天美视频

Allan Parachini/Civil Beat/2020

About the Author

Eric Stinton

Eric Stinton is a writer and teacher from Kailua, where he lives with his wife and dogs. He鈥檚 a combat sports columnist for Sherdog, and his fiction, nonfiction and journalism have appeared in Bamboo Ridge, The Classical, Harvard Review Online, Ka Wai Ola, Longreads, Medium and Vice Sports, among others. You can reach him on Twitter at @TombstoneStint and find his work at


Over the weekend, popular local Instagram account hohungryhungryhawaiian posted a petition to 鈥渆nd mandatory masks in Hawaii鈥 with the caption 鈥淒M me if you need the link. #endmaskwearing.鈥

The post was quickly deleted after the comment section erupted in arguments, but not before a large chunk of the account鈥檚 217,000-plus followers saw what looked like an endorsement of America鈥檚 whiniest, most embarrassing response to a global pandemic that has killed 160,000 Americans and 700,000 people worldwide.

The next day, hohungryhungryhawaiian 鈥 no caption 鈥 from Waianae Coast Comprehensive Health Center about why people should wear masks. 鈥淭oo much backlash ah,鈥 one commenter said, to which HHHH responded, 鈥渏ust posting all sides.鈥

Numerous similar comments were met with the same response: HHHH was just playing it down the middle, presenting both sides of a controversial issue.

Ala Moana Center perimeter walkway with sign 鈥楳asks Required beyond this point鈥 during COVID-19 pandemic. June 24, 2020
Masks are required in most public spaces and private offices in Hawaii. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2020

Such a response, to be sure, is toweringly stupid, but also unfortunately commonplace. It鈥檚 an example of a fallacious platitude disguised as conventional wisdom that maintains truth lies somewhere in the middle of opposing sides, no matter the dispute.

Indeed, if some people say the moon is made of rock and others say it鈥檚 made of cheese 鈥 a debate as valid as whether or not people should wear masks to prevent the transmission of an airborne virus 鈥 then surely reasonable people can conclude that the moon is made of some sort of cheesy rock. Just posting all sides here.

I understand the confusion over masks. In the early stages of the pandemic, both the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization said they weren鈥檛 necessary. Then they reversed their positions.

This is genuinely frustrating, especially since everyone can agree that wearing a mask is no fun.聽 鈥 namely the very legitimate fear that there wouldn鈥檛 be enough masks for health care workers 鈥 but broadly, that鈥檚 how science works: things change as we learn more information. There is that .

Masks aren鈥檛 perfect, nor are they the only way to help halt the spread of COVID-19. But in a country with an absurd and predatory health care system and a social safety net that鈥檚 really more of a cobweb, it鈥檚 one of the easiest, most affordable and most effective measures people can take.

Misleading The Public

As disconcerting as the anti-mask sentiment in this country is, I鈥檓 more concerned about vigilante 鈥渏ournalists.鈥 Though I鈥檝e singled out HHHH, the Instagram account is not alone. A few months ago, MyKailua promoted an anti-mask protest in a now-deleted post. The page offered the same excuse that it was simply presenting both sides.

This type of unaccountable journalism is actively dumbing down the public. I imagine the response to that would be 鈥渨e鈥檙e not journalists,鈥 but functionally that鈥檚 not accurate. MyKailua calls itself 鈥淜ailua鈥檚 Trusted Source鈥 in its IG bio.

MyKailua promoted an anti-mask protest but has since deleted the post. 

Pages like MyKailua and hohungryhungryhawaiian present news to their followers, but lack the built-in mechanisms that hold traditional media accountable.

The fact that they can 鈥 and do 鈥 simply delete posts is evidence enough; actual journalists have to live with their bad reporting and would face professional consequences for trying to erase it. The loss of their credibility would not be salvaged with a pretty sunset picture and a shaka emoji.

That isn鈥檛 to say traditional outlets are perfect. They make mistakes and deserve criticism when they do. But with a trend of rising cases that disproportionately impacts Pacific Islanders and , presenting legitimate information is more critical than ever.

Legacy media at least tries to take this responsibility seriously, but as Instagram increasingly becomes a , the burden is particularly important for rogue reporting that is otherwise unaccountable to any institutional code of ethics.

When Instagram pages have tens or hundreds of thousands of followers, the hard reality is that a large portion of them will be low-information consumers.

Posting scenic photos, funny memes and goofy videos builds a sense of trust, like you鈥檙e talking story with your kolohe friend or fun-loving uncle over some beers in the garage. That鈥檚 what makes their activist and journalistic stances alarming 鈥 it all blends together seamlessly.

Traditional media outlets are expected to abide by a code of ethics. Anthony Quintano/Civil Beat

It鈥檚 not always a bad thing: MyKailua has organized beach cleanups, helped lost items find their rightful owners and encouraged people to support local businesses.

They鈥檝e helped to pass out meals and masks to people in need during the pandemic. When they focus their influence in a positive direction, it鈥檚 one of the more redeeming examples of the power of social media.

But when those kinds of pages intersperse nostalgic pictures and positive community engagement with bogus conspiracy theories, there are real consequences.

Hawaii is fortunate to be in the position it鈥檚 in regarding the pandemic, even though the UH football team currently has more cases of COVID-19 than the nation of Taiwan. Our leadership has acted slowly and inadequately, but our geographic isolation has bailed us out.

Our state of 1.4 million people still sees more daily cases than South Korea, a nation with 36 times our population. But if our low numbers relative to the rest of America means weirdos will lean in to conspiracies, so be it. I鈥檇 rather that than a slew of deaths remove all doubts.

I鈥檓 not suggesting pages like hohungryhungryhawaiian should be banned or that people should stop following them. I still enjoy many of their posts. All I want is for them to be better, to understand the responsibility that comes with their reach.

If someone says it鈥檚 snowing in Honolulu and someone else says it鈥檚 not, they shouldn鈥檛 give both people a platform. Their job is to look outside and tell people what is actually happening. when he smoked a cigar, put on 10 masks and ran a kilometer in the summer heat to prove that masks won鈥檛 suffocate you.

Epidemiology is of course not as simple as whether or not it鈥檚 snowing in Honolulu, so please, leave it to the experts. Provide a platform for them to explain what鈥檚 happening instead of presenting yourself as an authority, then shruggingly refusing to take sides.

We already have enough authority figures excusing their inaction. Journalism 鈥 which is what pages like hohungryhungryhawaiian have chosen to participate in 鈥 is meant to hold those leaders to account, not emulate their spinelessness.


Read this next:

Thousands Languish Without Unemployment Checks Months Into Pandemic


Local reporting when you need it most

Support timely, accurate, independent journalism.

天美视频 is a nonprofit organization, and your donation helps us produce local reporting that serves all of Hawaii.

Contribute

About the Author

Eric Stinton

Eric Stinton is a writer and teacher from Kailua, where he lives with his wife and dogs. He鈥檚 a combat sports columnist for Sherdog, and his fiction, nonfiction and journalism have appeared in Bamboo Ridge, The Classical, Harvard Review Online, Ka Wai Ola, Longreads, Medium and Vice Sports, among others. You can reach him on Twitter at @TombstoneStint and find his work at


Latest Comments (0)

"Misleading The Public"聽1- Shutter all non essential economic activity2- Stay inside3- Covid can stay on surfaces for days4-Send them back to the nursing home5-We need more聽 ventilators and hospital beds6-Don't go to the hospital7-You don't need masks oh wait you do need them and they are mandatory8-Do all of this until there is a vaccine9-We need more of other people's money to recover from this ordealWake me up when we can have a real conversation about this.聽

4whatitsworth · 4 years ago

Good thoughts, but I don芒聙聶t agree that mass media journalists are held accountable for their reporting and partake in spreading more disinformation than any of these social media sites. A great example is the protests, and how afterward there were stories claiming there was no proof that these protests spread the virus. This goes against basic common sense and if we were to look back at when the surge started here, it was within the incubation period right after our protests. Oh course this is not the only reason, but the flat out denial that this contributed to the spread is just false, and is as dangerous as mask deniers as I am sure people took false comfort in these reports and gathered outside. Look to the current order to not gather at beaches nor parks as further evidence of this misinformation. The media at large needs to stop pushing their agenda and get back to responsible fact, driven, non-censored reporting.

senbi575 · 4 years ago

So how do we approach the bias in traditional news? The inflection in newscasters voices when they report on President Trump or former Vice President Biden... its readily evident when they show disdain for one or the other... depending on their own political bias... just another thought聽

pcbroda · 4 years ago

Join the conversation

About IDEAS

IDEAS is the place you'll find essays, analysis and opinion on public affairs in Hawaii. We want to showcase smart ideas about the future of Hawaii, from the state's sharpest thinkers, to stretch our collective thinking about a problem or an issue. Email news@civilbeat.org to submit an idea.

Mahalo!

You're officially signed up for our daily newsletter, the Morning Beat. A confirmation email will arrive shortly.

In the meantime, we have other newsletters that you might enjoy. Check the boxes for emails you'd like to receive.

  • What's this? Be the first to hear about important news stories with these occasional emails.
  • What's this? You'll hear from us whenever Civil Beat publishes a major project or investigation.
  • What's this? Get our latest environmental news on a monthly basis, including updates on Nathan Eagle's 'Hawaii 2040' series.
  • What's this? Get occasional emails highlighting essays, analysis and opinion from IDEAS, Civil Beat's commentary section.

Inbox overcrowded? Don't worry, you can unsubscribe
or update your preferences at any time.