Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 15 – Almost half of
Russians – 46 percent – say that they often cannot distinguish “false
information from truth” in media reports, while a similar percentage – 46 percent
say that they can, numbers that are relatively constant across groups of
different ages and social classes, according to Aleksey Levinson of the Levada
Center.
Given that significant majorities
watch central state television channels, the sociologist continues in a Vedomosti article, this reflects their
evaluation of their ability to judge what they are told in the first instance
on those channels rather than by other media outlets (vedomosti.ru/opinion/columns/2017/03/14/681023-lzhepravdi)
Many people say that homemakers “believe
‘the box’ more than others,” but data show that in fact, Russian homemakers today
are the most skeptical about their ability to distinguish truth from falsehood
on Russian television with 51 percent saying that they can’t always. Only a
slightly smaller share of workers say the same thing.
Moreover, Levinson continues, “among
those who have a university diploma, 41 percent cannot always distinguish
between television truth and television lies.
And even among the bosses, he says, the figure with similar with four in
ten saying that “we don’t know whether they are deceiving us or not.”
There are three reasons, Levinson
suggests, why there is no general and full trust in the Russian media. First of all, viewers have their own
experiences which allow them to compare what is said with what is true. “But
this isn’t the main reason,” the sociologist continues, and he points to two
additional ones.
The second reason is rooted in the
experience of Russians at the end of Soviet times when people began to
understand that “freedom begins with independence from official propaganda and
with the absence of unqualified faith in everything that this broadcast from
above.” That attitude has been extended to the Moscow media since they are
obviously state-controlled.
And third – and this, Levinson says,
is the “main” reason – Russian media today and those who direct it “don’t need
unqualified faith from their viewers, listeners or readers.” Instead, what they
require is that people suspend critical judgment and remain uncertain as to
what is true and what is not.
That is sufficient and keeps
Russians from coming down on the side of truth, an important value in Russian
culture, and thus putting them on the road to conflict with the powers that be.
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