This is a proposal for a series of webinars on media and democracy. It is on Wikiversity to encourage a wide discussion of the issues it raises moderated by the Wikimedia rules that invite contributors to “be bold but not reckless,” contributing revisions written from a neutral point of view, citing credible sources -- and raising other questions and concerns on the associated '“Discuss”' page.

Proposed: A monthly or quarterly webinar series on media and democracy.

Why[edit | edit source]

The goal would be to build an international grass roots movement to improve the quality of the media everywhere, one local area at a time. In this we would follow in part the leadership of Seattle, WA, in this area, described by Friedland (2014), and informed by research by Cagé, McChesney, and others cited in the references below and elsewhere.[1]

The urgency of this project is visible in the apparent growth in the Balkanization of the body politic, especially in the U.S. but internationally as well with the increase in terrorism from violent alt-right and Islamic elements.[2]

The election of Donald Trump as President of the United States provides a visible display of the extreme range in popular understanding of the problems facing the U.S. and the world between Trump's supporters and opponents and those in between.

It seems likely that these differences in the U.S. have been amplified by the evolution of the U.S. commercial media since around 1975. During the last quarter of the twentieth century, the mainstream commercial broadcasters fired nearly all of their investigative journalists except for a few producing popular programs like 60 Minutes.[3]

This trend can be reversed by people committed to working to understand it and develop effective countermeasures to convince their friends and neighbors to unhook from the mainstream media and support alternatives that provide the information they need to better protect their interests.[4]

What[edit | edit source]

The Friends of Community Media in Kansas City[5] has hosted a monthly "Forum" since July 2017 with the third one scheduled for September 16. The first one included an interview with Ernesto Falco,[6] Legislative Council for the Electronic Frontier Foundation in San Francisco. Parts of that material were broadcasted on KKFI radio[7] and offered to the Pacifica Network.[8] Future "FCM Fora" are tentatively scheduled for the third Saturdays of each month at 4 - 5:30 PM Central time, though the time (and less likely the date) may be adjusted for the convenience of the presenters and others.

The current plan is to conduct these Webinars using Webex, which supports a reasonably high quality recording of both audio and video, which can subsequently be edited for posting on, e.g., WorkingJournalistPress.com,[9] offered to Pacifica Network affiliates, and be integrated into high-quality documentaries for wider distribution.

Who[edit | edit source]

Leaders in describing this problem and what to do about it include the following:

For more on this[edit | edit source]

For more background, see the Wikiversity articles on “Everyone's favorite news site”, “Winning the War on Terror”, “Media and corruption”, and “Media and politics”.

References[edit | edit source]

Notes[edit | edit source]

  1. especially the Wikiversity article on "Winning the War on Terror".
  2. The Global Terrorism Database might be studied for what it might say about this.
  3. McChesney, Robert W. (2004), The Problem of the Media, Monthly Review Press, p. 81, ISBN 1-58367-105-6 For more on this, see, for example the Wikiversity article on “Winning the War on Terror”.
  4. Reversing this trend might be easier if we can retain net neutrality, an issue discussed in the Wikiversity article on "[[Net neutrality and 'Restoring Internet freedom' ]]".
  5. Friends of Community Media, Friends of Community Media, retrieved 2017-09-07
  6. Ernesto Falcon, Legislative Counsel, Electronic Frontier Foundation, retrieved 2017-09-07
  7. Graves, Spencer; Falcon, Ernesto (July 25, 2017), $15 minimum wage on Aug. 8 ballot in KCMO plus Trump’s attack on net neutrality, KKFI, retrieved 2017-09-01
  8. Graves, Spencer (2017-07-13), Net Neutrality interview with Ernesto Falcon, Electronic Frontier Foundation, AudioPort.org, retrieved 2017-09-07, Graves, Spencer (2017-07-15), Net neutrality per Ernesto Falcon at FCM Forum, AudioPort.org, retrieved 2017-09-07
  9. e.g., Graves, Spencer (2017-07-15), ANALYSIS: Another Trump oxymoron? "Restoring Internet Freedom" by destroying net neutrality, Working Journalist Press, retrieved 2017-09-07
  10. Quoted from Lloyd and Friedland.
  11. Cagé, Julia (2016). Saving the media: Capitalism, crowdfunding and democracy. Harvard U. Pr.. ISBN 9780674659759. 
  12. Cagé, Julia; Rueda, Valeria (2016), "The Long-Term Effects of the Printing Press in sub-Saharan Africa", American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 8 (3): 69–99, retrieved 2017-02-12
  13. McChesney, Robert W.; Nichols, John (2016), People get ready: The fight against a jobless economy and a citizenless democracy, Nation Books, ISBN 9781568585215