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    michigan today

    Explore " michigan today" with insightful episodes like "Episode 58: We need to make truth our national purpose, featuring Barbara McQuade, BA ‘87/JD ’91", "Episode 56: Cinema Ann Arbor, featuring Frank Uhle, BFA '83/MILS '92", "Episode 54: COVID’s silver lining, featuring Rob Ernst, MD ’91, CHO", "Episode 48: Tales of a G-man, featuring Greg Stejskal" and "Episode 47: Sing to the Colors, featuring James Tobin" from podcasts like ""Listen in, Michigan", "Listen in, Michigan", "Listen in, Michigan", "Listen in, Michigan" and "Listen in, Michigan"" and more!

    Episodes (28)

    Episode 58: We need to make truth our national purpose, featuring Barbara McQuade, BA ‘87/JD ’91

    Episode 58: We need to make truth our national purpose, featuring Barbara McQuade, BA ‘87/JD ’91

    Can we handle the truth?

    History's most heinous dictators have long relied on disinformation to destroy free societies and claim absolute power over nations. 

    Today's agents of chaos tend to be regular citizens, using social and traditional media as well as artificial intelligence to pollute the information ecosystem with lies and conspiracy theories. And in a sinister twist, modern-day extremists living in the U.S. are taking cues from history's worst offenders – Hitler, Stalin, and Mussolini – to wreak havoc here at home, says Barbara McQuade, BA ‘87/JD ’91

    "For American democracy to survive, U.S. citizens need to make truth our national purpose," says the professor of practice at Michigan Law. McQuade also is an MSNBC legal analyst and the author of the new book Attack from Within (Seven Stories Press, 2024). She hopes to spark a national, bipartisan discourse about how to combat disinformation amid the exponential dangers posed by the Internet, partisan media, artificial intelligence, and more.

    “We can’t be a democracy of self-governance if we cede all our power to those who are trying to manipulate us,” McQuade says. “These almost-simplistic tools and tactics that worked in the past are still working today. But now you can spread the word with the touch of a button and reach millions of people. Not only that, you can also adopt a false persona online and use bots to amplify your message.”

    The author reflects on her freshman year as a sports reporter at The Michigan Daily where she learned the “most important component in news is accuracy.” That simple tenet still shapes her career, from the courtroom to the classroom.

    “Truth matters,” McQuade says. “And yet we live in a world where truth is treated as this almost cosmic, religious concept -- as though truth is unknowable. Maybe so. But facts are knowable. Facts are black or white. And you have to accept the facts even when they are not to your liking.”

    From outrage to apathy

    Propaganda is no stranger to politics, but the forces at play today are more dangerous ever, McQuade says. 

    Research shows that humans are wired with the compulsion to be right -- and to win, sometimes at all costs – even when irrefutable evidence negates one’s argument. In the political arena, one may be tempted to “go along with the con,” just to see the preferred candidate or party prevail. “We want to believe,” McQuade notes, which seems less painful than admitting an error in judgment or risking “cancelation” by one’s peers. 

    And while human minds are adept at identifying patterns, making connections, and simplifying complexity, these traits also make us vulnerable to conspiracy theories and “big lies” about everything from COVID to climate change, McQuade says. Consider the myriad interpretations of the First and Second Amendments to the U.S. Constitution, often invoked to justify the actions of armed people who breached the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. The stated goal by many who have since been incarcerated was to take back a “stolen election” in response to lies propagated by partisan players. 

    “There’s a quote from Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson [1941-54],” McQuade says, “that we have to use practical wisdom to make sure we don’t convert the Bill of Rights into a suicide pact. And it seems like we are on a collision course with that.”

    The repetitive and relentless assault on truth is designed to leave us paralyzed and passive, she says.

    “It’s this abuse of our rights through disinformation that will lead us over the abyss.”

    On the edge

    All hope is not lost, McQuade says in Attack from Within. Research indicates when people are presented with opposing views and more information about a scenario, they can shift their position and moderate their views. The former U.S. attorney uses the book to deliver pragmatic solutions to defeat disinformation, noting “a little regulation could go a long way.”

    “This is not a partisan argument; it’s about the essential need for truth. Most of America is really quite moderate and we have the capacity to appreciate nuance,” McQuade says. “But I think in our complex world, we rely too much on proxies to tell us what to think about things instead of learning all those facts for ourselves.”

    Regulation could force transparency online – from exposing the true identities of internet actors to revealing what entity is paying for which campaign ad. Artificial intelligence could be used to detect/debunk fake news. It could identify bots and expose fake accounts on social media. 

    To combat the algorithms that reinforce personal bias in one’s customized “news bubble,” AI could be used to flag counterprogramming, opposing arguments, and ads with a position contrary to the content one usually receives. Regulators could require websites to disclose the methodology behind their algorithms, which are often designed to push outrageous content that keeps users engaged on their platform. Such disclosure would mean users could knowingly visit a site created to “gin up” their grievances or opt for a more measured editorial experience.

    “Democracy is all about an informed electorate,” McQuade says. “And if we're not just an uninformed but a disinformed electorate, it becomes very difficult to make important decisions for self-governance.”

    McQuade says some experts even suggest media outlets eliminate paywalls and replace them with a system of user credits as a way to keep the marketplace of ideas open for low-income consumers and avoid a society of informed versus uninformed citizens. This could offset one of modern media’s biggest challenges: monetizing and subsidizing robust news organizations, especially at the local level.  

    Perhaps the most effective strategy to combat disinformation is to focus more on the actual “town square” than the virtual one.

    “One of the things we need to do is invest in social capital by getting out of our little bubbles and embracing our shared humanity,” McQuade says. “It happens in faith communities, labor unions, sports leagues. Whenever we can see people from across the political aisle with whom we have more in common than we have difference, it makes it much harder for authoritarians to demonize us. The more we can get away from a world of ‘us and them’ and focus on the ‘we,’ the better off we’ll be.”

    The band plays on, feat. John Pasquale

    The band plays on, feat. John Pasquale

    Michigan Marching Band

    Michigan Today

    John Pasquale

    How we went blue Albert Ahronheim, onetime drum major of the Marching Band, deconstructs the iconic "Let's Go Blue" tune, starting with his initial conversation with George Cavender in the early '70s.

    Strike up the band When he was just a sophomore in the early 1950s, Jerry Bilik (who barely passed the MMB audition as 17th of 18 trombones) discovered a talent for writing and arranging that would transform the Michigan Marching Band forever.

     

     

     

     

     

    Locked in at the Bentley

    Locked in at the Bentley

    Brian Williams, assistant director and archivist at U-M's Bentley Historical Library, is a font of U-M facts and trivia. History nuts and people who like old stuff, quite literally, should enjoy this episode of “Listen in, Michigan."

    Here are links to some of the extraordinary items that Williams:

    • Fielding Yost’s 1901 contract to become the first football coach at
      U-M https://quod.lib.umich.edu/b/bhl/x-bl017701/bl017701

    • The 1817 draft of the act to establish the Catholepistemiad or University of Michigania https://quod.lib.umich.edu/w/walker/874.0001.002/1#?s=0&cv=0

    • The original notecards Lyndon B. Johnson used to deliver his “Great Society” speech to U-M graduates in 1964
      Bentley Historical Library https://quod.lib.umich.edu/b/bhl/x-hs13927/hs13927

    • The Bentley Historical Library
      https://bentley.umich.edu/

    And now for the highlights!

    And now for the highlights!

    The best of Listen in, Michigan

    Welcome to the 25th episode of Listen in, Michigan. In celebration of the miracle that I have actually survived making 24 of these podcasts, no small feat for a print journalist working alone in a recording studio, I have cut together some of my favorite snippets from the podcast so far. If you haven’t listened or subscribed yet, I hope you will. As you’ll hear, I have a lot of fun with my subjects.

    Episode 23: Football's Valhalla

    Episode 21: I Witness

    Episode 20: The Best of Bacon

    Episode 15: Strike Up the Band

    Episode 13: Iconic Restaurants of Ann Arbor

    Episode 6: The Wind is Very Much Up

    We Can Be Heroes

    We Can Be Heroes

    He was brilliant, brave, and curious — and his tale unspools like a thrilling mystery. Architect Raoul Wallenberg, ’35, protected thousands of Jews from the Nazis in World War II. And then he vanished off the face of the earth. Details of his disappearance remain a mystery to this day, but he likely was murdered in a Russian prison shortly after the war ended. And though he is gone, the descendants of those Wallenberg saved continue to walk this earth, thanks to his courage and ingenuity.

    Each year the University confers its Wallenberg Medal to those individuals who demonstrate the capacity of the human spirit to stand up for the helpless, defend the integrity of the powerless, and speak out on behalf of the voiceless.

    The 2018 Wallenberg Medal recognized two youth organizations working to end gun violence. Representatives for the Chicago-based youth organization B.R.A.V.E. and the student activists behind March For Our Lives in Parkland, Fla., accepted the honors Nov. 14 in Rackham Auditorium.

    Read full story at Michigan Today

    View video of the 2018 medal ceremony and speeches by the youth leaders

    More on Wallenberg

    Dan Chace: Football's Valhalla, The Bob Ufer Story

    Dan Chace: Football's Valhalla, The Bob Ufer Story

    Filmmaker Dan Chace, BA ’83, shares the labor of love that manifested as a beautiful documentary about beloved Wolverines football announcer Bob Ufer. The film is called "Footballs's Valhalla: The Bob Ufer Story."

    Read full story at Michigan Today

    More on Dan Chace

    I Witness, feat. Andy Sacks and Jay Cassidy

    I Witness, feat. Andy Sacks and Jay Cassidy

    Good news! Your 1968 photo of RFK is on the cover of a 2017 bestseller. Bad news: It’s credited to someone else. Listen in as Michigan Daily alumni Andy Sacks and Jay Cassidy take you back to Spring 1968 when RFK campaigned for a presidential bid in Detroit. As student photographers, Sacks and Cassidy captured some of the last images of Kennedy before he was assassinated several weeks later. Flash forward to 2017, and Sacks discovers one of his photos from that day is on the cover of an RFK biography by MSNBC's Chris Matthews. And the photo credit reads "Bill Epperidge."

    Read full story at Michigan Today

    View Video of Jay Cassidy as Featured Alum

    More on Andy Sacks & Jay Cassidy

    John U. Bacon on "The Best of Bacon"

    John U. Bacon on "The Best of Bacon"

    Raconteur John U. Bacon, BA ’86/MA ’94, regales the listener with tales – heartfelt and hilarious – culled from a 25-year career covering sports. His book "The Best of Bacon" features “select cuts,” showcasing Michigan heroes Bo Schembechler and Jim Abbott, as well as Detroit legends Ernie Harwell, Joe Louis, and more.

    Read full story at Michigan Today

    More on John U. Bacon

    Re:Union, the State of the Michigan Union

    Re:Union, the State of the Michigan Union

    In this episode, we chat with Susan Pile, U-M’s senior director of university unions and auxiliary services. She is managing the 20-month renovation of the beloved Michigan Union, but fear not: She is fiercely protective of its legacy.

    Read full story at Michigan Today

    Michigan Union Photos and History

    More on Union Renovation

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