Columnist’s defense of journalism rings hollow Joseph...
Columnist’s defense of journalism rings hollow
Joseph Bell, in the article “Accuracy is our rock” published Nov.
13, uses the occasion of associate editor Stephen Glass’ dishonest
reporting in New Republic, buttressed by the lying of Jayson Blair in
the New York Times, to tell us that journalism is an eminently
honorable and trustworthy source of information, in contrast to the
stew of ignorance and deceit that is, for example, talk radio.
To convince us that Glass and Blair couldn’t happen, he assures us
that his own work is flawless and that publishers relentlessly check
reporters’ work before printing it. But he can’t think that there are
no other examples of dishonest reporting, or that publishers have no
interest other than truth. A less recent example is that of Janet
Cooke, who was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for her “work” in the
Washington Post, a politically correct sob-story of a poor boy’s
struggles, which happened to be entirely fictitious.
Older, but far more significant, is the story of Walter Duranty,
star foreign correspondent for the New York Times -- and, again, a
winner of journalism’s highest award -- who was assigned to Moscow in
the 1930s. Duranty, as reporter for the Times, covered up the
deliberate, systematic starvation of millions of peasant farmers,
their families, and entire villages in the Ukraine under orders of
Josef Stalin. He was there, he saw it happen, and he used the New
York Times to lie about it, and to tell lies that discredited
truthful accounts of it, because he did not want the great Communist
experiment, as he imagined to be, exposed by the truth as a murderous
failure.
Are we to imagine that Duranty, was also lying to his publisher,
and that no one at New York Times learned of this calculated
slaughter -- as hideous and even larger than the Holocaust -- until
after he retired, with honors, three decades later? This was not one
man’s deception; his publishers were complicit in it, and,
considering the pretensions of the New York Times and the
significance of the free press in a democratic nation, it comes close
to being a crime against civilization. It should befoul the
reputation of the entire management of the Times, and of those who,
even today, try to use this wretched accessory to mass murder as an
example of professional journalism.
But Bell still brags about his association with this paper, and it
is the reputation of this unapologetic source of tendentious
misinformation that it is his self-appointed task to defend.
What Bell doesn’t recognize is that the real game of much
journalism is not news; it is political king making. Both Blair and
Cooke were black reporters; their success was sought by their
employers in order to make a political point. Duranty would never
have been allowed freedom to lie about events in the Soviet Union had
not the publishers of New York Times been sympathetic to the cover-up
he was engaged in; and the recent episode of the Los Angeles Times’
frantic search for anti-Schwarzenegger news, both among Hollywood
groupies and in highly eccentric polling data, are evidence -- hardly
unexpected -- of its preference for Democratic political leadership.
Bell sees no bias in print journalism not because it isn’t there,
but because he shares it, and feels that his own source of prideful
identity would suffer should the purity of journalism be questioned.
It’s nice to know, at least, that when Bell gets bought, he stays
bought.
DOUGLAS TOOHEY
Tustin
Striking worker needs a reality check
The insulting attacks against striking supermarket workers by
Elayne Carver cannot be left unanswered.
First, the strikers are not “unskilled workers” but the bedrock of
the middle class, which is under siege by corporate executives and
upper management as it has never been before. Carver insists they
join the “real world,” along with her, and obligingly shell out
hundreds of dollars each month for health insurance premiums.
No, Carver, it is not all of us who need to join the “real world”
that every industrialized nation presently belongs to, except the
United States. The “real world” of universal health care for all.
It is the supermarket chain store workers who are struggling
today. Who will it be tomorrow?
KAREN MCKENNA-JUERGENS
Costa Mesa
Pugilism over publication should take back seat
It’s Thanksgiving time -- with plenty of feel-good stories out
there -- and you have to lead your newspaper with an article on two
homeless people fighting over a “lad mag?” Sure, pictures of
half-naked women and stories about drinking and gadgets are sometimes
worth fighting for (I hope my wife isn’t reading this today) but
couldn’t that have been relegated to Page 2 and replaced with some
real news?
MIKE McNIFF
Costa Mesa
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