September 14, 2004
The Death Cry Of Snob Journalism
By
Michelle Malkin
Dan Rather, Professional
Journalist, and CBS News, Professional News Network,
want us to keep believing that they are the ordained
purveyors of truth. They are the mature and responsible
mavens of media ethics. They are the information
gatekeepers with unparalleled judgment, dedicated to the
high principles of The Craft of Journalism, unwavering
in their crusade for the public interest.
As
the
saying goes in the blogosphere: Bwah-hah-hah.
With
a click of the mouse and easy-to-use Web log software,
Internet-savvy citizens across America and around the
world are relentlessly unmasking the frauds of snob
journalism as never before. The wall between the
self-anointed press protectorate and the unwashed masses
has crumbled.
Rather and The Suits face
crushing evidence that CBS relied on bogus military
documents in a recent
“60 Minutes II” hit
piece
challenging President Bush’s National Guard service.
Questions about the documents’ authenticity were
first raised last week on the indispensable
conservative Internet forum, FreeRepublic.com, then
amplified and supplemented by the intrepid independent
bloggers of
Powerline,
Little Green Footballs,
INDC Journal, and
Allahpundit--.
Rather and his geriatric empire are combating these
powerfully persuasive blogs with anemic smears and
sneers. And they are losing so
very, very badly that they can’t keep on top of
their own spin.
Rather recklessly suggests that the bloggers who broke
the story are disciplined "partisan political
operatives," presumably affiliated with the Bush
campaign and/or Republican National Convention. Former
CBS news executive Jonathan Klein, on the other hand,
suggests that the bloggers are
loose cannons and amateur yahoos. The blogger,
Klein told Fox News, is a “guy sitting in his
living room in his
pajamas writing” without acceptable journalistic
credentials or a genuine commitment to “checks and
balances.”
It’s
no surprise, of course, that the conspiratorial,
central-planning mindset of the mainstream media
kingpins conjures up a top-down plot where there is none
and where none could ever be orchestrated even if the
Bush White House wanted one.
Bloggers take orders from no one. But with that
irresistible platter of publishing freedom comes a tall
glass of responsibility. For serious blogging pundits
and news-gatherers and discussion board operators,
cyber-cred is everything. Mainstream media
anthropologists often attach the adjective
“free-wheeling” to the blogger culture—ignoring the flip
side of the brutally quick-fixing and 24/7
fact-checking nature of the medium.
What
is amazing is that Rather would shamelessly traffic in
such paranoid nonsense against conservative-leaning
bloggers, without a shred of substantiation, in the
middle of his own disastrous journalistic hurricane—and
on the heels of CNN’s recent disclosure that two of its
most prominent talk show co-hosts, Paul Begala and James
Carville, have been hired as official consultants to the
Kerry presidential campaign but
will remain in their current positions at the network.
About these proven Democratic “partisan political
operatives,” Rather has made no comment on CBS.
As
for Klein, his
pajama put-down will go down in media history as the
death cry of snob journalism.
With
amusement, I have watched my colleagues in the Old Media
fight every democratizing and choice-enhancing trend
during the dozen years I’ve spent in the information
business. They scoffed at Rush Limbaugh as a flash in
the pan (and have searched in vain for a commercial
viable liberal counterpart for the last 15 years). They
sneered at The Drudge Report (then bookmarked his
site for hourly reading). They sniped at Fox News (then
ripped off every one of Roger Ailes’ innovations). They
laughed at
Regnery Publishing (then snatched up its editors and
formed New York knock-offs). They mocked the insurgent
New York Post (as their own
circulation figures and ad sales tanked). And now,
in final desperation, they trash the blogging revolution
as an irresponsible
pajama party for unprofessional hobbyists (even as
they launch their own corporate-scrubbed versions to
exhibit their “edginess.”)
Faced with an unstoppable onslaught of competitive
traffic, Dan Rather and the great pretenders in Trusted
Journalism have only one choice for survival: Yield.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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