The Volokh Conspiracy
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"Listen, the Media Deserves Some Blame, Too": "You Guys Should Not Have Believed Us So Easily"
From Mediaite (Zachary Leeman) yesterday:
"Original Sin" co-author Alex Thompson revealed a Democratic insider told him they were "amazed" at how "easily" the media swallowed "spin" about former President Joe Biden's health….
It goes on to quote Thompson:
The media fell short, and the biggest example of that is, if the media was on top of this, then Biden's debate performance should not have been such a shock to so many people ….
I had one conversation with someone, this was after the election, while we were reporting this book, and this person said, "Listen, yes, we deserve blame for X, Y, Z. We were hiding him. We were." But this person also sort of got in my face, and they said, "Listen, the media deserves some blame, too." Like we were sort of amazed at some of the stuff we were able to spin and get on….
They're just like, "You guys should not have believed us so easily." And I thought that was like a really interesting, but I also think that's true. I think the media, and in a lot of ways, was not skeptical enough and did not remember the less[on] that, they do it to different degrees, but every White House lies.
This reminds me of the essay I prepared for the Free Speech in Crisis & the Limits of the First Amendment in March; I was invited to participate on the Media Environment panel, for which the description was:
It is widely believed that a profoundly broken media system is responsible for bringing the current administration into power, and for critics, the political crisis it has unleashed. Is this correct? And if so, what is to be done about it? How can public opinion be harnessed to serve constitutional purposes in the new media landscape? How can and should the media system be reformed? And what can free speech law do about any of this?
We were all asked to write up to about 2000 words on our topics, and I include below the current draft of my submission (a version of which I blogged March 31). I hope to revise it, if there's time before the essays are published at Balkinization, to include part of Thompson's quotes, and to cite Original Sin.
[* * *]
The 2024 presidential campaign saw a massive disinformation and misinformation campaign, which likely helped bring the current administration into power. Leading media organizations failed to stop it in time. Indeed, some of them were complicit, through inadequate investigation and perhaps even willful blindness, in the misinformation. We thus face an urgent question, raised by the workshop organizers: "How can and should the media system be reformed?"
I'm speaking, of course, of the campaign to conceal President Biden's mental decline—a campaign that was only conclusively exposed by the June 27, 2024 debate. At that point, little time was left for deciding whether the President should be persuaded to step aside; for the actual persuasion; for the selection of a replacement; and for the replacement's attempt to persuade the people to elect her.
Had the Administration leveled with the public earlier, or had the media exposed the concealment earlier, there would likely have been time for a full primary campaign, in which Democratic voters could have made their choice about whom to run against Donald Trump.[1] Perhaps that candidate would have been more effective than Kamala Harris. Or perhaps the candidate would have still been Harris, but a Harris who was seen as having more legitimacy with the public. "Democracy Dies in Darkness," the Washington Post tells us. It appears that the Democratic Party's prospects died in this particular darkness.
The single most consequential fact of the 2024 Presidential campaign had thus been largely hidden for a long time, including from (and, perhaps unwittingly, by) the media organizations whose job it is to inform us. Indeed, this a fact not just of immense political significance, but also central to national security: If President Biden was indeed cognitively impaired, that bore on his ability to make decisions as President, not just his ability to be re-elected.
When, for instance, Trump and Vance spread unfounded rumors of Haitian immigrants eating cats and dogs, the media rightly blew the whistle. But when some media outlets tried to point out the evidence of Biden's likely incapacity, others didn't pick up on the investigation—and, indeed, sometimes pooh-poohed the investigation.
As late as mid-June 2024, the White House and many of its supporters characterized videos of Biden apparently freezing up and seeming confused as "cheap fake" disinformation created by his enemies.[2] Indeed, as Nate Silver has noted, "some coverage endorsed the White House party line, particularly in its tendency to characterize claims about Biden's acuity as 'misinformation.'"[3] Only Biden's televised debate performance on June 27, 2024 made it impossible to deny there was something badly wrong. It seems likely that many of the supposed "cheap fakes" actually accurately captured Biden's cognitive slippage, especially since the slippage apparently went back a good deal before the debate.[4]
And even if some particular videos had indeed been disinformation from his enemies, the fact remains that the media failed to adequately identify the disinformation from his friends. Indeed, isn't it shocking that so many White House reporters appear to have learned thanks only to the nationally televised debate and not to their investigative journalism?
Of course, reaching the truth on this question wasn't easy. Biden insiders apparently tried hard to conceal the facts (that's the disinformation part). And indeed it's not surprising that people who are both personally loyal to a President and rely on the President's success for their ongoing careers would want to conceal such facts. In our fallen world, we can't expect much candor from political insiders. And I expect most journalists sincerely believed the reassurances they were getting from the insiders.
But getting sincerely duped isn't a great professional mark for a journalist.[5] Their job was to dig and find out—before things became evident, not after (and indeed some indications of Biden's decline were indeed evident for some time before the debate[6]). Indeed, to the extent that the media's credibility has declined over recent years, such failures of investigation seem likely to only exacerbate this decline.
Undoubtedly, the White House wanted to keep this fact [of Biden's decline] under wraps until Biden was safely over the finish line in November. But media organizations that participated, even unwittingly, in this farce have not only made a subsequent Democratic administration far less likely—they have profoundly undermined their own integrity.[7]
* * *
How could this happen? I hope we will learn more about this in the years to come. A CNN headline the day I wrote this discussed a forthcoming book by Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson called "Original Sin: President Biden's Decline, Its Cover-Up, and His Disastrous Choice to Run Again."[8]
But at this point, at least a first cut—informed by our shared knowledge of human nature—is that many in the media likely didn't dig hard because they didn't really wanted to uncover things.[9] It isn't controversial, I think, that most in the mainstream media much preferred President Biden over his challenger, Donald Trump.[10] Indeed, I agree they had good reason to dislike Trump. Certainly Trump himself had done much to stoke that hostility.
"Biden is cognitively impaired" was a standard talking point on the Right. So long as Biden was the nominee, that fact, if demonstrated, would help Trump. (As I've argued, if the fact helped Democrats replace Biden with a better candidate, it might have hurt Trump, but that would have been a less direct chain of causation.) It's human nature to accept stories that fit one's political preferences than to challenge them. A thought experiment: If the sitting President in 2024 had been a Republican—whether Trump or, say, an older Ron DeSantis—would the media have acted the same way they did? Or would they have worked harder, dug deeper, and uncovered the truth earlier?
Yet of course institutions should be designed to counteract the flaws generated by human nature while working within the constraints created by human nature. (That knowledge was old when Madison was young.) This is true of media institutions as well as governmental ones. There need to be mechanisms to keep reporters' and editors' inevitable ideological predilections from turning into ideological blinders and ideological blunders.
Of course, it's much easier to identify the problem than a suitable solution. One can imagine, for instance, newspapers deliberately seeking out reporters and editors with many different ideological beliefs, hoping that colleagues will fill each others' blind spots (or, in collegial conversations, help each other identify their blind spots). But this may be hard to implement; and, as with preferences based on race and sex, preferences based on politics may be challenged as leading to hiring based on ideology rather than merit. (They may also be defended, as with preferences based on race and sex, as a tool for fighting subconscious bias that keeps meritorious candidates from being fairly considered.) Indeed, hiring that considers applicants' ideological beliefs may violate some states' laws that limit employment discrimination based on political ideology or party affiliation,[11] just as hiring that considers applicants' religious beliefs may violate bans on employment discrimination based on religion.
Newspapers might also return to prohibiting reporters and editors from publicly opining on controversial issues. Of course, realistic readers will recognize that reporters may still be biased. But taking a public stand on an issue may increase such bias: If one has publicly endorsed position X, it might become harder to write fairly about evidence that instead tends to support the rival position Y. Few of us like writing something that suggests that we were mistaken in the past, or that our critics can interpret as making such a suggestion.
Again, though, in some jurisdictions such public neutrality rules for newspaper employees may violate state employment statutes. One state court held (by a 5–4 vote) that those statutes themselves violate the First Amendment when applied to newspaper reporters or editors.[12] But in AP v. NLRB (1937), the U.S. Supreme Court held (also 5–4) that federal labor law, which bans discrimination based on union membership, didn't violate the Associated Press's rights to select reporters or editors.
Likewise, one can imagine newspapers and magazines deliberately courting a broad ideological mix of readers—not just for the extra revenue, but also to commit themselves to having a base that they will need to be seen as treating fairly. A publication that has many readers on the left, right, and center might feel more pressure to be fair and careful to all sides. Of course, it may be hard these days to acquire such a broad reader base. And there's always the danger that concern about reader reactions may press a newspaper to avoid controversial topics altogether, rather than to try handling them fairly.
Finally, newspapers can just try to recommit themselves to objectivity, fuzzy as the term may sometimes be. (Many commentators have expressly taken the opposite view.[13]) In their news coverage, they may recommit to discussing the best arguments on both sides of contested issues. In choosing what to cover, they may try hard to see what both sides of the aisle view as especially important. On their editorial pages, they may avoid a party line, either instituted top down[14] or by staff revolts.[15] Instead, they may adopt the policy that whatever ideas are shared by at least substantial minorities of the public should be seriously covered, even when editors think that one side is obviously wrong.
Again, though, that's easier said than done (and it's not even that easily said). It will inevitably require hard choices that will leave many observers skeptical about the media organization's fairness —e.g., which sides of a multi-sided issue should be covered, which topics are important enough to cover, which positions are such outliers that they can be set aside, how to allocate scarce space and attention. And it may not do much to solve the problem we began with, which is the ability of media organizations to be massively duped by the side they sympathize with.
Thus, these solutions are likely to be far from perfect. The cures may even be worse than disease.
But there is indeed a disease, "a profoundly broken media system" (to quote the workshop organizers). This system is one that the public has good reason to distrust. Its flaws undermine the media's ability to check government malfeasance. It may have been so captured by the desire to #Resist one movement that it failed to resist the disinformation spread by another. And it may thus have ended up helping the very candidate and movement that it had (understandably) viewed as dangerous.
[1] See, e.g., Chris Whipple, Uncharted: How Trump Beat Biden, Harris, and the Odds in the Wildest Campaign in History 201 (2025) (quoting Leon Panetta, White House Chief of Staff under Clinton and Secretary of Defense under Obama, as making this point); Jonathan Allen & Amie Parnes, Fight: Inside the Wildest Battle for the White House 86 (2025) (quoting "a Biden ally" as making the same point); id. at 90 (inferring that long-time Democratic Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi held a similar view); Josh Barro, This Is All Biden's Fault, N.Y. Times, Nov. 11, 2024; Four Writers on What Democrats Should Do, N.Y. Times, June 30, 2024.
[2] See, e.g., Hanna Panreck, Karine Jean-Pierre Doubles Down on 'Cheap Fake' Biden Videos: 'So Much Misinformation', Fox News, June 19, 2024.
[3] Nate Silver, Did the Media Blow It on Biden?, Silver Bulletin, May 15, 2025, https://www.natesilver.net/p/did-the-media-blow-it-on-biden.
[4] See, e.g., Annie Linskey & Siobhan Hughes, Behind Closed Doors, Biden Shows Signs of Slipping, Wall St. J., June 4, 2024; Michael Williams, George Clooney Says Democrats Need a New Nominee Just Weeks After He Headlined a Major Fundraiser for Biden, CNN, July 10, 2024; David Gilmour, CNN's Jake Tapper Argues Biden White House Misled Public 'All the Time' With 'Cheap Fake' Spin, Mediaite, May 14, 2025, https://www.mediaite.com/tv/i-look-back-on-it-with-humility-jake-tapper-says-he-covered-bidens-cognitive-issues-but-admits-not-enough/.
[5] See, e.g., Colby Hall, I Look Back on It With Humility': Jake Tapper Says He Covered Biden's Cognitive Issues, But Admits 'Not Enough', Mediaite, May 14, 2025, https://www.mediaite.com/tv/i-look-back-on-it-with-humility-jake-tapper-says-he-covered-bidens-cognitive-issues-but-admits-not-enough/.
[6] See Silver, supra note 3 (describing many such indications, and noting, "when something is an open secret to the extent Biden's condition was among elites—to the point that many people close to him felt it jeopardized national security—you'd hope for the press to report on it more aggressively"); see also Paul Mirengoff, Joe Biden's Steep Decline: A Tale of Two Coverups, Ringside at the Reckoning, May 16, 2025, https://ringsideatthereckoning.substack.com/p/joe-bidens-steep-decline-a-tale-of.
[7] Robby Soave, Why Didn't the Media Notice Joe Biden's 'Jet Lag' Sooner?, Reason, July 3, 2024.
[8] See also Whipple, supra note 1 (similarly discussing, among other things, Biden insiders' attempt to conceal Biden's cognitive impairment); Allen & Parnes, supra note 1 (making the same point).
[9] See Mirengoff, supra note 6.
[10] Cf. The American Journalist, Key Findings from the 2022 American Journalist Study (reporting that 51.7% of journalists identified as Independent, 36.4% Democrat, 8.5% Other, and 3.4% Republican). I appreciate that this is an online survey, and one that doesn't specifically ask about views on Trump; but it reinforces what is generally seen as conventional wisdom, and I've seen no data pointing in the opposite direction.
[11] See Eugene Volokh, Should the Law Limit Private-Employer-Imposed Speech Restrictions?, 2 J. Free Speech L. 269 (2022); Eugene Volokh, Private Employees' Speech and Political Activity: Statutory Protection Against Employer Retaliation, 16 Tex. Rev. of L. & Pol. 295 (2012).
[12] See Nelson v. McClatchy Newspapers, 131 Wash. 2d 523 (1997).
[13] See, e.g., Leonard Downie Jr., Newsrooms That Move Beyond 'Objectivity' Can Build Trust, Wash. Post, Jan. 30, 2023.
[14] See, e.g., Washington Post Owner Jeff Bezos Says Opinion Pages Will Defend Free Market And 'Personal Liberties', PBS News, Feb. 26, 2025.
[15] See, e.g., Marc Tracy, James Bennet Resigns as New York Times Opinion Editor, N.Y. Times, June 7, 2020.
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"A thought experiment: If the sitting President in 2024 had been a Republican—whether Trump or, say, an older Ron DeSantis—would the media have acted the same way they did? Or would they have worked harder, dug deeper, and uncovered the truth earlier?"
The answer is so obvious the question need not be asked. The real question is would the media have disseminated lies and misinformation about a Republican nominee. But that too would be an obvious question with an obvious answer.
"The real question is would the media have disseminated lies and misinformation about a Republican nominee."
Isn't that exactly what they do?
"It is widely believed that a profoundly broken media system is responsible for bringing the current administration into power,..."
I profoundly disagree with your characterization of the media as profoundly broken. It functioned exactly as it was supposed to by the people operating it. Their lies just caught up to them at a very inopportune time for them.
Here's a hypothetical for you, good professor; If Biden's issues had not been made so glaringly apparent, would the media have continued with it's campaign of lies?
Amen. Their job was delivering propaganda for the Democrats. They were doing quite well until suddenly they couldn't.
Except that polling of those who go to these outlets for news suggest many weren’t buying what the outlets were supposedly selling.
Except remaining in business suggests they were doing well enough to stay in business.
If you assume your conclusion despite evidence that suggests otherwise.
If you assume capitalists have magic reserves of money and can afford to lose money and make up for it in volume, I guess that would sound like a sound business plan.
That’s not the assumption you’re making, it’s that Democrats would only buy the papers if they persuaded them Biden’s age was no problem. But maybe a lot of Democrats didn’t think that was that important in their choice of news sources?
No no no no no.
Their job is selling advertisements. "When the price is free, you are the product."
As for a solution, you must identify the problem first. I submit it is a too-powerful government which is (a) worth bribing and cozying up to, and (b) worth controlling so as to be bribed and cozied-up to.
Local, state, and federal governments simply have too much power to meddle wherever they want. The more they meddle, the more profitable, literally, it is for people to sic government on other people before those others sic government on them first. It doesn't matter if those others are business competitors, political opponents, socially incorrect, or what; if the government can meddle, someone will find it better to encourage that meddling.
The problem has gotten worse as newspapers have gone to a paid subscription model.
Take the WAPO for instance, anytime they try to tack back to the middle, or provide more conservative views they lose subscibers.
People won't pay for what they don't want to hear.
With an advertiser based model the larger the audience the bigger the revenue.
I mean, that's pretty easy to answer, given that they're not spending any time or energy on the question of Trump's mental fitness even now. The more unhinged his rants are, the more the media treats it as just Trump Being Trump — almost entertaining, even — rather than a symptom of mental breakdown.
Trump doesn't freeze and read teleprompter instructions, or wander the stage until his wife comes to his rescue. There's a huge huge difference.
Indeed there is. Trump actually hallucinates things. The other day he claimed that he actually won the state of California. That's cuckoo-for-cocoa-puffs level bonkers. He claimed that Ukraine started the war with Russia. He claimed that Americans seized airports during the Revolutionary War. He confused asylum claims by refugees with insane asylums. He claimed that foreign countries pay tariffs. He said that magnets don't work if they get wet. And thousands more. He's completely in a different dimension of reality.
But it's OK to say hello to ghosts, and to sleep with his eyes wide open.
One is fixable. One is not.
Donald Trump's psychosis is no different than Joe Biden's. But we have 3 1/2 more years of stopping a rally to sway to music for an hour and claiming someone has "stage 9 cancer" to look forward to, as Elon, Stephen Miller et al openly puppet the guy around.
If you can't see the difference between a brain that's functional, even if you don't like the functions, and a brain that is asleep, then you have no business diagnosing anybody's psychoses.
No, it's a very different form of mental impairment. Biden is old and out of it in a normal way that people age. My mother is 102 years old and is not as sharp as she used to be, but she's not delusional.
Trump, OTOH, exhibits a level of dementia and lack of connection to reality that is truly concerning. It's not that he has slowed down (although he has, as have any of us over 60 or so) it's that he genuinely seems to believe things that are simply not real.
It's a very very different phenomenon; slow on the uptake and not completely sure what's going on around them vs. batshit crazy ideas that have on basis in reality.
e.g. "I didn't notice that you were in the room" vs. "There's a giant squid eating the bookshelf! Fetch the Windex to kill the thing!"
The difference is that Biden was able to carry out the duties of his office.
On March 11, 2020, Trump signed an executive order. That evening, he addressed the nation from the Oval Office, and tried to explain what what he had signed. He failed. Most seriously, he indicated that Americans in Europe would have to return to the United States during the next two days or be stuck in Europe until the executive order was lifted. The media, without any exceptions that I am aware of, failed to “dig and find out” that this was false, even though the only digging required would have been to read the executive order.
playing that double standard game again
Playing the mental health expert game again.
Whatever you think of Trump's mental state, AFAICT there's nothing being covered up.
The media has plenty of access, as do his cabinet and others, the back and forth isn't managed, etc.
We are free to debate Trump's fitness with a lot more information than we had about Biden.
? We have the same information about each: what we see in their respective public appearances.
"The more unhinged his rants are, the more the media treats it as just Trump Being Trump — almost entertaining, even — rather than a symptom of mental breakdown."
They're not doing news stories about how videos of his rants are deceptively edited cheapfakes.
"...what is to be done about it? How can public opinion be harnessed to serve constitutional purposes in the new media landscape? How can and should the media system be reformed?"
You are begging the question of: SHOULD anything be done about it?
I'd say no. The truth is and was out there. Choosing whom to believe is the the trick, but certainly no herculean task.
Back when the printing press was still a newfangled technology and the telegraph was at the pinnacle of rapid transmission of information, the issue with the press was that in most of the country the press has close to an absolute monopoly on the spreading of information. That was a problem.
Fast forward a few generations and we have national papers, a multitude of radio options, scores of TV options, and damn near unlimited online and social options.
Some of it is still as biased as the papers of yore, full of slanted articles and yellow journalism that strive to convince the readers that yes, in fact, Montana should, no no it NEEDS, to become a state.
But now you have options. Don't like what Maddow is pitching, flip to Hannity. Think what he is spouting is garbage, go to Breitbart, or Babylon Bee, or The Onion, or Reason, or Google News, or Facebook, or one a million other sources.
Obligatory: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MYQCb3qrBpo
That was funny. B/c DC is like an Animal House.
I remember regularly reading reports of concerns about Biden’s decline in the “mainstream” press. In fact EV’s own citations point to some of this. He might want to try a more exhaustive search regarding these. Google polling Biden age and you’ll get a slew of pre-convention mainstream media reports about polling regularly showing how most Americans thought he was too old (noticeably many to most Democrats who read the “mainstream” press).
Yes, the right-wing press reported on Biden's cognitive decline. And also on Harris's incompetence. We should expect the Trump-haters to lie to us at every opportunity.
Another non-sensical “response” by Roger.
"I remember regularly reading reports of concerns about Biden’s decline in the “mainstream” press."
Can you cite a few? The WSJ reported on his decline, and CNN ran an analysis criticizing WSJ for relying on too many conservatives.
https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2024-02-11/democrats-can-t-ignore-voter-concerns-about-biden-s-age-any-longer
https://www.politico.com/news/2024/02/08/biden-mental-fitness-major-focus-00140503
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/democrats-bungle-biden-age-concerns-some-critics-say-2024-02-13/
You are correct that some reported on Biden's mental infirmities after his faltering performance in response to Hur's report. However the coverage was damped down as the news cycle moved on.
See here in Google trends for the term:
https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?date=today%205-y&geo=US&q=biden%20mental&hl=en
There was plenty of attention during the 2020 campaign from the GOP but after Biden won the news switched to anything else.
The next spike in interest was after the Hur report. You can see interest die down after the media stopped reporting on it.
The final burst of interest was after his infamous debate performance, which continued until he dropped out.
Is this trends in searches? I’m not sure how that proves coverage by mainstream news outlets. I mean, in your own comment you claim the spike in May 2020 was from “the GOP” but the ones in early 2024 were from, what, mainstream coverage of the Hur report?
A Google trends search is a good correlation with the public's interest in a topic- topics that are served or even driven by media reporting on a topic.
As per my last comment, the 2020 interest was due to the GOP bringing it up in the campaign. It was effectively a non-issue due to Biden's decent showing (and Biden's zipper of a liner about giving Trump his pee if Trump wanted to test it so bad).
The Feb 2024 interest aligns precisely with the articles you yourself cited as you'd expect if media reporting on a topic drives the public to search for the topic.
Try this experiment: check for any April and May 2024 news articles on Biden's mental issues. You will not find as much as you found in Feb. What you find is either sourced from the right, or those articles are defending Biden.
Served or even driven? The argument here is the media covered it up. And from your own comment it seems the interest can be increased apart from or despite media coverage.
His decline was evident during the 2020 campaign. Dig up videos of him from then and from the Obama era. The difference was obvious then.
There was lots of talk about his decline then but then he did pretty well at the debate (remember, the line on his decline by detractors changed to “they must have pumped him full of drugs”).
“Marge, it takes two to lie. One to lie, and one to listen!”
>But getting sincerely duped isn't a great professional mark for a journalist
I could accept mere incompetence. The bigger issue is that they personally testified as to his fitness, and then attacked* anyone who reported the correct facts.
*worse, it was low-IQ garbage along the lines of "think of the poor child with a stutter who now feels bad, you monster"
“they personally testified as to his fitness”
Who is “they?”
The "journalists" you refuse to acknowledge now that their fraud has been exposed.
Jake Tapper et al.
Maybe more specific than “er. al?”
Which journalists?
Joe Scaroborough for one.
"In March 2024, the MSNBC host declared that the then-president was the “best Biden ever” and cited personal exchanges as to why. "
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zpc0fbfHFio
For one. And does even Scarborough claim to be a journalist? He’s usually identified as a “political commentator” or “host.”
They also covered up Kamala Harris's incompetence.
I tried to tell everyone years ago that Biden was too old. And I was viciously attacked on this very blog for my attempt to highlight a legitimate concern.
I'm not going to try to claim I am unusually perceptive and I can see things others miss because I don't have to, its obvious. But anybody who didn't see it was in denial.
But there is indeed a disease, "a profoundly broken media system" (to quote the workshop organizers). This system is one that the public has good reason to distrust. Its flaws undermine the media's ability to check government malfeasance. It may have been so captured by the desire to #Resist one movement that it failed to resist the disinformation spread by another. And it may thus have ended up helping the very candidate and movement that it had (understandably) viewed as dangerous.
With that, Volokh is far afield from insight into how investigative reporting works, and apparently conflates that activity with everything else going on in media—much of which is indeed profoundly broken.
Four points ought to at least induce reflection:
1. Volokh in his comments wanders back and forth without distinction, positing at one moment misplaced loyalty to Biden, and then partisan loyalty to Democrats, and then inchoate resistance to Trump.
2. Those are not compatible with each other, let alone the same. An investigator with a professionally corrosive loyalty to Democrats would logically be keen to improve their electoral chances by breaking a Biden mental incompetence story at the earliest moment.
3. If the investigator were instead loyal to Biden, and reliably informed he was incompetent, the investigator would betray both Biden and Democrats by concealing that news.What would inspire a reporter to be loyal to a mentally incompetent Biden, except a humane impulse which would at once counsel the unwisdom to be complicit in a cover-up? That would surely lead to personal catastrophe for Biden, disaster for Democrats, and as we have seen, triumph for Trump.
Does anyone suppose there is any professional journalistic upside to do something like that? There is not.
The critique thus far amounts to a cartoonish right-wing smear, in which professional journalistic investigators league themselves for no discernible purpose except evil, while risking their own professional demise.
4. As far as inchoate resistance to Trump is posited, unfounded MAGA charges of Biden mental incompetence sharpened at the outset of Biden's first candidacy (in truth, they had dogged him throughout his political career). Biden followed with an electoral win, and a presidency rightly praised as a multi-dimensional success—which did nothing at all to diminish either the right-wing charges of mental incompetence, or the obviously motivated and doubtful grounds for making those charges.
Whatever that circumstance suggests, it does not establish any realistic journalistic responsibility to follow up every unreliable allegation, from so many obviously unreliable sources. More was needed, and more did not appear.
Folks who want to posit anti-Trump resistance practiced by means of a deliberate journalistic cover up will thus have to show evidence of their own. Two kinds of evidence could be of interest. I have yet to see reason to suppose that either kind exists. They are:
1. That some right-winger came early-on into possession of dispassionate medical proof of serious Biden mental decline. Despite all the right-wing smears and trumpeting, where and when was anything like that ever disclosed?
2. That some investigative professional on the political left had means to penetrate medical privacy, and get that same kind of evidence, and declined to do it, or in fact got that information, and declined to publish it.
Show me evidence that either of those happened, and I will reconsider what I have said in light of whatever particulars have been disclosed.
Until then, I will continue to think the present cascade of disclosures appeared by collation. After the Harris loss, people started comparing notes, which reinforced conclusions that had crossed their minds, but without force sufficient to justify going public. Some were worried, but also doubtful. After Biden's disastrous debate, pre-existing concerns were remembered as less equivocal. That happens.
If anyone can show participation by a professional journalistic investigator in all that, maybe an interview to gather that point of view would be in order. Thus, on one very broad point, perhaps I agree with Volokh. If he thinks infrastructure to support professional investigative reporting has grown too weak, I agree with that. Professional investigative reporting functions by creating a nexus for collating disparate bits of scattered information. And conceivably could have done so in this case.
But presidential medical privacy being what it is, I doubt even legacy journalism in its heyday could have dug this Biden story out much sooner.