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N. 40, August 2003
Are we afraid of the wrong things?
I have an acquaintance of mine who tells me that he is worried whenever I get on a
plane (which is more often than most people, though Im not a golden level frequent
flier). You know the reasoning: those things (the planes) are heavier than air; we were
not meant to be flying thousands of feet above the earth; surely you heard about how the
airlines are cutting on maintenance because of increasing costs; etc., etc., etc.
Interestingly, this same friend of mine is not the least bit concerned about the fact that
in order to get to the airport I have to drive on a road, Alcoa Highway, that the locals
have nicknamed Ill Kill Ya Highway because of the high number of
accidents. Never mind that the statistics clearly say that riding a car is much more
dangerous than being on a plane, that if we were meant to do anything, that probably did
not include racing at 60 miles an hour on asphalt, and that there is not an iota of
evidence showing that airlines have been slacking on repairs (to the contrary, study after
study shows that the airline industry -- including commuter planes -- has become
increasingly safe over the past decades).
Are we afraid of the wrong things? That is certainly the thesis of University of Southern
Californias sociologist Barry Glassner, whose The Culture of Fear: Why Americans are
Afraid of the Wrong Things should be mandatory reading for people like my friend. Glassner
makes an interesting point, and backs it up with tons of anecdotal as well as statistical
evidence. We are more afraid of terrorism than of dying of ill effects caused by the
operations of our own industries, and yet the latter is a much higher cause of death than
the former. We are convinced by the media that it is very dangerous for anybody to walk
city streets because of random crime. But, as Glassner points out, violent
crime is anything but random: just consider that a black man is 18 times more likely to be
murdered than a white woman.
The examples can be multiplied almost endlessly, but a regular pattern emerges. We tend to
be afraid of things that are constantly in the news, even though the media have a stake in
ratings (and therefore in high-emotional impact stories), not necessarily in informing us.
We tend to be unduly impressed by personal stories, either recounted by people we know or
broadcasted by talk shows, and often lack the overall frame of reference to reasonably
interpret those stories. Surely there are genuine examples of, say, the IRS
persecuting some poor chap well beyond the boundaries of reasonableness. But
does that constitute a pattern of abuse of ordinary Americans by the tax people? More
importantly, does that require a special Congressional investigation, and perhaps passing
laws to curb such ghastly abuses of power? Maybe, but the answer is to be found in
independent investigations of the problem based on large numbers of cases, not on the
occasional horror story, as regrettable or even worrisome (nobody wishes to become the
next anecdote) as that may be.
Is there a national conspiracy by the media, the government, and the military-industrial
complex to keep Americans worried about the wrong things? Hmm, yes and no. On the one
hand, it is simply natural for human beings to respond emotionally to personal stories and
to yawn when faced with statistical analyses. It is also understandable, if borderline
unethical, of the media to go for the gory aspects of life, as unrepresentative of reality
as they may be, rather than for the more mundane but more relevant ones. Glassner even
suggests that perhaps we tend to fear the wrong things because they neatly substitute
fears of things for which we either cant do much about or are in fact partly guilty
of. For example, it may be that an obsessive interest in the relatively few cases of
children killed by their mothers makes us feel better about our own deficiencies in our
everyday exercise of the same role (along the lines of well, at least Im not
as bad a parent as that).
On the other hand, think of the recent and still unfolding story about President Bush
doctoring the truth about Iraqs nuclear program and why the US went to
war. (Im sure that if it were Clinton denying having received a blow job in the oval
office we would not be ashamed of using the word lying, and perhaps even of
thinking out loud about impeachment.) That one does indeed seem a case of the Government
purposely manipulating our feelings for rather sinister ends.
Do we have a defense against being afraid of the wrong things? Can we hope to channel our
fears where they belong? (After all, fear is a genuinely useful reaction, if directed to
genuine threats.) Yes, but the answer is going to make you yawn and wishing to turn the
page or jumping into another area of cyber space. The answer is slow, painful, continuous
education of ourselves. A process that is mostly up to us, that requires reading widely
and discussing openly, that can eat into your TV or golf time, and that would make you
more sociable only with the NPR-listening crowd. Then again, perhaps the greatest
responsibility of the citizens of a democracy is exactly to educate themselves, if nothing
else in preparation for the next trip to the voting booth.
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