Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

In chaotic era, conference aims to amplify 1st Amendment

- By Ted Anthony AP National Writer

PITTSBURGH >> Not long ago in the American republic, informatio­n was less chaotic — or, at least, seemed to be. Newspapers appeared reliably on stoops every morning. Reassuring men from three networks delivered the news at dinnertime. We knew what was true, what was false, what was important.

Except it never actually was that way. Not really. And we now know that like never before.

A generation-long technologi­cal rumpus that upended how informatio­n is delivered and gave everyone with a device in their pocket the ability to speak globally has revealed, as never before, the chaos that is free expression in the United States.

For two days in Pittsburgh, a national exploratio­n of what the First Amendment means to America in 2018 dug into every corner of this notion to understand where we are, and where we’re going, in terms of the rights Americans have to express themselves.

“Too many people in this country don’t understand how freedom works in their native land,” said Maxwell King, former editor of The Philadelph­ia Inquirer and head of the Pittsburgh Foundation, a philanthro­py that co-sponsored the event at Duquesne University.

In the spirit of the amendment itself, a barrage of provocativ­e ideas surfaced. And, predictabl­y when it comes to free speech, few produced unanimous conclusion­s.

Among news leaders, government officials and academics, the consensus seemed to be this: In an era upended by technology and the behaviors that have grown up around it, the First Amendment remains pivotal to a functionin­g democracy — perhaps more so than ever in a society increasing­ly suspicious of the role that the mass media plays.

“I don’t believe democracie­s can exist without a free press,” Tom Ridge, secretary of Homeland Security under former Republican President George W. Bush and the onetime governor of Pennsylvan­ia, said Monday.

Neverthele­ss, there’s much to consider about the role of the First Amendment in our sometimesb­rave new world, and the rapid-fire questions ran the gamut Sunday and Monday, as they are wont to do in a free society:

Is “fake news” — however it is defined, and whoever uses the term — protected speech? Who checks facts, and who watches them do it? How do we balance the desire for open debate and the rising need for “safe spaces” on college campuses? When are leaks legal?

And what is speech, precisely, in this new world? Am I expressing myself by my choice of locations, and does that make my GPS data protected expression? Are veiled dark-internet encouragem­ents to hurt or dismember someone speech that should be protected? Are social networks the new arbiters of who can be amplified? Should they be required to police content?

Finally: What does it mean when the president of the United States continuall­y takes verbal potshots at the press and encourages disdain for media whose stories run counter to his narrative?

“The social media companies themselves don’t understand social media,” said Sree Sreenivasa­n, a leader in digital journalism and former associate dean of the Columbia Journalism School. He says Donald Trump’s presidency was “a direct result of him understand­ing social media better than the social media companies.”

So how do we sort this all out? First of all, you probably can’t. A strong portion of chaos is natural — healthy, even — when it comes to freedom of expression in a society based on personal liberty.

But the fragmentat­ion of media, society and politics, and the willingnes­s of partisans to exploit that to contentiou­s ends, have made many wonder whether the relationsh­ip between polarizati­on and unfettered, unverified expression is too corrosive. The approachin­g midterm elections lend an urgency to this as well.

“I think it’s really hard to have a democracy when we don’t agree on a baseline set of facts,” said Martin Baron, executive editor of The Washington Post. That, he said, is where responsibl­e journalism must play a role.

Other reflection­s from speakers at the conference: THE NORTH KOREA EXAMPLE >> Suki Kim, a journalist who went undercover in North Korea for six months to chronicle life there, spoke of the deep indoctrina­tion she encountere­d in that society. “If you cannot tell the difference between what is true and not true,” she said, “it changes your foundation­s.” THE SMORGASBOR­D MODEL >> Ohio Gov. John Kasich, appearing via video, exhorted Americans to ingest their media mindfully — as one might consider choosing items from a restaurant buffet. “Don’t be a siloed consumer of the press. Take a bite of everything,” Kasich said. “The ability to sample a lot and draw a conclusion is the best way to be a consumer of the news.” THE EXPANDING WAYS WE COMMUNICAT­E >> Noel Francisco, the solicitor general of the United States, marveled at how many more methods of communicat­ion exist than when the First Amendment was ratified in the 18th century. “We have a lot more speech today,” he said. “And I think that just means we will have a lot more kinds of speech that are protected.”

Hugh Hewitt, the radio host and media critic, took a moment to muse about the republic’s founders as well. What, he wondered, might people who measured informatio­n’s speed in days and weeks, not minutes and seconds, have made of this phantasmag­orical media landscape that might well have left them, well, speechless?

“I wish we could summon their brains,” he said, “to deal with issues they could never have imagined.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/TED ANTHONY ?? Martin Baron, left, executive editor of The Washington Post, speaks as David Shribman, executive editor of Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, listens at the National First Amendment Conference in Pittsburgh on Monday.
AP PHOTO/TED ANTHONY Martin Baron, left, executive editor of The Washington Post, speaks as David Shribman, executive editor of Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, listens at the National First Amendment Conference in Pittsburgh on Monday.

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