Replies to Msg. #993005
.
 Msg. #  Subject Posted by    Board    Date   
30958 Re: Don't Dismiss President Trump's Attacks on the Media as Mere Stupidity
   [img]https://cmgajcluckovich.files.wordpress.com/2017/02/lk022117_colo...
oldCADuser   FFFT3   22 Feb 2017
9:18 PM
30931 Re: Don't Dismiss President Trump's Attacks on the Media as Mere Stupidity
   good morning clo! Just reading the morons tweet explaining that t...
keystone   FFFT3   20 Feb 2017
9:22 PM

The above list shows replies to the following message:

Don't Dismiss President Trump's Attacks on the Media as Mere Stupidity

By: clo in FFFT3
Mon, 20 Feb 17 6:24 PM
Msg. 30930 of 65535
Jump to msg. #  

Don't Dismiss President Trump's Attacks on the Media as Mere Stupidity
Bret Stephens
Feb 18, 2017

Bret Stephens writes the foreign-affairs column of the Wall Street Journal, for which he won the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for commentary.

Bret Stephens delivered the Daniel Pearl Memorial Lecture this week at the University of California, Los Angeles. Read the full text of his remarks below:

I’m profoundly honored to have this opportunity to celebrate the legacy of Danny Pearl, my colleague at The Wall Street Journal.

My topic this evening is intellectual integrity in the age of Donald Trump. I suspect this is a theme that would have resonated with Danny.

When you work at The Wall Street Journal, the coins of the realm are truth and trust — the latter flowing exclusively from the former. When you read a story in the Journal, you do so with the assurance that immense reportorial and editorial effort has been expended to ensure that what you read is factual.

Not probably factual. Not partially factual. Not alternatively factual. I mean fundamentally, comprehensively and exclusively factual. And therefore trustworthy.

This is how we operate. This is how Danny operated. This is how he died, losing his life in an effort to nail down a story.

In the 15 years since Danny’s death, the list of murdered journalists has grown long.

Paul Klebnikov and Anna Politkovskaya in Russia.
Zahra Kazemi and Sattar Behesti in Iran.
Jim Foley and Steve Sotloff in Syria.

Five journalists in Turkey. Twenty-six in Mexico. More than 100 in Iraq.

When we honor Danny, we honor them, too.
We do more than that.

We honor the central idea of journalism — the conviction, as my old boss Peter Kann once said, “that facts are facts; that they are ascertainable through honest, open-minded and diligent reporting; that truth is attainable by laying fact upon fact, much like the construction of a cathedral; and that truth is not merely in the eye of the beholder.”

And we honor the responsibility to separate truth from falsehood, which is never more important than when powerful people insist that falsehoods are truths, or that there is no such thing as truth to begin with.
So that’s the business we’re in: the business of journalism. Or, as the 45th president of the United States likes to call us, the “disgusting and corrupt media.”

Some of you may have noticed that we’re living through a period in which the executive branch of government is engaged in a systematic effort to create a climate of opinion against the news business.

The President routinely describes reporting he dislikes as FAKE NEWS. The Administration calls the press “the opposition party,” ridicules news organizations it doesn’t like as business failures, and calls for journalists to be fired. Mr. Trump has called for rewriting libel laws in order to more easily sue the press.

more:
http://time.com/4675860/donald-trump-fake-news-attacks/




Avatar

DO SOMETHING!