• sugar_in_your_tea
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    8
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    The problem is that there are grains of truth here, but a lot of emotional manipulation, such as:

    • Ania’s friends stop talking to her - is this actually likely to happen?
    • Ania doesn’t feel questions are welcome - every teacher I’ve had will return some days later with answers to relevant questions they couldn’t readily answer

    Poland’s leaders promised to cut all coal production by 2049

    Yet the video focuses on the Russia-Ukraine war. Surely that war won’t last for the next 26 years. I think the world would accept going back to coal (perhaps from non-Russian sources) until natural gas can be sourced elsewhere or replaced by something else. 26 years is a long time, and they could totally build nuclear plants in that time. They have the international agreements in place, so it shouldn’t be a huge issue to roll that out by the stated timeline.

    Had they started rolling it out sooner they would already have a backup plan to Russian natural gas and coal.

    So the main thrust of the videos i completely fine, but it sets up a strawman pitting two all-or-nothing approaches (switch 100% to green energy today or abandon green energy).

    I’m not going to go through the full video as the motherjones article does that already, but I do also want to point out that motherjones is pushing a heavy narrative as well, such as:

    While no school district has announced plans to show any of PragerU’s videos, NPR reports, there’s nothing to stop teachers from independently airing the material

    They’re making a huge deal out of something relatively small. Basically, Florida has stated that schools may use PragerU’s content, not that they have to or should use that content, only that it’s allowed.

    The important thing is how it’s presented. I think this video would be interesting for in-class discussion, especially when shown alongside a video with the opposite perspective. It could raise interesting questions, such as:

    • how quickly should countries/states switch to green energy?
    • how do we balance local needs and global concerns?
    • is going backward when an emergency comes up a bad thing? How long is acceptable for a “temporary” step back?

    I think it’s also interesting from a “how bias can impact the presentation” discussion. So I 100% agree with it being allowed to be used in schools, but I think that should be followed up with some kind of auditing process to make sure it’s being used appropriately, and that process should be as open as possible.