OPINION
Sophistry in Indian Media
April 24, 2009
Sujai
Sujai
Nietzsche said, ‘There are no facts; only interpretations’.
This is so true with the newspaper Times of India (TOI). For over three months they ran extensive Lead India Campaign urging and exhorting urban voters of Bangalore to come out and yet. Few days before elections, they even predicted a dramatic increase in the voter turnout because of their campaign. Voting took place yesterday in Bangalore and the voting turnout was not impressive
Bangalore recorded a ‘feeble 50%’ turnout. According to the Times of India,
The 50% average for the four Bangalore constituencies is lower than the 54% recorded in the last Lok Sabha polls before delimitation.So, in reality, after the intensive campaigning we saw the turnout decrease by 4% from the last Lok Sabha elections. As again, the rural Bangalore compensated for urban Bangalore. Bangalore Rural posted 60% turnout while Bangalore North and Bangalore Central posted only 45% turnout.
However, that did not stop TOI from making the following claim. Their patted themselves on their back, with the first-page lead-news story, claiming:
Call it the impact of the aggressive ‘go-vote’ campaign by various citizen groups or the sheer need to take charge of their destiny, Bangalore saw a 6% higher voter turnout…‘What?’ you may think. ‘What sheer nonsense!’ you may say. How could TOI twist the facts around to suit their agenda you may ask! For that you have to read what Nietzsche said once again – no facts, only interpretations, and of late TOI has become very good at it. The next sentence tells you how they use the facts to promote their agenda.
…as compared to 2008 assembly polls.You see – though the Lok Sabha turnout has actually decreased from 54% to 50%, TOI conveniently compared Lok Sabha turnout with Assembly poll turnout to prove that their campaign achieved success. Most often, the dynamics for Lok Sabha polls and Assembly polls are quite different, and that’s why the pundits keep the comparison separate.
Indian Media, and the Times of India, have mastered the art of sophistry, and their incessant campaigns on every issue are only becoming annoying – but my fear is that it will soon become the biggest propaganda machine, worse than Indian politicians, capable of brainwashing its readers to promote its vested interests and ideology.
Keep reading for comments on this article and add some feedback of your own!
Sophistry in Indian Media
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Morris
April 24, 2009
12:04 PM
It would have been interesting to read about some thoughts on their vested interests and ideology.
kerty
April 24, 2009
12:41 PM
It is hard to judge get-out-the-vote drive based on overall voter turnout alone. So much of politicking is about keeping the turn out of opponent's vote base low while maximizing ones own. Though in case of Karnataka, I have to agree that Banglore is not the barometer of Karnataka's sentiments. What is true of Banglore is not necessarily true in rest of Karnataka. Most of English rags and chattering class tend to be city-centric, and therefore do not get it right.
ajay
April 25, 2009
12:27 AM
I am surprised that this seems to surprise you. Unbiased and ethical media reporting goes out of the window the moment you have a news media system that is entirely for profit.
Chandra
April 25, 2009
01:10 AM
TOI is a newspaper for morons...
Ledzius
April 25, 2009
01:41 AM
Also the fact that they decided to lowercase the first person "I" and now have every mention of the word "allegedly" italicised irritates me to no end.
temporal
URL
April 25, 2009
01:47 AM
is there a single major media outlet that does not sell/rent editorial space?
Prateek
April 25, 2009
02:32 AM
I wouldn't say they have mastered it at all. They are blatantly obvious.
When the good outlets that have mastered the technique do it you don't realize it.
Aaman
URL
April 25, 2009
03:39 AM
Apparently, the actual turn-out in Bangalore was even worse, at about 46% and 40%. DNA India, acknowledged the failure of the get-out-the-vote campaign, and it's own culpability, quite commendably.
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