Jorge Ramos Commits Journalism, Gets Immediately
Attacked by Journalists
By Glenn Greenwald
August 27, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "The
Intercept " -
The Republican presidential candidate
leading every poll, Donald Trump, recently
unveiled his plan to forcibly deport
all 11 million human beings residing in the U.S. without proper
documentation, roughly half of whom have children born in
the U.S. (and who are thus American citizens). As George Will
noted last week, “Trump’s roundup would be about 94 times larger
than the wartime
internment of 117,000 persons of Japanese descent.” It would
require a massive expansion of the most tyrannical police state
powers far beyond their already immense post-9/11 explosion. And
that’s to say nothing of the incomparably ugly sentiments
that Trump’s advocacy of this plan, far before its implementation,
is
predictably unleashing.
Jorge Ramos, the
influential anchor of Univision and an American immigrant from
Mexico, has been denouncing Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric.
Yesterday at a Trump press conference in Iowa, Ramos stood and
questioned Trump on his immigration views. Trump at first ignored
him, then scolded him for speaking without being called on and
repeatedly ordered him to “sit down,” then told him: “Go back to
Univision.” When Ramos refused to sit down and shut up as ordered, a
Trump bodyguard physically removed him from the room. After the
press conference concluded, Ramos returned and again questioned
Trump about immigration, with the two mostly talking over each other
as Ramos asked Trump about the fundamental flaws in his policy.
Afterward, Ramos
said: “This is personal. … He’s talking about our parents, our
friends, our kids and our babies.”
One might think that in a conflict between a
journalist removed from a press conference for asking questions and
the politician who had him removed, journalists would side with
their fellow journalist. Some are. But many American journalists
have seized on the incident to denounce Ramos for the crime of
having opinions and even suggesting that he’s not really acting as a
journalist at all.
Politico’s
political reporter Marc Caputo unleashed a Twitter rant this morning
against Ramos. “This is bias: taking the news personally, explicitly
advocating an agenda,” he
began.
Then: “Trump can and should be pressed on this. Reporters can do
this without being activists”
and “some reporters still try to approach their stories fairly &
decently. & doing so does not prevent good reporting.” Not only
did Ramos not do journalism, Caputo argued, but he actually ruins
journalism: “My issue is his reporting is imbued with
take-it-personally bias. . . . we fend off phony bias allegations &
Ramos only helps to wrongly justify them. . . .One can ask and
report without the bias. I’ve done it for years & will continue 2 do
so.”
A Washington
Post article about the incident actually equated the two
figures, beginning with the headline: “Jorge Ramos is a conflict
junkie, just like his latest target: Donald Trump.” The
article twice suggested that Ramos’ behavior was something other
than journalism, claiming that his advocacy of immigration reform
“blurred the line between journalist and activist” and that “by
owning the issue of immigration, Ramos has also blurred the line
between journalist and activist.” That Ramos was acting more as an
“activist” than a “journalist” was a commonly expressed criticism
among media elites this morning.
Here we find, yet again, the enforcement of
unwritten, very recent, distinctively corporatized rules of supposed
“neutrality” and faux objectivity which all Real Journalists must
obey, upon pain of being expelled from the profession. A Good
Journalist must pretend they have no opinions, feign utter
indifference to the outcome of political debates, never take any
sides, be utterly devoid of any human connection to or passion for
the issues they cover, and most of all, have no role to play
whatsoever in opposing even the most extreme injustices.
Thus: you do not call torture “torture” if the
U.S. government falsely denies that it is; you do not say that the
chronic shooting of unarmed black citizens by the police is a major
problem since not everyone agrees that it is; and you do not object
when a major presidential candidate stokes dangerous nativist
resentments while demanding mass deportation of millions of
people. These are the strictures that have utterly neutered American
journalism, drained it of its vitality and core purpose, and ensured
that it does little other than serve those who wield the greatest
power and have the highest interest in preserving the status quo.
What is more noble for a journalist to do:
confront a dangerous, powerful billionaire-demagogue spouting
hatemongering nonsense about mass deportation, or sit by quietly and
pretend to have no opinions on any of it and that “both sides” are
equally deserving of respect and have equal claims to validity? As
Ramos
put it simply, in what should not even need to be said: “I’m a
reporter. My job is to ask questions. What’s ‘totally out of line’
is to eject a reporter from a press conference for asking
questions.”
Indeed, some of the most important and valuable
moments in American journalism have come from the nation’s most
influential journalists rejecting this cowardly demand that they
take no position, from Edward R. Murrow’s
brave 1954 denunciation of McCarthyism to
Walter Cronkite’s 1968 refusal to treat the U.S. government’s
lies about the Vietnam War as anything other than what they were.
Does anyone doubt that today’s neutrality-über-alles journalists
would denounce them as “activists” for inappropriately “taking a
side”?
As Jack Shafer
documented two years ago, crusading and “activist” journalism is
centuries old and has a very noble heritage. The notion that
journalists must be beacons of opinion-free, passion-devoid, staid,
impotent neutrality is an extremely new one, the byproduct of the
increasing corporatization of American journalism. That’s not hard
to understand: One of the supreme values of large corporations is
fear of offending anyone, particularly those in power, since that’s
bad for business. The way that conflict-avoiding value is infused
into the media outlets that these corporations own is to inculcate
their journalists that their primary duty is to avoid offending
anyone, especially those who wield power, which above all means
never taking a clear position about anything, instead just serving
as a mindless, uncritical vessel for “both sides,” what NYU
Journalism Professor Jay Rosen has dubbed “the view from nowhere.”
Whatever else that is, it is most certainly not a universal or
long-standing principle of how journalism should be conducted.
The worst aspect of these journalists’ demands for
“neutrality” is the conceit that they are actually neutral, that
they are themselves not activists. To be lectured about the need for
journalistic neutrality by Politico of all places — the
ultimate and most loyal servant of the D.C. political and corporate
class — by itself illustrates what a rotten sham this claim is.
I set out my argument about this at length in my
2013 exchange with Bill Keller and won’t repeat it all
here; suffice to say, all journalism is deeply subjective
and serves some group’s interests. All journalists constantly
express opinions and present the world in accordance with their
deeply subjective biases — and thus constantly serve one agenda or
another — whether they honestly admit doing so or dishonestly
pretend they don’t.
Ultimately, demands for “neutrality” and
“objectivity” are little more than rules designed to shield those
with the greatest power from meaningful challenge. As BuzzFeed’s
Adam Serwer
insightfully
put it this morning, “‘Objective’ reporters were openly mocking
Trump not that long ago, but Ramos has not reacted to Trump’s poll
numbers with appropriate deference . . . . Just a reminder that
what is considered objective reporting is intimately tied to power
or the perception of power.” Expressing opinions that are in
accord with, and which serve the interests of, those who wield the
greatest political and economic power is always acceptable for
the journalists who most tightly embrace the pretense of
“neutrality”; it’s only when an opinion constitutes dissent or when
it’s expressed with too little reverence for the most powerful does
it cross the line into “activism” and “bias.”
(Ramos’ supposed sin of being what the Post
called a “conflict junkie” — something that sounds to be nothing
more than a derogatory way of characterizing “adversary journalism”
— is even more ridiculous. Please spare me the tripe about how
Ramos’ real sin was one of rudeness, that he failed to wait for
explicit permission from the Trumpian Strongman to speak. Aside from
the absurdity of viewing Victorian-era etiquette as some sort of
journalistic virtue, Trump’s vindictive war with Univision made it
unlikely he’d call on Ramos, and journalists don’t always need to be
“polite” to do their jobs.
Beyond that, whether a reporter must be
deferential to a politician is one of those questions on which
people shamelessly switch sides based on which politician is being
treated rudely at the moment, as the past
liberal protests over the “rudeness” displayed to Obama by
conservative journalists demonstrate. That Ramos is not One of
Them — Joe Scarborough appeared not even to know who Ramos is and
suggested he was just seeking “15 minutes of fame,” despite
Ramos’ having far greater influence and fame than Scarborough could
dream of having — clearly fueled the journalistic resentment that
Ramos’ behavior was out of line).
What Ramos did here was pure journalism in its
classic and most noble expression: He aggressively confronted a
politician wielding a significant amount of power over some pretty
horrible things that the politician is doing and saying. As usual
when someone commits a real act of journalism aimed at the most
powerful in the U.S., those leading the charge against him are other
journalists, who so tellingly regard actual journalism as a gauche
and irreverent crime against those who wield the greatest power and
thus merit the greatest deference.
UPDATE: Caputo, while noting
that he disagrees with many of the views in this article, objects to
one phrase in particular and sets forth his objection
here. I quoted and/or linked to all of his referenced statements
and am happy to allow readers to decide if that one phrase was
accurate. I am quite convinced it was and stand by it.
=========
Jorge Ramos
Explains Why Trump Needs To Answer Questions From Hispanic Media
Outlets
Ramos: "He's Talking About The Fastest Growing
Electoral Bloc In The United States ... It Doesn't Matter If He
Doesn't Like It, There Are Questions That Need To Be Answered"
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