Framing Power: How Political Metaphors Shape Democracy
In today's newsletter: First, a short (3 minute) analysis of how the New York Times used a troubling
And what can we do to reframe the most important issue of our time?
“We’re in a propaganda war, but only one side is on the battlefield.” — David Fenton
If you read one thing today, please read this piece about the climate movement’s failure to compete with fossil fuel-funded propaganda on climate change.
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From The Guardian’s Jonathan Freedland:
Like the tobacco industry before it, oil and gas has sought to persuade the global public that they can’t be sure the climate crisis is real or human-made or that serious. It’s been hugely effective. To take just one number: only about one in seven Americans understands that there is a consensus among climate scientists, defined as more than 90% having “concluded that human-caused global warming is happening”.
Fossil fuel companies have spent billions to deceive the public and delay action. Using every technique of advertising, communication and marketing, they have campaigned relentlessly to sow doubt about their destructive product. Yet the climate movement has not risen to the communication challenge.
Writes Freedland:
Of course, this connects to a perennial problem for the left – which so often makes its case using statistics and abstract concepts, rather than simple images and emotion. (Think of the remain campaign.) Fenton urges the climate community to speak of pollution – a word everyone gets – and to settle on the image of a “blanket of pollution trapping heat on Earth”. Every oil and gas emission makes that blanket thicker – and all that trapped heat helps cause floods and start fires, he says.
FrameLab readers are no doubt familiar with this particular problem. Back in 2018, we discussed climate communication failures with David Fenton on the FrameLab podcast (click here to listen).
The issue: Communications from climate groups tend to be bogged down in policy speak, lingo and scientific factoids that lack the power to activate or convince. While asking the world to believe the science on climate change, climate activists have far too often ignored the science of communication.
But it’s not too late, and there may yet be hope. Read Freedland’s piece at the Guardian to find out more.
Related Readings:
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