Elite Journalists Love Big Brother
Prominent reporters and powerful officials know each other, share attitudes, and trust each other.

Journalists aren't always consistent fans of liberty; over a century ago, The New York Times editorialized against self-defense rights—a tradition it continues today. Still, in the past when there was more ideological variety among elite media than now (a flaw alternative outlets seek to address), reporters from all sorts of publications generally favored free speech, opposed broad surveillance, and supported restrictions on search and seizure. If nothing else, they knew they were high on the list of targets for abusive officials. But that was then; now, elite media love Big Brother.
On Independence Day, U.S. District Court Judge Terry Doughty issued a powerful First Amendment decision in an ongoing case brought by the attorneys general of Missouri and Louisiana. "If the allegations made by Plaintiffs are true, the present case arguably involves the most massive attack against free speech in United States' history" he said of government pressure on social media companies to suppress speech at odds with official messaging. The judge barred further arm-twisting, though with significant exceptions. It was a clear win for free speech, which you would expect to be applauded by people who make their living from speaking and writing. That's not what happened.
You are reading The Rattler from J.D. Tuccille and Reason. Get more of J.D.'s commentary on government overreach and threats to everyday liberty.
Free-Speech Practitioners Who Don't Like Free Speech
"The Donald Trump-appointed judge's move could undo years of efforts to enhance coordination between the government and social media companies," The Washington Post huffed in its report.
The "ruling that could curtail efforts to combat false and misleading narratives about the coronavirus pandemic and other issues," agreed The New York Times. Apparently, government officials are entitled to decide what constitutes truth and falsehood.
On July 5, Reason's Matt Welch appeared on a CNN panel discussion of the case to take the minority view (among the participants) that it's actually bad when governments muzzle views they don't like.
"We have a legal category of journalists for more speech regulation. It's just bizarre to me," he said.
Journalists for more speech regulation are eyeing podcasts, too, through which "misinformation about everything from election fraud to Covid-19 vaccines is reaching millions of Americans," according to Agence France-Presse. The problem is that "anybody can be a podcaster, anybody can get a microphone and start talking about whatever they want" we're warned in a piece that again assumes accusations of "misinformation" are the same as proof.
What's a Little Snooping Among Friends?
It's not just speech, either. On July 3, The New York Times weighed in on the continuing debate over domestic surveillance conducted under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. The Gray Lady's take on legal snooping provisions specifically called out as dangerous by whistleblower Edward Snowden is that (did you see this coming?) they're in peril from overwrought lawmakers.
"An intensive drive by right-wing Republicans in Congress to vilify the F.B.I. with charges of political bias has imperiled a program allowing spy agencies to conduct warrantless surveillance on foreign targets, sapping support for a premier intelligence tool and amplifying demands for stricter limits," wrote the Times's Karoun Demirjian.
The report went on to allow that many Democrats also oppose Section 702 and spying that often ensnares Americans. But the piece's overall framing is of necessary legislation freshly at-risk from "a new generation of Republicans less protective of Washington's post-9/11 counterterrorism powers."
We should have anticipated this moment. In 2013, even as the paper's own reporters helped publicize Snowden's revelations about the surveillance state, The Washington Post editorial board sniffed that "the first U.S. priority should be to prevent Mr. Snowden from leaking information that harms efforts to fight terrorism and conduct legitimate intelligence operations." All of this journalism is fine and dandy, they suggested, but it's inconvenient for the nice people in government office.
In fact, that's probably a fair assessment of the attitude of name-brand journalists towards their friends who wield coercive power—and they are friends, if not more.
The Blurry Line Between Government and Elite Media
"The flow of faces and names between government and 'news' media has turned what was supposed to be a watchdog over the destructive power of the state into little more than a forum for political marketing and an extended battleground for factional fighting," I noted in 2019. In particular, Politico media writer Jack Shafer observed in 2018, TV news networks are heavily leavened with former (and often future) security state apparatchiks. "Almost to a one, the TV spooks still identify with their former employers at the CIA, FBI, DEA, DHS, or other security agencies and remain protective of their institutions" Shafer wrote. "This makes nearly every word that comes out of their mouths suspect."
Many elite journalists can get quotes from politicians across the breakfast table. CNN's Christiane Amanpour married former Assistant Secretary of State James Rubin, MSNBC's Andrea Mitchell married former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, and Joe Scarborough (formerly a congressman) married co-host Mika Brezezinski (daughter of a former national security advisor). The Washington Post's Matea Gold is married to FBI chief of staff Jonathan Lenzner. "What to make of all the family ties between the news media and the Obama administration?" The Washington Post's Paul Farhi asked a decade ago in a query that could be posed continuously about government and media in general.
Prominent journalists and government officials often meet not on the job, but in the college dorm. "Forty-one percent of senior- or mid-level Biden White House staffers — or 82 people out of 201 aides analyzed — have Ivy League degrees," Politico reported in 2012. That expands on dominance by elite colleges dating back at least to JFK. And many faces those Ivy League grads saw in the White House press room were familiar. "Almost half of the people who reach the pinnacle of the journalism profession attended an elite school," found a 2018 paper in the Journal of Expertise focused on The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times. "Roughly 20% attended an Ivy League school."
To a great extent, interactions between prominent reporters and powerful officials are like private parties that never end. These people know each other, drink with each other, share attitudes, marry, and trust each other. Elite journalists have few doubts about the wisdom of their friends, for whom they do glorified public relations, to censor, spy, and coerce. About the rest of us… Who are we, anyway? Better to be safe and encourage the folks they know to keep a cap on the unseemly mob.
If You Want News, Look Elsewhere
Let's emphasize that "elite journalists" doesn't mean the folks struggling to keep your local paper alive, or determined bloggers covering official malfeasance, or reporters at alternative outlets competing with brand-name operations. They represent a range of views, often–strained relationships with the powerful, and are as vulnerable as you or I to the civil liberties violations championed by legacy media outlets.
But prominent journalists have become cheerleaders for Big Brother because they like and trust his minions more than they care about you and me. If you want support for freedom instead of authoritarianism, or even just skepticism about unrestrained government, look to reporters who aren't so enmeshed with those who wield power.
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How The Times has changed !
In 1864 , its Republican Editor deployed a brace of Gatling guns, one in its newsroom window, another in the front entrance to deter draft rioters from trashing the presses that printed his editorials in support of President Lincoln :
https://vvattsupwiththat.blogspot.com/2017/10/climate-of-fear-at-new-york-times.html
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ny times and washington post are state media
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WaPo " coordination between the government and social media companies
There's a word for that. Begins with 'f'. Don't tell me... let me think...was pretty popular in the 20's and 30's ... ended badly.
Rhymes with "ism".
Who is going to report the truth about the history of the Ukraine conflict?
The US, Biden, coordinating the coup and civil war in 2014, on Russias border, to give corrupt oligarchs control of Ukrainian wealth, putting the puppet Jew Zelensky in charge, funding Nazi AZOV battalions to lead a bloody civil war and terrorizing Russian speaking Ukrainians, destroying the Nord Stream Pipeline in an attempt to hurt Russia and make Europe dependent upon US energy and now giving Zelensky and his Nazis cluster bombs banned in over 120 countries.
I’m no journalist and I can connect these dots easily.
I didn't know fcapitalism had a silent f at the start of it! This late stage capitalism did end badly! I can't think of anything else you could be referencing.
When government is involved it isn't capitalism any longer. Certainly there is a gradient of government involvement, but 'coordinating between government and ... companies' is definitely on the crony capitalism side. It's not too different from 20's Italy or 30's Germany. And it is particularly pernicious since it involves freedom of speech and censorship.
What? You don’t like when government acts like capitalists?
Remember, Mussolini was a journalist pre dictator.
"Elite Journalists Love Big Brother"
This is the first in a series;
Tomorrow, "Water is wet"
The day after, "The sun rises in the East"
They are just setting up the "it's not censorship because they love the politicians" argument.
“They have good intentions “.
For the children.
(Really. Much of the infotainment-education-government complex is dedicated to brain-washing our children.)
The worrisome part is that the culture accepts toiling away for an indoctrination media complex as a moral virtue.
"indoctrination media complex"
Reason.com?
Another thing the left and their media megaphones have discovered they both support is child sex trafficking.
The talking points memo has gone out in regards to the recently released movie "The Sound of Freedom" which tells the horrors of child sex-trafficking. Just like mocking birds the media repeats allegations of world-wide sex trafficking cartels "is a right-wing conspiracy".
CBS, nearly a decade ago, did a segment on Tim Ballard and his child rescue operations, and they even joined in the chorus of conservative bashing in regards to the film.
How did our nation get to this point?
prominent journalists have become cheerleaders for Big Brother because they like and trust his minions more than they care about you and me.
It seems like Tuccille is working hard to not identify the real issue here. The problem is not that they like each other which is largely irrelevant. The problem is that they are open political allies prioritizing activism over truth, honesty, or integrity.
The problem is that they are open political allies prioritizing activism over truth, honesty, or integrity
And to what end?
We’ve seen the fuckers working together to start wars, both racial in nature at home with their St. Floyd bullshit to getting us involved in literal wars in Europe.
I’m disgusted to say that I have more respect for the Biden families’ access for cash schemes than the media-politics relationship Tuccille writes about.
Unfortunately, both seem inevitable with the power we give to the government.
Yeah, at this point a small nuke set off at the Democratic National Convention, where it might take out the heart of the DNC political and media corps, would be just a start.
Now THAT’S a woodchipper!
Fat man, little boy, … chipper guy!
Considering it's in Chicago, that might just be getting two birds with one stone.
The journalists see themselves as part of the technocratic elite. Criticizing the politicians who lack skepticism of the technocrats is firing on their own side. They are no longer in an adversial relationship with the most blatant advocates of overweeningly powerful government.
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But they have to spread false information to stop the spread of the wrong ideologies! Like how George Bush had to abandon free-market principles to save the free market system!
I strongly recommend people start using and sharing this analogy:
The Biden Administration is Napoleon from Animal farm. The liberal media is Squealer.
We are literally seeing this story unfold right in front of our eyes. People think this is 1984? Bah, it's Animal Farm manifesting in the present day.
The government are pigs. The media are pigs. And now we can address them by name.
Pork, the other white meat.
Big man, pig man, haha, charade you are!
Hey you white
housemeat, haha charade you are.And did we tell you the name of the game, boy?
We call it riding the gravy train
It is frightening how well these lyrics apply to the current administration.
The lunatic, is in the (white) house.
lol, you're killing me!
set the controls for the heart of the sun.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9kWMCXrPFI
Pork (Pantera "Walk" Parody)
Pork, the other
whitesupremacist meat.When every election is the most important election of our lifetime, and every Democrat is the most evil president of our lifetime, someone with a functioning brain might start to doubt the hysterical hyperbolic hyperbole coming from the right-wing media.
But you're not a democrat hack, got it.
I'm confused as to why he doesn't realize he is one. Self awareness is not his super power.
That was touching but not like when Biden interacts with children.
Keep your touching to yourself. Ew.
I don’t touch children; perhaps your advice is better offered to Joe Biden (D). There are numerous video documented cases of Biden groping, kissing, and physically grooming children. In one instance, the girl gave an interview a few years later stating that Biden did indeed grab and squeeze her breast. There is video of that touching. I’m at a loss why the #metoo movement has avoided that particular incident (and the many others).
I’m at a loss why the #metoo movement has avoided that particular incident (and the many others).
Obviously it's part of The Grand Conspiracy. Just ask your buddy Nardz.
I’m sure #metoo has valid reasons why they ignored video evidence of a politician squeezing a girl’s nipple on video with the victim stating what can be observed is what occurred.
Anyhow, Biden (D) has a video documented history of groping, touching, sniffing, and kissing children. It is a minor issue to some and a non-issue to others.
It makes sense to focus on those things instead of policy. After all, he is continuing and expanding many policies of his predecessor. Being that it is against the rules to give him credit for anything, acknowledging what would be considered policy achievements by the guy he replaced is just not allowed. So instead you must attack him as a person. Anything else would require principles.
Chaff and redirect plus an either/or fallacy. You mixed in a tu quoque as well getting into strawman territory.
Using your scenario, you’d be ok with one of your daughter’s teachers groping, kissing, and touching her as long as you felt he was presenting and expanding the classroom material of his predecessor?
Just wanted to confirm that you could care less about policies of the current president and are instead focused solely on the man, while also confirming that the policies of his predecessor didn't much matter either or the current guy would get credit for continuing them.
Thanks!
😀
More strawman, chaff & redirect, and tu quoque. But you do you.
Thanks.
🙂
When I have been in these comments during the administration of the child groping Biden (D), I have commented on the policies on the child groping Biden (D). I’m confident you have been in at least some of those comments where I called out the child groping Biden (D) policies for being incongruent with libertarian principles. The issue at hand is where the child groping Biden (D) has been placing his hands.
Why don’t I see the defenders of pussy-grabbing Trump’s economic and trade policies praising touchy-feely Biden for expanding and continuing said policies?
There are many such defenders here in the comments. Lots of them.
Why am I the only one pointing out their dearth of principles?
More chaff & redirect and again tu quoque. You mixed in some pointing and sputtering about needing others to agree with you on separate issues.
The article tries to address media elites and their purported coziness with government. I applied it to the context of media ignoring the child groping Biden (D) groping children when there is an abundance of video evidence of the child groping Biden (D) groping children. I want non-child groping politicians that govern via libertarian principles.
I think you have previously mentioned that you liked when LePage (R) was in the Blaine House. We have no info that LePage has ever interacted with children the way the child groping Biden (D) has groped children. As it stands, LePage falls under that “does not grope children” category. LePage ≠ Cutler/Biden. LePage gave us recognition that constitutional carry is the law of the land. That is libertarian.
Why is it that no defenders of Trump's economic policies praise Biden for continuing and expanding them?
sarc, you’ll have to ask the individuals with which you have this issue to get details. I liked the concept of the XL pipeline and I hope the child groping Biden (D) continues that. I disliked covid spending by the mean tweeting Trump (R) and the child groping Biden (D). For other issues where you believe some/many here praised Trump and vilified the child groping Biden (D), you’ll have to take that up with them.
As for the topic at hand, the MSM has given the child groping Biden (D) a free pass regarding the many documented times that he, the child groping Biden (D), has groped children.
It's not a conspiracy, that would require coordinated planning and actions. It is groupthink among leftists. They are marching in goose-step to the same beat. They like the touchy-feely politics of giving away billions to anyone who feels slighted, i.e. buying votes. They virtue signal whenever possible and ignore the terrible results.
Just look at the responses to the latest SCOTUS decisions, all of which were scrupulously following the Constitution. Nevertheless all 3 dim bulbs voted against the clearly reasonable position, and the scumbag media called the Court illegitimate.
We've moved from Who is John Galt? to What is a Woman?
Have you actually looked at any of the court opinions?
I've read summaries and analyses. These cases are actually not complex. It's amazing 3 people could pass the bar and get the wrong answers.
Harvard - use race to discriminate is unconstitutional under the 14th Amendment (equal protection)
Website designer - compelled speech is an abridgment of the person's conscience and freedom of thought/speech (lawyers can't be compelled to take cases against their will, why should web designers?)
Loan forgiveness - that's Congress's job (separation of powers for the ignorant)
How do you defend those 3 retards?
How do you defend those 3 retards?
I don't. But never let facts get in the way of the narrative. Keep on accusing me of being a leftist. You wouldn't want to disappoint the trolls.
Never let fascists get in the way.
Yeah; Having proud advocates of [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s] conquer the USA is no big deal....... /s For Nazi-fanboys like yourself.
Paging Godwin's Law. Godwin's Law to the comments please.
Not every Democrat is the most evil president, but their policies are certainly among the most evil that have ever been discussed in polite company in the USA. And there is plenty of corruption to make them individually evil as well.
By "evil" I assume you mean bad intentions, correct?
Both bad intentions, e.g. taking bribes, covering up crimes, etc., and bad outcomes, e.g. high inflation, huge spending, huge deficits, denial of biology, ignoring or intentionally skirting the Constitution, etc.
I see. So they wake up every morning and ask themselves "What's the most evil thing I can do today?" Just wanted to be sure. After all, it couldn't possibly be the case that the people you disagree with might actually have good intentions and admirable goals, but are so blinded by those intentions that they fail to see how their actions have unintended, detrimental consequences. No, they want these bad results. That was the plan all along. Because they're evil. Yup. They all have bad intentions.
Well, the TQ+++ crowd and their simps are pretty open about the fact that they think they deserve to convince kids to cut their genitals off and inject themselves with puberty blockers, and if you prevent them from propagandizing this, you're "literally committing genocide."
Whether they actually think of themselves as deliberately "evil" like Skeletor or as liberationists under the marxist model is pretty immaterial to the empirical effects of their beliefs.
While I vehemently disagree with the folks you’re talking about, who happen to be a very small minority by the way, they themselves believe they are doing the right thing. Perhaps a better tactic would be telling them why they are wrong instead of throwing poo like a monkey.
A "very small minority" can get their way if 1) they have allies willing to go along with them, and 2) are highly vocal.
You know who else was a "very small minority" like that?
Are you actually interested in an actual conversation, or trying to set me up so you can score points with your beloved troll brigade?
That was a rhetorical question by the way. I don't really care, and I'm not going to play.
It’s so bizarre when the biggest troll on the board also poses as interested in actual conversations as if people forget what he is.
Just because you pinned a star onto your shirt doesn't mean you suddenly have anything interesting to say.
Stupid analysis.
Every action leftists take is undertaken within the framework of advancing leftism. This is the political messaging of the left for roughly 5 decades, “the personal is political”.
It’s bizarre that leftists have openly espoused this philosophy for decades yet leftist defenders deny its existence. This is even though the lefts actions cannot be explained any other way. All other possible explanations do not conform to reality due to the myriad contradictory facts. Yet people like sarc insist it cannot be true simply because it reflects poorly on Dems and therefore cannot be true.
Once you recognize the philosophy underlying his objections they become laughable.
This is even though the lefts actions cannot be explained any other way.
Whenever someone says something “cannot be explained any other way” there is a 100% chance that that someone has closed their mind to alternate explanations and will hurl personal attacks at anyone who suggests otherwise.
Especially in the case of Marshal here who has never made a principled argument in his entire life, and instead asserts the correctness of his arguments by pointing out personal flaws in the people who he disagrees with.
It’s an interesting claim considering it is refuted by every comment already posted. I point out how the principles people claim to support are violated in other contexts showing they do not support their supposed principles consistently. I’m sure it’s just a coincidence that every such failure by sarc and the rest of the crew protects leftists. But this is a debate over principles.
Sarc misstates this as a personal attack because he cannot refute reality, but he also cannot miss an opportunity to attack others. If we want to understand who engages in personal attacks we should ask which commenters claims to fuck other mothers and the like. No doubt that was sarcasm effort to engage in actual conversation. You see to the left standards don’t exists as consistent rules. They are only applied to “other” everyone else which is why they are never applied to themselves.
I point out how the principles people claim to support are violated in other contexts showing they do not support their supposed principles consistently.
Like I said. Invalidate what people say by attacking them personally.
That's the same "logic" used by leftists who claim the fact that Thomas Jefferson owned slaves invalidates everything he wrote about liberty.
Yet you continue to believe you're somehow superior to these leftists you hate, even though you behave exactly like them.
Like I said. Invalidate what people say by attacking them personally.
That’s the same “logic” used by leftists who claim the fact that Thomas Jefferson owned slaves invalidates everything he wrote about liberty.
First you describe an ad hominem, but your example, "the fact that Thomas Jefferson owned slaves invalidates everything he wrote about liberty," is actually a non sequitur; a conclusion that does not follow from the premise.
Whereas, what Marshal wrote, "I point out how the principles people claim to support are violated in other contexts showing they do not support their supposed principles consistently," can certainly be presented in a logical argument.
The claim: "Jefferson's argued "self-evident" truth that liberty is an unalienable right of all men is directly contradicted by his ownership of men subject to the system of chattel slavery," is logical. It is not ad hominem. I can think of 2 counterarguments immediately, but that doesn't make the conclusion illogical within the limited context of the premise.
It is supremely ironic when you present such weak, illogical arguments about logic.
Notice how sarc refuses to address the explanation and runs to attack. He can’t help himself and he’s not smart enough to recognize this is exactly what he’s pretending to oppose.
I always find it amusing when people who are too stupid to understand what I'm saying say that I'm the one who isn't smart. Smart people never do that. Only really stupid people. People who are so stupid that they don't know that they are stupid. People who are so braindead they probably work for the government.
Tell me, when did you retire from your career as a federal bureaucrat?
Hey look, personal attacks are ok again! Whoever would have guessed sars would never apply the standard he judges others by to himself.
Shocking.
Oh look. Marshal can't tell the difference between him saying "You're stupid, therefore you are wrong" which invalidates what someone says by attacking the person who said it, and me saying "You're so wrong, you must be stupid" which is an observation and conclusion based upon what was said.
Notice he’s still refusing to address the subject which is that we can explain the lefts actions through political allyship, a concept they discuss openly. But sarc doesn’t want people discussing it because doing so damages the left. So first he strawmans the accusation by pretending it means the left is intentionally evil, and when that frame is replaced with reality he engages in juvenile insults as a distraction.
Remember though, we’re supposed to believ sarc is the one who wants “actual conversation”.
first he strawmans the accusation by pretending it means the left is intentionally evil
How is that a strawman?
Are you saying that these people you heap contempt and disdain upon don't have evil intentions?
Maybe they have good intentions and goals, but are going about it the wrong way?
Maybe instead of calling them names and accusing them of being evil, that perhaps we could agree that we all want people to have life, liberty, food, shelter, clothing, health care, education, happiness and all that, but disagree on the means?
Nah. That would mean acknowledging that your enemy is actually human. Better to just call them names and attribute evil motivations.
I don’t call people names, that’s your tactic. my comment was that they act as they do in furtherance of their political preferences. Maybe if you cared what people’s comments were instead of leaping to attack without understanding maybe you’d be able to develop a coherent response once in a while.
But once we accept you’re only here to troll all of your actions are perfectly consistent.
Sarc,
the hysterical hyperbolic hyperbole coming from the right-wing media.
NYT, WaPo, etc since 1980:
Reagen = Hitler, Bush = Hitler, Bush II = Hitler, Trump = Hitler
Who is being hysterically hyperbolic?
Shorter BigT: "Oh yeah? Whatabout....?"
Here's a tip. Hysterically pointing out others being hysterical doesn't make you less hysterical.
Some simps are more hysterical than others, of course. Comparisons to Hitler are about as extreme as one can get. Or do you have sympathy for Mr. Schicklgruber?
His detractors tended to end up dead, shot by police that worked for the government but not for the people. Sarcasmic approves.
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coordination between the government and social media companies
Is a thing that's not supposed to exist, you totalitarian cunts.
But then how are we going to protect Democracy?
There might even be a well-attended session at Davos this year on that very topic.
I understand that an article like this has to be full of direct links to NYT and WaPo. And that's ok. That doesn't really mean that links to other Reason articles with links to NYT and WaPo and Twitter is really avoiding the inbreeding rituals of elite journalists.
If one wanted to be cognizant of non-elite-journalist opinion, one might try to understand that Joe Reader does not have a paywall subscription to NYT OR WaPo. So linking to them is not really linking to anything interesting/important/valuable. It's just signalling
Heaven forfend that an article about elite media’s cozy relationship with the government should contain links to stories in elite media.
I think it's more of a complaint about how often those links appear.
That's why I said that I understand why those links appear in this article. And those links are exactly where they should be linked - not just gratuitous (as they often are).
Paywalls are easy to get around.
^---This
Gee, I wonder what the media's stand would be if it was a Trump administration seeking to suppress "misinformation?"
There was talk of investigating the crony socialism in the gov ran media that got completely propagandized instantly into Trump wants to control the press. It was shutdown immediately; but then along comes Musk and blows the lid off it at Twitter followed by Reason busting open Facebook.
It's leftard PROJECTION 101. It the #1 character trait of the left. To point fingers and blame everyone but themselves for exactly what they are doing. In search of some truth? Just take everything leftards accuse others of and that's exactly what they're doing.
'"The Donald Trump-appointed judge's move could undo years of efforts to enhance coordination between the government and social media companies," The Washington Post huffed in its report.'
Enhancement CCP style or Russia style?
¿Por que no los dos?
the Washington Huff-Post
The very roots of the problem.
Elite Journalists Love Big Brother……. ‘s paychecks (i.e. stolen-money grants/stimulus). It all started and is growing massively with every UN-Constitutional $ of wealth distribution. This is known as socialism (a gov funded/controlled economy) and it’s curses are well known to include gov-ran-media. How much was Twitter PAID to censor information? It was in the MILLIONS. What other Twitter customer comes along throwing out MILLIONS of dollars?
It's impossible to say the USA isn't socialist in today's times. The government has spent almost more than the entire GDP and as completely predictable this makes Gov-Guns the #1 asset to everyone and biggest concern. The USA was founded on a very small LIMITED government. This isn't the USA anymore and it will reap the consequences of a socialist nation (i.e. Nazi-Germany, Venezuela, etc, etc, etc.). The ONLY asset a monopoly of 'guns' has for humanity is to ensure Individual Liberty and Justice against 'guns' that want to take that away. Our government today *IS* that 'guns' taking everything away (Liberty and Justice) in the name of [Na]tional So[zi]al[ism] brought to you my leftards and their Nazi-ideology.
For sound economic perspective go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
Bush 43 would have loved this press. I remember the days when these same outlets bemoaned the idea that the government might be looking at what you check out at the library. Now they are telling you what to say and think. If we follow the logic, you can read it, just don’t post about it, think about it or say anything about it.
It isn't totalitarian or Orwellian at all. If only there were lessons in history we could learn from to avoid these pitfalls of the human condition. Oh well, guess we have to reluctantly vote democrat once again next year.
Journalists generally see themselves as part of the intellectual elite ruling class nowadays and therefore resent any pleb or prole having the temerity to muscle in on their scope of work, especially if they contradict the narrative. The fact that they complain that anyone can say anything harkens back to the days when the printing press was first introduced and the birth of newspapers. They were then the wild card contradicting the authorities. Now they are part of the authorities. They have lost their way.
It has to be rough to choose an area of expertise, then for the information age come along and make your expertise redundant. The creative destruction of journalism itself here is interesting to watch, as the gatekeeping institutions are rebalancing, journalists are basically the only class where the whole class gives you individual insights into that. I hope that people in jobs that actually produce value (like the journalists here at Reason, for even though they aren't the perfect angles of libertarianism that I wish for, they are infinitely better than standard beltway pundits.) Will come out ahead, such as substack and it's evolution. Sadly as the culture still seems to not embrace libertarianism, I fear that CIA style government cronies will end up controlling the narratives online as well.
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>>Journalists aren't always consistent fans of liberty
misspelled ever
Once a g-man always a g-man. Sure, they may not be on the government's payroll anymore but they still work for them.
I guess the Times and the Post are no longer private companies.
The symbiotic relationship between these entities, is being noticed elsewhere:
The Media’s Scandalous Infatuation with the Intelligence Community
BECKET ADAMS
This article is mostly opinion lightly supported but a few lightly related factoids. I take exception, for example, to the assertion that "freedom of the press" was intended to be a watch-dog on government. The press has frequently toed the party line over the centuries and acting as a propaganda organ for the party in power is nothing new to them. They served an important purpose back when it was difficult to send messages across a state let alone across the nation or around the world, and correspondents on the scene were the only reliable source of news. The reputations of the correspondents and of the editors here at home was valuable in a competitive sense then, but no so much any more.
Freedom of the press protects us all because journalism is an action, not (just) a profession.
It's happening AND it's as bad as we say.
"...Politico reported in 2012."
Should be 2021.
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Tuccille’s piece lacks nuance and thus encourages many of the thoughtless comments in this forum.
Many Washington reporters — like many Wall Street reporters — identify with the people they write about, but by no means is that true in all cases.
Indeed, identifying with sources is far from universal.
For decades, in lectures to journalists all over the world, I’ve taught them how to maintain skepticism and keep in mind that their duty is to the reader, lustener, and viewer, not sources. I’ll be doing this come September, at the Global Investigative Journalism Conference, held every two years, just as I did last month of the annual Investigative Reporters & Editors conference here in America.
By writing in terms of absolutes, Tuccille encourages the kind of unsophisticated, thinking that he’s doing enormous damage to our democracy. Having read many of his articles over the years. I know he can do better — can the editors of Reason.
The deeper problem is access journalism. Reporters who depend on the access to people for their stories have to get along with them. This is especially a problem with broadcast because of the need for images and actualities. And unfortunately it’s become common practice for sources to declare that they are on background, deep background, or off the record even though as a matter of both Law and ethical practice, the reporter is the only person who can grant these privileges. For decades, now I have watched the deterioration of this important principle, which has been exploited by elected officials and Wall Street to their benefit in the detriment of the American people.
What Tuccille wrote is not at all true of those of us who work from the public record, who never go to parties of the people we write about, and from whom we maintain appropriate distance.
The American people would also benefit if we had more journalists who come from working class, hardscrabble, or even middle class backgrounds and fewer raised in upper middle-class homes, and in some cases with significant trust funds. Such journalist are in minority, but given their backgrounds, they naturally tend to see the world through the eyes of their experience, which is why it’s crucial that we have cultural and economic diversity at the top ranks of American journalism.
I hope in future pieces, Reason editors think less in black-and-white and ensure that writers describe this, and all of the situations in shades of gray. To be clear, in this case, the gray certainly should not be light, but that only means careful reasoning is crucial.
“Nothing to see here, you little people; nothing at all.”
Sorry, diversity is only a defacto benefit in hiring, college admissions, and TV commercials.
Sorry but journalists are lower scum than lawyers these days. Blame yourself for decades of not policing the activists in your ranks and organizations and letting them be the messenger and the face of journalism. As your cabal stands there is nothing worth listening too because too much of it is outright lies and propaganda.
Dear Social Jystice us neither,
You wrote that I should blame myself for not policing my peers…You couldn’t be more wrong.
I’m the only Journalist in American history, who caused a broadcast chain to shut down and go out of business after exposed it’s news manipulations and blackouts. After a decade of proceedings, a 247 page report showed everything I wrote was spot on.
I’ve written numerous exposes of journalists who made stuff up, distorted things, and otherwise behaved badly. I’ve also expose the best selling books is frauds, most recently in the Newsweek cover story about the best selling fabulist C. David Heymann, who had originally expose back in the early 1980s.
I’ve been policing my fellow journalist for a half century in the pages of the Detroit, Free Press, the Los Angeles Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer, the Columbia Journalism School, the American Journalism, Review, the California, Journalism Review feed/back.
My wife and I also donated to Journalism reviews. And as I wrote in my original post, I lecture all over the world in an effort to teach Journalist how to properly do the work and never cut corners.
I have exposed, corrupt publishers, as well. One of them was criminally charged with being an unregistered foreign agent as a result of my reporting.
In some cases, I pursued stories across multiple newspapers, and for a decade or more.
So your comment as absolutely no basis in fact.
David Cay Johnston
Dear Social Justice Is Neither,
My apologies for misrendering your nom d' Internet. The EDIT button isn't working so I can't fix my mistake.
dcj
Tucille clearly stated that his criticism only applied to the "elite" journalists, AKA "celebrities" or "blow-dries." I would be interested in seeing your evidence, though, that the mainstream journalists in the trenches are following your teachings concerning their duty to their readership. On the other hand, I would venture to suggest that what we mostly need from our journalists is LESS of an eye on their readers and more integrity concerning giving the readers what they want to hear. Part of the problem here as I see it is that journals have given up on attracting subscribers based on unbiased news and a range of opinions in favor of carving out a niche market to stay afloat by supporting their biases.
As someone who is done thousands of always UNPAID broadcast appearances over the past half century and having appeared on every major network broadcast and cable from ABC to Fox to MSNBC and on channels all around the world, I clearly would fall into to Tuccille’s definition of elite. (You might wanna look up the meaning of that word, which is not pejorative, but praising..)
There are many journalists, who do their jobs with extraordinary diligence and care, and without being apologists, for those they cover, which was the core of my complaint about this piece by Tuccille, whose work I’ve read for many years. And many of them appear on the kinds of broadcast shows that are cited in the article.
That there are too many mandarins and justifier’s of the cultures of Washington, and Wall Street is absolutely true. But it’s also absolutely wrong to suggest it only fawning journalists are seen by the public.
I have bankers boxes full of articles that I wrote, exposing journalists or criticizing them for identifying with their sources, rather than maintaining a proper distance, and for having our inappropriate social relationships with news sources. And many of those articles urge diving into the public record, or as we put it at the new service. I ran for seven years DCREPORT.org, “ we cover with politicians do, not just what they say.”
Here’s a question for you: which news outlet, exposed the retired generals, admirals and colonels appearing on television as paid commentators, without revealing that they were on the payrolls of defense contractors or ideological marketing institutions?
I’ll answer it for you: The New York Times. That doesn’t support Tuccille’s simplistic essay as the key reporter on that story has been on national television commentary shows many times.
Unlike police, doctors, real estate brokers, and many others who cover up wrongdoing within their ranks, journalists through both journalism reviews and in front page reports expose their own wrongdoing. No other occupation or industry does this.
That’s not to argue that everything is hunky-dory. Far from it, as I’ve been reporting for a half century.
But consider these:
The corrupt deal between an advertiser in the Los Angeles Times — under a previous owner and with a serial company executive as CEO — resulted in a 48,000-word self expose by the paper.
Jayson Blair’s fabrications resulted in a 14,000 word Sunday page one self expose — and the summary firing (with no golden or even brass handshake) of the two top editors.
When The Philadelphia Inquirer learned that one of its reporters was the mistress of a political boss (who later went to prison) it ran a 32,000 word self expose.
I can point to more examples.
Again, nuance matters. Writing in black-and-white rather than shades of gray is inherently flawed. Tuccille knows better, and has done better.
He describes a real problem, he just doesn’t do it well, or with the level of skill that I know he is capable of.
If someone else doesn't already do it, Reason should develop and maintain a permanent data base consisting of anyone who has ever served in any of the following positions: President, all Senate confirmed officials, all policymaking officials in the Executive Office of the President, and all Senators and Congressmen and their chiefs of staff. The database would also identify their spouses or live-in partners, and the employer and position of each spouse or live-in partner. This would enable the public to identify those in public service, the media, industry, lobbyists, etc. who have conflicts of interest. Why should Justices Thomas and Roberts have all the fun?
Conflicts of interests among the elites? J'accuse you of disinformation!
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