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megimoo
12-15-2008, 06:01 PM
Cheerful Remarks at Big Media’s Funeral


I have been a member of the Society of Professional Journalists for more than 25 years. Not long ago they sent me a lapel pin to commemorate my devotion to the organization which has, I must admit, mostly consisted of paying my annual dues. I have long since lost my youthful enthusiasm for the profession, but not for writing.

Like Mark Twain, I drifted into journalism because I was seriously opposed to having to actually work for a living. One of Twain’s classic quotes was “Get your facts first and then you can distort them as much as you please.” A pretty fair definition of journalism in his times and ours.

I began to have early doubts about the rigors of being a journalist when, three months after I joined the staff of a weekly newspaper, the first I had ever worked for, the editor moved on to a daily and I was anointed the editor. That’s right. I went from rookie to head honcho in about 90 days. I virtually wrote that entire newspaper for well over a year or so and probably learned as much as any four-year curriculum at the Newhouse or Columbia School of Journalism. Then I moved on to a daily newspaper.

In the December issue of “Quill,” the SPJ magazine for its members, the new president, Dave Aeikens, used his page for a commentary titled, “Our profession is not dying, it’s just changing.” My thought was that he was making some cheerful remarks at a funeral. The name of the magazine tells you how outdated newspapers have become in a time when the digital version of your favorite source of news can be accessed in Ulaanbaatar, the capital of Mongolia

Indeed, Aeikens mentioned highly trafficked news websites such as CNN and the New York Times, but managed to neglect mentioning that Fox News was in the top ten. And therein lies the problem. The new media is so wedded to its liberal agenda that it can’t even manage to mention that the newly indicted Governor of Illinois is a Democrat, but on the same day they did not fail to include that Larry Craig, the Senator who got into trouble for unseemly behavior in a men’s room, is a Republican.

The game is up for the mainstream press. The Internet constantly reveals how they distort the news and how they print news that is too often unsubstantiated boldfaced lies such as telling us that global warming is real or that the U.S. can be “energy independent,” or that “biofuels” made from food sources can replace gasoline, or that Barack Obama is a “centrist.”

The problem is that too many people for whom CNN, MSNBC, the New York Times, and similar liberal news outlets represent an accurate presentation of the world remain blissfully ignorant despite ample evidence that Congress has absolutely no idea what it can or should do as the latest burst economic “bubble” creates fear and panic. Thus, we are now hearing all the failed programs of the previous recessions and depressions being trotted out. Only the Republicans are opposing the most blatant raid on the public treasury in the history of the nation.

While news of failing daily newspapers is now a daily occurrence, permit me to suggest that the problem goes beyond the loss of classified advertising or slashed display advertising budgets. Certainly they play a major role, but the print newspapers have run slap-dash into a generation that has been rendered so ignorant of history, civics, science and other essential knowledge, and is so self-absorbed as to have entire web pages and blogs devoted to themselves and networks of other nitwits, that reading the daily newspaper is just so ”yesterday.”

That is why newspaper circulation and network news viewers are sliding into a black hole where real reporters and real editors are becoming obsolescent.


http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.2007/pub_detail.asp

Spâtha
12-16-2008, 09:19 PM
While news of failing daily newspapers is now a daily occurrence, permit me to suggest that the problem goes beyond the loss of classified advertising or slashed display advertising budgets. Certainly they play a major role, but the print newspapers have run slap-dash into a generation that has been rendered so ignorant of history, civics, science and other essential knowledge, and is so self-absorbed as to have entire web pages and blogs devoted to themselves and networks of other nitwits, that reading the daily newspaper is just so ”yesterday.”

That comment is very accurate, but there is more...

Our local paper is so very liberal that I could not continue to read it any longer and canceled my subscription. When I was called to ask why, and if I wouldn't reconsider, I told them that the paper was far too liberal for my tastes and the paper offered a very unbalanced perspective.

The caller was shocked and taken aback that I would actually criticize her paper. I informed her that while my point of view was not the only one available, the POV of the paper was to be 'preachy' and demean those that disagreed with the editors. I told her I didn't think that was good for business, but it was her paper.

When I cited a recent article about the local gun show that was couched in a reference to 'so much Nazi paraphernalia lying about' and 'dangerous sorts lurking around tables full of loaded guns', the caller was mystified.

I informed the caller that if she expected me to read her paper, it was paramount that the paper hire reporters that had a modicum of intelligence and a general understanding of how the world functioned. After all, the reason for holding gun shows is to buy and sell firearms, war and military paraphernalia, and items valuable to collectors. And, there are NO LOADED GUNS allowed on the premises! Law enforcement officers are everywhere! Obviously this was an unknown element of her's or the paper's world.

I think the people operating newspapers are particularly without common sense. Their goals used to be... bring truth and information to the public. Now they exist only to spread propaganda from the left.