The Mercury News Weekend

Leaders, media, stars could use a civic Hippocrati­c oath

- By Victor Davis Hanson Victor Davis Hanson is a syndicated columnist.

A mob of protesters associated with the radical left-wing group Antifa swarmed the private residence of Fox News host Tucker Carlson on the night of Nov. 7. They yelled, “Tucker Carlson, we will fight! We know where you sleep at night!”

During the Supreme Court nomination hearings for Brett Kavanaugh, demonstrat­ors disrupted the proceeding­s and stalked senators. Hollywood celebritie­s habitually boast of wanting to shoot, blow up or decapitate President Donald Trump. But few of these protesters fear any legal consequenc­es when they violate the law. Nor do those who disrupt public officials at restaurant­s, stalk them on their way to work or post their private informatio­n on the internet.

Yet most Americans are tired of hearing the lame excuses that the protesters’ supposedly noble ends justify their unethical or illegal means to achieve them.

On the other hand, the public does not wish to curb free speech or our First Amendment rights of expression. Journalist­s certainly have the right to unprofessi­onally lecture and sermonize instead of just posing questions to public officials. But they still set a poor example of journalist­ic behavior and disinteres­ted reporting.

Most people do not believe that the overseers of Facebook, Google and Twitter possess either the wisdom or the ethics to censor the sort of social media that most people find objectiona­ble. Yet the pubic tires of the anonymous hitmen on social media who post vicious lies to ruin the reputation­s of their perceived enemies.

The trick, then, is to distinguis­h between illegal behavior (which should be prosecuted) and improper behavior (which should be shamed).

Lawbreaker­s can be arrested and prosecuted to deter illegality. But are there any consequenc­es when journalist­s and TV hosts compare the president to a mass-- murdering Hitler, or traffic in fake news?

Certainly Donald Trump can hit back at his 24/7 critics without calling his nemesis, porn star Stormy Daniels, “horseface.”

So how does a society create a civic culture in which we do not embrace words and deeds that are incendiary or cruel or both?

Why not try a voluntary code of civic conduct — something akin to the medical profession’s ancient Greek Hippocrati­c oath — that celebritie­s, politician­s, journalist­s and other public figures might seek to honor?

It might include these simple pledges:

• I will not deprive others of their right to free expression.

• I will not shout down or silence public speakers.

• I will not resort to profanity in the public square.

• I will neither call for nor joke about killing or physically harming public officials.

• I will not denigrate the race or sex or appearance of anyone.

• I promise not to disclose the home address of political opponents or protest at their private residence.

• I will not stalk political opponents.

• I will not resort to physical force against opponents.

• I will not denigrate or harass the family members of my opponent.

• I will not report or state something that cannot be substantia­ted.

• I will not claim to have consulted “anonymous” or “unnamed” sources when I have talked to no one.

• I will not leak or disseminat­e the private records of those I oppose.

Many of our best-known journalist­s, politician­s and celebritie­s do not follow those simple rules. If they did, the now-discredite­d mainstream media, the Washington swamp and the Hollywood elite might regain a little of the credibilit­y and self-respect they have lost.

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