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Needed: An Ethical Press
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13967 |
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CURRENT ISSUES
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2 / 1988 |
3,298 Words |
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John C. Merrill John C. Merrill has been a newspaper reporter and editor and
has taught journalism in the United States and abroad for the
last 35 years. His latest book, Freedom, Ethics, and the
Press: Toward a Dialectical Journalism, will be published by
Louisiana State University in 1989. |
Journalists in the United States who enjoy bashing everything and everybody in sight are beginning to get growing amounts of their own medicine. The spotlight of criticism is being focused on them and the media they serve.
As the media grow in power and as they cling to their self-designation as a "watchdog on government" and other self-enhancing labels, they increasingly indulge in what many people consider irresponsible or unethical practices. In their mad rush to meet deadlines and what they see as their prime responsibility "to let the people know," American journalists have been pushing ethics out of the picture and enthroning expediency and self-interest. Many critics would contend that "ethical journalism" in today's world is really oxymoronic.
Whether ethics and journalism are contradictory terms or not, it must be said that a considerable degree of unethical activity exists in the press. And often this activity is poorly reported, if at all, because of the press's natural self-interest and its capacity for controlling the news and having the last word.
Certainly the American media must be commended for their alertness to governmental and social immorality and questionable activities. Such media attention does, no doubt, help to keep society "honest" and "careful"--at least to a certain degree. But the media also need to look to their own houses; they themselves must have a greater resolve to be ethical--if for no other reason than to improve their negative image among a skeptical public.
The "watchdog" is frequently off its
... (1995 of 19782 Characters)
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