Constructive gadfly
Or Lack Thereof
Published on February 19, 2004 By stevendedalus In Philosophy

Columnists — bloggers excepted[?] — should exercise sound editorial judgment in composing their thoughts for the public. Far too often columnists express what is good for them is good for the rest by explaining only what is bad about the alternative without ever analyzing what is good about their own. It is dishonest to say that the New Deal was bad for the country because it interfered with private enterprise and intruded on the individual without citing what it was back then that caused private enterprise to let the country go down the tubes in '32, consequently giving birth to the New Deal's launching a more planned enterprise to give direction to the whole. If indeed the columnist perceives government interference as bad, he/she should readily support it with its deleterious effects, rather than simply stating that it is a violation of individual freedom to assess what is good for the self is therefore good for the nation. For if a kind of philosopher king unto oneself was thus assigned, there would be no need of social interaction; however, what is really meant is that, as with Plato, only a chosen few are so endowed and by definition decide what is good for the rest. This is no different from what big government does but with the a most significant exception: there are checks and balances in governance to insure that at least some good in the end prevails.


Of course, it is the reader and viewer's duty to do their own thinking when subject to glaring omissions designed to limit the right to know, but under the lights of slick machinations of presentation and glowing credentials of reputation, the reader and viewer easily succumb to deception behind the lines of print and lights of the camera that effect the action of sound and fury signifying political malaise. Freedom of the press is linked directly to the public's right to know in order to give substance to freedom of expression. But just as all freedom under the Constitution implies, in virtue of its very creation, with freedom and rights come responsibility. The right to know presses the responsibility to learn and hopefully in order that freedom of speech grows in intellect. Freedom of the press and, of course, now all news media, implies the ideal design of full and objective disclosure when it does not conflict with the right to privacy, nor harm the rights of others.


The founding fathers were oriented to conceive in the political context when framing these freedoms in order to preserve an open democracy. They did not have a crystal ball that showed the ensuing influx of the penny press and yellow journalism, much less the explosion of today's media. They would be appalled by the spread of information reduced to theater at the expense of public absorption of practical and political information and knowledge. The founding fathers had expressly included this amendment to prevent the government from violating political integrity; the thought would never have occurred to them that the very institution and individual the amendment was designed to protect would themselves be the source of duplicity!


The right to know and freedom of speech is very different from idle, often prurient, curiosity and what Plato coined "divine madness." There is a dual responsibility here: journalists are not to lose sight of their primary function to inform the public on the state of the union and states; and the public must meet them halfway by upgrading its perception of the spirit and intent of the First Amendment.


That one dismisses serious news and analysis as simply matters of taste or worse ideology is tantamount to saying that not voting is just as much a right as voting. The citizen who takes his right to information lightly by settling for lies, deceptions and half truths is lethal to the endurance of democracy and effects just such slothful thinking and faulty expression that is overrunning the nation: witness the pathetic ignorance and uncontrollable emotions of most of the calls on talk shows, many letters to editors and cable news e-mail — not to mention blogs. The press, too, has a responsibility to exercise editorial judgment that does not jeopardize objective disclosure; nor on its editorial pages should it reflect a single bias only. However, the traditional press, owing to the decline in responsible readership, is rapidly becoming academic in light of the popularity of television that has brought to dramatic fruition—as did and still do the yellow journalists—the mind-set of news as primarily that of entertainment and crude theater.


Copyright © 2004 Richard R. Kennedy All rights reserved. Revised: February 19, 2004.

Comments (Page 1)
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on Feb 19, 2004
I think the main, and really pressing problem, is that there is getting to be less and less of a division between Op/ed Columnists and News. If you watch Google's newsportal, there is op/ed stuff mixed right in as though it was fact. I have seen the same kind of bias even on reuters and 'wire' news services lately. On network and cable news you more often get an interpretation of the news instead of a fact-by-fact rundown.

I don't have a problem with opinion, but I really need a few minutes here and there of solid, robot-like exposition of the news. It is getting harder and harder to find.
on Feb 19, 2004
Good article as usual.
I think that quality information need money and the paper are not paid by the reader but by the advertissment. It can lead to an orientation of the editorial control. Money, money, money...
on Feb 19, 2004
Thank you for putting forth another great blog on relevant matters that is insightful and revelatory. As JEPEL says: "good article as usual."
From the blog: ["Columnists — bloggers excepted[?] — should exercise sound editorial judgment in composing their thoughts for the public. Far too often columnists express what is good for them is good for the rest by explaining only what is bad about the alternative without ever analyzing what is good about their own."]

"We are grateful to The Washington Post, The New York Times, Time Magazine and other great publications whose directors have attended our meetings and respected their promises of discretion for almost forty years. It would have been impossible for us to develop our plan for the world if we had been subject to the bright lights of publicity during those years. But, the work is now much more sophisticated and prepared to march towards a world government. The supranational sovereignty of an intellectual elite and world bankers is surely preferable to the national autodetermination practiced in past centuries."

David Rockefeller,
( founder of the Trilateral Commission),
in an address to a meeting of The Trilateral Commission,
in June, 1991.
Here is part of the problem with the 'controlled-media' to chew on. I will put up one by a journalist who won a Press Club award in 1950's and gave an indictment of all present as shills and lackeys for business and politicians when I can find it.

They are not just biased, or stupid, or out of touch. They are spineless cowards who see what is wrong and become part of it, letting their honest and well-researched work get censored and edited by owners and managers. They just put their head down and slink away, letting all know they have no courage or integrity. In the end of their careers, they are then accepted into new management levels for their spinelessness, and perpetuate the same censorship and 'control' over a new generation who enter the field to publish truth, and are likewise brought to abject m,isery in the profession they studied to work in.

In effect, and like the hippies, they become the very evil they once sought to destroy. As I say in my works, "History, and the turns it takes, is written as much -if not more - by cowardice as courage."
I'll reply further later, and once again, thanks for the blog. P.S.-(got e-mail to send for info file soon).
on Feb 19, 2004
stevendedalus- This an excellent article! One of the reasons I stay here is the bloggers who are putting out the stories we don't get to hear. I saw what the controlled media was like, in a small way, when I lived in a town where the high rate of Leukemia was being investigated. I had to depend on others outside of town to send me the real news that we were kept from hearing. It was amazing, frustrating and outrageous.
Thank you for putting this up.
on Feb 19, 2004
Harder to find indeed, as Jep suggests the corporate or advertising influence is not as subliminal--they're getting bolder, like going back to Hearst.

WiseFawn, you're a gem and always add insightful additions: the Leukemia, no doubt was to due to local environmental abuse, right?
on Feb 19, 2004
Anathema, as usual you come up with the greatest sources--you're unbelievable. I'm particularly concerned with the talking heads such as O'Reilly, Hannity and Matthews; it seems at times, well, nearly all the time, to vent their egos rather than responsible commentary. Matthews in particular waffles between his mentor Tip O'Neill and Limbaugh! These guys become gurus for the lazy viewer. The Washington Post, too, is forever popping waffles--ever since '88 when it refused to endorse either candidate with none of the above editorial.

PS I can't believe David Rockefeller!
on Feb 19, 2004
Oh, thank you. Absolutely! The town used to have a large Army Depot and the Army buried some barrels under ground. Later, a school was built on the spot. They've relocated the school and are still trying to clean it all up. The same town has a creosote problem in a river nearby. It was really incredible to see the way it was all handled by the local media and town.
on Feb 19, 2004
Again, WiseFawn--perfect blog name, by the way--a great comment.
on Feb 21, 2004
journalists are not to lose sight of their primary function to inform the public on the state of the union and states

I think I missed something here. Since when was journalism about informing the public? The purpose of the modern press is to make money primarily through advertising. In a perverse way, the news and commercials have swapped places. Information is I daresay, a necessary evil. Polarizing shows such as Hannity & Colmes are at best a way to build brand loyalty to FOX. Some ad exec is right now trying to figure out how he can sqeeze another dollar by using "product placement" on the 10 o'clock news. And now, the weather, brought to you by Hummer.

Worse is the ratcheting up of popculture and entertainment as "news" as we steadily march towards the concept of entertainews. Entertainment disguised as reality show disguised as current event disguised as legitimate news. Sigh.

So what can we do about it?
on Feb 21, 2004
I suppose, go back to the drawing board. I know the media are wild and have lost its point, like MSNBC getting rid of Donahue because he was too, too liberal in a time of war, but freedom of the press is supposed to mean to free up the minds of citizens, not muddy them. As a poet-philospher, you can't give up on philosophical first principles.
on Feb 21, 2004
I honestly think if someone did it really right, people would choose it. I know that even when I agree with most of these "commentators-in-sheep's-clothing", it feels like they are spitting news at me. The whole mood is kind of annoying. I don't like it, at least not as a primary source for news.

I liked it when a reporter would get emotional on camera and that in itself was a headline. Was it Walter Cronkite that got emotional at the news of the Kennedy assassination? That was moving. Bill O'Reilly preaching from the pulpit is annoying even when I agree wholeheartedly.
on Feb 21, 2004
PS. I had this conversation with the wife of an AP reporter just this week. She said - you need to talk to him about this
on Feb 21, 2004
Yes, BakerSt, it was Cronkite and indeed human and moving. Sean Hannity is one that really spits in the viewer's face.
on Feb 22, 2004
You guys hit the nail speaking of money in so-called journalism. It becomes learned quite quickly to speak the truth not too loud so that the bought and paid for editor doesn't just fire you. with some luck, the internet will change this with the evolution of blogs, et al, and as more of the real truth comes out people will naturally gravitate to it, those concerned about the truth anyway. Others will still get their fill of mis-information via the foxblog.

wisefawn, a site you may be interested in, commondreams.org, collects daily news that serve to bring light and accuracy to the otherwise spew coming out of fox and the likes of corporate media. Maybe we could start a new thread for sharing alternate news sources?

Certainly we are at a point in history where corporate media is complicit with government propaganda or conversely strangely quiet, depending on what sells best at the time. Politics, tv, news, music, sports, culture, et al, has just become one big giant corporate wal-martization of greed feeding on manufatured desires to siphon money from regular americans and hand it over to the Ken Lay , Cheney, Murdoch, and the likes around the world. A truly sad state of affairs.
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