized something was deeply wrong.

I wrote my FAQ page explaining. I tried sending people to the pages.

3/

But it was an avalanche.

(Some people complained about the fact that I sent people to my FAQ pages. What am I supposed to do? Answer the same question 1,000 times? Pretend like that garbage has a place in serious discourse?)

I was getting testy because I could see a problem.

It was was dangerous groupthink: dangerous because when thousands of people say the same untrue thing in the same words, something nefarious is happening.

4/

One feature of fasicsm is group chants.

How is "There are never any real consequences!" chanted by tens of thousands of people in chorus not a group chant?

I can guarantee that if I wrote this on Twitter, someone would say, "But there ARE never any real consequences."

On Mastoston there is 1 in 10 chance that I'll get that comment 😂

An improvement? I don't know.

At least a half dozen people responded to my post with irritation asking, "Why are you focusing on MSNBC and not Fox?"

5/

Why indeed?

"What about Fox?" is actually a propaganda technique called whataboutism. It was made famous in the Soviet Union. No matter what criticism was leveled against the Soviet Union, the answer was, "what about racial segregation in America?"

Ironically enough, whataboutism is a way to avoid accountability and deflect blame.

'We may distort the truth, but they lie more," does not excuse the fact that we distort the truth.

(also I don't like being told what I should write 😂 )

6/

I intend to continue my blog, but instead of responding to the latest rage, I will write about what interests me:

Who is included in 'we the people' and why?

How did our criminal justice system develop?

I'm also interested in voting rights history.

What I won't do anymore: offer commentary on the latest legal or political development.

Why? Because the moment I do, someone will tell me that there are never any real consequences and I will get testy and that testiness is a sign. . .

7/

It's a sign that something is wrong. That it's taking a toll on me.

I am sure it is taking a toll on a lot of people who are feeling anxious and unwell without knowing why.

Others are anxious because they are victims of the rage machine.

I am getting testy because I am completely disgusted by the rage machine.

I will put the finishing touches on my series, pin it to the top of each of my social media accounts.

8/

So it will be there as a resource.

Here is a fantasy: If people stop consuming rage content, it will stop being profitable.

It is a fantasy because it is too addicting.

Today's teachers and communications professors are teaching young people how to navigate information on the Internet and cable talk shows.

Similarly, people had to learn to evaluate written sources after the invention of the printing press.

9/

I get my news from print media because in print I am better able to skip the hype and opinions.

Also, in print, I can spot when a headline is misleading.

I have never gotten news from TV or cable. I don't like those talking heads.

On election night, I am generally working (I do voter protection work) but I watch the numbers and figure out which districts are reporting first.

I tried once to listen to the elections pundits and after 10 minutes I wanted to throw something at the TV.

10

For the people asking if I can find a way to continue offering explainers my answer is this:

If you stop listening to pundits you won't feel confused and you won't need an explainer.

If you stop listening to partisan pundits you'll stop viewing everything through the lens of "will this help Trump" and you will be more objective.

I didn't address a few of the more recent invented narratives. I may do that.

I'll let you all know when the series is in final form.

11/

When my editor read the mansucript for my book coming out next spring on the Bill of Rights, he said, "This helps me understand what's been in the news."

IOW, the way to understand the news is not to listen to pundits, get confused, and then look for explainers.

The way to understand current events is to understand law and history.

I think what I will write over the next year will be more interesting and enlightening then if I spend time debunking the latest outrage.

12.

It takes longer, but giving people (and young readers) the tools to understand is the best way.

That's why I write books for 8th graders.

They are the future and the future is theirs.

13/

Edited: I looked to see where my books are read. 8th grade.

@Teri_Kanefield
I like the direction you are taking. Your explainers are like a walk in fresh air: clears my mind and calms my nerves.
I completely understand why you do not want to respond the folks on the ledge anymore. We all need to stay calm and do the work.
I look forward to your new book and refer to your blogs all the time when I feel myself creeping to the open window: don’t want to go there!
@Teri_Kanefield So about 4 grades higher than the MAGA target audience

@Teri_Kanefield: I understand. It's not at all healthy to be angered all the time. In effect, trying to counter the rage merchants was itself rage inducing out of sheer frustration.

That said, I very much appreciated your "fun reading legal documents" posts not as a counterpoint to the pundits because I try to ignore those guys most of the time. I appreciated your getting into the details of the filings because that helped me to learn more of the nuances of our legal system and of the legal arguments we are seeing. Not being a lawyer, I don't have law school to give me that foundation, and I very much liked how you'd focus on the crucial parts of the filings themselves.

Also, I have to admit, I enjoyed some of your snark at the arguments that didn't pass the smell test, along with the explanations of why they were flawed.

@Teri_Kanefield Writing good books about law for 8th graders is a very valuable contribution to society. Good work.

@DavidPenington

Thank you. I love when teachers and librarians thank me. And I have a collection of awards and prizes for nonfiction for young readers.

@Teri_Kanefield You must do what is best for you. Thank you for the wonderful work you have done for us and best wishes for your future. Count me among those who will read you on what interests you.
@Teri_Kanefield I just want to add that your FAQ is the most helpful and informative FAQ I have ever ever seen, anywhere on any subject.

@Teri_Kanefield
I appreciate all of this.

Having now read your entire FAQ, and the taking action follow-up, though, I think the thing that I still continue to miss from all of this is *hope*.

There are lots of things we might be able to do if time was a thing that we had in abundance, but instead it is the thing we have the least of. It seems like that if we can't do something near-immediately, then one of a dozen different crises will probably eat us. (In descending order: p2025, lesser fascisms, climate war, everything else.)

And, of course, there's rapidly increasing inequality, massive erosion of individual rights, and the fact that we essentially live in a cyberpunk dystopia.

It's all important but it's all also totally overwhelming.

@Teri_Kanefield I fully understand your position.

I hope that maybe if something you find interesting to talk about pops up, you might dive into it. But I also understand that you might not have the energy to do so.

I have definitely enjoyed your posts and your explainers, but I get why it's taking a toll, the equivalent of shouting at the ocean.

Still hope you can comment on your pup here and there!

@Teri_Kanefield What's your take on the whole Second Civil War theory? Do you think it might actually happen?

@Teri_Kanefield

I am reading a wonderful but poorly titled book by Jessie Childs on the English Civil War. It is absolutely chock full of stomach punch scale recognition. 400 years ago we see the same swirling of ideas, conflicts, muddle.

One striking example. The Puritans hated being called that name. It implied that theirs was an ideology. For them, it was *fact* that they were Chosen, superior. Suggesting that they dreamt it up they thought insulting. Sound familiar?

@Teri_Kanefield Thank you! You've been a great help as I've tried to understand things over the last few years. I hope you can be tempted to continue to explain what certain things in the law mean as the former guy's trials proceed. Not to mention the election.

Addressing outrage surely must be exhausting and you've provided tools and resources to help us. But there's plenty of stuff that flies above the heads of us laypeople that isn't hair-on-fire panic that I turn to you for understanding.

@joeappel

I think I'll respond to this for everyone, if you don't mind.

@Teri_Kanefield 100% good with me!

@Teri_Kanefield Thanks for the answer. Your points about reading the news critically and being aware of how outrage merchants try to turn attention into profit are important and timely.

I should have been more clear about what I hope you’ll still share with us non-attorneys. Which has to do with the law itself and how things work as related to current events. With your blog posts you’ve given us an excellent resource. Just hoping we’ll still hear from you from time to time!

@joeappel It's a fair question and deserves a fair answer.

This week I plan to write about the history of voting rights. I may spend a few weeks on that. The reason: I am thinking about doing a young readers book on that and it makes sense to merge the blog writing I do with my book publishing. It's more efficient for me because my writing dovetails.

What I learned from the communications scholars I've been reading (too long for one post, so I'll continue)

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@joeappel

As soon as I start following the minutiae of the legal proceedings, I will attract readers who are also immersed in the echo chamber I described in my series.

If I keep attracting people immersed in that echo chamber, my mentions will continue to be filled with rage-inducing simplifications.

I used the word "testy" to describe how it makes me feel. That's not quite accurate. It makes me feel sad and sick the way you feel if you have to see a car wreck.

2/

@joeappel

People say, "Ignore the comments." If one of my pieces gets a lot of readers, I can't sit there blocking or muting them all. It's too hard, and sometimes I misread tone and block the wrong people.

Also I don't like ignoring my readers.

I plan to keep blogging weekly, but about things that interest me: Voting rights, constitutional law, history. These things relate to what is happening now, but more indirectly.

I'd rather have fewer readers.

Make sense?

@Teri_Kanefield Perfectly - and thank you! I always look forward to your blog posts.
@Teri_Kanefield Also, for the legal stuff I will turn to my daughter who is in her first year of law school.

@Teri_Kanefield

*than

“….more interesting and enlightening than…”

Thank you for all your hard work. I’m also a reader more than a watcher, and I value your insights.

@Teri_Kanefield but I love your takes on legal matters. Not as a response to pundits, but as an insightful interpretation of what they mean.
@Teri_Kanefield Dear Teri - I will seek out your commentary on whichever topics interest you because I value your voice and your insights. Thank you for the valiant work you have done to defuse the rage machine and to remind us of our collective civic responsibilities.

@Teri_Kanefield

That's a little sad, but I don't blame you. You gotta look out for you and it's a mess out there.
The way you break stuff down has certainly helped me wrap my head around things during an extremely disorienting time, and I truly appreciated it. Sometimes stuff has to be written out in crayon for me. I am a blonde. 😂
I'll miss that, but you certainly won't be losing this audience member. I'm excited to see what's next!!  

@Teri_Kanefield Your analysis will be sorely missed. I learned from your insight.
@Teri_Kanefield we gave up cable in '06, when we built our house. We came to realize that the pundits on TV then were not people we wanted to have dinner with. Why would I let them in my house to tell what I should think. TV is an addiction just like a drug. Pay your dealer monthly fee, and get a high off of it. We've vacationed in Europe with the money we haven't spent on people I wouldn't brake bread with and are so much better for it. Printed press is the way to go!
@Teri_Kanefield
I approve of not wanting to feed the outrage industry, but I do look forward to your evaluations when things are actually filled or ruled on. Just a data point. I know you're not obligated to make me happy.
@Teri_Kanefield I don’t listen to pundits—I come to your page! I’m interested in what’s going on, so where to turn? Any ideas welcome.

@geophany Once weekly I get this in my box from the Post about the Trump trials:
https://s2.washingtonpost.com/camp-rw/?trackId=5986a242ae7e8a68160e418f&s=65ee1f8537548053961dc39a&linknum=2&linktot=48

It seems to me that it is written in accessible language. I've been reading this for a few months, and so far, I find it accurate without hype or spin.

Trump trials this week include Fla. hearing, possible Willis decision

The latest news in Donald Trump’s four criminal cases, and what to watch for this week.

@Teri_Kanefield Thank you for that—I will check it out.

I’ll simply say what I enjoyed about your explainers—clear language from someone in the profession, laid out sometimes with a bit of fun when a juicy tidbit came out. You clearly enjoyed it and that in itself helped take the edge off all the clamoring and noise. I definitely did *not* enjoy the comments and so stopped reading them.
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@Teri_Kanefield

I don’t know if it’s possible or even if you would want to turn off comments, but would that make your job here any more appealing? Or ignoring them. It’s a fruitless task to try to cut through the hysteria—nobody can do that (although you gave it a good run), and I can understand that it could drive you nuts. How about just….not? Go back to the interesting part and let the noise go on elsewhere.
2/

@geophany

I thought about that.

I also thought about making a feed "invite only" where people have to pass a test to be invited :) I could conduct it like a class. If you don't like the professor, you don't call the professor names or start challening the professor. You drop the class and find a class you like better.

But for a while I think I'll change my focus.

Next I'll be writing about the history of voting rights. I hope you find it interesting.

@geophany

The problem is that there really are not many people like you.

Most of my followers also watch MSNBC panels and think these are valuable ways to get information.

They follow people like Larry Tribe, Andrew Weissmann, Elie Mystal, and others who I used to call Poppers (they pop off the tops of their heads) so I'm always having to tamp down the latest nonsense.

I figure if I start writing about interesing legal topics, I'll be able to write for a less misinformed audience.

@Teri_Kanefield

I’m not so sure I’m unusual, unless you really know otherwise. I think of myself as one of the quiet kids in the back while the annoying kids act up. At any rate I’m looking forward to interesting legal topics.

@geophany

One idea is to do a weekly commentary on the cases and post it only on my blog.

@Teri_Kanefield

That would certainly be welcome

@geophany

You may not be unusual. I have no idea what the numbers are.

I just know I was starting to feel like I was spending most of my time tamping down bad information.

@Teri_Kanefield @geophany Thank you for your level headed thoughts on these topics. IMO not all new technologies are good for society, social media being one. It’s usually better to wait and read a book or long form journalism, even for current events. Takes a pinch of forbearance though.

@Teri_Kanefield @geophany

That would be great! One of the things I really enjoyed were your fun with reading legal documents threads. I learned a lot, and I will miss those, but a weekly rundown of the cases from you would definitely fill that gap because you tend to do in depth analyses that are very helpful.

@Teri_Kanefield Have you ever asked those mouth-breathers "Why don't we try... IMPOSING consequences on them... so they can't lie?" Say it slowly to them like they are four
@Teri_Kanefield Anders Puck Nielson had a very similar view, speaking about how to combat disinformation. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-U8YgPaYjSA
Information war against Russia

YouTube