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Reporter bucks Army to defend craft
Capital Times ^ | Jan. 25, 2007 | John Nichols

Posted on 01/25/2007 4:26:29 PM PST by SJackson

American journalism is under assault. The Telecommunications Act of 1996, with its encouragement of media consolidation and homogenization, has provoked a marked decline in the diversity and quality of broadcast news.

The latest round of print media mergers and acquisitions is putting newspaper writers out of work at an unprecedented rate.

The people who own the nation's communications combines are, for the most part, so risk-averse and so obsessed with their bottom lines that they are making it impossible for serious reporters to do their jobs. These are fundamental, structural and rapidly expanding threats.

Equally serious is the threat posed by a government that overtly threatens reporters who actually seek to practice the craft of journalism.

But the greatest of all threats comes when journalists fail to defend fellow reporters and editors who have come under direct attack.

When the Bush administration decided to ignore questions from veteran White House correspondent Helen Thomas with presidential press secretaries and their aides going out of their way to try to isolate and discredit her for failing to practice stenography to power the remainder of the press corps was for the most part silent. And the power of the press was diminished.

Now comes another test.

Sarah Olson, a 31-year-old independent writer and radio producer from Oakland, Calif., finds herself in the targets of Army prosecutors. Those prosecutors are demanding that Olson help them build the case against 1st Lt. Ehren Watada, an officer who faces a court-martial trial for refusing to deploy to Iraq.

Along with a reporter for the Honolulu Star-Bulletin, Olson was in December sent a subpoena seeking testimony that would confirm the accuracy of anti-war statements attributed to Watada.

The quotes are not seriously in question; in fact, Watada has made similar statements in a number of public settings. The first commissioned officer in the U.S. armed forces to formally refuse deployment in George Bush's war, Watada has made it absolutely clear that he has lost confidence in the president as his commander in chief, that he believes the war lacks legal legitimacy, and that he feels his participation could make him a party to war crimes.

So why subpoena Sarah Olson? Watada's case is difficult for the Army prosecutors, and by extension for the commander in chief.

An Eagle Scout who joined the Army after finishing a degree at Hawaii Pacific University, Lt. Watada served so ably during a tour of duty in Korea that he was rated by his superior officers as "among the best" and recommended for an early promotion. Watada has volunteered to serve in Afghanistan, where he believes that U.S. troops are participating in "an unambiguous war linked to the Sept. 11 attacks."

But he refuses to deploy to Iraq because, he explains, he believes that the U.S. presence there violates the Constitution, which requires that wars be declared by Congress, and the War Powers Act, which places limits on presidential war-making. Watada also argues that the U.S. actions in Iraq are in clear conflict with the U.N. Charter and the Geneva Conventions.

It appears that the prosecutors do not want to provide Watada with an open forum in which to explain his arguments against the war. They are frightened by the prospect that an obviously courageous and patriotic soldier might make a convincing case against the legitimacy of an unpopular war.

That's publicity that the Bush administration does not want at a time when its war of whim has gone terribly awry. And it certainly won't help military recruitment.

So the military prosecutors are trying to get journalists to build the case against Watada.

Olson is balking.

"It's not a reporter's job to participate in the prosecution of her own sources," she explains. "When you force a journalist to participate, you run the risk of turning the journalist into an investigative tool of the state."

There is no question that Olson is right. The question is whether journalists will stand with her as she defends our craft. Olson is asking reporters and editors to sign a letter objecting to the Army's decision to subpoena journalists to testify in the court-martial of Lt. Watada.

The letter, addressed to prosecutors, states in part: "It's a journalist's job to report the news, not to participate in government prosecutions. The press cannot function if it is used by the government to prosecute political speech, and hauling a journalist into a military court erodes the separation between government and press. Turning reporters into the investigative arm of the government subverts press freedoms and chills dissenting speech in the United States."

I am proud to add my name to the list of signers of a statement that is not merely a defense of Sarah Olson but a reassertion of the founding principle that a free press is the essential underpinning of democracy.


TOPICS: Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: antiwar; cowards; globaltest; leftists; traitors; un; unitednations
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prosecutors do not want to provide Watada with an open forum in which to explain his arguments against the war.

No, their job is to prosecute him, not to provide a forum ala the progressive Abby Hoffman.

When you force a journalist to participate, you run the risk of turning the journalist into an investigative tool of the state

I've some sympathy for this arguement, but when push comes to shove, citizens have an obligation to testify. Irrespective of their profession. Employees testify against their employers, police testify against their informants, doctors testify against patients. Sarah Olson isn't a Priest and this wasn't a confession.

Watada has made similar statements in a number of public settings.

Which makes her refusal a public non-issue, only important to the extent the prosecution can document these "similar statement". My guess, they can't, at least not with the credibility of Sarah Olson.

1 posted on 01/25/2007 4:26:30 PM PST by SJackson
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To: SJackson
When the Bush administration decided to ignore questions from veteran White House correspondent Helen Thomas with presidential press secretaries and their aides going out of their way to try to isolate and discredit her for failing to practice stenography to power the remainder of the press corps was for the most part silent.

Either this sentence is very poorly written, or I'm sleeping with my eyes open. I don't know what it says. And, pleeeeease, no pictures of that vicious old lady Thomas.

2 posted on 01/25/2007 4:30:16 PM PST by hsalaw
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To: SJackson

If there is a demand for the services of these unemployed reporters, they could start their own paper and beat the pants off the competition. If there is a demand for their service, they could prove it to an investor, even Soros, who would finance them.

That they are not starting their own papers is proof that either a) they are not competent at their craft of journalism or b) there is no demand for their type of journalism. and c) they don't understand the realities of economics.


3 posted on 01/25/2007 4:32:40 PM PST by spintreebob
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To: hsalaw

I 2nd that no pictures of Helen....


4 posted on 01/25/2007 4:33:07 PM PST by Kimmers (It's not what you take when you leave this world behind, it's what you leave behind when you go)
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To: SJackson

These crybabies. If you can't freelance and make REAL money (which is why I am now 'unemployed' and making more than ever), you don't deserve the name writer.


5 posted on 01/25/2007 4:33:46 PM PST by Amalie (FREEDOM had NEVER been another word for nothing left to lose...)
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To: hsalaw

When I see her name I look the other way, in anticipation of the pictures. This is a Progressive paper, they consider answering Helen Thomas' questions an obligation of the office. I think the President could throw her out.


6 posted on 01/25/2007 4:33:48 PM PST by SJackson (Let a thousand flowers bloom and let all our rifles be aimed at the occupation, Abu Mazen 1/11/07)
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To: SJackson

Isn't he confined? Pre-trial like?


7 posted on 01/25/2007 4:34:14 PM PST by leadpenny
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

You'lll laugh at this one.


8 posted on 01/25/2007 4:34:39 PM PST by SJackson (Let a thousand flowers bloom and let all our rifles be aimed at the occupation, Abu Mazen 1/11/07)
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To: SJackson
"...The people who own the nation's communications combines are, for the most part, so risk-averse and so obsessed with their bottom lines that they are making it impossible for serious reporters to do their jobs."

Here is a solution for you poor, misunderstood "serious reporters".

Scrape up a couple of hundred million dollars and make a tender offer for a large newspaper. Then you can print any lefty crap you want.

But in the meantime, "He who pays the piper calls the tune!"

9 posted on 01/25/2007 4:43:20 PM PST by albee (Okay. so he missed aThe best thing you can do for the poor is.....not be one of them. - Eric Hoffer)
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To: SJackson
but a reassertion of the founding principle that a free press is the essential underpinning of democracy.

The Press. Is. The Problem.

10 posted on 01/25/2007 4:52:16 PM PST by RedQuill
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To: SJackson
"When you force a journalist to participate, you run the risk of turning the journalist into an investigative tool of the state."

...Instead of merely a tool of the anti-war left.

11 posted on 01/25/2007 4:55:23 PM PST by TADSLOS (Iran is in the IED exporting business. Time to shut them down.)
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To: SJackson
The Telecommunications Act of 1996, with its encouragement of media consolidation and homogenization, has provoked a marked decline in the diversity and quality of broadcast news.

Amazing. Fox News came on the scene in late 1996.

No wonder the Libs bitch and moan.

12 posted on 01/25/2007 5:04:08 PM PST by buccaneer81 (Bob Taft has soiled the family name for the next century.)
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To: SJackson
impossible for serious reporters to do their jobs.

This implys that are non serious reporters working now, which I find hard to argue with.

13 posted on 01/25/2007 5:07:51 PM PST by razorback-bert (Posted by Time's Man of the Year)
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To: hsalaw
You wrote: "When the Bush administration decided to ignore questions from veteran White House correspondent Helen Thomas with presidential press secretaries and their aides going out of their way to try to isolate and discredit her for failing to practice stenography to power the remainder of the press corps was for the most part silent."

"Either this sentence is very poorly written, or I'm sleeping with my eyes open. I don't know what it says. And, pleeeeease, no pictures of that vicious old lady Thomas.

Try to think of it as a counter weight that functions to keep your screen from scrolling all the way to the bottom.

Senper Fi
An Old Man

14 posted on 01/25/2007 5:19:04 PM PST by An Old Man (USMC 1956 1960)
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To: SJackson; Milhous; CGVet58; CasearianDaoist; headsonpikes; beyond the sea; E.G.C.; ...
"It's a journalist's job to report the news, not to participate in government prosecutions. The press cannot function if it is used by the government to prosecute political speech, and hauling a journalist into a military court erodes the separation between government and press. Turning reporters into the investigative arm of the government subverts press freedoms and chills dissenting speech in the United States."
The claim here is that "The News" identifies itself to journalists, who have no motive other than to reveal that NEWS to the people. The reality is that
Half the truth is often a great lie. - Benjamin Franklin
The News does not spring full-grown from Athena's brow, human beings - under warrant of the Constitution - have the freedom to decide what they are going to report, and what they will not report. Presumptively, therefore, journalism is politics. Neither more nor less.

15 posted on 01/25/2007 5:24:51 PM PST by conservatism_IS_compassion (The idea around which liberalism coheres is that NOTHING actually matters except PR.)
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To: SJackson
"Watada has volunteered to serve in Afghanistan, where he believes that U.S. troops are participating in "an unambiguous war linked to the Sept. 11 attacks."

If the war in Afghanistan is a legitimately declared war, so is the war in Iraq. Both are really just theaters of operation in the war with Islamofascists.

Watada cannot say that one is legitimately declared and the other is not, at least not with any rational person accepting it as a serious argument.
16 posted on 01/25/2007 5:42:16 PM PST by marktwain
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To: hsalaw


...I'm sorry, what's the bad news here?

The MSM is getting it's long coming kick to the jimmy with a steel toed, pointed boot. I'm pretty happy about this.

Gone are the days where they're oh so important they can lord over the rest of us.


17 posted on 01/25/2007 5:56:26 PM PST by Tzimisce (How Would Mohammed Vote? Hillary for President! www.dndorks.com)
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To: marktwain

Just send him to Afghanistan and the problem is solved?


18 posted on 01/25/2007 6:56:22 PM PST by perfect stranger
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To: SJackson
The first commissioned officer in the U.S. armed forces to formally refuse deployment in George Bush's war,......

I stopped reading here.

19 posted on 01/25/2007 7:23:57 PM PST by IDontLikeToPayTaxes
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To: conservatism_IS_compassion

BTTT


20 posted on 01/26/2007 3:01:30 AM PST by E.G.C.
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