April's topic is:
The intertwined excesses of the media and adversarial politics and their impact on effective democracy
Agenda
- What recent example, headline, or political moment best illustrates how media and political excesses are affecting democracy?
- Is the media still serving democracy—or has it been hijacked by the economics of attention? (see explanation on 2nd page)
- How have economic incentives (like clicks, ratings, and ad revenue) shaped the media’s role in democracy?
- Are media still serving the public interest—or primarily chasing attention? Is there a decline of trust in journalism?
- Can democracy function well when the media thrive on conflict and outrage?
- Has adversarial politics gone too far for democracy to function effectively?
- Is polarization now a feature, not a bug, of modern political strategy?
- Are there incentives for conflict over consensus?
- What are the impacts of tribalism, soundbite culture, and politics as performance
- Are media and politics locked in a destructive feedback loop that’s damaging democratic institutions?
- How do media and political actors reinforce each other’s extremes?
- What are the consequences of this feedback loop for public trust, informed citizenship, and electoral integrity?
- Are we seeing democratic erosion in plain sight through these dynamics?
- What is happening to civic discourse?
- How are citizens responding—disengagement, outrage, apathy, activism?
- Is the public becoming more informed, or more manipulated and tribal?
- What does this mean for democratic dialogue and pluralism?
- Are digital platforms and algorithms shaping—or distorting—democracy?
- How do algorithms shape what people believe and vote for?
- Are platforms distorting the democratic process?
- Could AI tools help restore democratic quality—or deepen the crisis?
- Who bears responsibility—and what can be done to protect democracy?
- Who holds the power to reverse the damage—media, tech companies, politicians, educators, citizens?
- Are democratic institutions adapting fast enough?
- What reforms could protect democracy without suppressing free speech?
- What would a healthier media-political culture look like in a thriving democracy?
- What would a more constructive political-media ecosystem look like?
- Can we imagine a system that rewards truth, depth, and consensus-building?
- Are there democratic innovations or models elsewhere worth learning from?
Notes - based on input from ChatGPT
The “Economics of Attention” refers to the idea that in today’s information-rich world, human attention is the scarce and valuable resource—not information itself.
Here’s how it plays out, especially in media and politics: