silveradept: A cartoon-stylized picture of Gamera, the giant turtle, in a fighting pose, with Japanese characters. (Gamera!)
Silver Adept ([personal profile] silveradept) wrote2011-08-12 10:22 pm

Another Question for all of you.

Many thanks for your responses to my previous questions about making meaning for oneself in a cosmic world that produces no external justifications.

This is not about cosmic issues. It's about something completely different.

As you well know, I follow politics, sometimes with zeal, sometimes with snark, occasionally with snarls.

However, having also watched several improv comedy shows here and there, the two mixed. Weirdly.

So, the following question:

What would the state of discourse be if every time someone who the population relies on to be honest, like a politician or a journalist/commentator, were subjected to a bleep censor every time they uttered a demonstrably false statement?

I'm not sure whether the bleep censor would just be over the part of the statement that made it untrue, like bleeping a "not" or a figure that's incorrect, or whether the entire statement would simply be bleeped out. I think bleeping the words would make things much more interesting. In print, a direct quote would have the redaction bar over the offending part of the statement.

I'm sure there would be accusations of media bias as to when the bleep censor was applied and to whom.

And there would have to be an allowance for live programs, as one cannot fact-check a speech in the middle of it sufficiently to apply the censor to anything novel. By the time the media programs start playing clips, though, they should be fact-checked enough to apply the filter.

I don't know which way things would go - whether there would be actual honesty in politics, the weaseling would get to a point where nothing could be demonstrated to be untrue, or whether we would have major speeches that could only be heard live, as any replay would simply be a rather long application of the bleep censor.

What do you all think?
tuzemi: (Default)

[personal profile] tuzemi 2011-08-13 12:38 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't think politics would get any more honest, but rather people would find ways to either corrupt the bleepers or end-user news channels (e.g. Fox) would just flout the system and start bleeping demonstrably true statements from not-batshit-insane people. And thanks to the Moral Majority / Christian Coalition / Tea Party, the line between politics and religion is gone so the bleepers would have to start operating on the 700 Club too, and people would be mighty upset when things like the story Genesis or Noah's Ark (which are taught as literally true) have to be bleeped out since we know from science that those events did not happen.

[personal profile] hebinekohime 2011-08-14 11:00 am (UTC)(link)
A subtitle disclaimer (footnote if print) would be a better and more interesting choice, imho.

[personal profile] hebinekohime 2011-08-15 04:31 am (UTC)(link)
You could display them like a regular subtitle; a caption at the bottom of the screen, which would give a correction or needed qualification to the statement.

I realize it's purely hypothetical, but if you were to regulate politicians lying over the airwaves then successfully disproving the lie would be more effective than bleeping it. You can't ever filter out all of the noise, but you can give people the information and hope that they use it.

[personal profile] hebinekohime 2011-08-15 08:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, they'd have to be legibly displayed and about as large as conventional subtitles (as opposed to, say, the disclaimers on pharmaceutical ads).

[identity profile] sethimothy.livejournal.com 2011-08-13 07:54 am (UTC)(link)
A man should be able to say what he will, and be held accountable, no matter how much of a lie they might be. Furthermore, no amount of blur or censor will stop those words from being spoken, or being meant; meanwhile, "demonstrably false" isn't an entirely easy line to draw especially in politics and social issues and I'd be worried such censorship could be taken further.

Better to let an honest man have the chance to tell a lie than to censor liars from telling what might be the truth, in my opinion, and a censor bar is the same as taking those words from their mouth.

[identity profile] scribe-of-stars.livejournal.com 2011-08-13 02:24 pm (UTC)(link)
In this day and age, who would control such a tool of censorship? Who would control what people would consider "true" or "false"? Undoubtedly a corporate entity would, just as they control everything else. This system, intended to protect "the truth," would serve only to condition the public to believe that only those statements defending corporate actions have any truth to them; they would think this by default, as anyone and anything anti-corporate would find themselves on the receiving end of the bleep button...unless the information threatened a media parent's rival, of course.

[identity profile] scribe-of-stars.livejournal.com 2011-08-13 03:07 pm (UTC)(link)
corporate or government

When you have corporations financing most Congressional and all Presidential candidates in their attempts to win or remain in office, I don't see the difference.