The Bridge with Peter Mansbridge - Moore-Butts #8 -- The Politics of The Lie
Episode Date: May 15, 2023Our two political heavyweights, Conservative James Moore and Liberal Gerry Butts, move their latest non-partisan discussion to the question of lies and their growing place in modern politics. Like i...t or not the lie is in the toolbox of politics and Donald Trump isn't the only one using it. How did that happen and where does it lead? Those are the questions we tackle in Moore-Butts #8.
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And hello there, Peter Mansbridge here. You are just moments away from the latest episode of The Bridge.
The topic today, the politics of the lie.
The Moore Butts conversation takes that subject head on today. And hello there, welcome to a new week.
Peter Mansbridge here in Toronto for this day.
And it's Moore-Butts conversation number eight today.
And you know, it's amazing that we've got to number eight.
When I first started this off, you know, sometime last year,
the whole idea was to put these two, you know two political heavyweights, if you will, together
in a room and let them talk about subjects
and hope they wouldn't go over that partisan line,
but stay in an information line
so we could try to understand whatever the particular issue of the day was.
Well, it worked.
And it keeps working. And today in conversation number eight, or issue of the day was. Well, it worked.
And it keeps working.
And today in conversation number eight,
I think we may well have the best one that we've done so far,
although they've all been pretty good.
James Moore, the former Conservative Cabinet Minister in the Harper government, had a number of different portfolios.
And today he's a senior policy advisor for the Denton's Group
and also works for Edelman as well
with similar kind of advice
to that big, huge international public relations firm.
As for Jerry Butts,
Jerry Butts is a former principal advisor
to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
He's a liberal, of course.
He is now the vice chair of the Eurasia Group, which advises governments and businesses around the world on questions of foreign policy and others.
Climate change.
He's a climate change expert uh himself anyway so there you go
that's kind of the the setup the conversation this week is on the politics of the lie we've all
watched uh you know when some of us feel oh well there's always been lying in politics well yeah
to a degree to some extent but nothing like it is today. And we tend to point
at one person for being responsible for this, but there's more than that. Although there's certainly
enough grist for the talk mill in talking about that one person, and you know who I'm talking
about when I say that. So enough from me, let's get to our conversation because i find this one really really good
there's some very good moments in this conversation so here we go the moore butts conversation
number eight all right gentlemen i want to start with your basic reaction to what we witnessed on Thursday night on CNN with Donald Trump.
James is actually on the record with his Thursday night tweet.
This is what it said.
Trump tonight refused to call Putin a war criminal,
continued to fuel insurrection-inducing lies about the 2020 election,
laughed about sexual abuse, promised to pardon january 6 rioters and claimed he finished
the wall the disgrace never ends got anything to add to that today james uh it wasn't just the
spectacle of donald trump that was upsetting that actually the most upsetting part was him uh dismissing and continuing to um abuse the character of a woman
who was found to have told the truth that donald trump sexually assaulted her there was a it was a
unanimous jury decision that found of donald trump's peers who who decided that donald trump
did sexually uh assault a woman and that he defamed her in his efforts to defend
himself. And about that conversation, there were people in the audience who laughed and thought it
was really funny in the way in which Donald Trump continued to insult this victim of sexual assault.
I think that was kind of the nadir of it. On the other hand, I don't agree with those who have said that CNN
should not have platformed him. Donald Trump is the former president of the United States. Donald
Trump is the likely nominee for the Republican Party. Donald Trump has the support of over 40%
of Americans who want this kind of stuff back into the White House. It's shocking to say,
but the truth is the truth donald trump and
the and the reputation that he's built around his economic policy and i'm using air quotes with my
fingers his economic policy and the perception of what it is which is you know pro-business and
tough and fiscally responsible and all that none of that is true it's all a meme but but his
economic policies and the perception of them are are far more popular in public opinion polling than are Joe Biden's.
And there's also the perception of a genuine border crisis now with Mexico.
If the Mexican border crisis continues to emerge and gets exploited and gets torqued up and the economy continues to be an issue, if America does slip into a recession later this year and Joe Biden continues to underperform, Donald Trump could very well uh and it's absolutely plausible that he'd be the president united states again so those are
the two most shocking things to me is the substance of what donald trump said yes but the audience
reaction to it and then the fact that people are talking and criticizing cnn for platforming a guy
people who are opposed to donald trump better start getting serious and honest with themselves about the fact that there is a large number of Americans, a massive cohort of
Americans, almost half of Americans, like what they saw, like what they see, and want him back
in the White House. And people need to be honest about that. How do you, and I hear you on that,
but how does that square with your last line the disgrace never ends well a lot of people like a lot of
disgraceful things uh politics is not about politics is a is about the choices in front of
you right and then it is what it is and for a lot of americans because of the polarization of
american politics donald trump represents a lot of things that they like which is that he's an
outsider he breaks the mold the bushes the obamas the Obamas, the Clintons, the Bidens, the media and Hollywood
all hate him. And just therefore, you know, ipso facto, he must represent them because he hates all
of the establishment because their lives aren't going well, they're not happy with the way the
world works. And if they hate him, he must be my guy so so in spite
of all the and also you know both political parties have spent Generations um smearing
politics tearing down politics saying the other side or a bunch of corrupt liars you know Bill
Clinton was responsible for um you know for for sexual assault Clarence Thomas is a rapist Bill
Clinton is a sexual Assault. Bill Clinton was responsible for
the death of his friend who committed suicide in a park just near the Pentagon. We've spent
many, many years, many decades tearing down and destroying the reputation of politics and
government and politicians. So when a guy like Donald Trump actually comes along, who tries to
incite an insurrection, who has actually now been found guilty of sexual assault,
who has twice been impeached, who has 34 indictments against him in New York for business fraud.
People just go, yeah, I know. Well, they're all kind of scumbags, aren't they?
And it's like, this is where we are. And it's shocking.
Jerry.
Well, it's hard to follow that, James.
I certainly agree with almost everything you said, though.
And it's in particular this last point of the long term.
I've used this analogy many times that it's like the public square has been flooded slowly with toxic sludge.
And it's happening here, too, at a much lower velocity,
but in the United States, it's impossible to overstate how corrupt your average American
thinks your average politician is. And once you establish that as a base rate,
it's very difficult to, um, there's, there are a lot of cliches about this and fairy tales and lessons from um uh history
but this is a boy who cried wolf situation about american politics as a whole there actually is a
wolf in the public square now and nobody can recognize it or at least 40% of the American public is not recognizing it. And I, you know,
I've been banging this drum for a little bit, Peter, but I think Donald Trump is the clear
front runner to become the next president of the United States. And I think that Joe Biden
is in trouble. And it's not because of anything he's done as president, but the visual presentation of those two men side by side is not going to favor the Democrats in the election.
You're talking about the age factor?
I mean, it's not like Trump.
I'm talking about everything, everything about it.
You know that I used to say when I was in active politics that the people who win the pictures usually win the campaign.
Right. And building momentum is about creating a consistent visual narrative that tells a story
that paints a picture of a community of people that you want to belong to. And that's true in
business. It's true in politics. It's true in just about everything. And Biden's got no energy. And I know people make fun of the way Trump uses that all the time, that he's low energy. But like most of the memes that and Donald Trump is nothing else, if not a meme factory, every time he opens his mouth, most of the memes that he has generated, there's a kernel of truth
to them. And I really worry about what that looks like side by side, because we forget the 2020
campaign was a very unusual campaign. Joe Biden could get away with not campaigning because we
were all in our basements, right? Famously. And the Trump campaign tried to make an issue of that. And when Trump did start to
develop some momentum at the end of the campaign was when he said, screw it, I'm going to go do
these rallies anyway. Right. And tens of thousands of people saw Donald Trump and those pictures got
broadcast on the national news and all around the social media, various social media platforms.
And it created this sense of momentum. And I think that we really underestimate the
we've kind of lived through this peaceful interregnum, right, where we've had a couple
of years of Joe Biden and the United States has almost felt normal. If you're in Canada or in the United States is doing a bunch of things that we expect the United States to do.
It's alliance building. It's facing down Russia. It's leading the charge against climate change.
It's doing a bunch of stuff that a lot of people, especially Canadians, would prefer to see the United States doing.
But that structural polarization that James mentioned is still very present.
And it could return with a vengeance if the campaign breaks in the wrong way.
The point Jerry just made about the 2020 campaign, because, you know, you talk to and I've
talked to many Democrats in the United States, they say, well, everything is easier the second
time Biden beat him the first time and it's easier the second time. And now Trump has indicted and so so therefore like there's just there's just too big of a gap there's
no way and i and it i it's so foolish for people to think that you know joe biden will be four
years older than he has been um the the cycle of the economy is trending in the wrong direction
the immigration crisis that i that i just just said is a reality as well.
And also the dynamics of 2020,
like every single election campaign in Canada,
every single election campaign in the United States,
it's a science of single instances,
which is to say it's no science at all.
They are all, it's a moment in time
influenced by a constellation of issues
around that particular date on the calendar
that are unique to each circumstance.
And the COVID point that Jerry makes is an important one.
And I think thoughtful observers,
now that we have some distance from November, 2020,
thoughtful observers have all said,
Joe Biden didn't win by actually that much.
It was about 80,000 net votes in three swing states
that were the difference between him and Donald Trump
getting a second term.
And so, and if you take COVID out of it and the entire narrative because that was peak covet right the the the vaccines
were just coming in we were starting to get back up we were starting to glimpse into 21 but but
summer and fall of 20 was peak covet in terms of the accumulated deaths and the accumulated lies
about cobit that were then being spilled by the Trump administration about, you know,
about, you know, Invermectin and all this sort of nonsense. And this is no big deal. It'll go
away in a year. And all that stuff was catching up. So he was caught in a lie that had massive
public consequence that ultimately a million, more than a million Americans have died of COVID.
There was a real public policy failure that had, it wasn't just a matter of opinion,
like all that's going to be gone. donald trump looks vibrant and young and energetic and thoughtful and and articulate
against you know joe biden at this point in in his life and that's a in terms of energy and going
forward and and you know everybody has their strengths and weaknesses. Like I think you, you can say in a pure marketing analysis,
like the strengths of Donald Trump in the moment he is,
he looks strong. He presents as tough. He presents as Jingo Weston.
He does habitually present himself as America first.
And I'm going to have America's back. Like people,
if you're looking through the lens and you want to believe that message,
he looks like a consistent and firm and clear messenger to the audience that he's trying to
appeal to. It's very hard to say that about Joe Biden. All right. Let me, I could sidetrack and
go into a debate about how articulate he looks, but I'll ignore that and stay on.
His audience.
Yeah. To his audience, perhaps. But let's stay on the focus. To his audience. Yeah, to his audience, perhaps.
But let's stay on the focus that we were trying to achieve here,
and that is this whole question of the lie.
I mean, Jerry mentioned a few moments ago that there's a kernel of truth
in a lot of what Trump says.
Yeah, there's also kind of an avalanche of lies that tends to blow up that kernel but i i
want to try to understand how we got to this point because i mean there's no doubt that thursday the
basis of his performance was was the lie i mean he told it repeatedly time after time after time
uh it's not a surprise.
We've known Trump as a liar for years.
I can recall days after the inauguration, I called him a liar on the air,
and I got kind of taken to the woodshed by not only my colleagues but CBC management at that time.
They said, well, you can't use the L word.
And a lot of people had that same theory in the American networks.
But now it's common like
everybody calls him a liar all the time there's no hesitation in using the in the l word how has
it come to this where where lying seems to have become and it's not just trump but he's the most
obvious target when you go this way but how how has it become an accepted part of the
political toolbox, if you wish? Jerry, you start us here.
I think Trump is a special case. There are other liars in politics, but it's sort of like comparing
when people compare someone to Hitler, right? There's only one Hitler. There's only one Donald Trump. And nobody has
created as big and successful a political career out of constantly lying quite like Trump.
And I think it gets back to, as much as I hate to say this, it's part of his personal brand.
And it always has been. I remember when I was a kid, my dad used to read what he called the papers every weekend.
And those were the Globe and the Star.
And I don't mean the Globe and Mail and the Toronto Star and the National Enquirer.
And we would get them at the grocery store every weekend and he would read them and he would pass them around to his friends.
And they would. This is a retired coal miner, right? So put yourself in that picture. And many of us,
including some of his kids, used to scratch our heads at it, but it was entertainment for him.
He never confused it with news, right? He was also a huge fan of yours, Peter,
and he watched you religiously and he loved public affairs. But somewhere along the line, we've
lost the ability to differentiate streams of information. And this gets back to the analogy
of flooding the public square with toxic sludge. Donald Trump has been part of that from the very
beginning. So when the Democrats tried to tell Americans in 2016 that Donald Trump was a bad guy,
Americans already knew that. They had seen him in the pages of the National Enquirer for 30 years.
They had seen him in the middle of the ring in WWF and then WWE for 20 years. He had made himself
part of the lifeblood of popular American culture in a more intimate way, I would argue, than anybody who'd ever run for president successfully.
So there was nothing you could tell the average American in Ohio about Donald Trump that he or she didn't already know.
And they bought into the spectacle.
So the lying was part of the brand,
but it was never the point.
And I think people are willing to overlook it.
The people who love him and are part of his tribe,
they just expect it.
And for people like us to stand back and say,
oh, how can they believe that?
They look at us and say,
well, we've known that about this guy all along but he's our guy
right he's our guy and that of course is the big lie because he couldn't be more the opposite right
um but he's created this almost unbreakable brand for himself that is impervious to any
individual action he takes or individual statement he utters.
James?
There's also, I agree with all that. Also this context, because you framed the question sort of where we're at today. We have had now, you know, about 15 years, it's hard to pick a date on it,
but sort of collapsing trust in major institutions that have led people to sort of say, well,
you're asking me, like, don't let the lie, you're asking me to trust. It's like, well, what?
What? I remember the most trusted man in American politics, Colonel Colin Powell,
who became General Colin Powell, who became Secretary of State Colin Powell. I remember him
going to the floor of the United Nations and making the argument for WMD Iraq. I remember that. I remember. I remember. And it's not even just on a large scale like that.
And you say, well, you know, so I can't trust. We could never trust politicians.
But Colin Powell was at one point the most respected man in the United States.
If he ran for president, he'd win an Ashuman and all that. And he did that.
And then you look at other institutions and it's it's a collapse of institutions everywhere you think about um the national football league lying about
what they knew about the ray rice incident knocking out his his his girlfriend in an elevator and
covering that up you think about the concussion crisis in football and them trying to cover the
thing about major league baseball lying about the steroid scandal you think about you know the year
the year that donald trump won the nomination to be the Republican nominee for president.
You know what movie won Best Picture that year in 2016 or the 15, the year that he launched Spotlight, which is a movie about what?
Collapse of trust in the Catholic Church and the covering up of the sexual abuse and torture of children.
Collapse of trust. And you can go institution after institution, the 2008 economic crisis, the collapse of trust in institutions, banking and regulations and
protecting people and their assets, their homes, and the financial structure about the most
important economic decision of your life, and the collapse and the hundreds of thousands of people
who lost all of their life savings. So no matter where you went, sports, football, military,
the treatment of our veterans, you know, our most
trusted people in public life. It was just a collapse of trust everywhere. So Donald Trump
comes along and he's a liar. Well, yeah, well, whatever. What isn't lying to me these days?
And the tectonic shift that was the 08 economic crisis and the collapse of trust and everything
around it. And people say, well, look at Donald Trump. He's lying. He's not really going to build
a wall like Mexico is going to pay for it. Come on. They say, well, it's as good a lie as any other one out there.
And I remember going to the 2016. I was in I was in Cleveland at the Republican convention as an observer doing some media and walking around the halls of that convention, chatting with delegates there.
Right. And I would say, you know, and it was interesting because they were kind of in two groups.
There were people sort of who were just trying to will their version of the world
into reality and it is as I say there are people who it's like they believe that professional
wrestling is real and you think wow like I don't know where to start from with this argument but
then there were other people and it was interesting because they were really cognizant of what they
were seeing in front of them and they would say well I'd say why are you support Donald Trump
because he's going to change he's going to shake everything up he's going to build and i said but he's not
really going to build a 25 foot wall all the way across the like that's not real and he said no no
he's going to build it and i said he's not really going to build it he goes well if anybody's going
to build it it'll be him and at least he's going to try and and he's he's saying what i want to
to hear because it's it's good like that's's how it should be. And at least he's
going to try it and screw it. Let's just go for it. Like what do we have to lose? Just go for it.
And so they knew it was a lie. They knew it was a meme. They knew there was a skit going on. They
were playing their part in the crowd. But it was comforting to them to try to take a lie and turn a lie into reality through the force of will and bravado
and you know it's is that toxic yes but in some ways for a lot of people that represented hope
to sort of surrender to a mistruth and the hope that you could will it into existence even though
it's not quite true now so there's a there's a psychology behind this in our democracy that i think we have to be aware of this uh this conversation is so good but it's so depressing i mean
you know i you know i seem to say that after my interventions
you're both in sync on a lot of this stuff i mean i'm old enough to to remember when a lie could be the basis or end up as a resignation.
You know, that's not on the charts anymore.
Nobody even thinks about it.
But the picture you both paint is like so ugly about now.
I mean, like, where is this heading?
What does this lead to?
This goes on like unchecked.
So here here is the good news. And it's very good news. I'm not sure if it's good news in an absolute sense, but it's definitely good news in relative to the in relation to the immediately previous conversation. General Malley Dillon, who ran a Biden's campaign in 2016. I remember
talking to her in 2020, talking to her in the run up to it. We were planning our own campaign
in 2019. And I said, so what's your message? And she said, Joe Biden's a good man and Donald Trump
is a bad man. That is our message. And we think we can win the
campaign on that because there are enough people in the United States who want a good person,
not a bad person in the White House. And I immediately thought, I'm not so sure about
that, but it's really simple and clear. And if you stick to that, maybe, and it's obviously true.
So if it's simple, clear, and obviously true, and you stick to it and
paint the picture in compelling ways, you can probably win. And they did. Now, I still think
that is true. But what has intervened in the meantime, to mitigate that is, I think Biden,
notwithstanding what his doctor's reports say, notwithstanding what is actually going on inside his anatomy,
he looks old and frail. And generally, Americans do not want someone in the White House who projects
frailty. So I think it's going to be, as James said, it's 80,000 votes in a couple of,
in a few states, and they're going to be hard to reconstruct.
But I don't think, I don't think we should take from the Donald Trump phenomenon,
the thought that all is lost about politics. There are very grave consequences. I think that need to be managed and mitigated. If you're around the NATO table, if you're in the EU,
if you're in Canada, if you worry about NAF table, if you're in the EU, if you're in Canada,
if you worry about NAFTA, if you worry about a lot of things, there are a lot of things that
need to be managed and mitigated. But I don't think we should come away from it with the
nihilistic conclusion that therefore all is lost in public life. Good people can still do well.
You agree with that, James?
I do agree with that.
Lying eventually catches up with you,
and lying eventually catches up with a country.
You know, you can talk about, you know,
the accumulation of lies in any jurisdiction.
We're focusing on Trump here.
I mean, you know, we can come home to Canada
and talk about different political parties, you know, and, you know, we can put our, you know, we're parking our partisan hats here. I mean, you know, we can come home to Canada and talk about different political parties,
you know, and, you know, we can put our, you know, we're parking our partisan hats here.
But eventually you accumulate and eventually the public just says, I just, I'm listening to this person because I just don't trust them anymore. And you just sort of shut them out. What maybe
is required in particularly in the United States is that there comes a point where a big lie doesn't
just have consequences for Donald Trump and whether or not he has to pay a couple million
dollars to somebody who he's been found guilty of sexually assaulting, you know, a couple decades
ago. But when a lie has a consequence for me, you know, when it was when Gordon or when Glenn Clark,
you know, was seen to be lying about the benefits of fast ferries in British Columbia and cost the
Treasury millions of dollars in a boondoggle project well now that affects me politicians
will lie but when it affects me well the the the you hope though that the lie doesn't doesn't
result in um you know a catastrophic um public policy the you know wm iraq cost thousands and
tens of thousands hundreds of thousands of lives of lives unnecessarily, as it turns out.
I think history is pretty clear on that. And then, of course, loss to the Treasury and all that. And
the public says, wait a minute. So I know a friend who lost a friend and another buddy of mine who
served is not being treated well. They've never really recovered PTSD, et cetera, et cetera. So
that lie is now why the Republican Party has only won the popular vote once in the last, I think, nine presidential elections.
So the Republican Party has said, which is among the reasons why the recorrection of the Republican Party now into an isolationist anti-war party in its own way.
It is because they have to overcorrect to try to scrub that, that they're not the party that will go into useless wars, actually won't even back, you know, appropriate military action in places like Ukraine,
because they were so stung by the overcorrection of the public against their party being in favor
of wars that they don't need to be. So the overcorrection in that direction. So I think
when the lies accumulate and have public consequence, that's when everybody sort of
retreats back and there'll be a counterbalance. To Jerry's point, though, is that, you know, the, you know,
there are very good people and honest, decent people.
But I just think it's very, very hard now because noise and heat is what is rewarded in politics,
not reason and substance and accomplishment.
And, you know, the other day for this passport issue in Canada,
which you talked about on your podcast this week,
I know, Peter,
about the symbols and all that.
I was literally standing in line
at Starbucks
and I saw people rattling around
on Twitter about how Terry Fox
and Vimy Ridge are taking that.
So I put forward a tweet
and I just said,
wait a minute,
they've scrubbed Terry Fox
and the Vimy Ridge Memorial
from the passport?
Who approved that?
That's crazy.
And I literally put that tweet out
and it's had like 5,000 or 6, thousand likes and retweets and there are literally 10 or 20 streams
of conversations going on going on about how this is this is how the Nazis got started it's like whoa
like like we've spiraled it's like holy cow who wants to who wants to put their hand up and their
family into the grinder of this public square at this time um it's it that's the that's genuinely depressing things but anyways i i i hope that
there's social learning and people realize there's consequence that politics cannot just be about
incitement it has to be actually about problem solving and governing yeah and i i think you make
a really important point here james which is there you'd like to think in a kind of cosmic way that lies always have consequences for the liars, but you know, often they don't have
many consequences for anybody else. And the difference between a lie that hurts somebody
in your family and one that is just seen to be grist, the daily mill of politics,
there's a big gulf between those two things. And
I don't think it's a stretch to say that Donald Trump lost in 2020, largely because of COVID.
I think that is what you were inferring earlier, James. And there's a lie that cost people
their lives, right? And in the most profound and traumatic way left an indelible scar on families,
millions of them in the United States. So in, in a way,
I think that I don't want to say there's something hopeful about that,
but maybe there's something reassuring about it that you can,
you can basically lie until the lies have consequences for real people and real
ways.
And then they,
um,
they kind of stop listening to you or they turn away from you.
Okay.
We're going to take a quick break.
I want to bring the other element into the story,
which is the media,
how it plays things now and how it,
uh,
how it's got to reconsider if at all,
how it's going to play things in the
future as a result of the politics of the law.
That when we come back.
And welcome back.
You're listening to The Bridge, the Monday episode of Moore Butts.
This is conversation number eight.
James Moore, the former Conservative cabinet minister,
and Gerry Butts, the former top Liberal aide to the Prime Minister,
both in new jobs, away from Parliament Hill these days,
but giving us their thoughts on the issues of the day.
You're listening on Sirius XM, Channel 167, Canada Talks,
or on your favorite podcast platform.
Okay, I want to talk about the media,
because after Thursday night, CNN is in the crosshairs
for giving an exposed liar, a twice-impeached,
multi-indicted, convicted sexual abuser, a platform.
Where are you on the media's role in this?
James, you start.
I mean, as harsh, if not more harsh, because like the media, quote, quote, like it's a
difficult thing and it's a hard thing to analyze because people talk about the media quote, quote, like it's, it's a, it's a difficult thing. And I, and I, it's a hard thing to analyze because people talk about the media quote,
but I often think like to say,
let's have a conversation about media is like saying,
let's have a conversation about sport. What sport hockey, baseball,
Olympic amateur, professional collegiate, like what kids like what?
So, so media is a massive umbrella that constitutes a lot of things.
Those who chronicle what has happened
and put it and try to synthesize it and put it out for information conversation and to keep the
public informed. That's one form of media, but that's a shrinking island. And it's being
overwhelmed by people who think that that's what they're getting. But what they're actually getting
are people who are running businesses and they're feeding people the substance that they want.
And you see it on the right. Of course, you see it on the left. Of course, you see it in both
fronts that the right tends to get scrutinized more, which says more about, you know, the nature
of the ideological composition of those who go into journalism. But it happens everywhere. And
I think a lot of people, as Jerry said earlier, don't often have, they don't seem to disseminate between them all.
And they think that one is the other and, and, and the other,
which is essentially essentially feeding the audience what they want to hear
and, and placating their,
their base instincts and ideologies and biases for the sake of the audience's
comfort and who pretend that that's actually sort of informed objective.
Here's what
actually happened news i mean those are the bad actors but it's hard to smoke them out
tucker carlson you know has been smoked out but he's welcomed onto a platform he's going to be
making a lot more money on twitter uh because he's um he's cultivating an audience and he's
running a business and he's not actually in the media and news environment. And so, you know, the media are, broadly speaking,
quote, unquote, are very culpable
because they don't govern themselves.
We see this, frankly, in the press gallery in Ottawa.
And it's been going on for, why is, you know,
why are some of the clear bad actors,
members of the press gallery?
Like Frank Magazine are members of the press gallery
and have been for years. Some of the independent journalists who are clearly just activists for
on EDC on either end are credentialed members of the press gallery who go to the press gallery
dinner who spend their evenings on laptops trying to destroy people for for no other reason but fun
and sport rather than actually being so so you know where's the self-government amongst
journalism to to have an honest conversation about their own profession um you know i think
that's something that's very much missing in canada and missing uh in in other jurisdictions
around the world as well jerry well i find myself saying this a lot. I agree with James entirely. The thing I would add to it is there's no ballast in the ship anymore.
It used to be that there were kind of out there media outlets in Canada,
but overall they were kind of balanced by a few key and people will see this
as evidence of some conspiracy,
but a few key outlets that you could count on to kind of tell
the truth over time and that they were more interested in getting the public square righted
than they were in selling newspapers or in this day and age driving clicks. And I just don't see
that anymore. I was talking to a friend who works at CBC, not in front of a camera, but she was
telling me about how at CBC headquarters these days,
the walls are filled with screens telling you what's moving and what's not.
It's kind of like you're in an old style stock exchange where you're looking at price fluctuations
over seconds, minutes, and hours. If that's all you're focused on, and this is certainly true of the Globe and
Mail and the way they run their business now, if all you're focused on is which stories are moving
fastest and what's attracting the most attention, then there's no way you're going to be focused on
telling the news over time. And, you know, I've been a harsh critic of the Globe and Mail.
I've been a harsh critic of other media outlets, but I think I've been a fair one. I think they're following a business model and not the public interest. And the ones that I worry about aren't the ones that you expected from the far reaches of the left and right. It's the ones that used to be in the center that are behaving in the same way that you would have expected yellow journalism to behave in yesteryear.
Okay, let me...
But what do you think, Peter?
You always ask us questions.
You have a lot more experience in this than we do.
Can I get Peter Mansbridge on record about Canadian journalism and where it's going?
I've actually said a few things lately, even about my old employer, the CBC,
which hasn't put me in good stead with some of them.
But let me pull the two of you back to the issue of the lie and the liar.
How do you cover an unrepentant liar?
That was part of the debate surrounding last Thursday, right?
Why did they ever give him a platform?
Why didn't they challenge him more?
Although I thought Caitlin Collins did a
hell of a job, all things considered.
But how do
you cover that person, whether
it's Trump or whether it's somebody else
you're convinced is constantly putting
out lies,
conspiracy theories, what have you
how do you cover that
well i think uh again i'm i'm not a journalist but i think that the way to cover is to
describe the connection between the lie and what kind of effect it has for the audience, right?
That it's not just that Donald Trump is lying about COVID.
It's that COVID is now affecting millions more people than it would have
had he been truthful about it in the beginning.
And I think that that's, it's a difficult connection to make,
but I think it's the most important connection to make.
Otherwise it all just sounds like talk. I don't think you should let lies go unchallenged, that's for sure.
Yeah. And I think one of the saving graces of a lot of this is the fact that the tools are out
there for citizen journalists and people just to sort of expose people, right? And there's a law of averages.
Even the best communicator, you know, the worst communicator will drop the ball in one
out of every five media interviews that they do.
And then eventually the party, you know, Canada party just say, well, let's go ahead and not
put that person on a panel anymore.
Or let's have them, you know, not go out and scrum after question period.
You know, great communicators will drop one in every 10,000 interviews,
but eventually you will hit your mark.
Eventually your law of averages catches up with everybody.
And the ability of the public now to sort of talk about this
and put it out there and say, look, this is just fact counterfact.
This is just eventually over time,
there's just an accumulation of weight of evidence on a person.
And you never know what is going to be the one lie or the one circumstance
that's eventually going to catch up with people.
And again, keeping it contemporary.
What did Justin Trudeau know about China in 2001 with Michael Chong?
Is it plausible that CSIS did their homework, presented it to PCO,
Justin Trudeau either saw it and ignored it or didn't see it?
Eventually, if that's the thing that you think is the most important to you because maybe maybe
you're a member of the chinese canadian diaspora and you have real concern about the government in
the way in which they're handling this maybe that's the thing in which you just say you know
what i just can't vote liberal anymore because i just don't believe them in this circumstance
because this has a material impact to me or you know to be to be
fair and to be cross-partisan like somebody says you know i've invested 20 years of my life into
scientific discovery and the idea that i have to go through the prime minister's communications shop
to decide whether or not the weather report that i'm going to put out there that'll have an impact
on aquaculture on the west coast of british columbia that has to go through the minister's
office before i have to say okay to do an interview in a regional paper about the shifting tides and the concerns
that i have for the next 20 years and that that that has to be okayed by a political office that's
just wrong like you know so so people now have tools at their disposal to to talk about these
things and put evidence on the table and the public can choose to dismiss them or not that's
the biggest biggest anxiety that i have but the tools with which people have to actually
expose truth and to put it in in front of the sunlight for for its first effect i have have
never been more manifest i'll i'll give you a counterpoint to that though peter which is um
the technology that is currently in rapid development to mislead
people into believing lies i.e misinformation and disinformation generated by uh artificial
intelligence is truly terrifying and um we will soon be able to video still very hard, but we will soon see images that we cannot distinguish from the real thing.
But they're generated by malign actors using high compute power.
And that's in this environment, the one that we're describing.
That's something to be truly worried about.
And in closed media environments, whether it's Russia, China, North Korea, you know,
like you start, imagine these tools in the hands of someone like Ceausescu or where you
can close off your borders and you can control the printing presses and the radio waves and
so on.
And you can control what people see in their television, radio and in print.
We have seen that world before when you extend it to digital and when there's just mass public
confusion about what's real and what's not, that is a very toxic uh toxic dynamic so therefore
the the need the fundamental need for us to have clear transparent verifiable peer-reviewed
silos or or pipelines of objective truth of what's actually happening. You know, the Leafs lose to
the Florida Panthers, but we know who scored, we know the score, we know it's verifiable. It's a
factual, it's a data point. What was in the federal budget? How much money was pledged? How much money
was spent? What's going to come up? You know, what are they expecting in terms of interest rates?
What's the forecast for deficits? And so like like it's an objective truth like people who want to establish platforms of objective clear truth I think the
public is craving for that because outside of whatever our biases the public just you know
it part of the reason why we flick on whatever websites or pick up a paper or turn and turn into
whatever station see I just want to know what the hell happened there was a boom and there was a
boom in the distance what happened like there Like there's a noise. Did a train
derail? Did something blow up? Was it just a firework? Like what happened over there? Do I
pick up my phone? And what platform do I go to to find out what the hell's happening around me?
Small scale, large scale, there's frankly money to be made, an economic model there for people
who can establish a platform of verifiable
objective truth that the public can tap into so that again that's maybe my silver lining
counterbalance to jerry is that he's right about the threat but i think there's opportunity out
there because the public at the end of the day you know it's it's a darwinian impulse we look
for patterns we look for consistency we look onto the horizon to see where the dangers are
and that has to be informed by objective truth
we are wired biologically through our darwinian impulse to look for risk on the horizon and we need to be informed by truth and so i think in time the avenues for for people to believe in
something that is genuinely true and objectifiably true will present itself all right in other words
free markets work i just want the record i want the record to show
peter that it was james who raised yes i believe he went to defeat at the end of the i i was willing
to let it go for the whole podcast he went to bring you and leave nation he went a bridge too
far on that one i must say but um listen we're we're out of time but i want to stretch it by a minute to each of you
uh with this last question um you know we we like to think as canadians that we're
that we're either pure from all this or we're close to being pure from all this
trump makes it look like his use of lying makes him a winner and you know success is contagious how does the system uh prevent that
from uh infecting canada with the same the same situation so a a minute to each of you um
jerry first i think our our our greatest and most important antibody or inoculation against that is our public school system, frankly.
I think that the fact that I grew up in a relatively poor town in eastern Nova Scotia and had all the same opportunities as people who grew up in Rosedale is largely due to the fact that we had strong public schools.
And that's why I kind of spent the first half of my career on that issue.
But I think as long as we have that, where there's going to be a baseline of inoculation
against it, what I think is going to be problematic is just the technological advancement coupled
with a chaotic media environment is making it very difficult for people to sort what's real
and what's not. And it, um, the ability to find like-minded people has been weaponized by some of
the most technologically advanced communications platforms in the world to give you the same
belonging to override your rational judgment of what's true and false. And that's really hard.
And Canada has no border against that.
All right.
James, you got the final word.
Yeah.
Well, I think two antidotes.
One, your question was, how do we not go down the rabbit hole
like we have in the United States?
I think we have two antidotes in Canada that are actually helpful.
One is actually our system.
In the United States, they don't have a question period.
We malign question period and attack question period.
But but there actually is an infrastructure in Canada and an expectation that the political parties will face each other live on television, live in front of the world and square off and have to have a debate and hold each other accountable.
Sometimes, obviously, it's ugly and blustering, irresponsible. The United States, like Donald Trump, is apparently going to run for the nomination and he's not going to debate his opponent. And there's talk that Joe Biden will be the
Democratic nominee and he's not going to debate Donald Trump because why bother?
Why? And then why take the risk of exposing, you know, his energy versus Donald Trump's and all
that. But the United States, you have competing press conferences and competing rallies and so
on. You don't actually have a direct head to head collision on a consistent basis where people hold
each other accountable. Yes, I know sometimes it's ugly but but in our system we actually do do that and
and it's it's actually a very important mechanism for for people to sort of see because real
recognizes real people can smell BS a mile away and you can kind of say that well that argument
is not no no no I see what you're trying to do that's not quite true and and just the just the
fact of the exposure of the actors
in an environment that forces accountability,
a very healthy thing.
And then the second one is the one that I just referred to
is that I think it's not just economics.
I think we have an impulse of biological Darwinian need
for clarity and to mitigate risk
for the survival of our communities and ourselves.
And that requires us to have an input of truth and data that is clear and verifiable. And we
want that. We seek that out with weather, with sports, with stock markets. We seek it out with
regard to the safety of our vehicles, with regard to the safety of our parks and all. We need it.
We need it. And we need it with government. And we need it with what's going on in the world and we and as soon as a news outlet breaks that trust uh they're no longer trusted and
so and so the i think the market force of the public expecting and needing clarity and certainty
in what's happening around them will will will cause platforms to emerge that have the trust of the public. All right. I seem to say this after each one of our
conversations, and that is that it was fascinating.
And this truly was, I think, of the eight we've done now. I think this
may well be the best one. The audience will determine that, and I'm sure
we'll hear from them, as we often do. And we'll try
and squeeze in another one before we
we take our summer breaks at the end of June so gentlemen thanks so much for this really enjoyed
it always a pleasure Peter thank you well there you go the more butts conversation number eight
James Moore was in Vancouver Jerry Butts was in Ottawa. And as I said, I look forward to hearing from you,
from those of you who actually listen to the conversation. Every once in a while,
I'll get stuff, whether it's on our YouTube channel or to the podcast, which is clearly
shots that are being taken by people who haven't even listened to the program right they look at the title and then they they react accordingly um i just toss those but the vast
majority of you um uh do have like thoughtful comments about the discussions that we have
including on the more butts conversation uh in this case eight, the politics of the lie. So if you want to drop me
a line, please do. It's themansbridgepodcast at gmail.com, themansbridgepodcast at gmail.com.
Tomorrow, Brian Stewart will be by with his regular weekly Tuesday commentary on the conflict
in Ukraine. Wednesday, Bruce Anderson is back. After a week off, Bruce will be here with Smoke
Mirrors and the Truth. Thursday, it's your
turn, your letters,
and the Random Ranter. And Friday, of course,
good talk with Chantel
and Bruce, who will
be by at the end of the week. So that's
it for this day.
Thanks so much for listening.
Really, really enjoyed today's
conversation.
Hope you did as well.
We'll talk to you again in 24 hours.