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When 'Justice' Trumps Accuracy, Journalism Loses
Townhall.com ^ | December 14, 2014 | Jeff Jacoby

Posted on 12/15/2014 7:53:58 AM PST by Kaslin

JOURNALISTS, SAYS Jorge Ramos, shouldn't make a fetish of accuracy and impartiality.

Speaking last month at the International Press Freedom Awards, Univision's influential news anchor told his audience that while he has "nothing against objectivity," journalism is meant to be wielded as "a weapon for a higher purpose: justice." To be sure, he said, it is important to get the facts right — five deaths should be reported as five, not six or seven. But "the best of journalism happens when we, purposely, stop pretending that we are neutral and recognize that we have a moral obligation to tell truth to power."

As it happens, Ramos delivered those remarks soon after the publication of Sabrina Erdely's 9,000-word story in Rolling Stone vividly describing the alleged gang rape of a freshman named Jackie at a University of Virginia fraternity party. Erdely had reportedly spent months researching the story, and its explosive impact was — at first — everything a tell-truth-to-power journalist could have wished: national attention, public outrage, campus protests, suspension of UVA's fraternities, and a new "zero-tolerance" policy on sexual assault.

But Rolling Stone's blockbuster has imploded, undone by independent reporting at The Washington Post that found glaring contradictions and irregularities with the story, and egregious failures in the way it was written and edited. Erdely, it turns out, had taken Jackie's horrific accusations on faith, never contacting the alleged rapists for a comment or response. In a rueful "Note to Our Readers," managing editor Will Dana writes: "[W]e have come to the conclusion … that the truth would have been better served by getting the other side of the story."

To a layman, that "conclusion" might seem so excruciatingly self-evident that Rolling Stone's debacle can only be explained as gross negligence, or a reckless disregard for the truth. But much of the journalistic priesthood holds to a different standard, one that elevates the higher truth of an overarching "narrative" — in this case, that a brutal and callous "rape culture" pervades American college campuses — above the mundane details of fact. Erdely had set out in search of a grim sexual-assault story, and settled on Jackie's account of being savaged by five men (or was it seven?) at a fraternity bash was just the vehicle she'd been looking for. Why get tangled in conflicting particulars?

"Maybe [Erdely] was too credulous," suggests longtime media critic Howard Kurtz in a piece on Rolling Stone's journalistic train wreck. "Along with her editors."

Or maybe this is what happens when newsrooms and journalism schools decide, like Jorge Ramos, that although they have "nothing against objectivity," their real aspiration is to use journalism "as a weapon for a higher purpose." Somehow it didn't come as a shock to learn that when Dana was invited to lecture at Middlebury College in 2006, his speech was titled: "A Defense of Biased Reporting."

Even after the UVA story began to collapse, voices were raised in defense of the narrative over mere fact.

"This is not to say that it does not matter whether or not Jackie's story is accurate," Julia Horowitz, an assistant managing editor at the University of Virginia's student newspaper, wrote in Politico. But "to let fact checking define the narrative would be a huge mistake."

Well, if the "narrative" is what matters most, checking the facts too closely can indeed be a huge mistake. Because facts, those stubborn things, have a tendency to undermine cherished narratives — particularly narratives grounded in emotionalism, memory, or ideology.

It's a temptation to which journalists have always been susceptible. In the 1930s, to mention one notorious example, Walter Duranty recycled Soviet propaganda, assuring his New York Times readers that no mass murders were occurring under Stalin's humane and enlightened rule. Duranty is reviled today. But the willingness to subordinate a passion for accuracy to a supposedly higher passion for "justice" (or "equality" or "fairness" or "diversity" or "peace" or "the environment") persists.

Has the time come to give up on the ideal of objective, unbiased journalism? Would media bias openly acknowledged be an improvement over news media that only pretend not to take sides?

This much is clear: The public isn't deceived. Trust in the media has been drifting downward for years. According to Gallup, Americans' confidence that news is being reported "fully, accurately, and fairly" reached an all-time low this year. Would you be astonished to see that number sink even further next year? Me neither.


TOPICS: Cuba; Culture/Society; Editorial; Mexico; US: Florida; US: Missouri; US: New York; US: Ohio; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: blackkk; cleveland; cuba; danielpantaleo; darrenwilson; emilyrenda; ericgarner; ferguson; fidelcastro; florida; georgezimmerman; howardkurtz; jackie; jorgeramos; juliahorowitz; mexico; michaelbrown; missouri; newyork; newyorkcity; newyorkslimes; newyorktimes; nypd; ohio; politico; rapehoax; stalin; statenisland; travyonmartin; univision; uva; walterduranty; willdana
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To: uncitizen
Wrong: The barf belongs here.

Couldn’t get passed the first paragraph.

21 posted on 12/15/2014 11:53:04 AM PST by Kaslin (He needed the ignorant to reelect him, and he got them. Now we all have to pay the consequenses)
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To: Kaslin

Huh?


22 posted on 12/15/2014 12:11:42 PM PST by uncitizen (our government is treasonous)
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To: Bob

The New York Times is incapable of shame...


23 posted on 12/15/2014 12:35:28 PM PST by GOPJ (Lieawatha/Obama - Obama for the tint on his skin. Lieawatha for what's missing between her legs...)
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To: thirst4truth
This is why we must have an R President, so the press will do their job. Yes, they will do it unfairly, but they will be on top of corruption and graft coming from an R Press.

Yeah, they did such a good job with Spiro Agnew (corruption charges from his time in Maryland politics, which is traditionally a sewage bath, remember?), and then they went on to "get" Dick Nixon for crap they were equally happy with, when Franklin Roosevelt and Landslide Lin't'n were doing it.

At least my uncle, who was arguing with us young guys about what was going on in 1973, lived long enough that I could apologize to him in 2006, when it all came together that he had been absolutely right and that Ben Bradlee and Kitty Graham (wringer ***s and all) were running a vendetta, not an investigation.

I won't be satisfied until I see the MSM destroyed and its tasks redistributed among a host of successor media.

24 posted on 12/16/2014 1:01:56 AM PST by lentulusgracchus ("If America was a house, the Left would root for the termites." - Greg Gutfeld)
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To: GOPJ

What would you expect of a homosexual posse?


25 posted on 12/16/2014 1:03:21 AM PST by lentulusgracchus ("If America was a house, the Left would root for the termites." - Greg Gutfeld)
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