18
JAN

Over the last few days I have become somewhat more interested in the marijuana legalization movement. This renewed interest is due mostly to what has been taking place on the Obama transition team’s website: change.gov. The team has been taking suggestions and questions from the general public through the site for the last month and a half or so. They also have a satellite site called the Citizen’s Briefing Book, where people can submit and vote on suggestions for the new president to look at.

Surprisingly (or maybe not surprisingly), there is one question/suggestion that keeps making it to the top of the list: the legalization and regulation of marijuana. As I write, this is is by far the top voted suggestion on the citizen’s briefing book. It is difficult to find actual lists of the results of the change.gov question voting on short notice, but here are a couple of websites discussing the results of the first and second round of questions as far as the topic of marijuana is concerned. Marijuana legalization placed first and fourth in rounds 1 and 2 respectively for most highly voted questions. There are a number of reasons listed in the comments as to why people think this should happen, but I am not going to go into the details here. My purpose is rather to analyze the reaction of the transition team to this particular topic.

You can view the responses of the Obama team to some of these questions on the change.gov website itself, but to summarize, in both rounds the response was a curt

“President-elect Obama is not in favor of the legalization of marijuana.”

I can only draw a couple of different conclusions from the fact that this question is being ignored.

The most probably explanation in my opinion is that the Obama team thinks that a bunch of potheads rallied on the internet to skew this whole online voting thing in their favor and that if they ignore the issue it will just go away after a while. Additionally, they don’t view the issue as anywhere serious enough to Obama’s popularity to even attempt to address it with a thoughtful response. I mean, it really wouldn’t have been too difficult to give something canned like:

President-Elect Obama recognizes the importance of taking a close look at the failure that is the war on drugs. However he feels that there are much more pressing issues facing the nation at the moment that must be dealt with first

This is, of course, a non-answer, but it at least wouldn’t have been as much of a snub at the people asking the question. The fact that the question didn’t even deserve a bullshit answer is blatantly insulting to a (I believe) significant number of Obama supporters who grow increasingly angry and who want answers.

The other possibility for why this question was ignored, is that the Obama team is too politically afraid of appearing sympathetic to a marijuana legalization movement in any way.

This is not the only issue being ignored by the Obama team. The top question from round 2 concerning whether Obama would appoint a special prosecutor to investigate some of the crimes of the Bush administration was basically answered with a written sound bite.

There are a number of video “reactions” on the citizen’s briefing book website to some of the ideas suggested there. As you might have guessed, the ideas were chosen not by vote count, but more so by which ideas already aligned with what the Obama team was going to do anyway. This provides the illusion of input into a system that in reality is already decided and closed off.

I am not one to advocate a tyranny of the majority, but when very popular questions are ignored by a government that claims to be listening, well I have to wonder if we voted for change, or simply the comfort of a more subtle deception.

This really isn’t about marijuana legalization or justice anymore, it’s about a government that professes openness and honesty, but then hides behind sound bites and single sentences when faced with questions apparently too difficult to properly answer. I can’t think of a better word to describe this than “hypocrisy.”

Posted by Kevin @ 12:58 on January 18, 2009
Categories: current events, news; Tags: , ,
17
APR

Over 30 people were killed yesterday by a student gunman at Virginia Tech University. This is a tragedy and my prayers go out to everyone involved.

The reason I start this post of on such a depressing note is that it brought back a recurring issue to the front of my mind: The proper role of the news media in today’s society. Now I don’t claim to be a journalism major or have any idea what I am talking about, but I’m going to ask questions and speculate on possible answers. The following mass of words will probably be unorganized and pretty incoherent.

Disclaimer: I am not trying to make light of the events that occurred at VT. As I said before this is a serious tragedy.

To use the VT shootings as an example, this story will be covered by all of the major news networks for the next week or two at least (to make a conservative estimate). It made front page headlines in pretty much every daily newspaper with an eye towards national events. Everyone who doesn’t live in a cave or under a rock will know to varying extents what happened. This event has the highest death count of any gun homicide in America to date. That being said, it pales in comparison to the genocide that happens daily in Darfur and other non-western nations, at least to my understanding. However the news coverage on these incidents is not even close to the coverage that the VT shootings will get. The VT stuff is a national incident while the genocide I mentioned earlier is international which may play a fairly large role in the varying amounts of coverage.

Lets take a different example instead. Fairly recently, celebrity Anna Nichole Smith died of mysterious causes in a room in Florida. This, along with the resulting legal stuff surrounding her child, was headline news for a solid 2-3 weeks. Now I can understand arguments as to why the VT incident should receive more news coverage, but I find if terribly difficult to rationalize how one of the largest story worth reporting in the entire world for this period of time is about some celebrity.

Basically I’ve come to understand that news media is more about entertainment value now than actually reporting news that people need to hear. Perhaps “entertaining” isn’t the best word, especially when applying it to the VT incident. “Interesting” could also be used. This is especially applicable to television news, but is also prevalent in many news magazines and newspapers. Of course, this has always been the case to some extent and always will be with a capitalist news media independent of the government. The population itself is partly to blame as well. News stations play what people want to watch so that they can get more viewers and make more money. If the people would rather hear about a celebrity death than a depressing story about genocide in Africa or an investigative report into government corruption, then that is what will be shown. I would very much like to see more investigative reporting on mainstream television but that is not likely to happen.

I will touch on some more questions related to my somewhat cynical take on the media hopefully in the next post.

So we’ve fixed you with cement galoshes…
Posted by Kevin @ 16:45 on April 17, 2007
Categories: current events, news, rant; Tags: , ,

Powered by WordPress