The Unsolved Mystery of the Missing (Real) Journalists

By: - June 20, 2022

Source link

Suppose you were a reporter without an agenda, no ax to grind, no political affiliation. You never stepped foot inside a school of journalism. Even better, following in the tradition of old-time journalists like H. L. Mencken, Ernest Hemingway, or Rose Wilder Lane, you never attended college. You read history, economics, and political science, you got hands-on experience working for several small papers and internet outfits, and you wrote reams of prose under the guidance of some old-school editors who had no qualms about tearing apart your work and telling you when it was baloney.

Now in your late twenties, you see yourself as a journalist with but one mission: to report facts—who, what, where, when, why, and how—as clearly and as truthfully as possible to the public. You believe in research, in digging below the surface of a story, and then, in as an unbiased manner as possible, you write up your findings and deliver them to your fellow citizens.

With the money you earn and with the help of your spouse’s income, you’re able to survive financially. At one point, inspired by the Julie Kelly’s articles at American Greatness, you decide to explore the Jan. 6th incident at the Capitol. You spend much of your free time conducting phone interviews with those who were there, you look into their backgrounds, you watch video footage and read reports about police allowing protestors into the Capitol building, you even manage a few anonymous interviews with some of those officers revealing some possible federal chicanery in stirring the pot of that so-called “insurrection.”

Unfortunately, you’re about to realize that your adversary as a truth-seeker is not the American people. It’s not even the swamp in Washington, D.C. It’s the mainstream media.

You approach some major newspapers and news outlets with the information you’ve gleaned, but they’re not interested. Eventually, your story ends up on some online site like the Daily Wire, where it rouses a small commotion but little more. The story dies there, and you soon realize that the old adage “The truth will out” is as dead in the realm of journalism as the stories on sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, Hunter Biden’s laptop, or the corrupt ties between some American politicians and officials in China or the Ukraine.

Since its founding, Americans have depended on an independent press to help preserve our liberty. We looked to those “ink-stained wretches” as watchdogs guarding our republic against public and private corruption, against lies and twisted truths.

That press often failed in this mission. As far back as the Founding Fathers, we see dissatisfied politicians and other public figures complaining about an abusive press. Often these complaints were justified, but on other occasions they arrived on the heels of some truth a journalist had brought to the attention of readers.

Occasionally, journalists in the past deliberately deceived the American public—or else were themselves deluded. The classic case is that of Stalinist apologist Walter Duranty, who won the 1932 Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of the Soviet Union, but who turned a blind eye to communist mass murders and other atrocities, including the policy of farm collectivization in the Ukraine that left millions of people dead from starvation.

Today many Americans distrust the press. Years of the media’s manipulations, the censoring or exclusion of certain stories, and the replacement of facts with opinions have erased that confidence, so much so that a 2021 poll found the U.S. news media ranks last in trust among 46 countries.

That’s a disaster, not just for our major papers and television news outlets—which have experienced a large drop in readership/viewership in the last year—but for the rest of us as well. When we can’t believe the news, which is supposed to be vetted, checked, and doublechecked, we turn to internet sources that at least give a different and seemingly more reliable perspective. One consequence of this misinformation and confusion is our sharply divided nation.

The solution to this mess is simple and must come from our news rooms. Reporters, editors, and owners should put aside their personal politics and prejudices and begin reporting the facts. When the Russians, for example, bombard some city in the Ukraine, just tell us about the event without the added commentary—some might call it propaganda—aimed at glorifying Ukraine. When gas prices are skyrocketing, explain that a large part of the increase at the pump is the result of the Biden administration’s policies locking down our oil and natural gas industries. When Hunter Biden’s vile laptop pops up during an election, don’t sweep that dirt under the rug.

If you want your audience back, report the facts. If circumstances allow, report the truth.

That’s how trust is restored.

“Easy-peasy,” as my 5-year-old grandson might say.

Image Credit: Pxhere

  • RSS WND

    • U.S. job growth projected to stall in coming year in another sign of stagflation
      By Will Kessler Daily Caller News Foundation Job growth may stall in the second half of 2024 as low growth and high inflation continue to elevate fears of stagflation, a report released Monday by the research group The Conference Board shows. The Conference Board Employment Trends Index, which has in the past successfully tracked job… […]
    • Congress demands FBI explain why it's dumbing down bureau
      The U.S. House Committee on the Judiciary is demanding an explanation from FBI chief Christopher Wray about why the bureau is going stupid. Specifically, why the organization no longer is hiring the "best and brightest" applicants available. The trend is all attributed to the FBI's "diversity, equity and inclusion" agenda in which applicants are picked… […]
    • Federal judges blacklist Columbia law students
      Extremists who support the Hamas terror against Israel have launched protests – against Israel – at campuses nationwide. They've taken over property, buildings, and more. They've force schools to change their class procedures, and in the case of Columbia University forced the school to call off a graduation ceremony. There, there have been arrests and… […]
    • Hamas claims it agrees to ceasefire proposal
      (JERUSALEM POST) -- Hamas said on Monday that it had accepted a Gaza ceasefire proposal from Egypt and Qatar, just as it appeared that the negotiations had fallen apart and Israel was heading for a military operation in Rafah. The Islamist faction said in a statement that its chief, Ismail Haniyeh, had informed Qatar's prime… […]
    • Central American country elects president vowing shutdown of migrant routes to U.S.
      By Jason Hopkins Daily Caller News Foundation A tiny Central American country’s new president-elect is vowing to shut down a key corridor heavily used by migrants to enter the U.S. Panamanian voters on Sunday elected center-right candidate Jose Raul Mulino as their new leader. The president-elect has notably vowed to shut down the trails used by… […]
    • Secret Service investigates man for making jokes about Bidens
      The evidence is becoming more and more clear as court cases against President Donald Trump progress: Democrats appear to have weaponized the judicial process to support their claims that Trump was guilty of "fraud" in a case where no one lost money, is guilty of a felony over misdemeanor business document violations, interfered with an… […]
    • Voters have 'historically low' confidence in Biden's work on economy
      Creating the blunt campaign reminder, "It's the economy, stupid," is credited to James Carville, at the time advising Bill Clinton in his 1992 presidential bid. He reportedly wanted to remind campaign workers, and the candidate, to focus on the nation's financial health, what he thought was a winning topic. That same reminder might have been… […]
    • Pro-lifers sue government for refusing to release abortion records
      With the fall of the faulty Roe v. Wade abortion "right," there are states where the number of abortions has fallen dramatically. So in one, Indiana, authorities decided they no longer would allow those public health records to be accessible. And they are getting sued for their plan. "This isn't about protecting women," Melanie Lyon,… […]
    • WATCH: Gunman aims to shoot pastor, but then something miraculous happens
      Was it a miracle from God? Stunning video out of North Braddock, Pennsylvania, on Sunday shows the moment a gunman aimed his weapon at a Christian pastor, but was unable to fire. The trigger was pulled, but the handgun jammed and no shot was fired. Stunning video from church service today. This happened in Braddock,… […]
    • If my 103-year-old mom were president, Part 2
      Mark Twain once wrote, "It is at our mother's knee that we acquire our noblest and truest and highest ideals." That's certainly true of my mother, and I hope yours, too. Former President Trump's campaign slogan is again: "Make America Great Again." I was thinking about this slogan over the weekend when my mother turned… […]
  • Enter My WorldView