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Pardon me for jumping into the middle here, but I have to respond to this.
Gould 0738 wrote: News should be objective. That's impossible. News is *always* biased, and the whole notion of objectivity in journalism is the biggest single factor in the political dumbing-down of Americans that has occurred over the last few decades. It's a recent invention, too, created in the 20th century by well-meaning people who didn't understand that it couldn't ever work. It would be a good idea if it could work, but it can't. Why not? Because news is collected and reported by people, and people have biases. No matter how hard you try for complete objectivity, it can never be achieved, because everything you see, hear and read is filtered through your own worldview. "But if they just report plain facts, with no interpretation, that's objective by definition!" you may respond. But that's not true either, at least not in a world as large and complex as the one we inhabit, for the simple reason that it's not possible to report *all* of the facts. The journalist must filter the raw facts and decide what is worth reporting and what isn't. This filtering introduces obvious bias. Even less obvious but perhaps more pernicious is the problem of fact-checking. While journalists should check all of the facts they report, there are many, many levels of checking, ranging from simple verification of the source to full-on investigation. In an ideal world, every fact reported would be fully investigated and verified through multiple channels, but that's simply not possible, so journalists have to make judgements about what level of checking is required. Naturally, "facts" that appear to violently contradict the reporter's own worldview will get checked more thoroughly than those that seem patently obvious, meaning that errors that the reporter agrees with are more likely to be published than errors the reporter does not agree with. Finally, even if individual reporters and editors were able to be purely objective and avoid biasing their reports in any way, a few individuals with an agenda can intentionally introduce their own biases. What makes all of this really nasty is when the consumers of this biased news are convinced that they are getting straight, objective news, so they don't bother to look for and take into account the biases. Personally, I think we as consumers of the news were much better off 100 years ago when the newspapers wore their biases on their sleeves, so to speak. Then, at least, people knew what they were getting, and they could use multiple, opposing sources to get a more accurate view of the world. Shawn. |
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