Posted on 07/22/2010 8:08:11 AM PDT by afraidfortherepublic
Todays lead story at Politico is one of the finer examples you will find of ideological ax-grinding dressed up as straight-news reporting. The piece, by Ken Vogel and Keach Hagey, uses just about every journalistic trick in the book, assembling a selection of quotes and points to establish a narrative that was set in the authors minds long before they sat down at their keyboards. But the piece does so much more too; it flirts with some blurry ethical lines as well. Shouldnt, for example, a Politico article about Journolist have perhaps mentioned or disclosed that at least some reporters for Politico were, you know, members of Journolist? Perhaps Politico has an incentive to downplay the impact of the listserve? (And, Mr. Vogel, did Andrew Breitbart really not respond to Politico?)
I will leave it to my colleagues at Big Journalism to give the proper attention this article is due. However, in building their ideological case, the authors point to certain facts about stories that first appeared here, which necessitates a few words here.
In discussing the recent Shirley Sherrod imbroglio, the authors write that Breitbart,
did not quite own up to the seriousness of the error he committed posting a video misleadingly edited to make it appear that a black Agriculture Department named Shirley Sherrod was boasting of discriminating against a white farmer.
We did not edit, much less misleadingly edit, any of Ms. Sherrods remarks. We posted two excerpts from her speech, representing the sum total of the video we had. We didnt cut anything out of her speech. Is any news organization in the future who only posts excerpts from a speech vulnerable to the charge that it misleadingly edited it?
At the very end of one of the video excerpts, Ms. Sherrod begins to explain how she later realized her initial discrimination of the white farmer was wrong. In Andrews article about the speech he noted
Eventually, her basic humanity informs that this white man is poor and needs help.
If we were trying to show that Ms. Sherrod was boasting of discrimination and were prone to editing the tape as evidence, wouldnt we have cut that part out? Wouldnt we have neglected to mention that she eventually did the right thing? But, the medias focus on Ms. Sherrod is really an attempt to misdirect attention from the NAACP, who was the real focus of the article and the video excerpts.
As Andrews article noted:
Sherrods racist tale is received by the NAACP audience with nodding approval and murmurs of recognition and agreement. Hardly the behavior of the group now holding itself up as the supreme judge of another groups racial tolerance.
We all now know that Ms. Sherrods anecdote was part of a larger point about the need to move beyond racial prejudices. But, the NAACP audience did not know that as they heard the speech. As Ms. Sherrod recounted the first part of her parable, how she declined to do everything she could for the farmer because of his race, the audience responded in approval. By itself, that made the video excerpt newsworthy.
Indeed, the NAACP, who was in possession of the full video for months, even noted in its initial statement condemning Ms. Sherrod:
The reaction from many in the audience is disturbing. We will be looking into the behavior of NAACP representatives at this local event and take any appropriate action.
This was always the story and it is clearly an uncomfortable one for the NAACP and, obviously, the authors of the Politico article. The media would rather focus on Ms. Sherrod or Andrew Breitbart than report that leaders of a state chapter of the NAACP approved of racial discrimination.
But, the authors arent finished there. To further underscore their point, they return to that old lefty cliche from last year; that what you saw with your own eyes on the ACORN tapes didnt really happen. The authors make this outright statement:
The ACORN videos were later revealed to have been misleadingly edited
Not alleged, mind you, but revealed, as if the Oracle of Delphi issued a formal proclamation. And, who exactly revealed this fact: oh, yes, Democrat Attorney General Jerry Brown. Brown is a long-time ally of ACORN and is running for Governor again this year. As ACORN had traditionally been an important part of Democrat candidates election efforts, he might have had an incentive to find that the ACORN videos were misleadingly edited. In fact, at the beginning of Browns investigation, a local ACORN spokesman told a meeting of local democrats that he had spoken to Browns office and was assured:
the fault WILL be found with the people that did the video not ACORN.
That certainly adds some interesting context to Browns finding. Of course, Brown may objectively believe the ACORN videos were misleadingly edited. But he isnt a disinterested observer. Politico should have noted that, even if it would have weakened their intended point. So too, they should have noted that, from the very beginning, the full audio recording and transcript of the entire ACORN interviews were available here. I have heard many on the left say ad nauseum that the ACORN videos were heavily edited, but I have yet to see one concrete example of how this alleged editing altered the substance of what the videos revealed.
At the very beginning of Andrews article on racism at the NAACP, he noted that context is everything. To the authors of the Politico article, context is negotiable; simply another weapon in a reporters ideological tool-kit.
I have always thought idiot-ridden Politico was a garbage site secretly funded by nazi collaborator Soros...go figure. =.=
Politico....
Is that Spanish for ‘commie’?
We know the leftist media does it all the time. Prime example: Katie Couric's "interview" with Sarah Palin.
Politico is just a bunch of Journolists....
” Indeed, the NAACP, who was in possession of the full video for months, even noted in its initial statement condemning Ms. Sherrod:
The reaction from many in the audience is disturbing. We will be looking into the behavior of NAACP representatives at this local event and take any appropriate action.
Doesn’t this really sum it up? Wasn’t that Andrew’s point?
This is what needs to be emphasized.
“The reaction from many in the audience is disturbing. We will be looking into the behavior of NAACP representatives at this local event and take any appropriate action.
Doesnt this really sum it up? Wasnt that Andrews point?
This is what needs to be emphasized.”
Mark Levine made a great point on his show yesterday: it’s not simply the audience reaction that needs to be emphasized, it’s also the fact that Sherrod is portraying herself as overcoming her initial racist views with the farmer, but at the end of the full tape she’s back to showing her own racism by smearing opponents of Obamacare as being opposed solely because of Obama’s skin color and having “ugly” views, etc. And of course her recent statements demonstrate how much her own racism has come full circle.
This is just another incidence of the strategy of creating a diversion coupled with an attempt to restructure the context while people are looking “over there”.
Making Sherrod and Breitbart the issues, not the NAACP, is what Politico and all good leftist journ-o-listers will be trying to accomplish in the coming days and weeks.
Their concerted effort to brand the TEA party as “racist” is just more of the same propaganda from the same journ-o-lister-types pervasive in the media. It’s the only way they think they can save O’bummer’s arse in Nov.
It’s crap, and I don’t think the electorate are going to bite. In fact, I’m optimistically thinking, backlash.
I am always amazed by by the volume of stuff posted on FR from the Politico.
Thanks for posting this clarifying article.
If context is everything, truth is the amplifier.
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