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Thursday, February 26, 2009
Debra J. Saunders :: Townhall.com Columnist
Cutting Off Your News To Spite Your Face
by Debra J. Saunders
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A couple of years ago, when speaking to a local group, I mentioned that The Chronicle was losing money. A couple in the back of the room rudely applauded. How thrilled those two must have felt when -- if -- they learned of San Francisco Chronicle Publisher Frank Vega's announcement Tuesday that the Hearst Corp. will implement "significant" workforce cuts. If the cuts don't pay off, then the Hearst Corp. will "offer the newspaper for sale or close it altogether."

Bloggers and e-mailers are crowing. If The Chronicle is shuttered, they'll be dancing a jig. Many conservatives feel a warm glow at the possible demise of an institution that they believe to be failing because of liberal bias. On the far left, that same glow will satisfy those who think newspapers are not liberal enough.

As for those who only read their news online, here's a news flash: News stories do not sprout up like Jack's beanstalk on the Internet. To produce news, you need professionals who understand the standards needed to research, report and write on what happened. If newspapers die, reliable information dries up.

Reduced ad revenue and falling newspaper circulation mean that there will be fewer people to cover the same number of stories. In the middle of an economic crisis and President Obama's federal spending bonanza, there will be fewer watchdogs to guard the shop.

So, to those of you who argue that the demise of liberal newspapers (The Chronicle in particular) is deserved, I offer a caveat: Be careful what you wish for.

Remember the ugly consequences of San Francisco's sanctuary city policy for juvenile offenders, who were sent abroad instead of to jail? Or Oakland Mayor Ron Dellums failure to tackle crime in Oaktown? Or reports on corporate bonuses for execs at bailed-out banks? Imagine that those things happened, but there was no journalist to investigate and report.

I wonder who will be around in five years to cover stories. Or what talk radio will talk about when hosts can't just siphon from carefully researched stories because they never were written.

Newspapers are the public's referees as to which information is credible. You can go online and read no end of fiction and smear about public figures. But when you read content in a newspaper, you consistently can rely on it.

As every conservative pundit knows, there is a special credibility that comes with being able to say, "as the New York Times reported," or "as the Washington Post reported." Even "as The Chronicle reported."

One of the great American pursuits in my lifetime has been to trash the local paper. It is a healthy, cathartic exercise -- and, at times, practiced in this column.

But at some point in recent years -- and publishers' decisions to post material online at no charge no doubt contributed -- this very American pastime devolved from spirited criticism to foolhardy prickliness. News consumers somehow moved from thinking their paper let them down to thinking that their paper was not worthy of them.

Despite all the solid stories, and all the reliable information, and all the articles that tell you something you did not know and all the opinion pieces that made you stop and think, a growing number of people have decided that it is more important for their news to be pure than it is for the public to be informed.

And I hear this from people who say they care about news. They look to the site-rich Internet for salvation, unaware that the decline of newspapers means that those shiny new websites are linking to fewer real news stories. What looks like more choice isn't. It's more doors leading to fewer rooms.

When a newspaper dies, you don't get a comprehensive periodical to fill the void. You get an informational vacant lot into which passersby can throw their junk.

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Deb
We know that news doesn't sprout up from a magic beanstalk and appear on the internet. But we also know that we can go to an internet news source and get basically the same national news and analysis that appears in a print paper for free, since you all get your national/international reports from just a few sources. Why should I shell out $0.50 to $1.00 for info that I can get from the AP website for free?

As for the idea that newspapers are the refrees for what information is credible, have YOU been reading any papers lately? In just the last campaign season we had The Gray Lady (NYT) printing unsubstantiated rumors of an affair as a straight news story...is that the work of a good "referee"? The newspapers are only as good as the publisher/editorial staff makes them, and too many are infested with a virulent left wing bias. That bias makes them unreliable, since they are the ones who decide what gets covered, who covers it, and the tenor of the coverage. And we have all witnessed the rampant examples of the "referees" putting their hands on the scales to get the result they desire and we have seen the "flood the zone" tactics used to push issues that the editor cares about and not to serve any real public purpose.

I understand that you are deperate to save the newspaper industry since it is where you are primarily employed, and it was probably something you always dreamed of. But the fact is that these periodic articles extolling the greatness and need for the print papers are falling on deaf ears, mainly because we have all seen that we really cannot trust the people in the industry to give us anything resembling news. So long as they continue to give us their opinins dressed up in a bad news costume, they will continue to hemmorage both readers and money.

Community Activist groups agendas
Was not a time ago that newspapers were the source of community activity.Before the government created the national asssociation of human rights workers, people relied upon their immediate community. Everytime someone moved they would become apart of a new community. Because of money worshipers and greed the community activist today are not even from the same state, just as newspaper owners used to be locals. Today the newspapers are not even owned by follow countrymen. The national association of human rights workers spend time defrauding the United States in the name of a victim without ever bringing forth the victim unless the victim is a drug addict, homosexual, illegal alien or some type of sexaul deviant. These are the same people which hate fill the newspapers of today.

I, for one, am not buying it
I hear you Debra, but I agree with Sean Hannity when he says that 2008 was the year journalism died.

You say Newspapers are public referees. Heck, they're all on the take for obambi and the lib agenda. Hard to win the game when the officials got money riding on the under/over.

The only reason I keep getting my newspaper is because it's good for cleaning windows and mirrors.

Professionals?
"To produce news, you need professionals who understand the standards needed to research, report and write on what happened."-Debra Saunders

I agree with that statement. It is very unfortunate that very few of these much needed professionals walk the halls of this nation's newspaper industry. I may go so far as to say that there are very few professional journalists in America who live up to the standards of ethical and proper journalism. I don't want the left's spin on the news, or the right's spin , for that matter. I want straight news which is as unbiased as it can possibly be coming from humans. When we have a paper that offers that, I'll shell out my dollar to support it. Until then, all these biased papers can disappear and I won't miss them for a second.

Cutting Off Your News To Spite Your Face
Ms. Saunders your article is the exact 100% statement of why
the news print media is failing. Yet, you report this article
as obliviously as news is reported every day.

institution that they believe to be failing because of liberal bias

1. "professionals" who understand the "standards".

2. "reliable information" dries up.

3. there will be fewer watchdogs to guard the shop.

Items 1, 2, and 3; this logic blew your article up front!

4. "journalist" to "investigate"

5. carefully "researched stories" (oxymoronic)

6. Newspapers are … "credible".

7. "you consistently can rely on it"

8. "As every conservative pundit knows, (Ms. Saunders you failed here
to do your research)" there is a "special credibility" that comes with
being able to say, "as the New York Times reported,"(????????) or
"as the Washington Post reported." Even "as The Chronicle
reported."

9. Despite all the "solid stories", and all the "reliable information",

10. shiny new websites are linking to fewer "real news" stories.

11. “…thinking that their paper was not worthy of them.” Precisely!

12. When a newspaper dies, you don't get a "comprehensive periodical"
(oxymoronic) to fill the void.

Cutting Off Your News To Spite Your Face
Professional standards!!!! The treatment of Governor Palin by "ivestigative" reporters vs Obama and Biden is proof that the professional standards are either wrong or not applie. But then that should not be a surprize Mark Twain had it right when he said if you did not read a news paper every day day you were uninformed and if you did you were missinformed...Oh, so true.

Completely Disagree
The failure of the New York Times would be a blessing. Creative destruction. These media outlets are more brazen than ever. If they survive they will be emboldened and do more. Is the New York Post going under? Is the Wall Street Journal? What "investigative" journalism will we be losing? None that isn't trying to find wrong-doing in Iraq, wrong-doing by Republicans. Where was the investigative reporting for Ayeres and Obama? It was ignored because the liberal rags had the bully pulpit. I will cheer when they all go and relevel the playing field so people are FORCED to read from non-liberal sources.

Sounds Disturbing
Pa-lease. The next thing you know you will be for public support of left-wing newspapers much the same as NPR is shoved into our ears courtesy of my confiscated money. In a Capitalist society the peoples money should determine what business lives and dies - RIP Chronicle - the sooner the better.

The Public Has Voted
The print media has been unashamedly in the tank for liberal causes. They missed no opportunity to bash Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld (and yet somehow failed, like the Dixie Chicks, to realize that perhaps half of their potential audience/customers voted for Bush & Cheney) while being completely uncritical of Al Gore and his Global Warming pseudo-science, Obama's Chicago political antics, the role of Barney Frank and Chris Dodd in allowing Fanny Mae and Freddi Mac to turn the real estate market into an unsustainable asset bubble, taking with it the financial markets, and on and on. Those of us who listen to Rush, Hannity, Boortz, Levin, etc., are aware that there is another side of the story, which we seldom if ever got from the print media, showing them to be anything but impartial in their reporting.

So, if we can't trust them for the whole truth on the questionable proposition of Anthropogenic Global Warming, if they constantly bash people we voted for, if they are unabashedly in the tank for clearly corrupt politicians who happen to have liberal agendas, why would we trust the rest of the "news" they print?

In other words, the print media have made no attempt to even appear honest brokers when reporting the "news"; they have been exceedingly transparent with their liberal leanings. They lost their standing as honest news organs, so now they are headed for the dust bin of history.

The law of supply and demand dictates that a need will be filled. So, though it may momentarily appear that there's no one left to dig up the real news in a professional manner, something will emerge to fill the void. Perhaps the soon-to-be unemployed reporters will remember their journalism training, get back to reporting just the fact - the unvarnished truth - and reappear on the internet.

pga301
I think it is a point missed to hope for non- liberal sources only. I would love to see non- biased sources, period. In the news media I prefer straight news reporting with no coloration based on ideology, creed, religion, or any other criteria. That is what the editorial pages are for. If The New York Times wanted nothing but Communists on their editorial board, I would have no beef with that. It is a private company. When they spin Communism as news, or bias the story, or simply make "news" up whole cloth, such as the 'McCain affair' embarrassment, that is when they should be called to account. They call themselves the third estate and expect to be given greater leeway under the law. That should come with greater responsibility to accuracy and truth.

Ignorance is better than stupidity
"it is more important for their news to be pure than it is for the public to be informed."???
Why don't I just read fiction?

You seem to be living in a time warp, the NYT has no credibility left - I read it on the internet.

rjas2330
I probably didn't go into enough detail about creative destruction.

If the newspaper business is leveled regardless of the conservative casualities the liberal elites will be taken down. Nature hates a vacuum. The death of the New York Times leaves room for a NEW newspaper of record. One that isn't a liberal rag.

Noone will invest in the failed liberal experiment after they fail they will look at successful models like the WSJ. If starting from scratch the kind of cross the board infestations that we are now told we MUST tolerate will not occur because they will be marked as unmarketable before they become "institutions" we can't live without.

We are constantly told we need to support the liberal press because they are institutions?

Well time for the old institutions to fail and new ones to take their place.

Fox challanged and passed the old king CNN by exactly the same process.

Time for the liberal papers to fail and if you want a job in the new newspaper business you better not be a flaming liberal sell-out.

Otherwise it never ends.

Former subscriber
The Saunders column makes some excellent points. But the problem is that the Chronicle (and many other papers) lost that journalistic professionalism many years ago and are now so biased that they've become unreadable.

I'm a former subscriber of the San Francisco Chronicle -- for 45 years, I received the Chronicle 7 days a week while I lived in Berkeley, Albany, Richmond, Yuba City, Chico, Citrus Heights, and finally El Sobrante. I dropped my subscription 2 years ago. I was just plain sick of one-sided coverage. Once upon a time, the opinions were mostly restricted to the editorial page and columnists. News reports had a balance -- balance that didn't mean one contrary paragraph 37 paragraphs into an article, but rather a balance statement of both sides of an issue. While journalists might have opinions, they were extremely careful to avoid any overt or public display of them. In recent years, I can't read a paper or magazine without seeing _UNRELATED_ comments about George Bush, global warming, or many other snippy comments that had nothing to do with the topic at hand. This passes as being "current" or something.

Frankly, I'm sorry that the Chronicle is in hard financial straights. But the lack of balance in their news columns for _years_ finally caused me to break a 45 year habit. Clearly, I'm not alone. Too bad, but the fact that circulation had been falling for years and years should have been an indication that something was wrong.... It seem to me that the Chronicle staff and management have ignored the growing crisis for years.

Creative Destruction is Correct
I wonder how long it will be before some enterprising conservatives begin to write copy and without the impediment of the printers unions begin to publish public journals that are more objective in the news section and more conservative in the editorial section? Probably not long after the dust settles in the wreckage left behind the Obama administration.

It so ironic that the very messiah that they longed for will lead to their final end.
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