THINKING ABOUT THINKING ABOUT GUN CONTROL
While filtering media this month, I was thinking about critical thinking and how it applies to the Boston Marathon bombing and the incorporation of terrorism into the gun control debate. An overarching theme emerged...Critical thinking must continually evolve in order to keep up with today's fluid media landscape. Bias is constant and exists in the media maker, the media audience and the media practitioner. Bias can be covert or overt and be manifested differently in different media. This creates an opportunity for the Media Psychologist to analyze emerging media and psychological research for better critical thinking tools.
Bias is a constant within ourselves and within all media-makers. A blatant bias is sometimes intentional and often easy to spot. However, there is also bias embedded in culture that needs to be examined. When we apply a critical thinking practice to how the culture is acting and reacting to media events we can discover these inherent bias. For instance, what are the inherent cultural biases that elevate a terrorist event to nationwide focus, but react to the staggering accumulated loss of life to gun violence in the U.S. as matter of course?
At the same time bias can be leveraged opportunistically. There are high profile agendas such as gun control and immigration reform at work that can take advantage of the emotion surrounding an incident such as the Boston Marathon bombing to further their positions. A critical thinking practice can play a role in interpreting how a widely publicized and popularly supported bill, such as the Manchin-Toomey background check amendment, can fail to pass on the Senate floor.
The news following the Boston Marathon bombing and the Senate gun
control debate coincided. I found myself
following the events with a new perspective. Simultaneously watching streaming news channels while following multiple news and eye-witness sources on my Twitter feed. I was compelled to move from source to
source in order to compare and contrast the content using a critical thinking practice: who is presenting the information, what
might their agenda or bias be, who are they representing, is this information verified and how can I verify
it? I was incorporating a reflection on how I was thinking and processing the information and searching for my own bias. It became clear that in the age of social mobile media the traditional journalism model falls short and our traditional critical thinking needs an update.
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This top tweet says Hello CNN, Fox News, MSNBC... your model is dead. Important stuff is happening in Boston right now and you're all sleepin |
People on the ground were tweeting live accounts and uploading visuals of the events taking place in Boston. This gave the world a more visceral first person account of what was happening. This information was immediate, but was it news? Yes. Was it journalism? For the most part, no. Problems arose as journalists appeared to be competing with the public for breaking news. Exacerbating an already tense situation, some journalists were reporting as fact a myriad of unverified stories and disregarding fact checking information in even the simplest of ways. In one instance, reputable news sources reported that police scanners had named missing student Sunil Tripathi as suspect number 2. News outlets have easy access to police scanners, but the rumor was retweeted and reported by news outlets such as CBS and Newsweek without verification. According to the Atlantic, Sunil was never mentioned on the Boston PD Scanner Recording, which could have easily been verified. In the rush to break stories, Sunil's life was put at risk and his family was devastated. It would be even more unfortunate if this misinformation contributed to his committing suicide. News journalism needs to be held accountable to a new and different standard.
Discussion of terrorism in Boston started to surface on both sides of the gun control debate. In his book, Thinking Fast and Slow, psychologist Daniel Kahneman says terrorist events have a cascading effect that drives a media frenzy that sustains an emotional state which can “distort
priorities and public resources." In a
Bloomberg article, Paul
Barrett points out that times of heightened anxiety over terrorism work to the
advantage of the NRA agenda and he predicts that the Boston Marathon bombings will hurt gun control. He points out that the threat of terrorism was introduced into the
debate with the implication that the passage of background checks would lead directly to denying “law-abiding citizens their right to protect
themselves in extreme circumstances.” This aligns with Kahneman's
assessment of how terrorism effects thinking, “the emotional arousal is
associative, automatic and uncontrolled, and it produces an impulse for
protection." On the senate floor, hours before the vote on a gun control bill, Senator Claire McCaskill's question of whether the Sandy Hook massacre and the Boston bombing can both be described as acts of terrorism with a different choice of weapons goes unanswered.
Prior to the Senate vote Claire McCaskill compares Sandy Hook to the Boston Marathon


It would appear that the NRA is savvy in the arena of behavioral psychology and that much can be learned by a thorough examination of their practices. Using Kahneman's Thinking Fast and Slow filters allows us a clearer understanding of how a member of an organization such as the NRA can be susceptible to influence that appeals to existing bias. In a critical
assessment it is clear that while the battle for public
opinion has been won, that doesn't translate to a win on the Senate floor. The pressure tactic of grading senators to influence
how their NRA member body vote puts a tangible pressure on senators. Media efforts such as the Mom's Demand Action (MDA) campaign, while compelling, lack the appropriate call to action. For gun reform to neutralize the NRA's influence, groups such as MDA must demonstrate the clout to mobilize a voter block large enough to effect the outcome of the Senate and Congress elections. Media Psychologist can play a role in deconstructing media's role in situations such as this in order to bring more clarity to the democratic process.
A critical assessment of the news events of April 2013 is a compelling exercise for the development of media practice. There is a need for critical thinking to guide research into models that bring new relevancy and responsibility to the field of social journalism; one that helps eliminate damaging incidents such as the misidentification of Sunil Tripathi as a suspect. I see an opportunity for Media Psychology to provide research on how new technologies can help people determine authenticity in emerging media platforms. I would like to develop a practice that helps shed light on media's role in the democratic process. Media Psychology can play an important role in deconstructing media propaganda and developing research that enables advocacy groups to be more strategic with limited resources. As a Media Psychology student my critical thinking practice will guide me to focus on research that will help solve problems and improve outcomes for the greater good of society.
Sources
Barrett, P. (2013, April 19) The Boston terror will benefit
the NRA hurt gun control. Businessweek
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-04-19/the-boston-terror-will-benefit-the-nra-hurt-gun-control
Brownstein, R. (2013, April 18) Why the senate vote may signal 2016 problems for the gun lobby. NationalJournal
http://www.nationaljournal.com/politics/why-the-senate-vote-may-signal-2016-problems-for-the-gun-lobby-20130418
Brownstein, R. (2013, April 18) Why the senate vote may signal 2016 problems for the gun lobby. NationalJournal
http://www.nationaljournal.com/politics/why-the-senate-vote-may-signal-2016-problems-for-the-gun-lobby-20130418
Hickey, W. (2013, Jan 16) How the gun industry funnels tens of millions of dollars to the NRA. Business Insider
Kahneman, D. (2011) Thinking fast and slow. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Little, M. (2013 April 21) When everyone is an eye-witness, what is a journalist. Storyful http://blog.storyful.com/2013/04/21/when-everyone-is-an-eye-witness-what-is-a-journalist/#.UXf2jSuG2JA
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2013/04/it-wasnt-sunil-tripathi-the-anatomy-of-a-misinformation-
disaster/275155/Wardle, C. (2013) Social News Gathering, Storyful
McLaughlin, M. (2013, January 16) Murders, shootings and gun sales per day: An average day in the United States. Huffington Post www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/16/murders-shootings-and-gun-sales-per-day_n_2488664.html
Paul, R. (2007, July23) Critical thinking in every domain of knowledge and belief
http://www.criticalthinking.org/pages/critical-thinking-in-every-domain-of-knowledge-and-belief/698
Stein, S. & Blumenthat, P. (2012, December 17) The gun lobby:Why the NRA is the baddest force in politics. Huffington
Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/17/gun-lobby-nra_n_2317885.html
Wong, S. (2013, April 17) Clair McCaskill: if Boston bombings are terrorism, why not Sandy Hook?
http://www.politico.com/story/2013/04/claire-mccaskill-terrorism-boston-marathon-sandy-hook-90213.html
Zorn, E. (2013, April 24) How a bill becomes slaw. Chicago TribuneWong, S. (2013, April 17) Clair McCaskill: if Boston bombings are terrorism, why not Sandy Hook?
http://www.politico.com/story/2013/04/claire-mccaskill-terrorism-boston-marathon-sandy-hook-90213.html
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2013-04-24/news/ct-oped-0424-zorn-20130424_1_gun-control-manchin-toomey-
amendment