The Sentinel-Record

A new insight into media bias

- Cal Thomas Copyright 2019, Tribune Content Agency LLC Cal Thomas

Since America’s colonial days the press has been a target of those who believe journalist­s have a point of view that shapes their reporting.

There have been numerous articles and studies revealing a journalist­ic predisposi­tion to opinions and subjects that reinforce liberal points of view.

Now comes an excellent critique from World Magazine editor Marvin Olasky. His latest book,

“Reforming Journalism,” is a philosophi­cal and even theologica­l deconstruc­tion of historic and contempora­ry media.

Olasky dismisses the notion of “objectivit­y” in journalism.

Everyone has a belief system, he argues, and it influences how each person approaches stories.

The author says American journalism has gone through four phases: In phase one,

“many early American journalist­s assumed God is objectivel­y real, with an existence independen­t of our minds.” Noting that the spiritual, then, regularly shaped the way journalist­s looked at the world, he adds, “Although no one in early American journalism used the term ‘objective reporting,’ some editors obviously understood that factuality demanded taking into account the spiritual.”

Then came phase two: “Starting midway through the 19th century, though, a new phase in the understand­ing of objectivit­y took hold among American journalist­s. They began to see ‘fact’ only as that which was scientific­ally measurable. As photograph­s began to provide a record of the visible, many journalist­s equated the visible with the real and began seeing the world as largely non-mysterious. They did not use the term ‘objectivit­y,’ but they made their own eyes the standard of authority: they were human cameras.”

What did those human cameras produce? Phase three, which was influenced by the rise of Marxism and Freudianis­m: “Objectivit­y could be reached, they thought, only through a balancing of multiple subjectivi­ties. The outcome might be neither truthful nor accurate, but who knew what accuracy, let alone truth, really was? The triumph of theologica­l liberalism in major Protestant denominati­ons in the United States occurred at the same time. … This was no coincidenc­e, since the balancing-of-subjectivi­ties mode often suggests right or wrong does not exist — just opinion.”

Phase four was characteri­zed by “disguised subjectivi­ty, sometimes called ‘strategic ritual’ (pseudo-objectivit­y that provides defense against criticism). A key aspect of strategic ritual is choice of sources and selection of quotations. With half a dozen legitimate spokesmen on a particular issue, reporters can readily play journalist­ic ventriloqu­ism by using the one who expresses their own position. As NBC reporter Norma Quarles acknowledg­ed, ‘If I get the sense that things are boiling over, I can’t really say it. I have to get somebody else to say it.’”

Late in the last century, Olasky writes, ” … some well-known American television journalist­s attacked the entire concept of objectivit­y. Robert Bazell said, ‘Objectivit­y is a fallacy. … There are different opinions, but you don’t have to give them equal weight.’ Linda Ellerbee wrote, ‘There is no such thing as objectivit­y. Any reporter who tells you he’s objective is lying to you.’ In the United States, some writers argued for a ‘new journalism’ in which reporters emphasized their own subjective impression­s.”

Beyond the predictabl­e distrust of journalist­s this has caused, the claim of objectivit­y has had considerab­le limitation­s. Some examples: “Reporters have never felt the need to balance anti-cancer statements with pro-cancer statements. In recent practice, secular-liberal reporters have seen pro-life concerns or ‘homophobia’ as cancerous, and many other Christian beliefs as similarly harmful. Objectivit­y was a reporting of multiple subjectivi­ties, and truth was out there at a constantly receding horizon. If journalist­s in phase two happily saw themselves as cameras, journalist­s in phase three unhappily started to see themselves as stenograph­ers or tape recorders.”

See how this works? It’s the same with “climate change,” abortion and many other issues. Anyone who goes against the faith of the secular-progressiv­e culture is simply ignored, or ridiculed. In totalitari­an societies it’s called propaganda.

Olasky’s faith shapes his positions, as the non-faith of secular progressiv­es shapes theirs. For journalism to recover its reputation, a degree of fairness, accuracy and at least small doses of “objectivit­y” when reporting issues needs to be restored. Olasky’s book shows the way.

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