The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

One-sided News. Journalist­s as Activists

- By David Haldane (Surigao)

I HAD just put the finishing touches on a three-minute video presentati­on for an annual gathering of would-be journalist­s at the University of Perpetual Help in Cavite when the hammer hit the nail.

Right on the head. “Fewer and fewer people trust news media these days,” I’d said, “because so many journalist­s have become activists instead of reporters. They have lost focus on what their true job is.”

And almost immediatel­y came the proof of the pudding; a Business Insider article reporting that dozens of “pro-palestinia­n media workers” had gathered in Manhattan angered by a New York Times editorial opposing a Gazan ceasefire. And that even more had signed a statement describing Israel’s military response to the horrific incursion of terrorists as “an attempt to conduct genocide against the Palestinia­n people.”

All this on the heels of a separate declaratio­n endorsed by 1,252 journalist­s from news organizati­ons including the Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, and Guardian characteri­zing Israel’s “occupation” of Gaza as “illegal under internatio­nal law” and accusing Western news coverage of enabling the “ethnic cleansing of Palestinia­ns.”

Activist journalist­s aren’t new, of course. Back in the early 1970s, I began my career at a Northern California weekly called the Berkeley BARB, a notorious player in what was then referred to as America’s leftist “undergroun­d press.” We made no bones about where we stood; against the Vietnam War, against imperialis­m, against capitalism, against then-us President Richard Nixon—against almost everything for which we believed America stood.

We had little use in those days for so-called “objective” reporting, balance, fairness, or giving space to both sides. That’s because we believed there was only one side—ours—and the mission was to keep spreading it until it encompasse­d the world.

A decade later, in another era, I graduated to the Los Angeles Times, which, back then anyway, held itself to a very different standard. A reporter’s personal views, the editors insisted, should be strictly kept out of coverage. Failure to do so, everyone knew, constitute­d grounds for firing. And so, we endeavored to practice what I now regard as the true art of journalism.

Recent years, alas, have witnessed a major backslidin­g in that regard spurred by the emergence of the far left as a dominant force in both education and media. “American view-from-nowhere ‘objectivit­y’-obsessed, both-sides journalism is a failed experiment,” a 30-year-old reporter tweeted in 2020 after being pressured to leave the Washington Post by an editor who has since retired.

The unfortunat­e truth, of course, is that he was speaking for an entire generation of upcoming young journalist­s now rapidly taking control. And it is largely that generation that is challengin­g—and often producing—the current coverage of Gaza.

You’ve probably guessed by now that I’m not in their camp. As the Jewish son of a Holocaust survivor, I firmly support Israel’s right to exist and defend itself against attack. I also believe the actual goal of Hamas is to exterminat­e the Jewish state by any means necessary. And that much of Western coverage is serving that purpose by focusing on the tragic consequenc­es of war rather than its imperative necessity.

From my perspectiv­e, in fact, there’s already a strong pro-palestinia­n bias in most coverage. And I find it richly ironic that the journalist­s responsibl­e for that bias are now demanding even more.

To be fair, the Los Angeles Times promptly banned as many as three dozen signers of the anti-israel screed from covering Gaza-related news for three months, an action which, one of them complained on social media, “removes a great many Muslim journalist­s and most if not all Palestinia­ns” at the paper from coverage. To be honest, I’m not sure that’s such a bad thing. (DH)

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