Annie
Diamond Member
- Nov 22, 2003
- 50,848
- 4,828
- 1,790
I agree that the MSM should be taken to task for not fact checking these horrendous inaccuracies. What I am more surprised about though, is that no one is calling them out on how they had no trouble disseminating 'stories' that portrayed Blacks as turning animalistic and Hobbesian so quickly. It's blatant racism, which too many Americans were willing to swallow hook, line, and sinker.
Interesting that they were quick to print the charges of racism regarding relief, but nothing on this regarding their stories.
http://corner.nationalreview.com/05_09_25_corner-archive.asp#077601
Interesting that they were quick to print the charges of racism regarding relief, but nothing on this regarding their stories.
http://corner.nationalreview.com/05_09_25_corner-archive.asp#077601
THE KATRINA REPORTING SCANDAL [John Podhoretz]
So we now have two major reports -- one on the New Orleans Times Picayune website and the other in the L.A. Times -- about the way in which the major media spread all sorts of hysteria about the conditions inside flooded New Orleans. How will this jibe with all the talk about how the media threw off its self-imposed shackles after 9/11 and found their critical and passionate voice yet again? Doubtless both will receive praise from the MSM itself -- the early reporters for their "commitment" and the later correctives for their honesty. For the rest of us, though, this is a moment for reflection. I think everyone was very credulous, willing to believe almost any story that was told, because we were seeing something we'd never seen before -- an American city under water, footage of uniformed cops actually looting stores in front of news cameras, and people confused and trapped in extremely unpleasant conditions. There can be no doubt that it was a nightmarish experience to have been stuck at the convention center, but it wasn't, as it turned out, a shooting gallery or a death sentence.
The unprecedented nature of the story as it was should have been enough for everybody. Instead, far too many people -- from cable-news folks to reporters to bloggers -- ended up retailing fiction as fact.
Posted at 10:56 AM