HUG A JOURNALIST TODAY

Donald Trump, Jr has admitted arranging a meeting with someone introduced to him as a representative of the Russian government.  The stated purpose of the meeting was to receive Russian information that might damage Hillary Clinton’s candidacy (and thereby help his dad’s).  Junior had already been notified that the help would be provided as “…part of Russia and its government’s support for Mr. Trump…” He angrily denied all of this until he learned that persistent journalists had proof.  Then he began trying to explain it away.

Junior Trump arranged for candidate Trump’s campaign manager, Paul Manafort, and son-in-law, Jared Kushner to join him in a meeting with the Russian.  It was held at the Trump Tower in June 2016 while candidate Trump was present in the building; but the President’s press secretary now says that Trump knew nothing about it until the New York Times broke the story.

This stunning news contradicts a full year of denials by Donald Trump and his entire team of any Russian involvement or support for their campaign; and it’s clear that they would not have admitted it if the press had not uncovered evidence.  Do you believe that Junior Trump brought people that he had been told represented Russian government into Trump tower for a meeting with Senior Trump’s top advisers and none of them mentioned it to Senior Trump?  You can bet that journalists will be digging for evidence, one way or the other.

However they voted, most Americans wanted to believe the Trump team was honest.  Many still do, but evidence of lies and deception began mounting even before the inauguration.  They have blamed it on “leakers”, on the FBI Director’s incompetence, on fake news, and on the mainstream (lamestream they like to call it) press. Without professional journalists digging for facts we would have little basis for judging the integrity of our officeholders, regardless of political affiliation.

This phenomenon is not limited to the Trump administration.  It was the press who broke the story of the Pentagon Papers with evidence that multiple administrations intentionally misled the public and the Congress about our involvement in Vietnam and the ensuing war.  They documented President’s Nixon’s crimes including the Watergate burglary and his “plumbers” unit which burglarized a psychiatrist’s office to obtain medical records that would discredit an opponent of the war.  Those stories resulted in Nixon’s resignation and Johnson’s decision to not seek reelection.  It was the press who uncovered and reported on J. Edgar Hoover’s abuse of his power as FBI Director, including spying on Dr Martin Luther King, Jr in order to obtain any information that could be used to blackmail him.

Government officials who had violated public trust tried to cover up and deny their misdeeds.  They blamed leakers, liars and biased reporters.  They even arrested and jailed journalists for reporting true stories.  But journalists and news organizations persist.  They not only cover world-changing news, journalists are the ones who keep us informed about state legislatures, school boards, health departments, city councils, sports and weather.  Because of them we know that Flint is only one of the cities with lead in its water.  They inform our discussions about the local effects of charter schools, climate change, and myriads of issues affecting our lives.

Journalism can be messy.  Some  organizations sensationalize news in hopes of improved TV ratings or ad sales to the point where an arrest for jay-walking sounds like “breaking news”.  Some have liberal or conservative or religious or ethnic biases.    Just choosing which stories to cover and which to pass up is based on the judgments of journalists and editors.  And sometimes even the best of journalists make mistakes.

We Americans have plenty of sources with lots of different perspectives and fortunately for us they tend to fact-check each other. If we’re paying attention we can check their accuracy by comparing several sources.  And if any news organization is consistently wrong with the facts, they eventually pay a price in public trust.

At this critical time in our history journalists are ferreting out facts despite concerted efforts to stop them; and truth is gradually emerging.   Without them,  our freedom would be imperiled.  It is indeed the truth that makes us free.  This is a good time to hug and thank a journalist.

4 thoughts on “HUG A JOURNALIST TODAY”

  1. Good piece! One observation. The journalistic vigilance that you correctly cite is welcome but disasterously belated. The sensational, perverse exposure that the mainstream media provided to Trump during the primaries and general election propelled him into the presidency. The totally corrupt moral compass of the Republican Party establishment clinched the deal. Now the media recognizes that they let Trump ” happen”. They are finally doing a better job of trying to rescue the survivors off the Titanic. Better late than never.

  2. A further comment on Trump and the media. He ran the most effective presidential campaign in history as measured by cost per popular vote or cost per electoral vote. These measures are cost/ benefit ratios, in effect. He was able to do this because the progressive media concentrated reporting on his antics and character flaws. They never connected the dots for the disinterested public about what a Trump presidency would actually mean for America. The media fed the public just what Trump needed to win–free publicity. The right was then able to concentrate their big money–that is soft money–on vilifying Obama, Clinton, and Pelosi to Republican benefit. The media’s weak coverage of the impact of a potential Trump win helped mightily to elect him on the cheap. You are correct they are doing their jobs effectively now. That is due, in part, to the several studies by journalism schools and institutes that indicate the progressive media made Trump and largely put him in office. The media is going crazy against him now partly because they know they elected him. This is common knowledge within the J-elite. Before I hug any journalists, I would probably kick them in the crotch first.

  3. Mr. Morrison,
    Please keep writing. I am a Swan friend from Southern, IN. I read and appreciate your work. Rarely do I comment, but your words resonate. Oh, how they do. Bonnie

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