H/T to
Neo for pointing out this important exposé by the
National Post's Jonathan Kay -
How Falconer hoodwinked the Toronto Star.
This tendency of
MSM to run with a story before thoroughly checking out the facts is
nothing new. In fact,
Kay admits that the
Post itself has been responsible for inaccurate stories, but the difference is in the retraction:
This was a major, major screw-up -- one that deserved a candid mea culpa editor's note of the type this newspaper published after it ran a similarly inaccurate story about Iranian Jews in 2006. Instead, Sunday's quasi-retraction was an exercise in verbal weaseldom. Particularly embarrassing was the fact that the heart of the issue was buried in this virtually unintelligible double-negative: "When Falconer was asked [Saturday] night if [superintendents] were never asked to contribute their views, he replied simply: 'No.'
(
Original Star report
here;
'retraction' here).
It has become blatantly obvious that most media outlets have some kind of political axe to grind, or at least some kind of agenda. Headlines, news reports and editorials are often torqued accordingly. (As
Jonathan Kay points out, the
Star's agenda is clearly stated in the '
Atkinson Principles'. So it is no wonder that it generally supports socialist-leaning parties.)
However, we do expect a
certain degree of due diligence and honesty when reporting a story. Perhaps we are naive in this expectation. A reporter can make an honest mistake, but shouldn't the editors be overseeing the article, and checking to make sure for example that Star reporter Michele Henry had interviewed a few school board officials to corroborate Falconer's story?
And what about the person who deliberately misleads the reporter in hopes of having the story skewed in their favour? Do they bear any responsibility? eg. Julian Falconer in this case?
Kay seems to feel that Falconer is more culpable than the Star here:
Nor do I see this as an innocent misunderstanding, which is what some people involved suggested to me over the phone. Falconer clearly wanted to sex up his report, and the reaction to it, by portraying the school board as a sort of dark, secretive Magisterium.
As my colleague John Turley-Ewart noted in his critique of Falconer's report last week, the human rights lawyer seems far more interested in riding politically correct hobby horses like bashing Mike Harris and blaming the pathologies of black schools on racism (the word "racialized," a fashionable PC term that roughly translates to "black and presumably oppressed," appears 84 times in the report.) His disgraceful spin job on the Toronto Star only serves to confirm the impression that he is more interested in furthering a political agenda than helping Toronto's schools.
So on a scale of guilt we have
Falconer as the worst, followed by the Star's senior editors, followed by the
'hoodwinked' reporter Michele Henry.
The other concern I have about MSM is how they seem to have the ability to be gatekeepers of information. Do they have any obligation to report
all major stories, or is it simply that which they deem newsworthy or appropriate to their agenda? Perhaps some journalists could enlighten me here.
For example,
letter-writer Chas Wynne of Oakville accuses the media of playing favourites when it comes to the Global-warming debate:
Lorrie Goldstein says we should "Skip the Kyoto snow job" (Jan. 8). Well, Lorrie, we wish we could, but it won't happen. Lorrie's analysis of the Kyoto Accord is spot on, but it is a small light in a wasteland of environmental political correctness. Most media and, consequently, most politicians parrot the man-made global warming mantra that has been driven by the radical environmentalists for years. The result is that, like a giant snowball rushing downhill, it continues to pick up speed and mass that will inevitably result in dim-bulb government policies. We have to wait until the mostly unintended consequences of these policies produce enough political resistance to enable sound environmental policy to be constructed and implemented. It could be quite awhile, but, in the meantime Lorrie, keep pitching.
(I like the snowball metaphor!)Then we have two stories that have inundated the blogosphere, but are largely ignored by MSM.
The first is
CBC-gate or
Pablo-gate.
The other is
Ezra Levant's fight against the
Alberta HRC.
(I guess we could throw in Maclean's and Mark Steyn's battle as well.) The National Post has
covered the Levant story, but few others.
Why are these stories barely making an appearance in MSM? Do the various media outlets have any obligation to cover them?
The point of today's rumination is wondering whether it's sloppy journalism, naive reporters, biased editors or skillful lobbyists and agenda-drivers mainly responsible for the deficit of honesty in Canadian MSM?
Or all of the above?
Labels: MSM bias