Bari Weiss is not a conservative; she’s very liberal in her politics, though just plain not #woke[1]From Wikipedia: Woke (/ˈwoʊk/) as a political term of African-American origin refers to a perceived awareness of issues concerning social justice and racial justice. It is derived from … Continue reading enough for the young wokes in The New York Times newsroom. Glenn Greenwald is not a conservative; he’s very much on the political left as far as an American would be defined, though he now lives in Brazil. And Andrew Sullivan is hardly a conservative, either.
But these three journalists have one thing in common: they stand for freedom of speech and accuracy in journalism!
When All The Media Narratives Collapse
In case after case, the US MSM just keeps getting it wrong.
by Andrew Sullivan | Friday, November 12, 2021
The news is a perilous business. It’s perilous because the first draft of history is almost always somewhat wrong, and needs a second draft, and a third, and so on, over time, until the historian can investigate with more perspective and calm. The job of journalists is to do as best they can, day by day, and respond swiftly when they screw up, correct the record, and move forward. I’ve learned this the hard way, not least in the combination of credulousness and trauma I harbored in the wake of 9/11.
But when the sources of news keep getting things wrong, and all the errors lie in the exact same direction, and they are reluctant to acknowledge error, we have a problem. If you look back at the last few years, the record of errors, small and large, about major stories, is hard to deny. It’s as if the more Donald Trump accused the MSM of being “fake news” the more assiduously they tried to prove him right.
And these mass deceptions have consequences. We are seeing this now in the Rittenhouse case — a gruesome story of a reckless teen with a rifle in the wake of the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha. The impression many got from much of the media was that a far-right vigilante, in the middle of race riots, had gone looking for trouble far from home and injured one man, and killed two, in a shooting spree.
Here’s the NYT on August 26, the morning after the killings: “The authorities were investigating whether the white teenager who was arrested … was part of a vigilante group. His social media accounts appeared to show an intense affinity for guns, law enforcement and President Trump.” Rittenhouse’s race is specified; the race of the men he killed and injured were not (they were also white).
Almost immediately, the complicated facts became unimportant. The far right viewed Rittenhouse as a hero — which he surely wasn’t. He had no business being there with an AR-15. The MSM and far left viewed him as a villain, appalled that he was being elevated, in Jamelle Bouie’s words, “as a symbol of self-defense.”[2]I have my own criticism of Mr Bouie’s work here. (Another NYT article, painting Rittenhouse as a MAGA fanatic, did note at the very bottom of the page: “Supporters of Mr. Rittenhouse said he was being attacked by the mob and acted in legitimate self-defense.” So they did have a caveat.)
But notice how the narrative — embedded in a deeper one that the Blake shooting was just as clear-cut as the Floyd murder, that thousands of black men were being gunned down by cops every year, and that “white supremacy” was rampant in every cranny of America — effectively excluded the possibility that Rittenhouse was a naive, dangerous fool in the midst of indefensible mayhem, who, in the end, shot assailants in self-defense. And so when, this week, one of Rittenhouse’s pursuers, Gaige Grosskreutz, admitted on the stand that Rittenhouse shot him only after Grosskreutz pointed his pistol directly at Rittenhouse’s head a few feet away, it came as a shock.
There’s much more at the original, and I absolutely encourage reading it. Mr Sullivan goes into many examples of recent journalistic ‘errors,’ and notes what we wicked reich wing conservatives have been saying for years now: the mistakes the credentialed media make all seem to be on one direction, the direction which feeds into the narrative of the American political left, of the American Democratic Party.
Was Kyle Rittenhouse “a naive, dangerous fool in the midst of indefensible mayhem, who, in the end, shot assailants in self-defense”? While I have never called him a “naïve, dangerous fool,” I have said, “Young Mr Rittenhouse helped to create the situation by traveling to Kenosha and appearing on the scene with a firearm. That does not mean it wasn’t self-defense; it seems pretty clear that it was. But he should never have gone there, certainly not armed.”
- We all get things wrong. What makes this more worrying is simply that all these false narratives just happen to favor the interests of the left and the Democratic party. And corrections, when they occur, take up a fraction of the space of the original falsehoods. These are not randos tweeting false rumors. They are the established press.
The trial of Mr Rittenhouse reminds me of that of George Zimmerman. Mr Zimmerman should never have followed Trayvon Martin, and certainly should have backed off when dispatchers told him to do so, but that did not give Mr Martin the right to assault him. Local law enforcement knew that Mr Zimmerman’s actions were legal self-defense, but political pressure pushed the state of Florida to appoint a special counsel and prosecute him anyway. It was really no surprise that Mr Zimmerman was acquitted, because the state had no case. The left waxed wroth, but they’d had their trial, and the jury exonerated Mr Zimmerman. Prosecutors in Kenosha surely knew, unless they are just boneheadedly stupid, that they didn’t have much of a case, but my guess — and it really is a guess — is that they were unwilling to take the political heat for dropping the charges against the defendant; they’re leaving it up to a (supposedly) anonymous jury.
But, as Mr Sullivan noted, the liberals in the credentialed media — even ones who masturbate during Zoom meetings — can’t escape their own narrative that he simply must be guilty!
This is why I have so often referred to ‘journolists’ as opposed to journalists. The spelling ‘journolist’ or ‘journolism’ comes from JournoList, an email list of 400 influential and politically liberal journalists, the exposure of which called into question their objectivity. I have noted, many times, how publisher Elizabeth Hughes has openly admitted that her goal is to filter reporting, filter (supposedly) straight news stories, in The Philadelphia Inquirer through a political sieve, rather than report the unvarnished facts.
Newspapers can, and should, have editorial and OpEd sections; with word count and column inch limits having been mostly replaced by nearly unlimited bandwidth, there should be more, not less, of such sections. The credentialed media ought to be perfectly free to engage in expressions of opinion. But for the credentialed media to regain lost credibility, they need to report the news as straight news, and not report opinion as fact.
That’s the difference between journalism and journolism.
References
↑1 | From Wikipedia:
I shall confess to sometimes “ironic usage” of the term. To put it bluntly, I think that the ‘woke’ are just boneheadedly stupid. |
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↑2 | I have my own criticism of Mr Bouie’s work here. |
Frankly Dana, I think you’re asking the impossible. Only machines can report only the unvarnished facts and even then it depends on who programmed them.
I have never read a news story where the view of the “reporter” hasn’t shown through. At least I can’t recall any.
Even in your example once you insert the word “shouldn’t” you insert opinion. Kye Rittenhouse “shouldn’t” have gone to Kenosha with a gun but the blacks in Kenosha “shouldn’t” have been insurrecting and setting fires. There are a lot more “shouldn’ts” I can insert like the cops shouldn’t, the mayor shouldn’t etc. Let’s not forget the could’s and would’s.
All of which are opinion. The problem is America has lost it’s belief in fairness. Especially from the left. The left only cares about winning fairness, morality or what’s right be dammed. We saw that in the stolen election and their refusal to even have a timely and bipartisan audit and we’ve seen it in the Ashly Babbitt murder because ALL homicides are investigated as a matter of law…except that one.
The media, like every other institution from education to the church touched by leftism has been corrupted. That’s why I no longer believe in democracy. The left now counts the votes so now the votes don’t count.
Rosenbaum, Grosskreutz, Huber and the other rioters didn’t just help to create the situation, they flat out created the situation where some people felt they had no choice but to stand the hell up and try to defend their community.
You may prefer for people to be good little sheep and just stand by and watch as the crazies go…well…crazy, but there are others who feel it is their duty to stand up when something is happening.
You’re attitude is why a dozen commuters in a subway car can stand by and watch while a woman is brutally raped. If one of them had attempted to intervene and had been injured or killed, would you say of them “they helped to create the situation”?
Kyle and the others that were there defending their community when the Police wouldn’t were absolutely heroes and the only people who created that situation were the rioters.
There are two falsehoods in your statement that cause you to reach an erroneous conclusion:
1. The dispatcher did not “tell Zimmerman to back off”. The dispatcher asked Zimmerman if he was following Martin. Zimmerman replied “yes”. The dispatcher then said “We don’t need you to do that.” That’s a suggestion, not an instruction.
2. When the dispatcher said “we don’t need you to do that” Zimmerman said “Ok” and immediately stopped following him. Zimmerman was on his way back to his parked truck when he was attacked by Martin.
Should he have followed Martin? Well, just prior to all this the dispatcher had asked Zimmerman to “let me know if he does anything”. Not an explicit instruction to follow Martin if he runs, but could be interpreted that way, especially in the heat of the moment and with no time for reflection. It is very plausible that Zimmerman started following Martin in an express intent to follow the instructions of the dispatcher.
This is especially borne out by the fact that when the dispatcher told Zimmerman he didn’t need to follow Martin, Zimmerman immediately stopped the pursuit, demonstrating his desire to follow the instructions of the dispatcher.
So, in your citing of the Zimmerman case, you draw the wrong conclusion due to getting two of the basic facts about the case wrong.
Neither Rittenhouse, nor Zimmerman did a thing wrong, nor did they exercise poor judgement in my opinion. They were both citizens concerned with the well-being of their communities and refused to stand by and do nothing, but took action.
I wish we had more people like that in this country.
Perhaps if more men stood up instead of standing by, our society wouldn’t be in the state it’s in today.
“All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.”
–Edmund Burke
By the way…Rittenhouse “traveled” all of 20 miles to get to Kenosha. He lives in Antioch, IL, right down the road. He worked in Kenosha. His father and several relatives lived in Kenosha. The friend who bought the AR 15 for him lived in Kenosha.
Saying he “traveled” there implies that he had no connection with Kenosha to cause him to feel it necessary to try to protect it. That’s a falsehood by implication.
Leftists aren’t the only ones who slant their pieces to fit their worldview.
Mr Rittenhouse worked in Kenosha, and apparently never possessed the AR-15 in Illinois, but he was not legally allowed to carry it in Wisconsin. He could, and should, be acquitted on all of the homicide charges, but it doesn’t take much imagination to see him convicted on the firearms charge.
If he is convicted on firearms charges (I don’t know their state law there so I can’t comment decisively) do you think he’ll get as much time in prison as the DC protestors have so far? That’s so far.
I couldn’t even guess. It is a felony in Wisconsin.