The Rise of
Trump Shows the Danger and Sham of Compelled
Journalistic “Neutrality”
By Glenn Greenwald
March 14, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept"
- As Donald Trump’s campaign predictably
moves from toxic rhetoric targeting the most
marginalized minorities to threats and use of
violence, there is a growing sense that
American institutions have been too lax about
resisting it. Political scientist Brendan Nyhan on
Sunday posted
a widely cited Twitter essay voicing this
concern, arguing that “Trump’s rise represents a
failure in American parties, media, and civic
institutions — and they’re continuing to fail right
now.” He added, “Someone could capture a major party
[nomination] who endorses violence [and] few seem
alarmed.”
Actually, many
people are alarmed, but it is difficult to know that
by observing media coverage, where little
journalistic alarm over Trump is expressed. That’s
because the rules of large media outlets —
venerating faux objectivity over truth
along with every other civic value — prohibit the
sounding of any alarms. Under this framework of
corporate journalism, to denounce Trump, or even to
sound alarms about the dark forces he’s exploiting
and unleashing, would not constitute journalism. To
the contrary, such behavior is regarded as a
violation of journalism. Such denunciations are
scorned as opinion, activism, and bias: all the
values that large media-owning corporations have
posited as the antithesis of journalism in order to
defang and neuter it as an adversarial force.
Just this
morning, NPR media reporter David Folkenflik
published a story describing the concern and
even anger of some NPR executives and journalists
over
a column by longtime NPR commentator Cokie
Roberts — the Beacon of Washington Centrism — that
criticizes Trump. “NPR has a policy forbidding its
journalists from taking public stances on political
affairs,” he wrote. For any NPR reporter, Roberts’s
statements — warning of the dangers of a Trump
presidency — would be a clear violation of that
policy.
An NPR vice
president, Michael Oreskes, published an
internal memo to NPR staff this morning
highlighting Roberts’s non-reporting and
non-employee role as a reason she would not be
punished, but he pointedly noted, “If Cokie were
still a member of NPR’s staff we would not have
allowed that.” And in an interview that Oreskes
“directed” Roberts to do this morning with Morning
Edition host David Greene about the matter, the NPR
host chided Roberts for expressing negative
views of Trump, telling her:
Objectivity is so fundamental to what we do. Can
you blame people like me for being a little
disappointed to hear you come out and take a
personal position on something like this in a
campaign?
Imagine
calling yourself a journalist, and then — as you
watch an authoritarian politician get closer to
power by threatening and unleashing violence and
stoking the ugliest impulses — denouncing not
that politician, but rather other journalists who
warn of the dangers. That is the embodiment of the
ethos of corporate journalism in America, and a
potent illustration of why its fetishized reverence
for “objectivity” is so rotted and even dangerous.
Indeed, Roberts herself agreed that it was justified
for her to speak out only because she’s in the role
of NPR commentator and not reporter: “If I were
doing it in your role” as a reporter, Roberts told
Greene, “you should be disappointed.”
This
abdication of the journalistic duty inevitably
engendered by corporate “neutrality” rules is not
new. We saw it repeatedly during the Bush years,
when most large media outlets suppressed
journalistic criticism of things like torture and
grotesque war crimes carried out by the U.S. as part
of the war on terror, and even changed
their language by adopting government
euphemisms to obscure what was being done. Outlets
such as the New York Times, the Washington
Post, and NPR
refused to use the word “torture” to describe
techniques long universally recognized as such —
which were always called torture by those same media
outlets
when used by countries adversarial to the U.S. —
because to do so would
evince “bias,” lack “neutrality,” and “take sides”
in the torture debate.
Contrary to
what U.S. media corporations have succeeded in
convincing people, these journalistic neutrality
rules are not remotely traditional. They are newly
invented concepts that coincided with the
acquisition of the nation’s most important media
outlets by large, controversy-averse corporations
for which “media” was just one of many businesses.
Large
corporations hate controversy (it alienates
consumers) and really hate offending those who wield
political power (bad for business). Imposing
objectivity rules on the journalists who work for
their media divisions was a means to avoid offending
anyone by forcing journalists to conceal their
perspectives, assumptions, and viewpoints, and,
worse, forcing them to dishonestly pretend that they
had none, that they float above all that. This
framework neutered journalism and drained it of all
its vitality and passion, reducing journalists to
stenography drones permitted to do little more than
summarize what each equally valid side
asserts. Worse, it ensures that people who wield
great influence and power — such as Donald Trump —
can engage in all sorts of toxic, dishonest, and
destructive behavior without having to worry about
any check from journalists, who are literally barred
by their employers from speaking out (even as their
employers
profit greatly through endless coverage).
This
corporate, neutrality-über-alles framework is
literally the exact antithesis of how journalism was
practiced, and why it was so valued, when the U.S.
Constitution was enacted and for decades after. As
Jack Shafer documented in
2013, those who claim that journalism has always
been grounded in neutrality demonstrate “a painful
lack of historical understanding of American
journalism.” Indeed, “American journalism began in
earnest as a rebellion against the state”: citizens
using journalism to denounce in no uncertain terms
the evils of the British Crown and to agitate for
resistance against it. He cites Judith and William
Serrin’s anthology, Muckraking: The Journalism
That Changed America, which “establishes the
primacy of partisan, activist journalism from the
revolutionary period through the modern era.”
That is the noble journalistic tradition that
has been deliberately suppressed — outright barred —
by our nation’s largest corporate media outlets,
justifying their meek and impotent codes under the
banner of an objectivity and neutrality that are as
illusory and deceitful as they are amoral.
As a
result, nobody should be looking to our nation’s
largest media outlets to serve as a bulwark against
Trumpism or any other serious menace. The rules they
have imposed on themselves, by design, ensure their
own neutrality even in the face of the most extreme
evils.
* * * * *
The debate
over “objectivity” and “neutrality” in
journalism has been, as I noted, quite relevant and
pressing since long before the emergence of Donald
Trump. I had a
long exchange with former New York Times
Executive Editor Bill Keller about this in 2013 in
the context of the founding of The Intercept, where
the arguments are laid out in full, and, as
Folkenflik noted this morning, I spoke with him
about this issue on CNN after that exchange with
Keller:
UPDATE:
Regarding whether “neutrality” and “objectivity” are
new journalistic concoctions, note that the two most
revered figures in American broadcast journalism
history – Edward R. Murrow and Walter Cronkite –
would have been fired from NPR and multiple other
contemporary media outlets for their most notable
moments: Murrow when he used his nightly news
broadcast to
repeatedly denounce Sen. Joseph McCarthy, and
Cronkite when he did the
same about the Vietnam War.
Glenn Greenwald is a journalist, constitutional
lawyer, and author of four New York Times
best-selling books on politics and law. His most
recent book, No Place to Hide, is
about the U.S. surveillance state and his
experiences reporting on the Snowden documents
around the world. Prior to co-founding The
Intercept, Glenn’s column was featured at
TheGuardian and
Salon.
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