The Disguise Is Falling Off the Liberal Media
By Thomas Sowell
HUMAN EVENTS
Posted May 19, 2005
It was perhaps appropriate that Dan Rather received the
prestigious Peabody award in journalism at the same time when Newsweek
magazine was finally backing away from its false story about Americans flushing
the Koran down the toilet at the Guantanamo prison.
At least Dan Rather's forged documents didn't get anybody killed, as the phony Newsweek
story did. What is even more revealing -- and appalling -- about the mainstream
media is that they are now circling the wagons around Newsweek, to
protect it from criticism, just as they circled the wagons around Dan Rather
last year, and now give him an award this year to put the frosting on the cake.
If the forged documents at CBS and the phony story at Newsweek were
just isolated mistakes, that would be one thing. But media liberals have made
themselves accessories after the fact, by springing to the defense of such
indefensible misconduct.
In a sense, that is good. It makes it easier for the public to see that the
forged documents and the fake story were not just odd things that happened to a
couple of people but were symptomatic of a mindset among many others who sprang
to their defense.
Someone referred to the story about George Bush's National Guard service as
"too good to check." In other words, it fit their vision so well, and
scored a point that they wanted to score against President Bush, that it hardly
seemed worthwhile to check out the facts.
That is almost certainly what happened with the story about Americans flushing
the Koran down the toilet at the Guantanamo prison. It seems unlikely that Newsweek
simply made up the story out of whole cloth. But, once they heard it, it was
"too good to check."
All this goes back to a more fundamental problem with the mainstream media. Too
many journalists see their work as an opportunity to promote their own pet
political notions, rather than a responsibility to inform the public and let
their readers and viewers decide for themselves.
It is not a question of being "fair" to this or that side but of
being honest with their readers and viewers.
Columnists and editorial writers are expected to offer opinions but reporters
are expected to report facts. However, that distinction is increasingly
blurred, with the front page of the New York Times often providing
classic examples of editorials disguised as news.
What happened to Dan Rather last year and to Newsweek this year is
that the disguise fell off when the "news" that they were trying to
sell turned out to be fake and all that was left exposed was their animosity
toward the Bush administration.
The Peabody award to Dan Rather drives home the point that the mainstream media
have learned nothing and are thumbing their noses at their critics -- and
ultimately at those readers and viewers who are looking for enlightenment,
rather than spin.
Abraham Lincoln said that you can fool all the people some of the time and some
of the people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time.
The steady erosion of the audience that watches CBS, ABC, and NBC television
news, and the declining circulation of the leading newspapers, all indicate
that more and more people are unwilling to be fooled.
The swift rise of talk radio, Fox News and the bloggers all reinforce the
conclusion of a growing disillusionment with the mainstream media that once had
a monopoly and abused it.
A reader recently suggested this formula: Monopoly plus discretion minus
accountability equals corruption. That kind of corruption can be found not only
in the mainstream media but also in two of our most important institutions, the
public schools and the federal courts.
Both the schools and the courts flatter themselves that their job is to change
society. So does much of the media. But what qualifies these people to be
world-changers? They are usually poorly informed about science, uninformed
about history and misinformed about economics.
And who elected them to change the world while pretending to be doing something
else and betraying their trust?
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