In an ideal society the media would play a crucial role disseminating vital information during a crisis like coronavirus.

But the end of objective journalism has made that impossible. Years of transparently biased, anti-Trump coverage has become dangerous.

Yet the spin doctors of journalism still can’t help but twist coronavirus reporting into campaign propaganda with an eye on November.

The most widely-circulated ostensibly reputable news outlets in the U.S. suggest COVID-19 is the worst threat since the Civil War. The Washington Post issued dire warnings that coronavirus could infect a hundred million, and that 2.2 million Americans could die.

In the face of so potentially great a threat, it’s crucial that Americans get timely information that they can trust from the news media. But two critical failures of American journalism in its current state made that impossible, adding chaos to crisis.

Negativity Bias In Media

One of these is American journalism’s unrepentant commitment to skew reporting toward partisan activism. The other is the persistence of human negativity bias incentivizing newsrooms to bias their coverage toward alarmism. The result is misleading news and a distorted perception of potential threats.

Or as Harvard professor of psychology Steven Pinker puts it:

Journalism has a built-in bias toward the negative, because bad things are sudden and newsworthy (a shooting rampage, a war, an epidemic), while good things are gradual and boring (a crime decline, a spreading peace, a longevity rise).

This may have resulted in an exaggerated media response to coronavirus. And a bias toward emphasizing the most sensational and dire projections of its potential impact. This led the media to widely report a 3.4% “death rate” from coronavirus infection.

While emphasizing the catastrophic possibilities of this death rate should millions become infected, journalists frequently overlooked contextualizing information that would have made this 3.4% figure less sensational.

These important qualifications include:

1. The widely-reported coronavirus “death rate” is the number of fatalities coded with coronavirus as the cause of death, divided by the number of confirmed cases in the country.

2. Italy has coded any death by a patient with coronavirus as caused by coronavirus, even though that may not necessarily be the case.

3. The number of confirmed cases is not the same as the actual number of cases. It’s merely the number of positive coronavirus tests. This wildly inflated the “death rate.” As the Washington Post notes, “Coronavirus confirmed cases are a fraction of the real total” (original headline).

As a result, the widely reported, very alarming death rate was very misleading.

Moreover, Dr. John Ioannidis, a leading epidemiologist and statistician, says the real death rate could be as low as 0.05%.

Anti-Trump Media Unprepared for Coronavirus

It cannot escape notice that news outlets, which are mostly commercial enterprises supported by advertising, enjoy greater circulation and higher ratings when they give into negativity bias. While this profit motive is understandable if not excusable, the inflammatory partisanship of our news institutions is downright perverse.

When something like the coronavirus pandemic happens, Americans should be able to trust news institutions. But they can’t because news coverage is complicated by the media’s unrestrained animus toward Donald Trump. That’s rampant, industry-wide malpractice, a dangerous disservice to the American people.

In May 2019, the RAND Corporation published the results of its second report based on researched into “Truth Decay.” The conclusion? U.S. journalism has become more subjective and opinion-based. And left-of-center journalists are vastly over-represented in writing this increasingly subjective “news.” They also live in a bubble.

By 2016, more than half of news employees worked in counties that Hillary Clinton won by 30% or more.

Since before Donald Trump became president, the mainstream media has conspicuously worked not to inform, but inflame.

That’s why Americans’ trust in media dropped to a record low of 32% when Trump got elected in 2016. Trust hovered at historic lows throughout his presidency. In the 1980s, 65% of Americans trusted the press.

News Media Added Chaos to Coronavirus

The understandable reticence of a majority of Americans to trust the news media added chaos to the crisis. It made a prudent, fact-based public response to coronavirus all but impossible.

NPR/PBS NewsHour found half of Americans don’t trust the news media’s coronavirus coverage. Meanwhile, Rasmussen Reports found independent voters rated the media’s coronavirus coverage even worse than Republicans did.

Try untangling a public policy response from the web of electioneering and partisan deception that have helped create hyper-partisan, post-truth America.

Even White House task force leader Dr. Anthony Fauci has had to plead with the mainstream media to stop “pitting” him against Trump. He says it’s a false narrative.

Given the intensity of anti-Trump media bias, Americans can’t help but wonder if the press is aiming for the best public response to coronavirus and harm-mitigation– or its seemingly singular obsession, undermining Donald Trump’s reelection chances.

That is unacceptable. American journalism is long overdue for a major self check.

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect the views of CCN.com.