Scientists fear communications chill in polarized media landscape
VANCOUVER — A marine mammal scientist in Vancouver says he thinks his work has been misrepresented online and he’s worried it’s part of a trend that has him and his colleagues questioning whether they should talk to media at all in the era of “fake news.”
“We’ve got groups that perhaps don’t understand the science but they hear a little piece of science that fits with their own narrative, so they grab onto that,” said Andrew Trites, who oversees the marine mammal unit at the University of British Columbia.
“The truth doesn’t matter as much as hearing something that works to support your cause.”
Trites said a Washington state advocacy group called Save Family Farming recently posted a story alongside a slide from a presentation he gave on the endangered southern resident killer whales.