By Marc Jampole
Like many of my friends, I’m excited about marching in the
People’s Climate Change March this Sunday in New York City. Organizers are
hoping it will be the largest demonstration in history in support of solutions
to climate change. The march on Manhattan’s Upper West Side coincides with the
start of the United Nations 2014 Climate Summit two days later.
By the grace of good luck, the Peoples Climate Change March
and the U.N. summit come on the heels of a new study that demonstrates what
anyone with common sense should have always known: that weaning the world’s
economy off carbon-based fuels will not wreck the economy. For years,
intellectual factotums of the oil and electrical generation industries have
insisted that replacing carbon-based fuels with solar and wind power would hurt
the economy. Their arguments didn’t take
into account that designing, making and servicing solar and wind equipment
created jobs or that using less oil, coal and natural gas saved money that
companies and individuals could spend, creating jobs elsewhere in the economy.
I haven’t marched in a demonstration since 2008, so I’m
psyched! I’m hoping that the turnout runs into the hundreds of thousands.
But be it the largest climate change demonstration or a
bust, the success of the march will depend less on how many and who walks and
more on the attitude of the news media. The news media will define how many
people showed up, and their numbers often stray from reality. The news media
will determine whether the march is forgotten three years later or goes down in
history.
I first learned this lesson during the Viet Nam War era—my
youth—when the news media underestimated the attendance at every antiwar
demonstration in the early years of protest—before the media followed the
country and started to oppose the war.
The 2010 election exemplifies how the new media can make or
break a march. There were three marches and demonstrations on Independence Mall
in Washington DC during the election season:
- March of Tea Party organized by and featuring Glen Beck
- March of progressives organized by unions
- March organized by Jon Stewart, Stephen Colbert and the Comedy Central which was also a demonstration for progressive causes.
Despite the fact that the most reputable estimator, the one
used by CBS—AirPhotosLive—estimated
all three demonstrations to have attracted 75,000-100,000, the two progressive
demonstrations are lost to history already, while the Tea Party affair is
mentioned in virtually all contemporary recounting of the 2010 election.
The
mainstream media virtually ignored the union demonstration in the weeks before
it occurred, whereas it orchestrated a build-up for the Tea Party demonstration
more suited to the first inauguration of a president who won in a landslide.
An apt
analogy, since some right-wing liars claimed that as many people attended the
rally as made the scene at Barack Obama’s first inauguration—just less than 2.0
million, a number that injected new meaning into the expression, the big lie.
Aided and
abetted by the right-wing media, mainstream newspapers tended to float a number
of figures for the Tea Party demonstration—the favorite being 400,000. But
never did a mainstream print publication claim any number above 100,000 without
attributing to someone suspect—nor did most right-wing media for that matter.
It was a mass example of the Matt Drudge effect, which occurs when instead of
reporting something scurrilous and unprovable, a mainstream reporters says that
someone with a poor record of reliability said it, someone like Matt Drudge or
the late Andrew Breitbart.
It was the
mainstream news media that overhyped the Tea Party’s 2010 Washington DC
demonstration, the mainstream news media that irresponsibly misreported the
numbers, the mainstream news media that ignored the demonstration of
progressives organized by the unions and the mainstream’s leading pundits who
have made the Tea Party march a major political milestone in 21st century
politics.
As much as
I wish for a large turnout at the Peoples Climate Change March on Sunday, I
wish harder that recent studies, extreme weather and polar melting have
convinced the ownership of the mainstream media to like the march and embrace
the cause by reporting accurately.