The Columbus Dispatch

‘ The Post’ reminds us how important real news is

- KATHLEEN PARKER Kathleen Parkers’s email address is kathleenpa­rker@ washpost.com.

As a functional obsessive-compulsive, I’m never happier than at year’s end, when I get to make lists. Herewith, my picks for the most important stories of 2017:

This year, my list is short: “Fake News” — from which all cursings flow.

Not only has the president’s frequent “fake news” defense against any story he dislikes helped codify the idea that the media, especially CNN, The New York Times and The Washington Post, seek only to misinform, but this strategic deception has created a volunteer class of the arrogantly ignorant.

While such consistent dishonesty is annoying, my greater concern is for the future of the republic. The health of our democratic system of government relies at least somewhat upon a reasonably well-informed citizenry. When truth is relative, facts are fungible and the loudest voice wins the day, why, anyone really can become president.

How do journalist­s combat the rallying cry of the president himself?

Art, it seems, has come to the rescue. Voila “The Post.”

Among the many reasons to love Steven Spielberg’s new movie is that “The Post” may be the best rebuttal yet to the “fake news” mantra. It’s the story of the paper’s publicatio­n of parts of the Pentagon Papers, a classified history of the Vietnam War, which revealed that three presidents (John Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon) had lied persistent­ly about the war and its human toll. The New York Times actually broke the story but was forced to cease publishing under a Justice Department injunction, which ultimately was reversed by the Supreme Court in 1971.

The injunction, neverthele­ss, provided the Post an opportunit­y to intercept the ball and run with it, publishing excerpts from its own, subsequent­ly acquired copy of the documents. The movie traces the partnershi­p of then-publisher Katharine Graham (Meryl Streep) and former executive editor Ben Bradlee (Tom Hanks) as they struggle with the decision to publish the papers.

Much of the focus is on Graham, who assumed control of The Post after her husband and co-owner, Phil Graham, committed suicide in August 1963 — hardly a tepid time to be in the news business. Although the paper has long been considered a Graham family enterprise, it was Katharine’s father, Eugene Meyer, who bought the paper in 1933 at a bankruptcy auction, eventually handing over the reins to Katharine’s husband.

Underlying the story of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers was an unsubtle, feminist subtext that will be familiar to women of a certain age. In 1963, “Kate” Graham was the only woman in the boardroom and one of only a few women when she glided through the newsroom. Thus, this wife-turned-publisher had to face not only business challenges for which she was ill prepared, including a risky public offering, she also had to convince skeptical men that she was up to the job.

Pivotal in Graham’s transforma­tion was the decision to publish the Pentagon Papers, which was portrayed as torturous owing to two concurrent problems: One, she feared the banks would abandon her during the then-imminent public offering; and, two, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, who had commission­ed the study that became known as the Pentagon Papers, was one of her dearest friends.

Both she and Bradlee, who had been close to Kennedy, were forced to choose between loyalty to friends and the truth. At one point, Bradlee, apparently hurt that Kennedy had lied to him, reflects on the inherent tension between being friends with newsmakers and his responsibi­lity to report news.

The message embedded therein is that facts and truth matter most of all. In newsrooms where real-life journalist­s pursue both, the very real struggles on view in “The Post” are replicated every day. There may be less drama, but the stakes are just as high. In a time of “fake news,” darkness settles when people can no longer tell the difference.

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