What Should Outrage You - Reporter Fired for Personal Blog Post Re: Covering Trump's Lies

Marketplace is a radio program produced by American Public Media, and it's heard on many public radio stations. A transgender reporter, Lewis Wallace was recently fired from his position at Marketplace for posting the following on his personal blog:

Like a lot of people, I’ve been losing sleep over the news of the last week. As a working journalist, I’ve been deeply questioning not just what our role is in this moment, but how we must change what we are doing to adapt to a government that believes in “alternative facts” and thrives on lies, including the lie of white racial superiority [...]

One of the diciest issues as we reconsider our role as journalists in this moment is that of “objectivity.” Some argue that if we abandon our stance of journalistic neutrality, we let the “post-fact” camp win. I argue that our minds — and our listeners’ and readers minds — are stronger than that, strong enough to hold that we can both come from a particular perspective, and still tell the truth. And I have the sense that this distinction is important in this moment, because we are going to have to fight for and defend what it means to serve the public as journalists.

1.

Neutrality isn’t real: Neutrality is impossible for me, and you should admit that it is for you, too.... [C]an people of color be expected to give credence to “both sides” of a dispute with a white supremacist, a person who holds unscientific and morally reprehensible views on the very nature of being human? Should any of us do that? Final note here, the “center” that is viewed as neutral can and does shift; studying the history of journalism is a great help in understanding how centrism is more a marketing tactic to reach broad audiences than actual neutrality. Many of the journalists who’ve told the truth in key historical moments have been outliers and members of an opposition, here and in other countries. And right now, as norms of government shift toward a “post-fact” framework, I’d argue that any journalist invested in factual reporting can no longer remain neutral.

[...]

3.

We can (and should) still tell the truth and check our facts: The job of storytelling, of truth-telling, is not going away. But it is getting harder and more complex, in the face of unknowable datasets, lying federal leaders, Facebook algorithm dominance and a changing but also opaque market for online news that tends to bring the foamiest of fluff to the top and confuses even the most savvy consumers. All of that said, the people consuming news are savvy. They know that news is curated and complex; that the editorial choice of what to report and how to report it is always a subjective one; that facts are real, but so are priorities and perspective. I think we are past the point where they expect us to speak to a fictitious and ever-shifting center in order to appear “neutral.” In other words, we can check our facts, tell the truth, and hold the line without pretending that there is no ethical basis to the work that we do.

4.

... To call a politician on a lie is our job; to bring stories of the oppressed to life is our job; to represent a cross-section of our communities is our job; to tell the truth in the face of “alternative facts” and routine obscuring is our job; and we can do all that without promoting the male-centric and whitewashed falsehood of objectivity.

There's much more, and I urge you to read Wallace's full blog post, but his essential point is conveyed in the above excerpt. Telling the truth is what is crucial, not simply reporting both sides of the story when one side is obviously false or misleading, and the other side is based on known facts. Objectivity in journalism does not demand a "neutrality." Quite the contrary.

Marketplace immediately suspended Wallace for violating its "ethics code" (you can read it here). The specific violations that were mentioned to Wallace were that he violated Marketplace's goal of reporting the news with "objectivity and neutrality," though, as Wallace points out, neither of those words is included in the Marketplace's ethics code itself, His bosses were concerned about Wallace's position, as expressed on his personal blog, that reporters should not be afraid to be labeled "politically correct" or "liberal." They said this to Wallace even though they admitted no one in particular had called them to complain about his blog post or reporting. His suspension from work was (allegedly) purely about Wallace's violation of their ethics code.

His superiors demanded the blog post be taken down and Wallace complied. However, after doing so Wallace was not reinstated, nor did management respond to his pleas for an explanation as to why the suspension continued. Wallace put the post back up on Saturday, after writing management a letter describing why he did not feel he had violated their "ethics code" (scroll down to end of the Medium article to read that letter under the heading "My last communication with Marketplace before I was fired").

On Monday, Marketplace's VP fired Wallace effective immediately, claiming that he wanted to be an activist and do advocacy journalism rather than perform his duty as an objective reporter for their organization. However, it seems apparent to me that management at Marketplace, whether at the behest of one of its sponsors, or out of an an overabundance of fear that a mere post to a personal blog Marketplace had encouraged Wallace to create to build his "personal brand," would create difficulties for them either with covering the Trump administration or with their donor base, or both.

Regardless, this firing will have a chilling effect on how reporters in other media outlets, whether privately owned or not-for-profit entities such as APR, cover the "news" and what they say to one another or others when they aren't "on the job." Most states do not have any laws that protect journalists from such punitive measures when they express their own opinions outside the workplace (New York is on of the few exceptions, along with California, Colorado, North Dakota - of all places - and the District of Columbia).

Lewis Wallace wanted to start a dialogue with other reporters about how to cover the news in a era when our politicians and prominent news figures uniformly lie, and their lies are ever more patently false, whether they come from persons on the "right" or the "left." What he received instead was the loss of his job, one he had performed admirably for many years at Marketplace out of it's New York office. I hope he gets legal counsel and sues Marketplace and APM for wrongful termination under New York law (or California law, since APM is based out of California), and I also hope a more courageous media outlet hires him as soon as possible so he can continue his career.

Unfortunately, however, most reporters and journalists live or work in jurisdictions that do not protect journalists for expressions of their beliefs or opinions made outside the confines of their workplaces. Once again, as we saw during the Bush years, media companies, appear to be kowtowing to what is deemed acceptable by "The Powers that Be" in government and out. If a journalist is unable to express his or her opinion outside the workplace, how much more likely is it that the news we receive is, as Wallace pointed out in his original blog post, subject to distortion by the people "who [are] making editorial decisions" on what does and what does not get covered?

Thus, we can rest assured among the consolidated, highly concentrated corporate media outlets that "bias" will only be permitted and "facts" will only be reported if they are acceptable to upper management and/or their advertisers. This, of course is not new, but the firing of a reporter at a non-profit public radio outlet over a blog post that frankly only a few hundred or possible thousand people may have read is bordering on absurdist farce if it wasn't so serious. For who among us does not want reporting that avoids the false "objectivity" of reporting both sides of the controversy, when it is well know there is no controversy and that one side has all the facts and the other has all the bullshit?

Lewis Wallace's great sin was stating what everyone already knows - that our major media outlets lie to us, or mislead us, every day, through what they fail to cover or through their own "fake neutrality" in deciding how to cover events. His firing reminds us that we are ever more the victims of propaganda that to paraphrase one of our former Presidents, is continually being catapulted at us, battering us with a barrage of half-truths and outright lies to keep us from seeing the underlying truth that they are nothing more than mouthpieces for those in power who are desperate to maintain the status quo no matter what the cost to the rest of us.

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earthling1's picture

between NPR and APR, other than both being fake news outlets?

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Neither Russia nor China is our enemy.
Neither Iran nor Venezuela are threatening America.
Cuba is a dead horse, stop beating it.

Steven D's picture

@earthling1 is a separate non-profit organization that produces and syndicates programming to public radio stations. It has no direct ties to NPR. Marketplace is a radio program dedicated to economic, business and financial news. APM also produces A Prairie Home Companion" among other shows etc.

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

@Steven D Prarie Home Companion is strike two against APR then in my opinion.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

Steven D's picture

@duckpin That would have made me spit my coffee out if I had been drinking at the time.

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

@Steven D but the 2 or 3 times I did listen to it years ago it just didn't appeal to me. I do recognize that there is much worse radio programming and I am glad you didn't mind my being a little punkie.
Cheers.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

Mark from Queens's picture

@duckpin after Garrison Keillor left. That show was always more like a time capsule to me, and although I didn't seek it out, if it came on I'd listen for a little while and imagine myself in a small Midwestern theater/state fair type atmosphere. Sort of appealed to me the way in my memory the Lawrence Welk show my grandfather would watch does now, though I hated it as a small boy.

But yeah, the past two times I've been in the car it came on just as they were about to introduce the musical guest, and it was Ben Folds one time and Jack White the next. That refreshed me. Then the skits, I noticed, were also not so corny and kitschy the way they had been known for. Seemed cooler, updated, more progressive in their satire.

As for NPR I still retain a certain amount of vitriol for their Neoliberal garbage reporting. Locally on WNYC Leonard Lopate is about all worth listening to, and Brook Gladstone's usually excellent "On The Media" show.

Locally I've given up on NPR completely and should have a long time ago. I'll listen to the aforementioned on podcasts or overnight repeats when I know they'll be on. WBAI is on the dial in the kitchen al the time (check out their programming). That's the kind of radical radio every town in this country so desperately needs.

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

@Mark from Queens Thanks for this.
When I lived in the southern mountains I could get 6 college radio stations and enjoyed the student programming. One by one they went to NPR and one by one they got worse, in my opinion. I could hear new indie music and jazz before and zilch after the changeover.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

@earthling1 for the entrenched power structure.

I also think the term "white supremacy" is racist. Who is white? A Greek? A German? A Jew? A Slav? A Swede?
Just because this colored person thinks he's being held back by people with transparent skin, or nearly transparent skin or olive skin, doesn't mean it's OK for him to persist in this slur.

I don't think he should be fired for saying in private that he doesn't like the way he thinks he has been treated, that's free speech: I'm just saying I think he's making a bigoted statement.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

Steven D's picture

@duckpin

Why is the use of the term "white supremacy" racist in your view?

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

@Steven D type into oppressors. I think it's better to say right-wingers or hate-mongers or anti-African American than to use the term "white."

I was reading, for the first time, last year that in colonial times people like Franklin and Jefferson, two giants of American history, didn't think Germans or Swedes were "white." The article seemed well researched and showed me the shifting nature of this term for certain humans over the centuries.

If you're being oppressed, and many are, be specific. More are being oppressed by the evolved system of global monopoly capital(since 1950 or so when it emerged) than by racism. We need to be rid of both and you get that, if you're lucky, through solidarity of the class that can only survive by selling one's labor.

"We're all colored; if we weren't, no one could see us."...Captain Beefheart.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

Mark from Queens's picture

@duckpin to his never-ending credit in the Primary (which, alongside his defense of Palestine, ranks to me as two of the bravest and most important proclamations during a presidential primary), at the heart of so much of American society, from law enforcement, the courts, the penal system, the school-to-prison pipeline, education system, etc should be of no doubt to any Progressive (or whatever we're calling ourselves today).

An overwhelming amount of empirical evidence says that, by far, black people are more incarcerated, spend longer terms in prison and are discriminately harassed by the police than white people are for identical offenses. It's not even close.

White supremacy is the disease that continues to infect all of these institutions, which keeps this horrific status quo alive in they country of accepted harsh and inhumane treatment of black people specifically, all for the appeasement of fearful white people who have been conditioned for decades by mainstream media propaganda of nightly, top-of-the-hour "Breaking News" reports of black men holding up delis, or shootings, or whatever else can be used to create a fearful populace that can further be divided and conquered so that the working class is kept from uniting under the auspice of the economic deprivation that is often at the heart of these transgressions, and instead vote their fears for more "law and order" (ala RW extremists, from after the Reconstruction straight up to Drumpf's white nationalist appeal) and resentment that others are getting handouts while they have to work their shitty jobs, rather than having them recognize that an egalitarian Socialist society that provides for all would help mitigate so many of the social and economic ills we're still faced with.

It's a vicious circle. It won't be broken until we face up to this head on and stand with the oppressed, by first admitting how heinous it is. Our silence or immobilization just abides it.

#BlackLivesMatter

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

Steven D's picture

@duckpin but there are people who specifically reference their belief sysytem as being in favor of the "white race" and that other races are inferior to "whites." Groups such as the Conservative Citizens Council and The American Fresdom Party, to name but two of many, expressly identify as White nationalists and believers in the ideology of white racial superiority.

So, while I take your point, I don't see it as a term that is extended to all "white" people. I do agree that the idea of a "white race" and a "black race" was created in the 18th and 19th Century by the political elites in America and also the colonial powers in Europe to justify their actions in conquering, enslaving, and abusing populations of other countries whose skin pigmentation was darker than their own.

Also, for the record, the reporter who posted to his blog (for which he was fired) is a transman, not a person of color.

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

@Steven D Thanks for your post. I think I understand your point and accept it.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

@duckpin @duckpin The internet isn't private. It's the equivalent of standing on a street corner shouting at strangers and if you identify yourself, it's not anonymous.

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I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

@The Voice In the Wilderness

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

SnappleBC's picture

@The Voice In the Wilderness In general few workers have any protections against arbitrary termination. So anything we post online can (and is) used during the hiring process as well as subsequently -- as this story demonstrates.

So on one hand this person was treated no worse than any other. I don't participate on facebook for just this reason and I seriously need to go do a thorough scrubbing of my facebook content. I think, as a society, we need to ask ourselves just how "private" the various bits of the internet is and what is the reasonable separation between someone's personal views and their work performance and impact on the company.

It's hard to really blame corporations though. In this era of oligarchy, consumer activism is a thing. I would prefer if my employees kept a low profile also... at least in their official persona.

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A lot of wanderers in the U.S. political desert recognize that all the duopoly has to offer is a choice of mirages. Come, let us trudge towards empty expanse of sand #1, littered with the bleached bones of Deaniacs and Hope and Changers.
-- lotlizard

PriceRip's picture

@SnappleBC
          Millennials are a lot less concerned because this mode of interaction is so very familiar to them. It is even "worse" with my grand daughter, she happily plays with her various toys while sending gibberish texts to her contacts. [Oops, better check the settings, again.]

          As for me, I have lived in a goldfish bowl all my life. My online information is easily accessible, and deep. Any competent motivated hacker already had access to my information, and anonymity is antithetical to my character.

          The kicker: On the internet nothing is hidden or even deletable.

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Alligator Ed's picture

@PriceRip

On the internet nothing is hidden or even deletable.

.

Like herpes, the internet is forever. I don't do social media, except c99. If anyone wants to know my thoughts, they'll have to search it themselves.

Once an author publishes a book, it is no long theirs.

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@SnappleBC

Personally, I can and do blame corporations for attempting to control the private lives of employees in their off time. What was the concept of democracy for, if not for such as this freedom for wage slaves?

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

Phoebe Loosinhouse's picture

battle not to be a pawn or part of disseminating "fake news" which I thought supposed to be the cause du jour.

I can't see anything that his bosses could have taken issue with with the possible exception of the title of the essay "Objectivity is Dead, and I'm okay with it." I think his editors took it to mean that he was issuing himself a permission to push a liberal agenda, whereas my understanding of the essay was simply to admit that reporters are human with individual political beliefs and persuasions that are the culmination of their personal experiences and history and his particular internal compass skewed liberal.

Personally, I think any reporter of any political persuasion ,whether left or right, should be lauded when they shine a spotlight on anything that is demonstrably false in what most of us would call a "reality based" environment. Publications themselves often have made clear how their politics inform their reporting and their editorial choices. I have taken to reading media that has been labelled both right and left in my own search for objective truth and what I find is that you'll your nuggets of knowledge in both and both suppress inconvenient facts that don't further their viewpoint.

Right now the publication I respect the most for its willingness to expose clay feet of any political persuasion is The Intercept.

I am sorry Wallace lost his job - it seems like a completely unnecessary over-reaction by his editors.

Excellent essay, Steven, thanks.

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" “Human kindness has never weakened the stamina or softened the fiber of a free people. A nation does not have to be cruel to be tough.” FDR "

Steven D's picture

@Phoebe Loosinhouse if only for Glenn Grenwald, though they do far more than what he produces. I'm sure they are one of the sites Facebook will be banning or has banned.

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

thanatokephaloides's picture

@Steven D

I'm sure they are one of the sites Facebook will be banning or has banned.

Just one more reason Facebook delendum est -- no censeo about it!

Diablo

* delendum est - must be destroyed; censeo - I opine

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

jwa13's picture

@thanatokephaloides Cato

(... and perhaps, et tu, Marcus Porcius Cato Uticensis also?)

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When Cicero had finished speaking, the people said “How well he spoke”.
When Demosthenes had finished speaking, the people said “Let us march”.

Bisbonian's picture

@Phoebe Loosinhouse

This essay looks an awful lot like he just wrote a great resume, for the news outlet that would value these qualities.

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"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

@Phoebe Loosinhouse @Phoebe Loosinhouse

Actually, it seemed to me that he was saying that it wasn't possible to inevitably frame - not 'left and right' - but right and wrong as being equally valid in news reporting, something with which I happen to whole-heartedly concur.

Edit: I thought I was replying to, I think, SnappleBC? Not sure how I managed this, lol.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

RU on FB? If you are, please take a look at our FB page and invite your friends to like and follow us. When the share button cooperates with me, I post c99 front-paged articles to c99's FB page. Come look. https://www.facebook.com/pg/caucus99percent/posts/?ref=page_internal

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

Steven D's picture

@dkmich Done

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

boriscleto's picture

@dkmich

I just followed the page on FB. But I've been sharing essays there for a while. Especially gjohnsit's.

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" In the beginning, the universe was created. This has made a lot of people very angry, and is generally considered to have been a bad move. -- Douglas Adams, The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy "

Neutrality is not impossible. He fails prey to lazy post-structuralist thought and frankly I think we fewer of these types in reportage rather than more. Neutrality should be a professional standard that one continually aspires to. No one being perfect, of course there are times when a bias may be detected. But that should be exposed, reflected upon, and avoided in the future.

I find this statement the most troubling from a professional journalist: Can people of color be expected to give credence to “both sides” of a dispute with a white supremacist, a person who holds unscientific and morally reprehensible views on the very nature of being human? Should any of us do that?

The response is, absolutely, yes. If a reporter cannot divorce personal feelings from the assignment, s/he should not take the assignment. This notion that we are all enslaved by our identity and incapable of escaping those chains is the kids of lazy SJW thinking that foments so much of the hostility in our society. (It is not, of course, the sole catalyst of our social hostility.) More germane to the discussion, it is why we have such terrible reporting in our media. Personal reactions to stories are now viewed as relevant and, hence- informative. They are not, unless you have demonstrated a degree of insight that elevates your opinions about the din. I would suggest K Hall Jamieson, for example, fits this bill on media and elections. Lewis, not so much.

Lewis also makes the mistake of equating this mythical "center" with neutrality. They have nothing to do with each other. Neutrality involves avoiding inflammatory language that exposes a bias in the reporting, divining the relevant facts based on the totality of events, not an angle the reporter wants to push. It is obvious to me that if a reporter sees his goal as exposing truth from his personal perspective, he has failed at his job. That is the role of an opinion-maker, not a reporter.

I find Lewis's notion of not being able to transcend one's identity a sad reflection of our dystopic society. If we accept this premise, there is no hope for a better future because none of us can transcend our solipsistic perspective. I vehemently disagree with that attitude.

I also don't think the piece is particularly well-written, especially for a professional journalist.

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Steven D's picture

@orestes @orestes @orestes Let's use another example. Should we report climate disruption and global warming "neutrally" by giving equal time to those who deny it is occurring and that human activity is the primary cause, even though they have no factual basis to support those assertions? The evidence is overwhelmingly on the side of the climate scientists who have studied the matter. Climate deniers use false assertions, ad hominem attacks on the integrity and reputations of the climate scientists and lie about what the research studies and the data shows. Why should journalists treat them and their "point of view" "neutrally" when we know they are liars, and often not even scientists in the field who for the most part are funded by Big Oil companies and conservative think tanks that are funded by fossil fuel interests?

Or should we give equal time to those who claim tax cuts for the rich trickle down to lift all boats after decades of evidence that shows this is not the case?

When you know which side has the stronger, more factual basis for their claims, what purpose does it serve to report "neutrally" and give all sides an equal hearing, especially when one of those the sides are spreading lies and myths, or dismissing evidence that disproves and contradicts their "views" out of hand? Isn't the primary purpose of reporting to get to the truth and expose those who have an agenda to mislead the public with propaganda, misrepresenting the facts, half-truths and omissions? Or am I missing something here?

That's how I read Lewis' primary argument. I think his title was unnecessarily inflammatory, because to me, being neutral and objective are not equivalent qualities. Indeed, I would say acting neutrally as a journalist is a failure to report objectively about the story you are covering.

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

@Steven D of the term neutral. Neutral does not mean that one does not use one's faculties or that one must treat different sides of an issue as equivalent.

I don't think your climate change scenario implicates the issues I was addressing. But, nevertheless, how it should be reported depends upon what is being reported. If one is reporting a new study, the only issues are reporting the study and reporting on its bona fides (acceptance within the scientific community, critiques). If one is reporting on whether climate change is real, then the opposing views should be reported. One can make the point that the deniers have little on their side by actually demonstrating that rather than declaiming it without evidence. For example, one reports, pro-CC scientists identify X, y, and Z. Deniers argue no relation with human activity. In support, they offer...(and here is where the distinction can be demonstrated). Let the reader/viewer then decide where they come down on it.

To be clear, I distinguish between reporting and opinion. (Sadly, there is a growing blurring of this distinction. It is almost completely lost in TV news reporting and print is catching up.) The kinds of issues you raise generally fall in the realm of opinion.

One other point that I didn't address initially is the notion that consumers of news are "savvy." I find that notion preposterous and it reads as if Lewis mentions it solely as a cheap rationalization for his desire to commit journalistic misconduct: it doesn't matter if I take an advocacy role without clearly denoting such, the consumer[sic] is savvy enough to catch what I am doing. I find this notion of savvy consumers of news to be patently ridiculous. Readers of the NYRB, The Economist- generally, yes, you can make that assumption. But readers and TV viewers generally? No way in hell.

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Alligator Ed's picture

@orestes This is a subject worthy of a long, reasoned debate, which cannot be confined to the comment thread of an essay. By this I do not mean that the discussion is worthless. On the contrary, this discussion brings us to the heart of Fake News, Alternate Facts, the meaning of Truth, the reliability of Perception.

In view of the limited space commentary is afforded (and correctly so), there are ambiguities in this debate of "neutral vs objective" which hides important truths and yields false impressions. Both Steven D and Orestes make excellent points, but both perforce are limited and incomplete.

A longer forum would be needed for a fuller denouement of this entire issue.

Expectations influence reaction. Steven D expected the censorship of a contrarian "blog" article--and he found it. Orestes expected more objectivity in the essay, and did not find it. They are actually looking at two different things while attempting to use the same terminology for both.

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Not Henry Kissinger's picture

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The current working assumption appears to be that our Shroedinger's Cat system is still alive. But what if we all suspect it's not, and the real problem is we just can't bring ourselves to open the box?

Steven D's picture

@Not Henry Kissinger @Not Henry Kissinger @Not Henry Kissinger In any case, under NY and Cali law he has a case for wrongful termination for being fired for expressing opinions that his employer found objectionable for vague and ambiguous reasons.

His reporting while working for Marketplace obviously couldn't have been simply the result of receiving a "cushy sinecure" since he won several national awards for his journalism, and his employers had never complained about his professionalism or objectivity in his reporting before. Indeed, much of his his reporting focused on the economic marginalization of various groups, which indeed is the case. If it wasn't the case more people would have turned out to vote for Clinton rather than stay home, and more would have voted against Trump in those few crucial states where he eked out an electoral college victory.

Was Wallace's rhetoric in his blog post over the top at times? Sure, that's what people do in blog posts. But his central thesis is one that we on the left have been clamoring for for some time - report the news truthfully rather than act as stenographers for the powerful in government or do lazy stories that encourage "false equivalencies" and promote a "controversy" regarding an issue when the facts are all, or mostly all, on one side. For me, this is the pertinent language from his post that I agree with:

We can (and should) still tell the truth and check our facts: The job of storytelling, of truth-telling, is not going away. But it is getting harder and more complex, in the face of unknowable datasets, lying federal leaders, Facebook algorithm dominance and a changing but also opaque market for online news that tends to bring the foamiest of fluff to the top and confuses even the most savvy consumers. All of that said, the people consuming news are savvy. They know that news is curated and complex; that the editorial choice of what to report and how to report it is always a subjective one; that facts are real, but so are priorities and perspective. I think we are past the point where they expect us to speak to a fictitious and ever-shifting center in order to appear “neutral.” In other words, we can check our facts, tell the truth, and hold the line without pretending that there is no ethical basis to the work that we do.

Journalists should fight back: As the status quo in this country shifts, we must decide whether we are going to shift with it. It seems clear that these shifts will not benefit those of us in the industry who care about truth-telling and about holding power accountable. Will we shift toward climate denial? Will we make space for demonization of Muslims and Mexicans and “Chicago”?

And this part of his post was the reason his superiors gave for suspending him (and eventually firing him):

We will be called politically correct, liberal and leftist. We shouldn’t care about that nor work to avoid it.

That was the specific part of his post that bothered them. They didn't want Marketplace reporters being given labels they viewed as having negative connotations, among the the label "leftist" one which I think most of us agree is one we identify with.

I think you are dismissing his claims too easily. Are Muslims being demonized by Trump? Yes. Are various marginalized groups being targeted? Just ask the folks protesting the DAPL what they think. Indigenous people and environmentalists and simply those who want to prevent the unnecessary expansion of more pipelines that puts their drinking water at risk are indeed being targeted. Are the people of Chicago being unfairly called out and the abuses of the police being overlooked, while the new administration seeks to elevate the status of the boys in blue? Yes. If we dismiss all this as mere identity politics, we exclude people just as those in the Clinton camp excluded poor working class and rural whites in the last election in their pursuit of moderate suburban Republican voters.

Sanders proposed an inclusive agenda, which at its core, stood for standing for all those who have been oppressed by our government, from minority communities to OWS to the working class, unionized or not. He emphasized protecting and expanding the rights of all Americans. He certainly didn't dismiss the concerns of Blacks, Latinos, LGBTQ communities, the disabled, veterans of our wars and all the other victims of inequality in our country. I believe you are looking at this through too narrow a lens. We need a coalition on the left to unite these groups with the common goal of being treated fairly and justly by our legal, political and economic systems so that gains can be achieved by all.

I agree that a reliance on the narrow set of social issues that the Neo-liberal wing of the Democrats have employed to curry favor and sow divisiveness is a losing strategy (as HRC found out when the groups she depended upon to vote for her based on strictly those narrow social issues failed to turn out in large enough numbers to secure an electoral victory). But I fail to see how ignoring the real issues that exist in this country among a variety of sub-groups, from inequities in incarceration rates, unemployment, housing, education, etc. should be subsumed under the single banner of classism. That's a fail from the get go in my humble opinion. I prefer the Sanders approach of inclusiveness and expanding opportunity and civil and economic rights for all people, whether he continues to lead it himself, or someone else picks up that standard.

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

Alligator Ed's picture

@Steven D But I do not feel they are responsive to the issue of neutrality versus objectivity. Thus, until the ambiguities inherent in this debate so far can be eliminated, we can agree the "journalism" in this country is in a sorry state. But remediation requires clearer definition of the problem(s) and expectations--these are not the same.

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sojourns's picture

I just sent them a nasty gram.

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"I can't understand why people are frightened of new ideas. I'm frightened of the old ones."
John Cage

Unabashed Liberal's picture

that facts be reported, backed up with the appropriate material. I'm more than happy to do my own research--preferring to draw my own conclusion(s).

BTW, I have no opinion on Wallace's situation with Marketplace, since I've got to leave, and haven't had a chance to read his account. So, this is just my general opinion on the topic. I wish him well, personally; and agree that his 'personal blog' should not be an [employer] issue.

I must say, from my own observation of the White House Daily Press Briefings--it's the norm, not the exception, for reporters to take the neoliberal position on topics, ranging from free trade to taxes/entitlements, etc.

Anyhoo, I believe that all 'professional' reporting should be based upon fact(s)--with backup. I'll go to the Op-Ed Section, if I want to read opinion. Thanks for this essay, Steven.

Mollie


"If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went."--Will Rogers

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Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.

Mark from Queens's picture

dark times. And we've been in similar spots before (every time I wonder why we just keep doing the same thing over and over I have to remind myself, "oh, that's right, the schools purposely don't teach our radical history in America").

Was just reading a compendium of issues of the Masses magazine, a Socialist political paper which ran from 1911-1917 when it was made casualty by the Espionage Act.

A piece called "Indicted for Criminal Libel," written in April of 1914, covered the topic of the Associated Press's monopoly (even then!), and how they suppress and misdirect news to favor certain economic factions. The indictment was based on cartoons implicating the Associated Press of impropriety, and was an eerie foreshadowing of the Red Scare to come.

The speakers at the Cooper Union meeting, and others besides, insist that there should be an investigation of The Associated Press. The indictment of Eastman and Young makes certain that an investigation will be had, a thorough, searching, and perfectly impartial investigation. The Socialists who perpetrated the libel will have every opportunity in the world to show that Mr. Noyes does in fact poison the news, mislead the public, and pervert its notions of current affairs. If The Associated Press has guilty secrets they will get full publicity. What more can be asked by the volunteer defenders of the press against an odious monopoly? The surface appearance of the transaction is that The Associated Press has courted an investigation of the most far-reaching kind.

Mr. Pinchot is a careless man. He made this statement:

“I have had a long acquaintance with The Associated Press. I am perfectly willing to stand behind the charge made by Eastman and Young that The Associated Press does color and distort the news, that it is not impartial, and that it is a monopolistic corporation, not only in constraint of news but in constraint of truth.”

The Masses2 Freedom Of the Press.jpg

Part of Pinochet's statement:

In the first indictment the figure depicted as poisoning the reservoir of public news and labelled “The Associated Press” is alleged to refer, as in fact it was meant to refer, to the Associated Press, a corporation. In a trial under such an indictment there would naturally be admitted the broadest evidence upon the questions whether the Associated Press colors news and exercises a monopolistic control over the distribution of information to the public. In a trial upon such an indictment a searching investigation into the policy and organization of the Associated Press, its attitude toward labor and capital, its control by bond ownership, etc., would be inevitable.

The Masses1 Poisoned At The Source.jpg

The last cartoon of the piece is called "April Fool." Can you imagine if the press actively sought to afflict the comfortable, and comfort the afflicted - with the hard truth about matters?

The Masses3 Guardian Angel April Fools.jpg

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

gulfgal98's picture

Is what I am getting from this is that NPR and many other so called news outlets require their journalists to report two sides to every story in equal weight, both the fake news propaganda and the facts? In effect, they are applying the Faux News standard of "Fair and Balanced."

The question I have is how is the public being served if those reporting said "news," be it propaganda or facts, are prohibited from making the difference clear to us?

StevenD, this is one of your best essays.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

... His suspension from work was (allegedly) purely about Wallace's violation of their ethics code.

Because he had ethics, he contravened their code against reporters having them?

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.