The Patriot Act. Increased Racial
Profiling. Detainments. Watchlists. Warrantless Searches.
All of these are
synonyms for fear, and then follows a list of acts that have originated from
these fears.
Remember back in
2010 when Jon Stuart created “The Rally To Restore Sanity” and Stephen Colbert
followed, when he created “The March to Keep Fear Alive”? If not, Stuart'scan be found here and Colbert's, here.
Posner would in
no way consider Stuart or Colbert public intellectuals, but there’s no denying
that the two have a big political presence, especially within the media and public sphere. The two
use humor, satire, and other elements to appeal to their audiences, but behind
all of that lies truth (albeit, their version or take on it) and like their
activities mentioned above, appeal to the masses and try to engage the nation
in current events. I believe Colbert does a great job of this, especially when
he ran for President in 2008, the South Carolina Primary for GOP in early
January of this year, and then a few weeks later when he confirmed Stuart would
be the official head of his fundraising committee, and then he released the
statement "I am proud to announce that I am forming an exploratory committee to
lay the groundwork for my possible candidacy for the President of the United
States of South Carolina!"
Colbert elevated his humor to the next level: he integrated it not only
with truth, but also infused it with action. Why would two well-established
people such as Stuart and Colbert cross-over into full-fledged politics? I’d
like to think part of it was their fear of the current presidential happenings,
and turning that fear into a sense of safety. After all, what Stuart and
Colbert’s “stint” did was increase awareness of the politics, increase voter
turnout, and even increase people to convert
their fears into actions that could help indirectly alleviate some of those
fears.
In this instance,
I it worked to use the tools of fear and mass-media and then challenging us
(the public, Americans, the people) to take action.
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