SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN IS NEITHER SCIENTIFIC NOR AMERICAN
What has happened to this once great science-focused magazine that I used to read cover-to-cover?
‘Protest Paradigm’ Shows What’s Wrong with Media Coverage of Student Activism The following essay is reprinted with permission from The Conversation, an online publication covering the latest research.
Read more at Scientific American. |
Objectivity in research?
It is a given that most published material is conditioned by funding sources, the need to attract an audience, and the ideological bent of the publisher. This is true of journals, mainstream media, and social media platforms, where content is curated by both inclusion and omission.
Furthermore, some subjects do not lend themselves to manipulation by moral equivalency or multiculturalism. One such subject is terrorism targeted at innocent civilian populations to further a political power grab.
So let’s, for a moment, look at the author’s bio and see if we can see any predisposition for a bias or ideology…
Michigan State University, College of Communication Arts and Sciences, School of Journalism Danielle Brown, Ph.D., is the 1855 Community and Urban Journalism Professor and an associate professor in the School of Journalism. She is also the founding director of the LIFT Project -- an engaged research effort aimed at identifying networks of trusted messengers in Black communities in the Midwest to 1) understand their effects on civic and democratic life; 2) create, network, and allocate resources needed to inform Black communities better; and 3) build new opportunities for sustainable reparative narrative change. Dr. Brown’s interdisciplinary and community-engaged scholarship utilizes the cross-sections of journalism, political science, and sociology. She specializes in analyses of media representations and narrative change, social movements and activism, and identity and political psychology. Dr. Brown has published dozens of articles in top-tier journals, and her work also appears in popular media outlets like the Washington Post, Nieman Lab, Columbia Journalism Review and The Conversation. Much of her research and work has been supported with the more than $1.5 million in external funding she has secured from foundations and non-profit organizations like the Knight Foundation, Global Impact, Robert Wood Johnson, and Color of Change. She has received multiple awards and recognitions for her research and service record as an early-career scholar and her pioneering public engagement work. Dr. Brown is an associate editor for the International Journal of Press/Politics and serves on the editorial board for Journalism Practices. She previously served on the faculty at the University of Minnesota and Indiana University. Prior to joining the academy, she was a photojournalist, writer, and later a non-profit public relations professional. Her full curriculum vitae is available here. <Source> |
Already the red, and I do mean red, flags are flying as one can easily discern that the author’s bias and activism could easily affect her research findings and conclusions, especially using the pseudo-precise guidelines of the soft sciences such as sociology and the faux scientific pretense of “political science.”
How about her publications?
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS Brown, D. K. (2024). What January 6 was Not. In Kriess et al. (eds), Media and January 6. Oxford University Press. Brown, D. K., Williams Fayne, M., Henderson, J., Snow, J. C., Harisiadis, C., Gunapalan, T., & DeFoster, C. (2023). Lifted Voices: Local News Coverage After the Racial Reckoning, Minnesota News Media Report. www.LIFTproj.com. Brown, D. K., Snow, J. C., Walker, D., Henderson, J., Williams Fayne, M., Myers, C. L., & Smith, M. A. (2023). Lifted Voices: Perspectives of Residents and Leaders, Minnesota Survey Report. www.LIFTproj.com Brown, D. K. & Searles, K. (2023). “New” Methods, “New” Challenges. Political Communication Forum. http://dx.doi.org/10.17169/refubium-39043. Grabe, E. M., Brown, D.K. et al. (2023). The social contagion potential of pro-vaccine messages on Black Twitter. Health Communication. Brown, D. K. & Mourão, R. R. (2022). No Reckoning for the Right: How Political Ideology, Protest Intolerance and Media Consumption Affect Support for Black Lives Matter Protests. Political Communication. doi.org/10.1080/10584609.2022.2121346 Brown, D. K. (2022). Media models for nonviolence: Instagram representations of the #WomensMarch mass mobilization news and audience engagement. International Journal of Communication, 16, 1669-1687. Brown, D. K., & Midberry, J. (2022). Social media news production, emotional Facebook reactions, and the politicization of drug addiction. Health Communication, 37(3), 375-383. doi: 10.1080/10410236.2020.1846265 [OCS: Let us not forget that the racial unrest in Minnesota and elsewhere can be traced to the trained queer Marxist community organizers of Black Lives Matter and their massive multi-million dollar fraud. Or that the far-left media drove the murder conviction of Derek Chauvin for a violent felon resisting arrest who died from his heart condition and a fentanyl overdose.] |
Bottom line…
The point is not to deny Professor Brown’s scholarship, research, and activism but to point out how wildly inappropriate that her work be featured in a scientific publication, even one that has devolved into a pathetic rag.
We are so screwed when pseudo-science is used to drive a political ideology and agenda.
-- Steve
“Nullius in verba”-- take nobody's word for it!
"Acta non verba" -- actions not words
“Beware of false knowledge; it is more dangerous than ignorance.”-- George Bernard Shaw
“Progressive, liberal, Socialist, Marxist, Democratic Socialist -- they are all COMMUNISTS.”
“The key to fighting the craziness of the progressives is to hold them responsible for their actions, not their intentions.” – OCS "The object in life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane." -- Marcus Aurelius “A people that elect corrupt politicians, imposters, thieves, and traitors are not victims... but accomplices” -- George Orwell “Fere libenter homines id quod volunt credunt." (The people gladly believe what they wish to.) ~Julius Caesar “Describing the problem is quite different from knowing the solution. Except in politics." ~ OCS