Wall Street Journal's glib snark over Harvey completes its Fox News-ification
A recent survey by progressive watchdog Public Citizen (9/12/17) on the media’s coverage of hurricanes Harvey and Irma confirms what’s long been known: Corporate media are indifferent to the causal relationship between climate change and extreme weather, and by far the worst offenders are the Rupert Murdoch–owned Fox News, Wall Street Journal and New York Post.
The survey covered 18 outlets hurricane coverage for the week of August 25–September 1: ten major newspapers, three weekly news magazines, and ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN and Fox News. Out of 2,000 media items, there were only 136 mentions of climate change, many denialist in content.
Fox‘s Tucker Carlson (8/31/17) to The Hill‘s Joe Concha: “Science is complicated. You know what’s not complicated? Moral preening.” |
The Journal had three op-eds and Fox News had two segments that denied—and laughingly mocked—any connection between hurricane intensity and climate change, the survey found:
- Holman W. Jenkins, Jr: “First Houston’s Resilience, Then Washington’s Boondoggle” (Wall Street Journal, 8/29/31)
- Roger Pielke Jr: “The Hurricane Lull Couldn’t Last” (Wall Street Journal, 8/31/17)
- Editorial Board: “Texas, Thou Hast Sinned” (Wall Street Journal, 8/31/17)
- Tucker Carlson Tonight (Fox News, 8/31/17)
- The Five (Fox News, 8/25/17)
Public Citizen’s report (9/8/17)
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The survey highlighted what it considered the “seven aspects” of climate change coverage:
- Clearly connected climate change to Hurricane Harvey (or to events like it)
- Framed questions regarding the role of climate change as whether it contributes to or intensifies the damage from events like Harvey rather than whether it “causes” them
- Discussed relevant clearly connected climate change to Hurricane Harvey (or to events like it);
- Noted ways to adapt to climate change (for example with better disaster preparedness or zoning or building policies)
- Noted ways to mitigate climate change (for example by reducing greenhouse gas pollution and switching to renewable sources of energy)
- Noted specific relevant policies or actions that have been or could be taken at the local or state level; and
- Noted specific relevant policies or actions that have been or could be taken at the federal level.
In reality, the problem is not Texas but Texaco. |
Who says progressives don’t believe in religion? They may not believe in Jehovah or Jesus, but they certainly believe in Old Testament-style wrath against sinners. Real Noah and the Ark stuff. Witness the emerging theme on the media left that Texas, and especially Houston, are at fault for the devastation of Hurricane Harvey.LOL funny stuff, right? A city underwater and extreme weather amplified by catastrophic climate change is all one big joke. A recent Guardian (9/10/17) report documented how corrupting Murdoch’s hand has been with the establishment paper, with dozens of writers quitting after being pressured to “normalize” Trump. Nevertheless, the Journal continues to ignore basic science to remain lockstep with their party and president, becoming more tabloid in tone and more craven in purpose.
*Adam Johnson is a contributing analyst for FAIR.org.
Links
- Public Citizen, Storm of Silence Harvey Climate Coverage
- Corporate Media Called Out for Whiffing on 'Most Important Story in the World'
- British Press Watchdog Says Climate Change Article Was Faulty
- Texas, Thou Hast Sinned
- Naomi Klein and the Quest for Environmental Justice
- The Climate Catastrophe We’re All Ignoring
- The Aftermath of Hurricane Donald
- Demanding Climate Justice in the Wake of Hurricanes Harvey and Irma
- 90 Companies Helped Cause the Climate Crisis—They Should Pay For It
- Warning Letter to Harvey and Irma Survivors from Katrina Survivor
- On The Road To Extinction, Maybe It's Not All About Us
- Naomi Klein and the Quest for Environmental Justice
- Show Up, Stand Up and Step Up: Bold Action in the Wake of Storms
- Irma Won’t “Wake Up” Climate Change-Denying Republicans. Their Whole Ideology Is on the Line.
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