News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Book review of The Culture Of Fear |
Title: | US: Book review of The Culture Of Fear |
Published On: | 1999-06-27 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times Book Reviews |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-06 03:01:17 |
Boo!
THE CULTURE OF FEAR: Why Americans Are Afraid of the Wrong Things; By Barry
Glassner; (BasicBooks: 276 pp., $25)
USC sociologist Barry Glassner has written a gutsy expose of one of the
most widespread delusions of our time: misplaced fear. Glassner
demonstrates with precision and clarity that Americans today have built
what he calls a "culture of fear" by buying into rumors and hearsay that
pass for facts. Who traffics in fear mongering? Follow the money, says
Glassner, to the politicians when they win elections by grossly
exaggerating (and sometimes outright lying about) crime and drug use
percentages under their opponent's watch. To advocacy groups that profit
because nothing drives fundraisers faster than expectations of doom, which
promise to be thwarted just in time if the donor's contribution is beefy
enough. To conservatives decrying the demise of the family, and to liberals
proclaiming the destruction of the environment
Religion also plays on our fears by hyping the doom and gloom of this world
to make the next world seem all the more appealing or frightening. An
evangelical Christian friend of mine recently insisted that we are in the
"end times" because the Bible prophesied an increase in immorality and
malfeasance. Because everyone knows crime is an epidemic problem in America
that worsens by the year ("just look at the recent Colorado shooting," he
enthused), the end is nigh. On the same day as my friend's comments, the
FBI released its findings that we are in the midst of the longest decline
in crime rates since the bureau began collecting data in 1930.
Such examples illustrate a paradox: We are more fearful at the very time
when things have never been so good. "Give us a happy ending and we write a
new disaster story," says Glassner. As story-telling animals, we spin
dramatic tales of calamity and misfortune. "In the late 1990s the number of
drug users had decreased by half compared to a decade earlier," yet the
"majority of adults rank drug abuse as the greatest danger to America's
youth." Ditto the economy, where "the unemployment rate was below 5% for
the first time in a quarter century. Yet pundits warned of imminent
economic disaster." In this century alone, modern medicine and social
hygiene practices and technologies have nearly doubled our life spans and
improved our health immeasurably, yet Glassner points out that if you tally
up the reported disease statistics, out of 266 million Americans, 543
million of us are seriously ill.
How can this be? To quote Disraeli: "lies, damn lies, and statistics." We
may be good storytellers, but we are lousy statisticians. Glassner shows,
for example, that women in their 40s believe they have a one in 10 chance
of dying of breast cancer, but their real lifetime odds are more like one
in 250. In addition, he notes that some "feminists helped popularize the
frightful but erroneous statistic that two of three teen mothers had been
seduced and abandoned by adult men," when in reality it "is more like one
in 10, but some feminists continued to cultivate the scare well after the
bogus stat had been definitively debunked." The bigger problem here is the
law of large numbers, or as the magician Penn Jillette likes to say:
"million to one odds happen eight times a day in New York." In America,
million to one odds happen 266 times a day, and of those, the most
sensational dozen make the evening news, especially if captured on video.
Herein lies the problem. We are daily fed numbers we cannot comprehend
about threats to our security we cannot tolerate. But better safe than
sorry, right? Wrong, says Glassner. Pathological fear takes a dramatic toll
on our psyches and wallets: "We waste tens of billions of dollars and
person hours every year on largely mythical hazards like road rage, on
prison cells occupied by people who pose little or no danger to others, on
programs designed to protect young people from dangers that few of them
ever face, on compensation for victims of metaphorical illnesses, and on
technology to make airline travel which is already safer than other means
of transportation safer still."
Of all the institutions feeding our fears, the media takes center stage for
sensationalism ("If it bleeds, it leads" is the old adage). Glassner cites
an Emory University study showing that the leading cause of death - heart
disease received the same amount of press coverage as the 11th-ranked,
homicide. Not surprising, drug use, the lowest ranking risk factor
associated with serious illness and death, received as much attention as
the second ranked risk factor, poor diet and lack of exercise. From 1990 to
1998, America's murder rate decreased by 20% while the number of murder
stories on network newscasts increased by an incredible 600% (and this
doesn't include O.J. stories). "The short answer to why Americans harbor so
many misbegotten fears is that immense power and money await those who tap
into our moral insecurities and supply us with symbolic substitutes."
The long answer is in the details so well documented and presented in this
important book, which has the courage to point out that Gulf War Syndrome
is a chimera, that television does not cause violence, that Satanic cults
are phantasmagorical, that many recovered memories of child abuse are
nothing more than false memories planted by bad therapists and that
silicone breast implants cause nothing more than metastatic litigation.
So as the nation wrings its collective hands in despair over what to do
about the murders at Columbine High School and their media driven clones,
we would be well advised to remember the law of large numbers, the illusory
nature of fear and our penchant to focus on the most egregious events. Most
of what we dread, as Glassner convincingly argues, is the vaporous
by-product of a culture of fear of which we are both creators and victims.
THE CULTURE OF FEAR: Why Americans Are Afraid of the Wrong Things; By Barry
Glassner; (BasicBooks: 276 pp., $25)
USC sociologist Barry Glassner has written a gutsy expose of one of the
most widespread delusions of our time: misplaced fear. Glassner
demonstrates with precision and clarity that Americans today have built
what he calls a "culture of fear" by buying into rumors and hearsay that
pass for facts. Who traffics in fear mongering? Follow the money, says
Glassner, to the politicians when they win elections by grossly
exaggerating (and sometimes outright lying about) crime and drug use
percentages under their opponent's watch. To advocacy groups that profit
because nothing drives fundraisers faster than expectations of doom, which
promise to be thwarted just in time if the donor's contribution is beefy
enough. To conservatives decrying the demise of the family, and to liberals
proclaiming the destruction of the environment
Religion also plays on our fears by hyping the doom and gloom of this world
to make the next world seem all the more appealing or frightening. An
evangelical Christian friend of mine recently insisted that we are in the
"end times" because the Bible prophesied an increase in immorality and
malfeasance. Because everyone knows crime is an epidemic problem in America
that worsens by the year ("just look at the recent Colorado shooting," he
enthused), the end is nigh. On the same day as my friend's comments, the
FBI released its findings that we are in the midst of the longest decline
in crime rates since the bureau began collecting data in 1930.
Such examples illustrate a paradox: We are more fearful at the very time
when things have never been so good. "Give us a happy ending and we write a
new disaster story," says Glassner. As story-telling animals, we spin
dramatic tales of calamity and misfortune. "In the late 1990s the number of
drug users had decreased by half compared to a decade earlier," yet the
"majority of adults rank drug abuse as the greatest danger to America's
youth." Ditto the economy, where "the unemployment rate was below 5% for
the first time in a quarter century. Yet pundits warned of imminent
economic disaster." In this century alone, modern medicine and social
hygiene practices and technologies have nearly doubled our life spans and
improved our health immeasurably, yet Glassner points out that if you tally
up the reported disease statistics, out of 266 million Americans, 543
million of us are seriously ill.
How can this be? To quote Disraeli: "lies, damn lies, and statistics." We
may be good storytellers, but we are lousy statisticians. Glassner shows,
for example, that women in their 40s believe they have a one in 10 chance
of dying of breast cancer, but their real lifetime odds are more like one
in 250. In addition, he notes that some "feminists helped popularize the
frightful but erroneous statistic that two of three teen mothers had been
seduced and abandoned by adult men," when in reality it "is more like one
in 10, but some feminists continued to cultivate the scare well after the
bogus stat had been definitively debunked." The bigger problem here is the
law of large numbers, or as the magician Penn Jillette likes to say:
"million to one odds happen eight times a day in New York." In America,
million to one odds happen 266 times a day, and of those, the most
sensational dozen make the evening news, especially if captured on video.
Herein lies the problem. We are daily fed numbers we cannot comprehend
about threats to our security we cannot tolerate. But better safe than
sorry, right? Wrong, says Glassner. Pathological fear takes a dramatic toll
on our psyches and wallets: "We waste tens of billions of dollars and
person hours every year on largely mythical hazards like road rage, on
prison cells occupied by people who pose little or no danger to others, on
programs designed to protect young people from dangers that few of them
ever face, on compensation for victims of metaphorical illnesses, and on
technology to make airline travel which is already safer than other means
of transportation safer still."
Of all the institutions feeding our fears, the media takes center stage for
sensationalism ("If it bleeds, it leads" is the old adage). Glassner cites
an Emory University study showing that the leading cause of death - heart
disease received the same amount of press coverage as the 11th-ranked,
homicide. Not surprising, drug use, the lowest ranking risk factor
associated with serious illness and death, received as much attention as
the second ranked risk factor, poor diet and lack of exercise. From 1990 to
1998, America's murder rate decreased by 20% while the number of murder
stories on network newscasts increased by an incredible 600% (and this
doesn't include O.J. stories). "The short answer to why Americans harbor so
many misbegotten fears is that immense power and money await those who tap
into our moral insecurities and supply us with symbolic substitutes."
The long answer is in the details so well documented and presented in this
important book, which has the courage to point out that Gulf War Syndrome
is a chimera, that television does not cause violence, that Satanic cults
are phantasmagorical, that many recovered memories of child abuse are
nothing more than false memories planted by bad therapists and that
silicone breast implants cause nothing more than metastatic litigation.
So as the nation wrings its collective hands in despair over what to do
about the murders at Columbine High School and their media driven clones,
we would be well advised to remember the law of large numbers, the illusory
nature of fear and our penchant to focus on the most egregious events. Most
of what we dread, as Glassner convincingly argues, is the vaporous
by-product of a culture of fear of which we are both creators and victims.
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