Responsible reporting
If you don't read the newspaper
you are uninformed, if you do
read the newspaper you are
misinformed. —Mark Twain
you are uninformed, if you do
read the newspaper you are
misinformed. —Mark Twain
(I’ll update that to include radio and TV news these days as well.)
My mother
was a newspaper reporter, and she told me something I've never forgotten.
She said, “Be careful about trusting the news. It’s absurdly easy for
incompetent or unethical reporters to color it. Let’s say, for example,
the Sheriff is in Boston speaking at a law enforcement conference.
There’s a terrible local crime while he’s away. If I don’t happen to like
the Sheriff or if I disagree with his policies, I could choose to report only
that he was unavailable, or that he could not be reached for comment. It
would be true, but it wouldn't be honest, and readers might well take it to
mean he’s not doing his job. Do you understand?”
Sadly,
Mom’s advice has grown even more wise considering today’s pseudo-news
reporting.
Whole
networks have obvious one-sided political agendas. Newscasters are as
much ego-brandishing celebrities as reporters, and seem to become overnight
experts on any number of topics from nutrition to child-rearing to
environmental issues to foreign affairs to astrophysics. They often
essentially pre-judge the guilt or innocence of alleged transgressors and they
don’t hesitate to slant the news, even to the extent of inciting violence over
this or that incident that instead ought to be handled not in the media but
within the established legal system, which is all we have in America for any
semblance of true justice.
Editorializing and commentary in journalism, when clearly labeled as such, are
protected under our constitution and rightly so, but straight news reporting
should be conducted with professional honesty, integrity, thoroughness,
accuracy, and absolute objectivity. Allowing us, the reading and viewing
public, to make up our own minds on the issues.
But good
luck with that in today's world.
Phil
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