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In Defense of Journalists
News
August 24, 2018
In Defense of Journalists

Dear Readers: Today we publish an opinion piece (below) by Sue Cross, executive director and CEO of the Institute for Nonprofit News, of which Oklahoma Watch is a member. In

Oklahoma Watch

Dear Readers:

Today we publish an opinion piece (below) by Sue Cross, executive director and CEO of the Institute for Nonprofit News, of which Oklahoma Watch is a member. In running an editorial, we join many other news outlets across the country.

President Donald Trump has heaped scorn on the news profession, calling reporters and editors “sleazy” and “an enemy of the American people.” With the attacks intensifying, there is a growing concern the loaded language will incite acts of violence against journalists.

After decades in the news business, I can assure you the extreme language of these attacks is unmerited. Journalists are not enemies of the citizens of the United States or the people of Oklahoma. They are professionals simply trying to do their job, get to the truth, dig out the facts that public officials and others in power may not want you to know, regardless of political party – and present these facts fairly and objectively. The process can be flawed. We are human, too. But most journalists strive to be accurate and credible – more than most people know. They are ambitious and dogged, but also aware of the codes of ethics that are a hallmark of our industry. The work we do is essential to our democracy, giving you information that allows you to engage in your community with a deeper understanding

At Oklahoma Watch, we welcome all of the criticism, and support, that you wish to send our way. You can email us at editor@oklahomawatch.org or call

(405) 325-3529 any time, or contact our journalists directly. They are the ones doing the hard work: Trevor Brown, Whitney Bryen, Paul Monies, Jennifer Palmer, Jeff Raymond. And you can comment on any of our stories or other content on our website or social-media pages.

The First Amendment ultimately is for you, not just us. We are privileged to work in a job where we can press those freedoms for the public every day.

-David Fritze, executive editor, Oklahoma Watch

***

Dear Friends,

Today, the Institute for Nonprofit News joins journalists across the country in asking you, the public, to stand up for your rights to free speech and an open government.

This started as a campaign by the Boston Globe to ask the President of the United States to knock off attacking the news media. But the President’s attacks on the press aren’t ultimately about the press.

“The press” is just journalists who work as your eyes and ears in places you can’t be. The press is the people you send into rooms to witness what your government is doing and tell you about it.

Dictators and tyrants don’t want you in the room. Dictators throughout the course of history have tried to limit what their people know or create confusion about what is true. By sowing confusion or getting you to limit your information sources, dictators reap power and control.

Don’t be confused.

In the U.S., we are not a dictatorship. We are a democracy. A free, fact-based press was built right into the foundations of that when the First Amendment was adopted in 1791:

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”

Today, verbal and even physical attacks on media, police-state tactics and government secrecy are spreading with impunity throughout the country. In Denver and Milwaukee, police recently detained and harrassed nonprofit reporters and prevented them from doing their jobs. In Wausau, Wisconsin, officials routinely keep public documents out of the public’s hands — your hands. The same happens in East Lansing, San Diego, Oregon — and on and on. We hear reports month in month out, from the 170 nonprofit news media that are part of INN.

Attacks on nonprofit media are particularly cannibalistic. Nonprofit newsrooms are dedicated to public service. Their reporters and editors are public servants, with a mindset cops might find surprisingly close to their own. “Protect and serve” pretty well describes the motivations of most watchdog reporters.

It’s important to know that these attacks aren’t just launched against a national press, a liberal or conservative press, a commercial press.

They are against anyone who works to bring you fair, fact-based, objective accounts so that you have reliable information and can act on your constitutional rights — so that you can voice your stories, cast your votes, be informed, live freely and well.

Criticism of media is fine, and needed. But it’s different when government officials systematically tear down the free press because they don’t like the facts it reports. Then they are working to limit your ability to know what your government is doing.

Thirteen years after we adopted the First Amendment, Thomas Jefferson wrote to John Tyler,“No experiment can be more interesting than that we are now trying, and which we trust will end in establishing the fact, that man may be governed by reason and truth. Our first object should therefore be, to leave open to him all the avenues to truth. The most effectual hitherto found, is the freedom of the press. It is, therefore, the first shut up by those who fear the investigation of their actions.”

We’re not going to shut up. We’re going to keep reporting so that you can read what you want, make your own judgments, and question a government that works for you. That’s the basis of our freedom, our economy, our way of life.

So don’t be faked out by claims of fake news. It’s out there, no doubt. But so are many more reliable news sources dedicated to reason and truth. Dozens of public service newsrooms that commit to high ethical standards are listed in the INN member directory. Or commit to your local newspaper, radio newscast, television broadcaster. If you think an outlet’s coverage is off-base, reach out and question it, contribute news and commentary, point out a mistake when they make one. Reporters and editors want to hear from you.

The “news media” isn’t some monolithic thing. It’s a voice of your community, and you can be part of it. We hope you will. Because a free press doesn’t belong to the President. It belongs to you.

-Sue Cross, executive director and CEO, Institute for Nonprofit News

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