acroyear: (fof earplug)
[personal profile] acroyear
Journalists angry over the commission of journalism - Glenn Greenwald - Salon.com:
To Kurtz, when a journalist accurately points out that a powerful political leader is lying, that's "taking sides," a departure from journalistic objectivity, something improper. In reply, Dickey agreed with that assessment, noting that "part of the soul of [Cooper's] show is to take sides" and be "committed to a certain vision of the story." Like Rainey, Dickey was forced to acknowledge that all of the statements Cooper identified as "lies" were actually lies, and thus magnanimously decreed: "I think Anderson can be forgiven for using that word in that context." Kurtz then patronizingly noted: "And of course, Anderson Cooper was repeatedly punched in the head when he was covering the demonstrations" -- as though his departure from good journalistic objectivity can at least be understood here (though of course not justified) because of the emotional trauma he suffered.

Rainey, Kurtz and Dickey all have this exactly backwards. Identifying lies told by powerful political leaders -- and describing them as such -- is what good journalists do, by definition. It's the crux of adversarial journalism, of a "watchdog" press. "Objectivity" does not require refraining from pointing out the falsity of government claims. The opposite is true; objectivity requires that a journalist do exactly that: treat factually false statements as false. "Objectivity" is breached not when a journalist calls a lie a "lie," but when they refuse to do so, when they treat lies told by powerful political officials as though they're viable, reasonable interpretations of subjective questions. The very idea that a journalist is engaged in "opinion-making" or is "taking sides" by calling a lie a "lie" is ludicrous; the only "side" such a journalist is taking is with facts, with the truth. It's when a journalist fails to identify a false statement as such that they are "taking sides" -- they're siding with those in power by deceitfully depicting their demonstrably false statements as something other than lies.

Date: 2011-02-16 01:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wildwose.livejournal.com
If the journalist were more concerned with calling them on their lies than they were with ratings...well, I think politics would be better and their ratings would be higher. Maybe. I never underestimate the capacity of the body politic to have their ideas spoon fed to them.

Date: 2011-02-19 01:49 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] acroyear70.livejournal.com
one would think the *real* lesson of Watergate was lost on the media: when you are honest, with evidence, of *government* lies, you increase sales and ratings.

instead, we got the lesson of Monicagate: when you ridiculously over-present the single lie of a single person (a lie having nothing to do with actual government whatsoever), you lose ratings.

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