The Press Earns its Freedom Everyday

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Politics
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The Public Ought To Know, fake news,

Today’s New York Times, included an insert, “Truth. It’s more important now than ever.” How true!

 

All the discussion about “fake news” and attacks on the news media infuriates me. In law school I edited CONSCIENCE, an award winning publication. I regularly wrote a column, “The Public Ought to Know,” from ‘03 to ‘05 and resurrected it as “The Public Ought To Know” for The Labor Press since January 2015. I regularly shared information with reporters to help them do their jobs and depended on the media to get the word out on issues that matter. Many I dealt with in and out of City government moved on to significant reporting roles on the national scene.  One gets parodied (rather well) on Saturday Night Live. These men and women care. They do their job responsibly and objectively and leave any bias to the editorial and op-ed pages.

 

In my final CONSCIENCE editorial, titled the same as this blog, I wrote, “Our Founding Fathers recognized the importance of a free an unencumbered press to a representative democracy or to any nation. The news media not only checks abuses by government and other social institutions, but historically has done so most effectively. Short of libel considerations, society must minimize, if not eliminate, restraints on the press.”

 

These words matter even more today when we need to make sure respect for truth and facts predominates.

 

Later in the editorial, I wrote, “Our free and responsible press guarantees the continued existence of our representative democracy.” These words ring true today.

 

Here’s a Buffalo Springfield song a pros pro for this discussion.

Comments

Cayce Crown

"I refuse to accept the view that mankind is so tragically bound to the starless midnight of racism and war that the bright daybreak of peace and brotherhood can never become a reality... I believe that unarmed truth and unconditional love will have the final word." MLK JR
Cynthia Somma

It is so difficult to distinguish between truth or fiction..I think some "truths" out there are so outlandish..we may not believe it.
So who do we believe?
Ester Horowitz

Someone I know just posted that the real truth about media being shut out of the WH press was that the correspondence association cycles the press Corp as a routine thing and that particular day it happens to not include certain key players I. It's routine cycle. Corey how bogus or correct is that?
Corey Bearak

You raise interesting issues. I often tak of knowing enough to know. Danger is where people do not follow or just refuse to truth those who deliver facts including those many dedicated journalists who toil hard to get real facts and debunk alternative assertions that fall short of the truth

Submitted by MarilynGenoa on Sun, 02/26/2017 - 00:34

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Marilyn Genoa

I find many of these blogs energizing. Cayce thank you for the beautiful quote from MLK and Corey for being able to provide us with so many "real" facts. One of my favorite comedians said there only be one set of facts. There can't be his facts or her facts or their facts, there can only be THE facts.
Corey Bearak

Bogus. WH excluded some in the pool which the corps basically sets and added others that are marginally media if at all. See AP story: https://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2017/02/24/us/ap-us-white-house-press.html
Corey Bearak

Marlyn, YW!
I mused some today about a amor Press column on the Truth, I know it will include this song, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pUQw8s-QZOg&feature=related - but maybe the live version

Submitted by Steven_Lichtenstein on Sun, 02/26/2017 - 05:34

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Steven Lichtenstein

Clearly The NY Times has an implicit bias as Mike Pence opined on during the presidential campaign. In addition even one of The Time's own public editors admitted that they had a liberal bias. http://www.newsbusters.org/blogs/nb/noel-sheppard/2013/08/18/new-york-times-public-editor-admits-paper-has-liberal-bias The reality is that "the truth" is in the eye of the beholder and based upon ones experiential filters, there may be several correct interpretations of the same event.
Corey Bearak

Steve my dear friend. Facts are Facts. Interpretations are judgments about folks intentions and what lead to actual facts (aka why), not about the actual fact. Bias goes to presentation, not the fact itself. Bias may cover how important one views a fact or set of facts. In additional, need to separate Editorials and op-eds from the reporting. Most of the NY Times better reporters started out around the same time as this correspondent at City Hall. Two were not Times reporters but at the NY Post and Newsday when we first interacted. As such I saw them cover liberal and no so liberal politicians and others with objectivity.
Maurice Frumkin

Only a true leader has the strength to listen and learn from all forms of critique. Unfortunately, this "leader" is too fearful of opposing opinions, and it will contribute to his downfall in the end.

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