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To: conservatism_IS_compassion
My understanding of the "free press" as outlined by the founding fathers is that the citizery as a whole IS the "free press." There was never intended to be a Washington Press Corps, or the requirement of "press credentials." If you winessed an event that you felt worthy of publication, or held an opinion as it pertained to elected officials; you were free to write and publish it.

As it is today (as it's always been) employees are loyal to the muckety-muck who signs the paycheck...they tow the company line or else lose that high-priced, high profile status; as well as those coveted "press credentials" and any semblance of prior access.

Of course, today (with all the mainsteam media mergers) those who sign the paychecks are an increasingly small, powerful cabal of men on the mountain who can dictate what they deem as newsworthy topics. Reporters and reporterettes (for lack of a more descriptive adjective) prostitute themselves for the check signer in leiu of objectivity, unbiased content and newsworthiness.

To put this into context, Thomas Jefferson referred to the running of a newspaper in 1791 as a "polluted enterprise"...and today he is surely spinning wildly in his grave.

85 posted on 02/14/2002 6:56:48 AM PST by Ground0
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To: Ground0
My understanding of the "free press" as outlined by the founding fathers is that the citizery as a whole IS the "free press." There was never intended to be a Washington Press Corps, or the requirement of "press credentials." If you winessed an event that you felt worthy of publication, or held an opinion as it pertained to elected officials; you were free to write and publish it.

Yes, traditionally "correspondents" were literally people who wrote letters to newspapers back home. The decision whether or not to print a given letter, of course, would lie with the newspaper editor--who is responsible (to his employer, the owner of the newspaper) for the effect publishing a given letter has on the image and the salability of the newspaper. And of course the sales of the paper, and the advertising revenue dependent on that circulation, are in the long run what enables the presses to run. So the paper must successfully entertain . . .

86 posted on 02/14/2002 8:30:55 AM PST by conservatism_IS_compassion
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