ReviewEssays.com - Term Papers, Book Reports, Research Papers and College Essays
Search

Media Combativness

Essay by   •  December 29, 2010  •  Essay  •  485 Words (2 Pages)  •  884 Views

Essay Preview: Media Combativness

Report this essay
Page 1 of 2

The human race has become more combative in the last 30 years (maybe people have forgotten how wars, and feuds start). The stuff we see on the television, in the papers, and magazines has chanced vastly since the Vietnam War. Prior to that conflict you did not see the underhanded side of human nature. I feel that as time has went on we have come to expect the tactics that are used during election years. I see it more and more at a young age we are learning to be arugmentive, for example a toddler will argue that he/she doesn't want to go to bed and parents argue with them to get them to do what they want them to do, or will give in to their demands. Maybe this has accelerated the combativeness in our nature. We learn at a young age that we need to argue to get our way or to have that feeling of self importance. Now I am not saying that we should all become submissive, if we feel strongly about an issue that is great we can communicate this in a way that is not combative. On the other hand we need to learn to see the others persons thought for what they are, not that we are right and they are wrong. Ok a prime example of the media using their product to encourage this trend is the infamous presidential blow job. Now the way I see it that should have been a matter handle between the man and his wife, not on the nightly news. I still feel that Mr. Clintons actions, while not the best course of action for his marriage on his part, but it was not a matter that affected the way he ran the country or performed his duty to the people he represented. Did the media make that much of a stink over J.F.K'S roll in the hay with Miss Monroe? No, why because it was a matter to be handle between the man and his wife, and the times were different then. Things went down hill when the government allowed the media to cover the Vietnam war without the same rules and guide lines that were in place during the previous wars. Since then we have had Watergate, which yes was an illegal act, but was it a matter to be handle in the press? I don't feel it was it was a matter to be handle by the law of the land not the press of the land. What did it matter that Bill Clinton smoked a joint in college? Didn't we all? How did that action of 20 years prior have any bearing on weather or not he was or was not qualified to perform his job? We are no longer the people with the freedom to make our own decisions the press has made the decisions for us.

...

...

Download as:   txt (2.4 Kb)   pdf (56.5 Kb)   docx (9.4 Kb)  
Continue for 1 more page »
Only available on ReviewEssays.com