Saturday, February 10, 2007

The duty of reporters, the duty of the people.

A comment (not my own) in response to Washington Post article:

Al-Qaeda Suspects Color White House Debate Over Iran
By Dafna Linzer, February 10, 2007

. . . I would just like to say to the Washington Post staff that promotes this sort of propaganda and when I say propaganda I am talking about the way you are reporting this crap as newswothy - instead on jumping on the bandwagon of making this administration accountable for making a mockery out of the media including yourselves. . . . Do you not know the seriousness of the way this country is going? Please think long and hard about the way you think you have the power of the pen. . . .

-- By danders5000 | Feb 10, 2007 2:33:54 AM

Correct me if I'm wrong, but this reader is blaming WaPo journalists for "supporting" the Bush regime by not opposing it. Read that sentence again; it is a very sad set of circumstances on many levels (e.g. the need to blame people for supporting our President). In any case, this accusation upon journalists seems rather unfair due to the ethics rules that are the guiding light of good journalism, which include neutrality and unbiased reporting.

This reader told WaPo journalists to use the power of the pen to create change in today's society, to hold the Bush administration accountable for what they've done. Although I agree that journalism should be used to balance the powers of lawmakers with the powers of the people, I don't agree that it should be used to spoon-feed one-sided ideas into the public's mind, even if they seem like good ideas at the time. With the continuing illegitimate behavior of the Bush administration, it may seem deserving and justified that the media cater to the anti-everything-Bush majority or even cater to the vengeance of having been deceived by the White House on many topics, especially concerning the "War Of Terror" which Borat aptly names it. There is now a sense of betrayal when one does not preach to the choir, as seen in the impassioned comments of the WaPo reader.

What the reader did not consider is that the role of journalism in a democratic society is to serve the truth, like it or not; to provide un-opinionated reports to give to the people for the people themselves to interpret, opinionate, and take action. To make liberal use of the pen would be to violate the neutrality that is useful in order for the public to respond logically and in all varieties of ways that mark us as an individualized society.

I believe that the WaPo article states the facts and sheds several perspectives from various sources on the situation, and in no way seems to support the issue on either side. In fact, they document that:
Five administration officials were made available for interviews for this story on the condition that they not be identified. Other officials who spoke without permission -- including senior officials, career analysts and policymakers -- said their standing with the White House would be at risk if they were quoted by name.
(from WashingtonPost.com)
How is this spreading administration propaganda? It's true that there is no in-depth analysis of the further consequences of the situation, and the article doesn't offer suggestions as to what the "correct" future approaches could be, but isn't that what we the people are partially here for? Aren't we supposed to take the information from the journalists and use it to write our own letters to government, and our own opinion pieces? Journalists are necessarily under a tighter rein when they are blessed (cursed) with providing "just the facts, ma'am," and to let the readers judge as they wish, and react as they wish. That's proper journalism, no?

(What I was ranting about in my previous post was the incomplete analysis of a given situation, not the incomplete analysis of a possible propaganda scheme.)

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

May you send the link to the complete article?

Thanks.

amadeusLL said...

Hi Pedro,

The complete article link is:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/09/AR2007020902294.html

Enjoy,
Lisa

Anonymous said...

Amadeus love the passion here. Indeed one aim of journalism is give us who what when where why and how but the last two are moving targets at best.

Why especially gives the writer some license as to how the facts are being portrayed. How is a collection of assembled facts meant to convey some version of the goings on an article.

Any good journalist aims to tell a story. They want to state the facts and keep folks emotionally/intellectually invested enough to get to the end. The truth in any story is a formalized collection of facts selected to tell a particular version of events therein.

Just reading the story I feel slightly ambivalent towards Iran and slightly upset with them because they are not as forthcoming or cooperative at folks would want them to be causing so much anxiety for the White House administration.

I tried to read this as a blank slate but I couldn't, I live in the United States and know more about them than Iran. A little more information from the Iranian perspective would have helped this story be more "fair and balanced" but I am not sure as a reader of US based WaPo that measure would have kept my attention.

I wholeheartedly agree with you that people should not depend on journalists to get on politicians. They get paid to tell stories! They ideally get people interested enough to do more research or take more action on a topic. But hey, who's got the time?