Oh boy, I’ve been waiting for someone level-headed to see Rathergate and it’s relation to the blogosphere for what it is, and Steven Johnson nailed it:
Until the blogosphere figures out a way to contribute to those kinds of stories—and not just ones where a knowledge of font trivia makes you a genuine expert—I think we’ll still prove to be better at framing the news than making it ourselves.
There’s a larger story that’s been lost here. Since the late 1970s the right has made a focused effort to convince the populace that The Media—the corporate media; the only media that matters to the mainstream—has a collective liberal bias. As a result, professional journalists are much less critical of the right and the true bias of the mainstream media—corporate and conservative—is reinforced.
I’m slowly making my way through Robert W. McChesney’s The Problem of the Media, and he provides the basis for what he calls the conservative critique of the “liberal media:”
The conservative critique is based on four propositions: 1) the decisive power over the news lies with journalists—owners and advertisers are irrelevant or relatively powerless; 2) journalists are political liberals; 3) journalists abuse their power to advance liberal policies—thus breaking the professional code; and 4) objective journalists would almost certainly present the world exactly as seen by contemporary U.S. conservatives.
Make no mistake about the underlying issue of President Bush’s service record—Greg Palast delivered the goods five years ago. As for Dan Rather, well, stick a fork in him; he’s done.