Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Don’t Know Much About History - Introduction/Body for Research Paper

            You come home from a long day at work, exhausted, and collapse in a giant heap on the mangy couch you found on the street. You breathe a sigh of relief and switch on the box television, suddenly sad that you cannot a newer flatter model. Static appears at first, but then clears out to show the well-dressed, perfect looking news-anchor. “BREAKING NEWS” was spelled across the top of the screen in big, blue and flashing capital letters. The camera zoomed into the face of the news anchor while she began reporting, “Breaking news at Channel 11 News headquarters. Earlier this evening, U.S. air troopers bombed a building suspected to house the terrorist leader Osama Bin Laden. It was found that Bin Laden was not there, but he had been. The search continues, while U.S. troops prepare to move into enemy territory and find the terrorist who initiated the cricis that killed our loved ones. Stay tuned for updates.” You mute the volume as the channel goes to ads, and think with hatred of the criminal Bin Laden. “We should just have bombed the whole country to get him, he killed our civilians!” Though you did not know anyone personally who died in 9/11, you felt a lot of anger towards those who killed innocent Americans.
            That was a fake story, from a fake day, though it does represent some realistic events. 9/11 was caused by terrorists, not Afghanistan. The U.S. declared war on Afghanistan, not only the terrorists. Millions upon millions of INNOCENT Afghans died in this war. The amount of people that died in 9/11 was a miniscule number compared to those who died in Afghanistan. The Channel 11 News failed to mention any of these facts. They just portrayed Afghanistan as a war-torn area, where everyone is a potential terrorist. Imagine someone who only watches Channel 11 news and does not check to make sure that they are telling accurate information. They would be misinformed citizens due to the news stories that manipulate them by excluding some facts and exaggerating others.
            Only 32 percent of American citizens trust the media (Bernstein). It is quite sad when you think about it. If only the media stated the whole truth instead of the half-truth that it uses to manipulate viewers. Trust has become a problem in the United States, and the deficiency starts with the manipulation of others using stories.
            Stories have existed for a long time, for as long as humans have existed for all we know. They have been used to understand human complexity, to entertain children and adults alike, to inform, and sadly, they have also been used to manipulate. The telling of stories first started as oral story-telling. When humans learned how to write, stories began being copied down into books. We know now that stories, though they are beautiful and creative, also have the power to change the mind. A good story can be the basis of claims and dreams. President Trump, for example, told a simple yet straightforward story; “Let America be great again.” Some speculate that this story may have won him the election. Stories can change our view on anything basically, as they make us understand and reflect. In a way, all stories have the potential to change a reader’s view. It is when changing the reader’s view serves ulterior motives or becomes harmful, that stories become a problem.


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