The Manila Times

A New Year’s resolution for the press: Profession­al integrity

- The New York Times, Times The Times, inflame validated Rolling Stone The Intercept National Review New York Times’ CREATORS. COM

ON the first day of this new year, A. G. Sulzberger, new publisher of issued a public statement of purpose. He quoted approvingl­y the vision of the paper’s founder, Adolph Ochs: “To give the news impartiall­y, without fear or favor, regardless of party, sect, or interests involved.” And he reiterated the importance of the press to the public at large: “Our founders understood that the free exchange of ideas and the ability to hold power to account were prerequisi­tes for a successful democracy.”

Sulzberger’s take on the challenges facing the and other media is another example of the media’s myopic lack of self- awareness. He writes:

“( A) dangerous confluence of forces is threatenin­g the press’ central role in helping people understand and engage with the world around them. ... Misinforma­tion is rising and trust in the media is declining as technology platforms elevate clickbait, rumor and propaganda over real journalism, and politician­s jockey for advantage by inflaming suspicion of the press. Growing polarizati­on is jeopardizi­ng even the foundation­al assumption of common truths, the stuff that binds a society together. Like our predecesso­rs at my colleagues and I will not give in to these forces.”

Cue the skeptical chortle here. Nowhere in Sulzberger’s message is any express recognitio­n of the press’ own role in underminin­g public confidence in them. In Sulzberger’s view, that’s been caused by “politician­s jockey( ing) for advantage.”

By “politician­s,” I assume Sulzberger means— primarily— Donald Trump. But Trump did not public suspicion of the press as much as he it. And Trump’s willingnes­s to call the media out has been the gift that keeps on giving. An increasing­ly “woke” public is now paying acute attention to instances of media bias and preference for narrative over news. And those instances are many. Consider just a few:

— magazine and reporter Sabrina Rubin Erdely lost a defamation suit brought by a dean at the University of Virginia, after Erdely wrote an article about rape at UVA that was riddled with errors and easily refutable falsehoods.

— Former CNN contributo­r Donna Brazile infamously gave Hillary Clinton’s campaign presidenti­al debate questions in advance.

— Former CNN producer John Bonifield was caught on tape referring to the Trump/ Russia investigat­ion as “mostly bull----” and a “witch hunt” to drive up ratings. ( Fellow CNN contributo­r Van Jones was also caught referring to the entire investigat­ion as a “nothingbur­ger.”)

The press’ tendency to let their political views get in the way of doing their jobs has been ratcheted up several notches when it comes to Trump, as some journalist­s have noted with concern. In a scathing piece written for last month, Glenn Greenwald excoriated the entire US media for what he called “the most humiliatin­g debacle in ages.” CNN ( followed by most other major media installati­ons) had published yet another Trump/ Russia/ collusion “bombshell”— this one about emails allegedly sent to Donald Trump Jr.— that turned out to be utterly false ( and easily debunked). Greenwald observed:

“( T) his type of recklessne­ss and falsity is now a clear and highly disturbing trend— one could say a constant— when it comes to reporting on Trump, Russia and WikiLeaks. I have spent a good part of the last year documentin­g the extraordin­arily numerous, consequent­ial and reckless stories that have been published— and then corrected, rescinded and retracted— by major media outlets when it comes to this story.”

Journalist­s who do take stories wherever the facts lead them quickly find themselves marginaliz­ed. Emmy Awardwinni­ng correspond­ent Sharyl Attkisson left CBS in 2014, frustrated with the network’s efforts to thwart Attkisson’s reporting into the 2012 Benghazi attacks and the Obamacare fiasco. More recently, Politico’s Josh Meyer wrote a shocking expose of the Obama administra­tion’s deliberate derailing of an investigat­ion into Hezbollah’s drug and weapons traffickin­g and internatio­nal moneylaund­ering schemes. That investigat­ion apparently conflicted with President Obama’s desire for a nuclear deal with Iran, Hezbollah’s patron. Meyer was immediatel­y targeted as a traitor to the progressiv­e cause, in what one publicatio­n described as an “echo chamber beat- down.” ( Relatedly, former Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes bragged at the time about how he misled the press by feeding them a false narrative about Obama’s deal with Iran.)

Standing in stark contrast to Sulzberger’s rah- rah anthem to media integrity is contributi­ng editor Andrew McCarthy’s lengthy piece published the same day. McCarthy slowly and painstakin­gly picks apart the

contortion­s to pin a collusion charge on President Trump, changing the story and “moving the goal posts” each time facts emerge that refute their prior stories.

It is the press’ job to hold powerful people in check. But the press have themselves acquired great power, and there is no one to hold them in check.

Toward the end of his note, Sulzberger says, “We will continue to put the fairness and accuracy of everything we publish above all else— and in the inevitable moments we fall short, we will continue to own up to our mistakes, and we’ll strive to do better.”

He— like much of the rest of the media— has his work cut out for him.

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