Author Topic: What is the roll of the media?  (Read 5784 times)

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Mr_Perceptive

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Re: What is the roll of the media?
« Reply #30 on: September 13, 2007, 03:20:59 PM »
Well, I WAS wondering where the Euro-centrism came from. Question answered. Thank you.

_JS

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Re: What is the roll of the media?
« Reply #31 on: September 13, 2007, 03:27:18 PM »
Well, I WAS wondering where the Euro-centrism came from. Question answered. Thank you.

That and being German.

Hey Professor.
I smell something burning, hope it's just my brains.
They're only dropping peppermints and daisy-chains
   So stuff my nose with garlic
   Coat my eyes with butter
   Fill my ears with silver
   Stick my legs in plaster
   Tell me lies about Vietnam.

Mr_Perceptive

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Re: What is the roll of the media?
« Reply #32 on: September 13, 2007, 03:30:37 PM »
Naw, I figured it out. But, come ot think of it. He did tell me a bit about some of ya'll.

Well, back to work. Some Major Evenets chronciling through.

_JS

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Re: What is the roll of the media?
« Reply #33 on: September 13, 2007, 03:41:19 PM »
He did, huh?

And we spell it "y'all", in the South.
I smell something burning, hope it's just my brains.
They're only dropping peppermints and daisy-chains
   So stuff my nose with garlic
   Coat my eyes with butter
   Fill my ears with silver
   Stick my legs in plaster
   Tell me lies about Vietnam.

sirs

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Re: What is the roll of the media?
« Reply #34 on: September 13, 2007, 04:45:29 PM »
Why not advocate what? Sorry, I got a bit confused.

Putting yourself in another person's shoes.  Trying to look at an issue, from their perspective.


Sirs, if you want to know the honest truth, I think journalist do a decent job at what they do, but I think journalism is in a deplorable state

I'm pretty close to having the same assessment.  I think some do, I think most do not.  When I pick up a paper and read a headline from any of the mainstream media outlets, those stories are saturated with a left leaning ideological bias.  Even positive reports regarding the war, our economy, or our military leaders like Patreus, have a negative plug to them.  Corrections to headline stories of how bad this Republican was, or how terrible that RW political scandal was, that were found to be flawed, are ususally found on page 27, in the lower left hand corner.   Occasionally I come across some responsible journalism (read NO, not simply articles from the Washington Times or WS Journal, or some RW op-ed from National review), I mean stories and reports from some of the mainstream outlets that actually makes an effort to fully report a story, fully report each angle.  Doesn't happen often, but it is a breath of fresh air, and gives me hope that it can spread.  Until then, I'm going to keep criticising the insidious effort by MSM outlets, to undermine this President & conservatives, as well as areas of progress both made in the war and this economy, as well as highlight those who'd rationalize how perfectly justifiable it is for the media to keep doing just that.

« Last Edit: September 13, 2007, 07:44:07 PM by sirs »
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Michael Tee

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Re: What is the roll of the media?
« Reply #35 on: September 13, 2007, 07:27:41 PM »
<<If the media is the watchdog of overzealous Government, who is the watchdog for the media?>>

The other media.  Didn't you catch the thread where the NYT discounted its ad rates for MoveOn.org and the NY Post blew the whistle on them? 

Did you catch the Toledo Blade's expose of Tiger Force atrocities and crimes against humanity?  The other media missed or buried the story but the Blade found it; EXACTLY the kind of story that thugs like Hayden want permanently suppressed, hence their war on the press. Their plan is to create such a shit-storm of indignation against the "treasonous" press that self-censorship will ensure that stories like the following will never again see the light of day.

Vietnamese colonel to investigate Tiger Force

By MICHAEL D. SALLAH and MITCH WEISS
BLADE STAFF WRITERS

Thirty-six years after a U.S. Army platoon swept through the heart of Vietnam torturing and killing civilians, a Vietnamese military official is investigating the atrocities to determine how many people died in the rampage.

Provincial officials say they want to trace the movements of Tiger Force during the unit's seven-month campaign in the Central Highlands by interviewing villagers and searching local archives.

Col. Nguyen Thai is leading the investigation sparked by The Blade's series, "Buried Secrets, Brutal Truths," his spokesman in Vietnam said last night.

The newspaper's findings - reported by television and newspapers in Vietnam - may answer questions about the fate of hundreds of civilians in Quang Ngai and Quang Nam provinces who disappeared in 1967.

"He has a lot of questions about what happened to the people, and about Tiger Force," said spokesman Nguyen Minh Nguyet.

The Blade's eight-month investigation shows at least 81 civilians and prisoners were fatally shot or stabbed between May and November, 1967, according to classified U.S. Army records.

But based on more than 100 Blade interviews with former Tiger Force soldiers and civilians, the platoon is estimated to have killed hundreds of unarmed villagers in the longest series of atrocities by a U.S. fighting unit in the war.

Among the findings:

# Women and children were blown up in underground bunkers, and prisoners were tortured and executed, their ears and scalps severed for souvenirs.

# Commanders knew about the platoon's atrocities in 1967 and in some cases, encouraged the soldiers to continue the violence.

# Four years after the atrocities, the Army began investigating war-crime allegations against Tiger Force. Investigators found that a total of 18 soldiers committed crimes including murder and assault. But no one was ever charged.

The case reached the Pentagon and White House, but the investigation was closed in 1975, with the records buried in the military's archives for the last three decades, the newspaper found.

The 45-man platoon was created in 1965 as a special force to spy on the enemy in the jungles.

But when Tiger Force was sent to the Central Highlands, platoon members began to kill and mutilate unarmed civilians, records show.

Colonel Nguyen will travel to tiny hamlets scattered in the two Vietnamese provinces to talk to villagers and look into the war crimes from 36 years ago, said Ms. Nguyen.

Colonel Nguyen was appointed to carry out the investigation by officials in Quang Nam province as part of a local effort to help account for thousands of people missing since the war.

In a recent interview in Vietnam, the colonel explained an inquiry was critical to the Vietnamese people to find out what happened to their family members.

"These people have no where to look to find answers anymore. They've lived with this [uncertainty] for a long time," he said.

"We want to know more about this platoon, and what they did. Why did they operate this way. We have never heard of this before."

He said he would look into several cases mentioned in The Blade's series, published Oct. 19 through 22, including the death of 68-year-old Dao Hue, a carpenter who was shot in the head by a Tiger Force lieutenant in the Song Ve Valley. He said he would also investigate the disappearance of a 12-year-old boy taken away by the platoon after two companions were fatally shot.

But there are many others he wants to investigate. "I want to find out everything I can, and I will," he said. "I will do this every day if I have to. This is not something that we take lightly. This is not something we should forget."

http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/99999999/SRTIGERFORCE/110260159

crocat

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Re: What is the roll of the media?
« Reply #36 on: September 13, 2007, 10:13:34 PM »


Media / Political Bias

There is no such thing as an objective point of view.

No matter how much we may try to ignore it, human communication always takes place in a context, through a medium, and among individuals and groups who are situated historically, politically, economically, and socially. This state of affairs is neither bad nor good. It simply is. Bias is a small word that identifies the collective influences of the entire context of a message.

Politicians are certainly biased and overtly so. They belong to parties and espouse policies and ideologies. And while they may think their individual ideologies are simply common sense, they understand that they speak from political positions.

Journalists, too, speak from political positions but usually not overtly so. The journalistic ethics of objectivity and fairness are strong influences on the profession. But journalistic objectivity is not the pristine objectivity of philosophy. Instead, a journalist attempts to be objective by two methods: 1) fairness to those concerned with the news and 2) a professional process of information gathering that seeks fairness, completeness, and accuracy. As we all know, the ethical heights journalists set for themselves are not always reached. But, all in all, like politics, it is an honorable profession practiced, for the most part, by people trying to do the right thing.

The press is often thought of as a unified voice with a distinct bias (right or left depending on the critic). This simplistic thinking fits the needs of ideological struggle, but is hardly useful in coming to a better understanding of what is happening in the world. I believe journalism is an under-theorized practice. In other words, journalists often do what they do without reflecting upon the meaning of the premises and assumptions that support their practice. I say this as a former journalist. I think we may begin to reflect upon journalistic practice by noticing that the press applies a narrative structure to ambiguous events in order to create a coherent and causal sense of events.

For citizens and information consumers (which are one in the same today), it is important to develop the skill of detecting bias. Remember: Bias does not suggest that a message is false or unfair. You should apply other techniques in the Rhetorica Critical Meter to determine if a message is fallacious.

Critical questions for detecting bias

   1. What is the author's / speaker's socio-political position? With what social, political, or professional groups is the speaker identified?
   2. Does the speaker have anything to gain personally from delivering the message?
   3. Who is paying for the message? Where does the message appear? What is the bias of the medium? Who stands to gain?
   4. What sources does the speaker use, and how credible are they? Does the speaker cite statistics? If so, how were the data gathered, who gathered the data, and are the data being presented fully?
   5. How does the speaker present arguments? Is the message one-sided, or does it include alternative points of view? Does the speaker fairly present alternative arguments? Does the speaker ignore obviously conflicting arguments?
   6. If the message includes alternative points of view, how are those views characterized? Does the speaker use positive words and images to describe his/her point of view and negative words and images to describe other points of view? Does the speaker ascribe positive motivations to his/her point of view and negative motivations to alternative points of view?

Bias in the news media

Is the news media biased toward liberals? Yes. Is the news media biased toward conservatives? Yes. These questions and answers are uninteresting because it is possible to find evidence--anecdotal and otherwise--to "prove" media bias of one stripe or another. Far more interesting and instructive is studying the inherent, or structural, biases of journalism as a professional practice--especially as mediated through television. I use the word "bias" here to challenge its current use by partisan critics. A more accepted, and perhaps more accurate, term would be "frame." These are some of  the professional frames that structure what journalists can see and how they can present what they see.

   1. Commercial bias: The news media are money-making businesses. As such, they must deliver a good product to their customers to make a profit. The customers of the news media are advertisers. The most important product the news media delivers to its customers are readers or viewers. Good is defined in numbers and quality of readers or viewers. The news media are biased toward conflict (re: bad news and narrative biases below) because conflict draws readers and viewers. Harmony is boring.
   2. Temporal bias: The news media are biased toward the immediate. News is what's new and fresh. To be immediate and fresh, the news must be ever-changing even when there is little news to cover.
   3. Visual bias: Television (and, increasingly, newspapers) is biased toward  visual depictions of news. Television is nothing without pictures. Legitimate news that has no visual angle is likely to get little attention. Much of what is important in politics--policy--cannot be photographed.
   4. Bad news bias: Good news is boring (and probably does not photograph well, either). This bias makes the world look like a more dangerous place than it really is. Plus, this bias makes politicians look far more crooked than they really are.
   5. Narrative bias: The news media cover the news in terms of "stories" that must have a beginning, middle, and end--in other words, a plot with antagonists and protagonists. Much of what happens in our world, however, is ambiguous. The news media apply a narrative structure to ambiguous events suggesting that these events are easily understood and have clear cause-and-effect relationships. Good storytelling requires drama, and so this bias often leads journalists to add, or seek out, drama for the sake of drama. Controversy creates drama. Journalists often seek out the opinions of competing experts or officials in order to present conflict between two sides of an issue (sometimes referred to as the authority-disorder bias). Lastly, narrative bias leads many journalists to create, and then hang on to, master narratives--set story lines with set characters who act in set ways. Once a master narrative has been set, it is very difficult to get journalists to see that their narrative is simply one way, and not necessarily the correct or best way, of viewing people and events.
   6. Status Quo bias: The news media believe "the system works." During the "fiasco in Florida," recall that the news media were compelled to remind us that the Constitution was safe, the process was working, and all would be well. The mainstream news media never question the structure of the political system. The American way is the only way, politically and socially. In fact, the American way is news. The press spends vast amounts of time in unquestioning coverage of  the process of political campaigns (but less so on the process of governance). This bias ensures that alternate points of view about how government might run and what government might do are effectively ignored.
   7. Fairness bias: No, this is not an oxymoron. Ethical journalistic practice demands that reporters and editors be fair. In the news product this bias manifests as a contention between/among political actors (also re: narrative bias above). Whenever one faction or politician does something or says something newsworthy, the press is compelled by this bias to get a reaction from an opposing camp. This creates the illusion that the game of politics is always contentious and never cooperative. This bias can also create situations in which one faction appears to be attacked by the press. For example, politician A announces some positive accomplishment followed by the press seeking a negative comment from politician B. The point is not to disparage politician A but to be fair to politician B. When politician A is a conservative, this practice appears to be liberal bias.
   8. Expediency bias: Journalism is a competitive, deadline-driven profession. Reporters compete among themselves for prime space or air time. News organizations compete for market share and reader/viewer attention. And the 24-hour news cycle--driven by the immediacy of television and the internet--creates a situation in which the job of competing never comes to a rest. Add financial pressures to this mix--the general desire of media groups for profit margins that exceed what's "normal" in many other industries--and you create a bias toward information that can be obtained quickly, easily, and inexpensively. Need an expert/official quote (status quo bias) to balance (fairness bias) a story (narrative bias)? Who can you get on the phone fast? Who is always ready with a quote and always willing to speak (i.e. say what you need them to say to balance the story)? Who sent a press release recently? Much of deadline decision making comes down to gathering information that is readily available from sources that are well known.
   9. Glory bias: Journalists, especially television reporters, often assert themselves into the stories they cover. This happens most often in terms of proximity, i.e. to the locus of unfolding events or within the orbit of powerful political and civic actors. This bias helps journalists establish and maintain a cultural identity as knowledgeable insiders (although many journalists reject the notion that follows from this--that they are players in the game and not merely observers). The glory bias shows itself in particularly obnoxious ways in television journalism. News promos with stirring music and heroic pictures of individual reporters create the aura of omnipresence and omnipotence.  I ascribe the use of the satellite phone to this bias. Note how often it's used in situations in which a normal video feed should be no problem to establish, e.g. a report from Tokyo I saw recently on CNN. The jerky pictures and fuzzy sound of the satellite phone create a romantic image of foreign adventure.

Structural Bias as Theory

I have asserted that some critics of the press think of it as speaking with a unified voice with a distinct ideological bias. I have further asserted that this simplistic thinking fits the needs of ideological struggle, but is hardly useful in coming to a better understanding of what is happening in the world. For that better understanding we need a theory.

A theory offers us a model that tells us why things happen as they do. Further, a theory allows us to predict outcomes and behavior. Assertions of ideological bias do neither. While we can expect the press to demonstrate ideological biases in regard to certain issues or other localized phenomena, these and other behaviors are explained and predicted by the structural biases. Since the press sometimes demonstrates a conservative bias, asserting that the press is liberal neither predicts nor explains. Since the press sometimes demonstrates a liberal bias, asserting that the press is conservative neither predicts nor explains.

Test this for yourself. Choose a situation that is current--preferably breaking right now. For each of the structural biases listed above, write down what you would expect the press to do based on that bias. Then, complete the exercise with a concluding statement that takes into account as many of the structural biases as possible. Now, follow the situation for a few days and note how the press behaves. I think you will find that you have successfully predicted press behavior.

News media assumptions about language and discourse

Simply communicating by written or spoken words introduces bias to the message. If, as asserted earlier, there is no such thing as an objective point of view, then there cannot be objective or transparent language, i.e. a one-to-one correspondence between reality and words such that I may accurately represent reality so that you experience it as I do. Language mediates our lived experiences. And our evaluation of those experiences are reflected in our language use. Rhetoric scholar James A. Berlin once said that language is "never innocent." By this he meant that language cannot be neutral; it reflects and structures our ideologies and world views. To speak at all is to speak politically. The practice of journalism, however, accepts a very different view of language that creates serious consequences for the news consumer. Most journalists do their jobs with little or no thought given to language theory, i.e. how language works and how humans use language. Most journalists, consciously or not, accept a theory (metaphor) of language as a transparent conduit along which word-ideas are easily sent to a reader or viewer who then experiences reality as portrayed by the words.

From George Lakoff's Moral Politics (U of Chicago P), journalism falsely asserts that:

   1. Concepts are literal and nonpartisan: The standard six-question rubric of journalism (who, what, when, where, why, how) cannot capture the complexity of issues as seen through, and expressed by, the incompatible moral systems of liberals and conservatives.
   2. Language use is neutral: "Language is associated with a conceptual system. To use the language of a moral or political conceptual system is to use and to reinforce that conceptual system."
   3. News can be reported in neutral terms: Not if #2 is correct. To choose a discourse is to choose a position. To attempt neutrality confuses the political concepts. Is it an "inheritance tax" or a "death tax"? What could possibly be a neutral term? To use both in the name of balance is confusing because most news articles don't have the space, and most TV treatments don't have the time, to fully explain the terms and why liberals prefer one and conservatives prefer the other. There's no time or space to explain why this language difference matters (beyond political tactics) to the formation, implementation, and evaluation of policy.
   4. Mere use of language cannot put anyone at a disadvantage: Again, see #2.
   5. All readers and viewers share the same conceptual system: We share the same English language, i.e. its grammar. We often do not share dialects or the denotations and connotations of concepts, lived experience, and ideologies. The statement "I am a patriotic American" means something entirely different to liberals and conservatives. That difference is more than a matter of connotation. The differences in connotation spring from different moral constructs. What the conservative means by that statement appears immoral to the liberal and vice versa.

These false assumptions by journalists, rather than overt politicking, help create the political bias news consumers often detect in news reporting. A conservative will quite naturally assert a conservative world view by using concepts in ways comfortable to conservatives. The same goes for liberals. It is often pointed out that most news reporters are Democrats or vote for Democrats. Party affiliation, however, tells us nothing about political ideology and the moral concepts that undergird it. There are conservative Democrats and liberal Republicans. Be that as it may, the ethics of journalistic practice strongly urge reporters to adopt the assumptions about language listed above and the structural biases listed above. The ethics of journalistic practice encourage journalists to adopt a (nonexistent) neutral language to mitigate any effects of ideological bias. There simply is no concerted or sustained effort to slant the news for political purposes by mainstream news outlets.

Anti-bias crusading as an elitist practice

Accuracy in Media claims the the news media are biased toward liberal politics. Fairness & Accuracy in Media claims the the news media are biased toward conservative politics. Supporters of these views see one group as right and the other as wrong. But the reality is not that simple. Yes, AIM and FAIR each point out coverage that appears to bolster their various claims. At times, the media do seem to be biased one way or the other. What these groups don't say, however, is that their mistrust of the media is also a mistrust of the people. Those who complain most about media bias would see themselves as able to identify it and resist it. They get upset about it because they question whether the average American is able to do the same. If the average American can identify it and resist it, then there is little need to get upset about bias. The AIM and FAIR web sites are full of material to help hapless Americans avoid the cognitive ravages of the "evil" conservatives or the "slandering" liberals and their media lackeys. I believe the average American is quite capable of identifying problems with news coverage. In my opinion, crusading against political bias in the news media is an elitist practice.

http://rhetorica.net/bias.htm

This is not my article but one I found on the web... I liked the way it read... don't agree with the writers conclusion.  For my mind... I know that the hapless masses are void of cognitive skills when it comes to turning on their own mind and forming their own views.  (clearly I don't mean anyone in this forum because though I disagree wholeheartedly with many of you... you are at least making an effort to understand, react and correct.).  I watch every year as the democrats try to bring in the minorities and unskilled workers.  It is a party... but at the end of the day these people don't show up and the ones that do are doing what someone else told them to do... not what they have taken the time to know what they really think about the person or party platform.


Please.... call me an elitist....

Michael Tee

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Re: What is the roll of the media?
« Reply #37 on: September 13, 2007, 10:57:47 PM »
sirs:  <<Hayden just referenced such [reporters publishing half-stories] in his talk, not to mention the probable risk of sources, if not lives with even further "stories". >>

Here's what I assume you are referring to:

Hayden:  <<Some say there is no evidence that leaks of classified information have harmed national security. As CIA Director, I?m telling you there is, and they have. Let me give you just two examples:

<<In one case, leaks provided ammunition for a government to prosecute and imprison one of our sources, whose family was also endangered. The revelations had an immediate, chilling effect on our ability to collect against a top-priority target.>>

Fucking bullshit.  Obviously.  No back-up, no details, nothing.  Since the "source" is already presumably known and imprisoned, publication of his name and circumstances could add nothing further to his woes.  The fake "concern" for the poor schmuck's family is particularly nauseating - - it was, of course, the CIA that put this guy's family in the line of fire in the first place, as soon as they began subverting him and getting him to feed them information.  This is probably an outright lie, but even if not, what is the big deal if some guy who betrays his own country is getting the punishment that a traitor deserves?  We are supposed to blame journalists for this?  Whatever happened to theories of personal responsibility so beloved in crypto-fascist circles?  The guy is responsible for the consequences of his own action.  He chose treason, now he is being called to pay for it.  Don't blame the reporter.  The whole story is obviously a lie anyway, just dreamed up to demonize the press.
In another, a spate of media reports cost us several promising counterterrorism and counterproliferation assets. Sources not even involved in the exposed operation lost confidence that their relationship with us could be kept secret, and they stopped reporting.

<<I've told you how liaison relationships with our foreign partners are critical to the war effort. Several years before the 9/11 attacks, a press leak of liaison intelligence prompted one country's service to stop cooperating with us on counterterrorism for two years.>>

Another obvious lie.  Why?  Because once the story leaked, it was out there and couldn't be pulled back.  There was no way the damage could be repaired.  But whatever made it profitable for that country to share with the U.S. before the leak wouldn't have been affected by the leak in any way.  If a reason existed for sharing before the leak, the same reason existed after the leak.  The sharing would have gone on, just with a little more care to see that there were no further leaks.  Since the story already leaked, there would have been no secrets given away if that thug Hayden had mentioned the country he was referring to.  As if the total improbability of the story weren't enough to expose it as a fake, Hayden't refusal to specify a country is further confirmation of the phoniness of this claim as well.

<<More recently, more than one foreign service has told us that, because of public disclosures, they had to withhold intelligence that they otherwise would have shared with us. That gap in information puts Americans at risk. >>

More obvious bullshit, for reasons already given above.

<<Hayden again gives specific examples that led to connections not being able to be made, and a much greater risk in loss of life. >>

Apart from the bullshit which I just demolished, I don't recall seeing any other specific examples from Hayden, but if I missed any, I'm sure they'd be just as phony as the ones he already gave.

<<We're talking war here Tee.  To you and the media, any loss of American life is just "collateral damage", right?>>

Oh gosh no.  How could that be?  I thought "collateral damage" was just U.S. military slang for dead Iraqis.

sirs

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Re: What is the roll of the media?
« Reply #38 on: September 14, 2007, 03:33:27 AM »
Perfect, and dare I say typical Tee comeback.  Hayden is lying, because...........well, because Tee says so.  And that folks, is what supposedly debunks the notion that leaked stories put lives at risk.  Then there's the added implied "even if....", because it was the CIA that placed the families of sources at risk for........pretty much doing their job of trying to gather intel on our enemies.  Priceless
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Mr_Perceptive

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Re: What is the roll of the media?
« Reply #39 on: September 14, 2007, 09:58:48 AM »


Media / Political Bias

There is no such thing as an objective point of view.

No matter how much we may try to ignore it, human communication always takes place in a context, through a medium, and among individuals and groups who are situated historically, politically, economically, and socially. This state of affairs is neither bad nor good. It simply is. Bias is a small word that identifies the collective influences of the entire context of a message.

Politicians are certainly biased and overtly so. They belong to parties and espouse policies and ideologies. And while they may think their individual ideologies are simply common sense, they understand that they speak from political positions.

Journalists, too, speak from political positions but usually not overtly so. The journalistic ethics of objectivity and fairness are strong influences on the profession. But journalistic objectivity is not the pristine objectivity of philosophy. Instead, a journalist attempts to be objective by two methods: 1) fairness to those concerned with the news and 2) a professional process of information gathering that seeks fairness, completeness, and accuracy. As we all know, the ethical heights journalists set for themselves are not always reached. But, all in all, like politics, it is an honorable profession practiced, for the most part, by people trying to do the right thing.

The press is often thought of as a unified voice with a distinct bias (right or left depending on the critic). This simplistic thinking fits the needs of ideological struggle, but is hardly useful in coming to a better understanding of what is happening in the world. I believe journalism is an under-theorized practice. In other words, journalists often do what they do without reflecting upon the meaning of the premises and assumptions that support their practice. I say this as a former journalist. I think we may begin to reflect upon journalistic practice by noticing that the press applies a narrative structure to ambiguous events in order to create a coherent and causal sense of events.

For citizens and information consumers (which are one in the same today), it is important to develop the skill of detecting bias. Remember: Bias does not suggest that a message is false or unfair. You should apply other techniques in the Rhetorica Critical Meter to determine if a message is fallacious.

Critical questions for detecting bias

   1. What is the author's / speaker's socio-political position? With what social, political, or professional groups is the speaker identified?
   2. Does the speaker have anything to gain personally from delivering the message?
   3. Who is paying for the message? Where does the message appear? What is the bias of the medium? Who stands to gain?
   4. What sources does the speaker use, and how credible are they? Does the speaker cite statistics? If so, how were the data gathered, who gathered the data, and are the data being presented fully?
   5. How does the speaker present arguments? Is the message one-sided, or does it include alternative points of view? Does the speaker fairly present alternative arguments? Does the speaker ignore obviously conflicting arguments?
   6. If the message includes alternative points of view, how are those views characterized? Does the speaker use positive words and images to describe his/her point of view and negative words and images to describe other points of view? Does the speaker ascribe positive motivations to his/her point of view and negative motivations to alternative points of view?

Bias in the news media

Is the news media biased toward liberals? Yes. Is the news media biased toward conservatives? Yes. These questions and answers are uninteresting because it is possible to find evidence--anecdotal and otherwise--to "prove" media bias of one stripe or another. Far more interesting and instructive is studying the inherent, or structural, biases of journalism as a professional practice--especially as mediated through television. I use the word "bias" here to challenge its current use by partisan critics. A more accepted, and perhaps more accurate, term would be "frame." These are some of  the professional frames that structure what journalists can see and how they can present what they see.

   1. Commercial bias: The news media are money-making businesses. As such, they must deliver a good product to their customers to make a profit. The customers of the news media are advertisers. The most important product the news media delivers to its customers are readers or viewers. Good is defined in numbers and quality of readers or viewers. The news media are biased toward conflict (re: bad news and narrative biases below) because conflict draws readers and viewers. Harmony is boring.
   2. Temporal bias: The news media are biased toward the immediate. News is what's new and fresh. To be immediate and fresh, the news must be ever-changing even when there is little news to cover.
   3. Visual bias: Television (and, increasingly, newspapers) is biased toward  visual depictions of news. Television is nothing without pictures. Legitimate news that has no visual angle is likely to get little attention. Much of what is important in politics--policy--cannot be photographed.
   4. Bad news bias: Good news is boring (and probably does not photograph well, either). This bias makes the world look like a more dangerous place than it really is. Plus, this bias makes politicians look far more crooked than they really are.
   5. Narrative bias: The news media cover the news in terms of "stories" that must have a beginning, middle, and end--in other words, a plot with antagonists and protagonists. Much of what happens in our world, however, is ambiguous. The news media apply a narrative structure to ambiguous events suggesting that these events are easily understood and have clear cause-and-effect relationships. Good storytelling requires drama, and so this bias often leads journalists to add, or seek out, drama for the sake of drama. Controversy creates drama. Journalists often seek out the opinions of competing experts or officials in order to present conflict between two sides of an issue (sometimes referred to as the authority-disorder bias). Lastly, narrative bias leads many journalists to create, and then hang on to, master narratives--set story lines with set characters who act in set ways. Once a master narrative has been set, it is very difficult to get journalists to see that their narrative is simply one way, and not necessarily the correct or best way, of viewing people and events.
   6. Status Quo bias: The news media believe "the system works." During the "fiasco in Florida," recall that the news media were compelled to remind us that the Constitution was safe, the process was working, and all would be well. The mainstream news media never question the structure of the political system. The American way is the only way, politically and socially. In fact, the American way is news. The press spends vast amounts of time in unquestioning coverage of  the process of political campaigns (but less so on the process of governance). This bias ensures that alternate points of view about how government might run and what government might do are effectively ignored.
   7. Fairness bias: No, this is not an oxymoron. Ethical journalistic practice demands that reporters and editors be fair. In the news product this bias manifests as a contention between/among political actors (also re: narrative bias above). Whenever one faction or politician does something or says something newsworthy, the press is compelled by this bias to get a reaction from an opposing camp. This creates the illusion that the game of politics is always contentious and never cooperative. This bias can also create situations in which one faction appears to be attacked by the press. For example, politician A announces some positive accomplishment followed by the press seeking a negative comment from politician B. The point is not to disparage politician A but to be fair to politician B. When politician A is a conservative, this practice appears to be liberal bias.
   8. Expediency bias: Journalism is a competitive, deadline-driven profession. Reporters compete among themselves for prime space or air time. News organizations compete for market share and reader/viewer attention. And the 24-hour news cycle--driven by the immediacy of television and the internet--creates a situation in which the job of competing never comes to a rest. Add financial pressures to this mix--the general desire of media groups for profit margins that exceed what's "normal" in many other industries--and you create a bias toward information that can be obtained quickly, easily, and inexpensively. Need an expert/official quote (status quo bias) to balance (fairness bias) a story (narrative bias)? Who can you get on the phone fast? Who is always ready with a quote and always willing to speak (i.e. say what you need them to say to balance the story)? Who sent a press release recently? Much of deadline decision making comes down to gathering information that is readily available from sources that are well known.
   9. Glory bias: Journalists, especially television reporters, often assert themselves into the stories they cover. This happens most often in terms of proximity, i.e. to the locus of unfolding events or within the orbit of powerful political and civic actors. This bias helps journalists establish and maintain a cultural identity as knowledgeable insiders (although many journalists reject the notion that follows from this--that they are players in the game and not merely observers). The glory bias shows itself in particularly obnoxious ways in television journalism. News promos with stirring music and heroic pictures of individual reporters create the aura of omnipresence and omnipotence.  I ascribe the use of the satellite phone to this bias. Note how often it's used in situations in which a normal video feed should be no problem to establish, e.g. a report from Tokyo I saw recently on CNN. The jerky pictures and fuzzy sound of the satellite phone create a romantic image of foreign adventure.

Structural Bias as Theory

I have asserted that some critics of the press think of it as speaking with a unified voice with a distinct ideological bias. I have further asserted that this simplistic thinking fits the needs of ideological struggle, but is hardly useful in coming to a better understanding of what is happening in the world. For that better understanding we need a theory.

A theory offers us a model that tells us why things happen as they do. Further, a theory allows us to predict outcomes and behavior. Assertions of ideological bias do neither. While we can expect the press to demonstrate ideological biases in regard to certain issues or other localized phenomena, these and other behaviors are explained and predicted by the structural biases. Since the press sometimes demonstrates a conservative bias, asserting that the press is liberal neither predicts nor explains. Since the press sometimes demonstrates a liberal bias, asserting that the press is conservative neither predicts nor explains.

Test this for yourself. Choose a situation that is current--preferably breaking right now. For each of the structural biases listed above, write down what you would expect the press to do based on that bias. Then, complete the exercise with a concluding statement that takes into account as many of the structural biases as possible. Now, follow the situation for a few days and note how the press behaves. I think you will find that you have successfully predicted press behavior.

News media assumptions about language and discourse

Simply communicating by written or spoken words introduces bias to the message. If, as asserted earlier, there is no such thing as an objective point of view, then there cannot be objective or transparent language, i.e. a one-to-one correspondence between reality and words such that I may accurately represent reality so that you experience it as I do. Language mediates our lived experiences. And our evaluation of those experiences are reflected in our language use. Rhetoric scholar James A. Berlin once said that language is "never innocent." By this he meant that language cannot be neutral; it reflects and structures our ideologies and world views. To speak at all is to speak politically. The practice of journalism, however, accepts a very different view of language that creates serious consequences for the news consumer. Most journalists do their jobs with little or no thought given to language theory, i.e. how language works and how humans use language. Most journalists, consciously or not, accept a theory (metaphor) of language as a transparent conduit along which word-ideas are easily sent to a reader or viewer who then experiences reality as portrayed by the words.

From George Lakoff's Moral Politics (U of Chicago P), journalism falsely asserts that:

   1. Concepts are literal and nonpartisan: The standard six-question rubric of journalism (who, what, when, where, why, how) cannot capture the complexity of issues as seen through, and expressed by, the incompatible moral systems of liberals and conservatives.
   2. Language use is neutral: "Language is associated with a conceptual system. To use the language of a moral or political conceptual system is to use and to reinforce that conceptual system."
   3. News can be reported in neutral terms: Not if #2 is correct. To choose a discourse is to choose a position. To attempt neutrality confuses the political concepts. Is it an "inheritance tax" or a "death tax"? What could possibly be a neutral term? To use both in the name of balance is confusing because most news articles don't have the space, and most TV treatments don't have the time, to fully explain the terms and why liberals prefer one and conservatives prefer the other. There's no time or space to explain why this language difference matters (beyond political tactics) to the formation, implementation, and evaluation of policy.
   4. Mere use of language cannot put anyone at a disadvantage: Again, see #2.
   5. All readers and viewers share the same conceptual system: We share the same English language, i.e. its grammar. We often do not share dialects or the denotations and connotations of concepts, lived experience, and ideologies. The statement "I am a patriotic American" means something entirely different to liberals and conservatives. That difference is more than a matter of connotation. The differences in connotation spring from different moral constructs. What the conservative means by that statement appears immoral to the liberal and vice versa.

These false assumptions by journalists, rather than overt politicking, help create the political bias news consumers often detect in news reporting. A conservative will quite naturally assert a conservative world view by using concepts in ways comfortable to conservatives. The same goes for liberals. It is often pointed out that most news reporters are Democrats or vote for Democrats. Party affiliation, however, tells us nothing about political ideology and the moral concepts that undergird it. There are conservative Democrats and liberal Republicans. Be that as it may, the ethics of journalistic practice strongly urge reporters to adopt the assumptions about language listed above and the structural biases listed above. The ethics of journalistic practice encourage journalists to adopt a (nonexistent) neutral language to mitigate any effects of ideological bias. There simply is no concerted or sustained effort to slant the news for political purposes by mainstream news outlets.

Anti-bias crusading as an elitist practice

Accuracy in Media claims the the news media are biased toward liberal politics. Fairness & Accuracy in Media claims the the news media are biased toward conservative politics. Supporters of these views see one group as right and the other as wrong. But the reality is not that simple. Yes, AIM and FAIR each point out coverage that appears to bolster their various claims. At times, the media do seem to be biased one way or the other. What these groups don't say, however, is that their mistrust of the media is also a mistrust of the people. Those who complain most about media bias would see themselves as able to identify it and resist it. They get upset about it because they question whether the average American is able to do the same. If the average American can identify it and resist it, then there is little need to get upset about bias. The AIM and FAIR web sites are full of material to help hapless Americans avoid the cognitive ravages of the "evil" conservatives or the "slandering" liberals and their media lackeys. I believe the average American is quite capable of identifying problems with news coverage. In my opinion, crusading against political bias in the news media is an elitist practice.

http://rhetorica.net/bias.htm

This is not my article but one I found on the web... I liked the way it read... don't agree with the writers conclusion.  For my mind... I know that the hapless masses are void of cognitive skills when it comes to turning on their own mind and forming their own views.  (clearly I don't mean anyone in this forum because though I disagree wholeheartedly with many of you... you are at least making an effort to understand, react and correct.).  I watch every year as the democrats try to bring in the minorities and unskilled workers.  It is a party... but at the end of the day these people don't show up and the ones that do are doing what someone else told them to do... not what they have taken the time to know what they really think about the person or party platform.


Please.... call me an elitist....

Damn, but you're on target! I raise a cold one to you!

crocat

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Re: What is the roll of the media?
« Reply #40 on: September 14, 2007, 10:04:39 PM »

Damn, but you're on target! I raise a cold one to you!

cheers, mate

Michael Tee

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Re: What is the roll of the media?
« Reply #41 on: September 14, 2007, 10:45:19 PM »
<<Perfect, and dare I say typical Tee comeback.  Hayden is lying, because...........well, because Tee says so. >>

Uh, no, not even close.  As I made crystal-clear in my post, Hayden is lying because his stories make no sense and because he provides no details in circumstance where even his traitorous "sources" are beyond being hurt by release of further details.

But nice try, sirs.  Up to your usual standards.  Where unanswerable reasons are provided, don't attempt to deny them, just pretend that they were never given.  Then conclude with the single word, "priceless, " as if that settled everything.   

 LMFAO.  Priceless.

sirs

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Re: What is the roll of the media?
« Reply #42 on: September 15, 2007, 03:44:05 AM »
<<Perfect, and dare I say typical Tee comeback.  Hayden is lying, because...........well, because Tee says so. >>

Uh, no, not even close.  As I made crystal-clear in my post, Hayden is lying because his stories make no sense and because he provides no details in circumstance where even his traitorous "sources" are beyond being hurt by release of further details.

They actually make perfect sense to those with an IQ above room temperature, which is why it again boils down to "Hayden's lying, because Tee says so"

"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Michael Tee

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Re: What is the roll of the media?
« Reply #43 on: September 15, 2007, 12:12:09 PM »
<<They [Hayden's bullshit stories] actually make perfect sense to those with an IQ above room temperature, which is why it again boils down to "Hayden's lying, because Tee says so">>

Another example of sirs' (and by extension the whole species of right-wing fruit-bats to which he belongs) debating skills.  Where logical reasons are given to demonstrate exactly WHY the thug Hayden's bullshit stories make no sense at all, DO NOT EVEN ATTEMPT to argue with those reasons (we all know why) but instead, flatly contradict them ("They make perfect sense") and impugn the intelligence of those who follow them by (not very originally) contrasting them with "those with an IQ above room temperature."

Priceless.