By Staff Reporters, Dar es
Salaam and Nairobi
Noam Chomsky, the famous American
linguist, coined an old media effect theory “the CNN effect” or “CNNization of the
news.” In the thesis, Chomsky uncovers the problem of CNN-manipulation, misinformation and
disinformation.
Not so miles away from
Chomsky’s sphere, comes a business mogul-turned-politician, Donald Trump, with
similar discontent on the CNN’s news sociology. Trump’s Fake News typology has now complemented Chomsky theory with a bang but unveiling similar sentiments.
The two native Americans’ anger
with CNN is straight, clear and vertical-the news conglomerate has lost its much
acclaimed news touch to focus on biased reporting, often times, engulfed in
stories lacking the per-liquisite contextual background on matters they try to
extrapolate.
Not always so but the Chomsky-Trump
prophesy is increasingly trending into a reality-CNN is progressively more accused
all over the world, particularly among developed world, for its misinformation of
what is really happening in those nations. “To them (CNN), everything has to
be akin to the American confused but conservative culture,” says Toni Barack a
Nairobi mass communication graduate from Daystar University.
A CNN story published on 11th
October, 2018 on its twitter account titled: “They failed mandatory pregnancy
tests at school. Then they were expelled” written by its London based
correspondent, Ivana Kottasova, on a grant, is yet but another testimony on how
CNN reporters with no deep-reading of the cultures they write about will always
miss and mess on it.
Covering the already dead
story of Tanzania’s decision to ban pregnant students to continue with
schooling in public formal system, the author writes: “Last June, Magufuli, dubbed "The Bulldozer," went a step
further, announcing that pregnant students would not be allowed to return to school
after giving birth.” The story baselessly tries to undermine the morality
of the government order. with no apparent justifiable arguement
However on its online
twitter account-seemingly tired of the CNN’s bias on reporting developing
nations and Africa in particular, a significant majority of the contributors sided with the
Tanzanian President Magufuli's decision, some wishing such a policy would one day be
imported to their own countries to end school pregnancy woes!
“That’s awesome!!!America should do the same,” commented a CNN
twitter addict named Joshua Neumann as another commentator Lewis added: “This needs to happen in the UK as plenty get
pregnant to get council housing.”
More readers across the
globe supported Magufuli’s moral basis that seeks to encourage school girls to
abstain from premature sex to focus on studies. What CNN missed, confirmed by most
adamant readers, is the fact that it is weird to defend the young mothers to
remain in classes with their babies. Instead, the Tanzanian authorities do allow
an alternate access to education via private based schooling system.
Chomsky warned of CNN bias |
“It’s weird that you have public schools with half the class being
student-mothers. How can a formal system accept that? Considering the extent of
pre-marital pregnancies in most African countries just imagine the
psychological stifle a decision to allow these young mothers in class will pose on other
girls in the class!” says a Dar es Salaam based sociologist John Chami.
CNN readers seem to get
that, and continued to spat on the media giant’s twitter wall with hundreds of
“venomous” comments. One reader posted to CNN with a “spat” of a datasheet report from
the US based University of Michigani analysis showing the impact of unwed parenthood.
The report shows how entertaining early girls’ pregnancies cost the US
government. “Unwed Parenthood: America’s
Largest Source of Shootings, Rape and Murder,” reads the report title.
Another commentator Eunartha Bossamy who spitted against
CNN and supported the government of Tanzania on the position wrote: “Then similarly do genetic testing on all
newborns to establish paternity and if the father is also found to be a student,
expel him. If he is found to be a teacher or adult or other authority figure…arrest
him.”
Tanzanian ethics minded President |
Another commentator from
Uganda supported the Tanzanian position saying it’s the same in his native
country. “It is normal in our Ugandan
schools too. If you become pregnant, go raise a family.”
Kenan
Olia
put forward another moral line of defense to Magufuli on pregnant girls in
schools: “In Africa parents send their
children to school to have the best education. It’s the school’s duty to ensure
that the girls return home safe and better for the community. Mind u, boys are
expelled too if they’re found having sex in school. We applaud the moral standards set.”
Some readers went as far as
to remind the CNN’s lack historical knowledge on the evolution of the US
society. “Teen pregnancies in Hampshire
were a thing in the 80’s too. I don’t think you really know about what you (CNN)
are talking about. It seems your ‘awareness’ is still that of a immature and
distracted pre-teen trying to remember something he was never concerned with,” wrote Azucena
DiBiscaglia. Similar US experience was further shared by Lex Jurgen:
“@CNN They
moved girls who were pregnant teens out of my California public schools way
back when to alternative locations…I assume all schools do this. Certainly the
US parochial schools would. Yo don’t see pregnant girls in US high schools.”
Good observation..cnn is so biased when covering african stories..worst of all is too negative
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