Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Bias toward truth; it’s still a thing

- Gene Collier Gene Collier is a columnist for the Pittsburgh Post-gazette.

There is no journalist­ic imperative to balance truth with untruth; it’s stupid. And yet we persist. There is no journalist­ic protocol which dictates that we interview at least one radical left socialist meteorolog­ist and one MAGA conservati­ve wingnut meteorolog­ist on the issue of whether or not it’s raining; looking out the window will suffice.

And yet we persist.

When nine of the hottest years in recorded history have come in the previous 10 years, and catastroph­ic weather events are sweeping the planet, we needn’t call Doug Mastriano to tell us that global warming is “fake science,” and that’s not because he won’t talk to us anyway.

When Dr. Anthony Fauci retires after a 50-plus year career as a decorated immunologi­st who served eight presidents including George W. Bush, who bestowed upon him the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom, we needn’t include in our coverage the reaction of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-GA., whose medical opinion is apparently that Dr. Fauci requires immediate incarcerat­ion

And yet we persist.

The “we” that I’m editoriali­zing about here is the collective “we,” the media monolith that lives in the perception of many distrustfu­l Americans, as though none of us makes a move without the coordinati­on of our institutio­nal biases.

In real life, it’s all we can do to catch most of the typos.

But the purpose of what we do must stand, institutio­nalized, and just like when I went to journalism school in the mid-14th century, it’s not a lot more high-minded than this: find out what’s true and what’s not, present the former and condemn the latter when necessary. And it’s rarely been more necessary. As the former head of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics tweeted last week, “Any reporters who haven’t appreciate­d the fascist threat yet aren’t going to appreciate it until the last institutio­n has fallen and been ground into dust; they’ll still be both-sidesing things even once the country looks like Northern Ireland at the height of the troubles.”

President Joe Biden gave a major speech two weeks ago in Philadelph­ia, focusing on the metastasiz­ing threat to democracy. The major TV networks didn’t carry it. Had the whiff of partisan politics apparently. Many mainstream media outlets took exception to the president’s tone. Not helpful, we said.

Two nights later, Trump was in Wilkes-barre, Pa., generating headlines that looked like they’d leaped off the home page of The Onion:

n Guy Who Got Equivalent Of $143 Million From His Dad Accuses Fetterman Of Leeching Off His Parents.

n Guy Who Took Highly Classified Documents Out Of White House And Refused To Return Them Calls Biden An Enemy Of The State.

The 45th president, in a two-hour speech mostly about himself rather than the Republican candidates he was ostensibly in the state to support, did get around to calling the FBI vicious monsters and scum, but the more pernicious aspect of it all was the growing normalizat­ion of this kind of Trump’s brand of rhetorical insanity as legitimate public discourse.

The media’s becoming immune to it. Look at this exchange, highlighte­d in Jennifer Rubin’s column in The Washington Post, between Michael Mccaul, the ranking Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and Martha Raddatz on ABC:

Raddatz: “Do you see any reason that (Trump) should have taken those documents, those classified, highly classified documents to Mar-a-lago?”

Mccaul: “Well, look, I — you know, I have lived in the classified world most of my profession­al career, I personally wouldn’t do that. But I’m not the president of the United States. But he has a different set of rules that apply to him. The president can declassify a document on a moment’s notice.”

Raddatz: “(Trump’s Attorney General William Barr) basically said, if (Trump) stood over documents and said, ‘These are all declassifi­ed,’ it was — it’s an absurd idea. You think that’s what happened?”

Mccaul: “There is a process for declassifi­cation. But again, the president’s in a very different position than most of us in the national security space.”

It apparently didn’t matter to Mccaul or occur to Raddatz that Trump is not the president, but the pervasive notion that Trump is above the law and thus can do no legal wrong went pretty much unchalleng­ed.

The reluctance of Mccaul to even suggest that something Trump did wasn’t 100% on the level is an apt descriptio­n of the funhouse mirror Republican­s are looking into. They feel like they can’t win without Trump, can’t win without the man who lost the Senate, lost the House, lost the White House by 7 million votes, and got impeached twice.

But don’t worry, I know I should be getting myself out to a MAGA rally soon enough so I can learn about the errors in my analysis.

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