John Stossel Rocks

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scurtis_34471

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This is very insightful and thought it provided some much-needed perspective:

By JOHN STOSSEL

April 18, 2007 — The randomness of the Virginia Tech shootings, and the way we hear the gory, horrific details reported over and over can make us lose perspective. One psychologist issued a press release saying, "We need to take action now to … end this epidemic of violence."

California legislators held special hearings on campus safety, and Sen. Diane Feinstein, D-Calif., said she hoped this would "reignite the dormant effort to pass common-sense gun regulations in this nation." Please. That's a lot of reaction for something that almost never happens.

Many Americans believe schools are more dangerous than ever, but that's a myth! It's one of many I've discovered in 36 years of consumer reporting. (Click here for more myths).

Death Toll Declining

In the early '90s — the first years records were kept — there were more than 40 deaths just from K-12 school shootings per year. Since then, the death toll has been trending down, not up.

MYTH: Schools are violent.
TRUTH: Schools are pretty safe.

Media bad news bears love crime and violence. Terrible things are happening, and everyone knows they're happening much more often. The gory pictures and the excited copy conceal the actual truth: America is safer than almost any country in human history.

The Virginia Tech shooting has resurrected the fears that the Columbine, Jonesboro and Paducah school shootings created during the late 1990s. Those killings triggered a regular spate of stories about "spreading school violence." But school violence in America had been steadily decreasing. Violent crimes in schools dropped by half between 1992 and 2002, although reporting about school violence increased.

Schools Are Safe

The shooting incidents are awful but aberrant; more Americans die from lightning strikes than from school violence. More kids die in bathtubs. But the media had become obsessed with school violence. After Columbine, my network aired 383 stories about the tragedy. Sam Donaldson warned wary parents and students about "angry teens turning up in other towns." CBS News correspondent Bob McNamara called school shootings "an American nightmare that too many schools know too well."

But it wasn't a nightmare that schools knew well. In fact, students are probably safer in school than they are at home or at the mall. Crime statistics show that kids are twice as likely to be victims of violence away from school than they are in school.

The media hysteria encouraged people who run schools to do crazy things, like spend thousands of dollars on security cameras, and hire police officers to guard the doors. Some schools terrified students by running SWAT team drills; cops burst into classrooms and ordered kids down to the floor. The result? Students felt less secure than ever before. Though school violence was down, studies show kids were more scared. "They can't learn under these conditions," said psychologist Frank Farley, former head of the American Psychological Association.

To listen to the media, Farley told me, you'd have to believe that Chicken Little was right. "The sky is truly falling. America is in terrible straits and our schools are a mess and they're violent. But they are not violent. I don't know why there is all this press coverage, other than the need for a story," said Farley.

That's it. The media beast must be fed. Scares drive up ratings.



Portions of this story taken from John Stossel's book, "Myth, Lies, and Downright Stupidity," coming out in paperback May 1.
 
I read an essay written by John Stossel about his job some 15 years back. Can't remember the title of the essay or even the publication unfortunately. In it he was talking about some of the news reports handed to him that he flat refused to do because he considered them sensationalist.

For example one that he refused was about Bic lighters exploding when using them normally and almost killing people. The producers wanted the story to sound like it was an epidemic but the truth was that it had happened only twice that he could find any record of, and neither were actually life threatening injuries.

I don't care if he's on a liberal network, Stossel is generally a pretty stand up guy.
 
That's it. The media beast must be fed. Scares drive up ratings.
Exactly. Reminds me of the Don Henley song Dirty Laundry: "We got the bubble-headed-bleach-blonde comes on at five...she can tell you 'bout the plane crash with a gleam in her eye. It's interesting when people die- give us dirty laundry"

...pass common-sense gun regulations...

And the award for oxymoronic buzzword of the decade goes to....Diane Feinstein!
 
Sometimes it's hard to believe he's involved in mainstream media. He's the perfect example of stepping back and looking at the big picture instead of acting quickly on emotion. That's a great story that probably won't reach enough people.
 
Stossel articulates what I couldn't, when I saw the comment by that VPC guy (Sugarmann?) who said that "school shootings define our nation." It is tragic whenever it happens--I am not trying to diminish the incident--but the "epidemic" is being manufactured.
 
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