Mary Fisher

Inspire Act Serve

  • About
  • May I Just Say by Mary Fisher
  • Images & Artwork
  • Media & Press
  • Community Building
  • Contact Us

Artwork by Mary Fisher

News about "Reform"

March 13, 2025 by MARY FISHER

The Trump Musk co-presidency is doing so much damage to so many people that the tally of blood, agony and corruption is almost immeasurable. It isn’t being done under cover of darkness. The heartless co-executives are smashing and cutting in broad daylight with no one apparently able to curtail their cruelties.

The obviously false justification for causing such pain is that they are “correcting” the government, “adjusting” the budget and “getting rid of dead weight.” It isn’t true. They’re exercising crude power for their own aims. They lie with a reckless abandon because they can.

How did we get here? It didn’t start with the unholy alliance of Musk and Trump, or even with Trump’s first or second election. For years, we’ve watched media – both traditional and social – grow less and less capable, or willing, to speak truth to power. Instead, media has sold out to what holds an audience’s attention and what chalks up some profit. When billionaire Jeff Bezos purchased The Washington Post, he intended to make money and control reporting, including the report that he was contributing $1 Million to Trump’s inaugural extravaganza. (It’s a paltry sum next to Musk’s $290 Million for Trump’s campaign, the apparent price that can buy a co-presidency.)

The product now called “news” is sold for profit and persuasion, and the persuasion is fueled by dubious or out-right false stories rooted in fear: childhood vaccinations cause autism, there’s a war on Christians and Christmas, DEI is sand-bagging white people, immigrants are mostly rapists and murderers, Ukraine started a war with Russia, Democrats drain the blood of children in a DC pizza joint, and…more. A population fed the steady diet of lies by the media is a population ripe to believe that Trump and Musk are helping America become more American. (Deep breath.)

More than a decade ago Psychology Today showed that what’s driving most modern media’s “news” is a combination of two things: profit, and fear. Here's what I suggest in my forthcoming book, Uneasy Silence:

“The media’s drive for profit outpaces the media’s interest in truth. The goal is profit, and the strategy is persuasive storytelling. Truth is nice but not necessary; the news needs to make money.

…According to the Psychology Today report, fear-based news programming has two aims. The first is to grab attention. In the news media, this is called the “teaser.” The second aim is to persuade the viewer that the solution for reducing fear will be in the news story. Usually, there’s no solution. There’s just a story. If the “news” can hold my attention by keeping me afraid, that’s as good as money in the bank.

…We’ve been treated to years in which lies and immorality sold as well as, if not better than, honesty and honor. What I now know is that the reliability, or “factuality,” of reports depends on who’s controlling the reports. For many newsmakers, if lies could bring a crowd, bring on the lies.”

So here’s the current whopper: We’re told that the Administration is cutting 83% of USAID’s programs. This mainstay of US foreign policy since 1961 will now enjoy what Secretary of State Marco Rubio called an “overdue and historic reform.”

Nicolas Enrich, Acting Assistant Administrator for Global Health at USAID begs to differ. In a confidential internal memorandum, he predicted that one million starving children will lose access to food and nutrition. That’s one million, and counting.

I’ve been looking for the headline that says “Trump Musk Lie, A Million Children Die.” So far, no headlines. Which leaves me once more shocked at the power of a million lies and the ability to knowingly ignore the deaths of a million hungry children.

Click to join email list
March 13, 2025 /MARY FISHER

Artwork by Mary Fisher

Bridging the Gap

March 05, 2025 by MARY FISHER

I didn’t so much boycott President Trump’s Joint Address to Congress as dread it. My expectations were sufficiently low: a campaign-style speech, too long and too full of half-truths and un-truths. My expectations were, unfortunately, about right.

But it set me to wondering what it will take to recognize and slow the torrent of false messaging and divisive strategies that drive wedges between the American people, keeping us separated, gnawing at each other’s ankles before we finish our first morning coffee.

In a few weeks, my new book (Uneasy Silence) will be available. Here’s part of a reflection on that question as framed there:

“We need, as a society, to find a way to bridge the news gap between MSNBC and Fox, and between many of the thousands of voices shouting on social media. Unless we can reach across the divide, we’ll never find a way to talk to one another. I’d like to think that truthfulness will be the basis of trustworthiness. But we have a long way to go. You hold your truth; I hold mine. The battle being waged in both traditional and social media is to win our loyalty that the truth is being told whether it is or not. When nearly half of the nation’s voting adults are willing to accept a torrent of lies in place of honest storytelling, we’re evidently in some trouble.

Perhaps it’s because I served President Gerald R. Ford, who was at once truthful and humble, that I bleed over the lies told by some so-called ”leaders.” I long for the moment in which every news outlet will bring us a single message:

“My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over. Our Constitution works; our great Republic is a government of laws and not of men. Here the people rule….”

It’s a half-century since President Ford took office, and once more we’re struggling to “bind up the internal wounds.”

To stitch us back together, we need to find a way to share a common truth, resist motives of profit and fear, and reach out to people with whom we disagree, sometimes strenuously. But my behavior shows that I’m staying home, close to friends and family whose life views are close to mine.

Reach out to strangers who stormed the Capitol? Listen to someone who votes against my priority? Try some social stitching that’d pull together our divided population? Oh…I don’t know. I’m not confident it’s worth the price in time and emotional energy. So I stay home, as comfortable as I can be, listening to news stories I trust.

I may be part of the problem. I need to become part of the solution. I’ll definitely need your help on this.”

 — Excerpt from my forthcoming book, Uneasy Silence, coming soon wherever online books are sold.

Click to sign up for email list
March 05, 2025 /MARY FISHER

Artwork by Mary Fisher

Tools of the Trade

February 26, 2025 by MARY FISHER

I don’t really know how it feels to be transgender, but I have some acquaintance with being the object of ignorance and bias. To be a woman with AIDS, when I was first diagnosed and probably still now, was to be a dirty woman, not infected but corrupted.

Maybe that’s why I resonated with an article sent by a friend, authored by Steve Mathonnet-VanderWell. He noted that “every single major medical organization, including the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Medical Association, and the American Psychiatric Association, supports age-appropriate, gender-affirming care for transgender and non-binary people.”

Then he adds: “In the last election, the United States decided that the prime threats to American greatness are not the climate crisis, not systemic racism, not income inequality. Rather, they are immigrants, park rangers, and transgender people. I won’t go into all the tragic stories and statistics about transgender people – family rejection, social scorn, assaults and murders, homelessness, suicide. If anyone seriously believes that a person would go through all this so they could skulk in women’s restrooms or have a successful swimming career, they are dismally misinformed and have been callously manipulated.”

I think both are true: people are being “dismally misinformed” and “callously manipulated” by power brokers who want to stir the cauldron of fear and hide behind chaos. I can count on one hand the number of media sources I now completely trust to tell the objective truth, and some days I’m not sure about two of those fingers.

This isn’t new. I noted in my forthcoming book (Uneasy Silence) that what the media reports and what it does not report are both key to manipulation. Tiny lies become national stories. Myths and deceit are transformed into wide-spread convictions. Those manipulating the media in State Houses and the White House, invoking censorship to “cleanse history,” are employing tools of the trade for despots and dictators. This isn’t politics as usual; it’s dictatorship as always.

And it's why I included the following in my book:

“Sarah Quinn tells the largely unreported story of the 1889 massacre in Leflore County, Mississippi. Black farmers, struggling to survive, organized a co-op, or ‘Alliance,’ to increase the poverty-level prices they were paid for their goods. The National Guard, called in to impose order, arrested 40 local Black men and turned them over to a local white mob. One scholar estimates that the Leflore County Massacre took the lives of 25 Black people; reports at the time actually suggested 100 people were tortured and killed, including women and children. As a strategy to take away the voice of the oppressed, Quinn notes, the killing ‘was purposely not recorded in the county news, and a journalist who later went to investigate found locals too terrified to speak of it.’”

Terror works. Intimidation is a potent silencer. When Black people in Ocoee, Florida asked for the right to vote, a white mob turned Election Day 1920 into what historian Paul Ortiz has called ‘the single bloodiest election day in modern American history.’ At least sixty Black people died. Black homes were burned. Black men were castrated. The horror went largely unreported. I’ve never read about it in any history book I was assigned.

Time and again, history proves that nothing is as silent as the grave.”

I wanted Uneasy Silence to be uplifting and encouraging, something that evokes a smile or teases out a laugh. Early readers of the manuscript have generously said it achieves this.

But the problem is, every page isn’t a joke because I also wanted to tell the truth. These days, given – well, given everything, it isn’t easy to balance grim realities, truthful reporting and a relieving laugh before bedtime. It just ain’t easy.

— Excerpt from my forthcoming book, Uneasy Silence - coming soon

Click to sign up for email list
February 26, 2025 /MARY FISHER
  • Newer
  • Older

Follow Us