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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!isc-br!bunker!hcap!hnews!105!126!Mike.Freeman
- From: Mike.Freeman@f126.n105.z1.fidonet.org (Mike Freeman)
- Newsgroups: misc.handicap
- Subject: Re: "blind loyalty"
- Message-ID: <23854@handicap.news>
- Date: 12 Aug 92 21:20:41 GMT
- Sender: wtm@bunker.shel.isc-br.com
- Reply-To: Mike.Freeman@f126.n105.z1.fidonet.org
- Organization: FidoNet node 1:105/126 - Lawson & Reay, Vancouver WA
- Lines: 58
- Approved: wtm@hnews.fidonet.org
- X-Fidonet: Blink Talk Conference
-
- Index Number: 23854
-
- [This is from the Blink Talk Conference]
-
- Hi, Jamal!
-
- You take me to task for my use of Ms. Cunningham's description of NAC as
- an example of the inaccuracies that, IMHO, typify her article in July's
- Baltimore Magazine entitled "Blind Loyalty". In doing so, you
- essentially employee the loyer's device of the "alternative defenses".
- That is, you case that, on the one hand, by common standards, Ms.
- Cunningham's description of NAC as an "independent" organization would
- be considered accurate but if, on the other hand, NAC was (or is) not
- truly independent -- and you admit that there were/are good reasons for
- questioning that supposed independence -- that NAC was not essential to
- Ms. Cunningham's story and, hence, that such an inaccuracy does not
- matter. You challenge me to come up with more persuasive examples to
- support my claims that the article exhibits bias and that the statements
- of interviewees were not thoroughly investigated.
-
- To my mind, Jamal, the foregoing doesn't wash. To my mind, a reporter
- should, strive to be absolutely accurate. Ms. Cunningham had two months
- to do this story; that should have been ample time to research all
- aspects of the story, including NFB's tangle with NAC, what NAC thought
- of NFB, why NFB tangled with NAC and the origins of NAC and where NAC
- got its funds. The fact that she mentions NAC at all indicates that she
- had some knowledge that NFB considered NAC's existence an issue. Why
- not research just a bit farther and scope out NAC? After all, she might
- have come up with some anti-NFB dirt. In the process, she would have
- discovered NAC's funding sources and this would have given her at least
- some caution in making a statement such as she made.
-
- In a sense, however, you are absolutely correct; NAC is only at the
- periphery of Ms. Cunningham's story. However, IMHO, can be considered a
- touchstone by which we can evaluate the rest of her work, at least in
- this article. True, I could have cited many other instances (and have,
- I believe, in subsequent posts). However, some on this echo have hinted
- broadly that I have waxed over-prolific in my writings so I was
- endeavoring not to write a great ptome. So I confined myself to citing
- a few instances of what I consider to be misleading writing, maintaining
- that they were and are illustrative of the problems exhibited by this
- article. C'est la vie.
-
- As for subjectivity, I do not doubt that there is a place for personal
- opinion and subjective analysis in journalism. I maintain, however,
- that it should be clearly labeled such and should be set apart from
- factual reporting. To be sure, Ms. Cunningham's piece was, to a
- certain, extent, supposed to be impressionistic. Even so, however, I
- maintain that this does not give her license to tell only part of the
- story or to phrase things in such a way that subjective judgments
- masquerade as objective reporting.
-
- Mike Freeman
- ___ CRR QWK 1.40
-
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