Aizle wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
Aizle wrote:
I'm aware of that. I believe his premise is flawed, that announcing his bias ahead of time somehow makes him a better journalist.
2 wrongs don't make a right.
Does pretending you don't have a bias work better?
Not if you aren't actively trying to report facts.
The wording here is a difficult to understand (for me at least). Did you really mean to say "If you are actively trying to report facts"?
If thats the case, any pretending gets in the way at best, and throws journalistic integrity out the window at worst.
Aizle wrote:
My point is that journalism is about reporting facts and trying your best to NOT color the information that you are presenting.
Agreed.
Aizle wrote:
Yes, it's an impossible task. There will always be a little bit of bias that is unconcious.
Agreed
Aizle wrote:
However, I believe that embracing bias, and stating it up front does NOT create better reporting.
I disagree. I'd rather a reporter tell me which way the reporter leans. If he does, then I am able to use that to filter what he is reporting. If the reporter pretends he is unbiased I have to expend that much more energy to discern which way they lean.
If all things are equal, and we assume they are trying to uphold journalistic standards, then a reporter who is aware of their bias and informs me of such is much more reliable to me as they are:
1) Aware
2) Have informed me
3) Trying to be a journalist with integrity
4) Trying to limit their bias because they are aware of it
A journalist who doesn't inform me of their bias may not even be aware of their bias, and therefore can't attempt to limit it. Heck, they may be aware of it but not the extent to which they are biased, which will lead to too little introspection on their part. By failing #1, they fail the rest. If they fail #2, I can't be assured of the rest either.
Aizle wrote:
I'm not interested in some reporter making up my mind for me, I'm interested in seeing the facts as clearly as I can and making it up for myself.
Agreed
Aizle wrote:
Open biased reporting does not assist me in that endeavor at all, in fact it very actively hinders it.
We've reached an agreement that all reporting is biased; I'd rather it be open instead of trying to decide which way the reporter is biased, if they know it and if they are trying to hide it from me - that is much more of a hindrance to me.
Aizle wrote:
From my point of view, reporting should be as neutral as possible with all weight put on the facts of the situation.
Agreed
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"Dress cops up as soldiers, give them military equipment, train them in military tactics, tell them they’re fighting a ‘war,’ and the consequences are predictable." —Radley Balko