• crusa187
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    2 hours ago

    Just 20 years ago a similar hurricane by the name of Katrina rocked the nation and was part of the 24 he news cycle for months. Katrina was (and rightfully so) a huge deal in America, and recognized as a mega traumatizing event.

    It’s amazing to me how jaded the American public and media have become in that time, to where this disaster hardly even makes the news and is forgotten before it’s even joever.

    I’m honestly not quite sure what to think of it. Have we become so calloused to the idea of climate change that this isn’t newsworthy? Is this more reflective of the corporate capture of media, and insurers not wanting to pay out for destroyed homes and lives? Or is this just secondary to the overriding effort to further a new war in the Middle East?

    • Owl [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      1 hour ago

      I think investors and the US government got a lot better at controlling the news during the Bush administration, and in the intervening 16-20 years, media people have built their entire careers in that environment. The state department gives the juiciest war news to people who parrot their press releases, so those people advance. The news companies are owned by billionaires with other more profitable investments than the news, who can block advancement for anyone who pushes a story that’d hurt one of those, including talking about climate change. People who do well in this sort of environment have had 20 years to float to the top, and don’t need any special coercion to keep pushing the latest war and ignoring something that might be inconvenient to an investor.

    • UmbraVivi [he/him, she/her]@hexbear.net
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      2 hours ago

      I think people no longer have the same expectations for the government to help them. The US government has told the public to go fuck themselves at every possible opportunity.