JOHN STOSSEL ON THE “FEAR-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX:”

Newsrooms are full of English majors who acknowledge that they are not good at math, but still rush to make confident pronouncements about a global-warming “crisis” and the coming of bird flu. . . .

Here’s another example. What do you think is more dangerous, a house with a pool or a house with a gun? When, for “20/20,” I asked some kids, all said the house with the gun is more dangerous. I’m sure their parents would agree. Yet a child is 100 times more likely to die in a swimming pool than in a gun accident.

Parents don’t know that partly because the media hate guns and gun accidents make bigger headlines. Ask yourself which incident would be more likely to be covered on TV.

Media exposure clouds our judgment about real-life odds. Of course, it doesn’t help that viewers are as ignorant about probability as reporters are.

Read the whole thing. I like that “fear-industrial complex” tag. It’s certainly apt. As Stossel concludes: “Instead of educating people to real dangers, we scare them about things that hardly matter.”

And here’s evidence for Stossel’s point about coverage of guns vs. other causes of death.