Posted on 08/07/2006 7:48:55 AM PDT by PajamaTruthMafia
An individual disclosing troop movements, national security secrets? You bet. Death penalty for media? Who would you kill? The reporter or the editor or the publisher or the printer?
I was suprised to learn that Time Magazine doctored the photo of the dead soldier being dragged through the streets of Somalia. It seems that his genitalia was exposed. They were of the mind that they could print a photo of a dead soldier being dragged through the streets like a trophy (despite it not showing the same respect the DUmass media claims to be showing in supressing ALL photos of dead people from the 9-11 attacks) BUT they could not show his exposed anatomy.
The Time Magazine manipulation can be seen in this book:
Underexposed - Pictures Can Lie And Liars Can Use Pictures (Edited by Colin Jacobson)
Interviewing POW soldiers posing as a Red Cross nurse and taking their statements out of context when that same "nurse" sat behind the mike as a Nazi broadcaster.
Morale is part of the whole "aid and comfort" thing.
You can lend aid and comfort to the enemy by answering polls with a 'yes' when asked if we should, say, pull out of Iraq. Aid and comfort is too elastic for our purposes here, I think.
Freedom of the press isn't suspended in wartime and along with that goes a certain amount of perfidy, or so it seems. So I guess my answer to your original question is that applying the death penalty to media requires extreme actions, not just aid and comfort.
"Journalists" who are there on the ground to manipulate reporting (staging unrepresentative photos and even manipulating images) are doing far more than ISLAMming a poll on the war.
Was Goebbels a war criminal?
Goebbels? I've answered your serious question. If you're going into la-la land, at least tell me what's your agenda. Is it that you think Israel should deliberately kill the photogs and reporters in Lebanon?
bttt
I don't have to clarify anything but if I meant killed I would have said "killed"! I personally dislike the MSM with a passion and if one of them happened to get killed I just hope they know Jesus but I won't be shedding any tears.
bttt
I have a fairly good digital camera and whatever I download is what I get. My point isn't what makes a good photographer because these people are supposed to be professionals which makes it more unreasonable why they would use software to adjust (distort) their photos unless all they're trying to do is sensationalize the scene.
Perhaps she is married to the "green helmet guy"?
"I have a fairly good digital camera and whatever I download is what I get."
That's not how it works in the real world of photojournalism. Even in the caveman days before digital and software, photographers used various techniques to change lighting or contrast. As far as I know, that's always been considered acceptable. Adding or taking away objects is not acceptable.
Is Hezbollah a political leadership or a terrorist organization?
Alligning with terrorists is what these "journalists" are doing.
I am asking (in citing Goebbels) that one does not have to pull a trigger or compromise troops to engage in horrific acts.
You seem willing to permit anything in a "free press".
Read up on WWII. Was the press too restricted?
Maybe it's not how it works in real life photojournalism but it's also obvious that they've taken minor photo correcting tools to the extreme, where no one knows what they're really getting.
I'm asking you what your point is. Should Israel deliberately target the press?
"But pictures of staged events are still acceptable."
I was thinking the same thing.
And then there was this othe LA Times staffer, a female journalist/activist who has tried to spin events and manipulate perception.
Undercover Photographer: L.A. Times staffer crosses a line, again. [Hugh Hewitt mentioned] (www.NationalReview.com ^ | 05/14/2002)
Little critical attention has been given to the recent antics of Los Angeles Times staff photographer Carolyn Cole, who on May 2 joined a group of "peace activists" who had clandestinely entered Bethlehem's Church of the Nativity, in solidarity with the Palestinian militants holding dozens of civilians and clergymen hostage.Upon her arrival inside the holy site, Cole took on the dual role of photographer and reporter for the Times, offering first-person accounts from within the church.
The Times, often accused of carrying an anti-Israeli grudge, confirmed many of its critics' suspicions by printing Cole's blatantly pro-Palestinian church dispatches. Cole even noted that she felt safer with the Palestinian militants than she did with the Israelis. (A collection of her like-minded photos from inside the church appear in this week's Time.)
And prior to that she'd been arrested in Florida when she attempted to start a "Cuban" riot in Florida by throwing rocks at police when Cubans were protesting Reno's abduction of Ellian.
I asked if there was anything the press could do that would warrant a death penalty.
You made allowances for espionage (troop deployment, national security, etc.).
I say siding with the enemy (and Hezbollah is a CRIMINAL organization) can put someone on the firing line as well. You don't seem to be willing to go there.
The death penalty for "siding with the enemy"? Nope. I don't go there. I'll side with whom I please.
So Johnny Walker did no wrong?
"Pray" that sedition laws are never written again.
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