Showing posts with label mainstream media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mainstream media. Show all posts

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Journalism ethics: How news is corrupted by misinformation and theft.

Offices of Concordia Sentinel in Ferriday, Louisiana
Carol Forsloff - Newspapers are paid for words and images they create, whether that is an Internet or standard paper source, so when they are taken by someone else, that's stealing.  Yet is not uncommon to find the same story that is found on mainstream media virtually copied word for word.  Along with that, some of the facts may be wrongfully reported the first time, then the mistakes repeated and when corrected by the source, remain errors on the copied piece.

All of this leads to misinformation and corrupts our news.

We learn in grammar school not to take words and phrases out of text material without giving credit to the source.  We learn that again when we do research for high school and college reports.  When we don't follow what we learned in grammar school when we write online, we violate even more the essential rule about plagiarism.

Let's see how it works on the Internet, because that's where it happens the most.

If you, for example, find a story, an idea that is written that excites you and simply rewrite that one story, you have in essence stolen the idea itself, especially when keywords are what drive search engines.  It means people who would ordinarily read the source material, now read yours instead.  The standard definition of plagiarism refers not just to the words but the idea created by them.

Worse are online sources who predominantly secure readership simply by copying and pasting the articles from other newspapers, even when credit is given.

This is different than having an idea or a story and wrapping it around newspaper sources for evidence.  It falls in the realm of research and can broaden both the original source reach but also provide additional information to the public supported by news.

When newspapers show advertisers their readership, those numbers are diminished by the fact that many people who would have read the source material, instead read it from a secondary source when that single source, as well as its core idea, is the only theme of the story.  That takes compensation from the newspaper and also the writer of the original as well, for the job of
the writer is dependent upon the readership also.


Rewritten material that simply takes the original source and puts it in altogether different wording is often done by newspapers as part of support for new work when the sourced material is from press releases.  That's different than a copied single story from a newspaper, done in different
words.


Rewritten newspaper articles are really sourced from the property of someone else who benefits financially from them through readership and through advertising.  When one person deprives another of financial benefit in some way, there can be repercussions eventually, although on the Internet that has not been pursued in any vigorous way, not yet.

But this is what it does to our news.  It means the original message is lost in the din of the repeats.  It means the original message may be delivered by someone with an agenda of sorts, so the message becomes an arrow for a predetermined target as opposed to
education and information, which is supposed to be the essence of news.


A number of citizen news sites are based on the model of competition, which can exacerbate the problem of repeating news, especially from only one source.  It is made worse in the atmosphere of social media where voting for a particular article establishes its place on a page. Internet
experts have long since told us most readers don't go beyond that first page when they enter a site, and therefore the news most valuable is often not the most read.  The one most popular is highlighted instead, in a vote-up system where people can vote for friends or run campaigns
somewhere in cyberspace for the sake of reaching the top.


The benefit to the culture of news is, however, undermined by such practices, from both traditional and nontraditional media, where original sources may be forgotten in the race to the top it seems.  Much of the reading public doesn't know the difference, on a glossy page,
whether the material written is original or simply copied.


The New York Times examined this issue, noting how one newspaper will copy whole passages without giving credit, so the problem doesn't belong just to bloggers or citizen news.

"ZACHERY KOUWE, a Times business reporter for a little over a year, resigned after he was accused of plagiarizing from The Wall Street Journal. An internal review of his work turned up more articles — he said he was shown four — containing copy clearly lifted from other news sources."
Plagiarism is a mortal journalistic sin, and the Times goes on to discuss how that is. But it is the theft that is worse for it takes those who write original material and minimizes their worth.  It means the public gets watered down, repeated, and often faulty news.

It is possible to be 16 years old, have a computer, and rewrite the news from next door, then package it as original on a blog somewhere.  If attractively done, and reinforced by good friends in the model of "I'll vote for you if you vote for me" parade, the blog becomes part of the
public's information, when many might not know the difference.


The behavior is widespread and repeated across the Internet, but repetition, even by the Big Boys, doesn't make it right.  It's part of the corporate greed that has undermined the culture as well.

The whole process bastardizes news when it steals.

No wonder the public doesn't trust it.

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Affordable Care Act undermined by false beliefs that undermine humanitarian values

[caption id="attachment_17150" align="alignleft" width="300"]Learning about health care options Learning about health care options[/caption]

Carol Forsloff---After living in Hawaii 28 years, a journalist has perspective on health coverage, given the way the State has functioned with its insurance programs and coverage. There are good reasons why Hawaii ranks #1 in health factors, much of it having to do with the availability of health care.

In Hawaii every employer must provide health coverage for employees who work 20 hours weekly or more. The State also has a program for the poor, so that they too have coverage when they are unable to work or are otherwise in need of health care maintenance.

For 28 years, unless there was a job specifically with insurance coverage, I was unable to leave the State. That's because of preexisting health conditions from a long-term and life-threatening illness that occurred when I was 35. Individual insurance was either not available, and I was declined, or so expensive that it would have meant a choice between food or health care.

In Louisiana every presentation from a politician around the State focused on the negatives of the Affordable Care Act when it was first proposed and watching and listening to “plants” in audiences and vetted questions so that no one was allowed to question speakers, all offering those negatives, brought information to this journalist that there were planned techniques to undermine almost any decision made by President Barack Obama.

Much of the continuing spread of those negatives has to do with the psychology of all of us. When we hear criticism constantly about anyone, even if the individual being criticized is a close friend or relative, we begin to question our beliefs. After all, how can so many people who differ with us be wrong? In addition there is also the dictum that it's harder to believe the truth when it's told after a falsehood has spread,

The statement from Republicans that focused on undermining any decision made by Obama has made not just a difficult environment within the political party but a toxicity of belief that has permeated almost every social issue in America. That includes guns, women's rights, immigration and health care. Those who oppose the loudest voice are shouted down indeed. That means truth is never read or heard by the larger number of people.

Indeed as some of the media has declared, the mainstream television, radio and newspaper stories seldom, if ever, offer an positive information about the Affordable Care Act, even when there are many stories of people receiving health insurance who were denied health insurance when they desperately needed it most.

Surely the Affordable Care Act has snags, but so did Medicare and Social Security when these programs were first unveiled. And those programs met with many of the same criticisms---primarily by those who used the words “Socialist” or even “Communist” in relationship to them. But there was not the concerted effort, vocalized by leaders of the opposition, to undermine completely any of the President's ideas at the time. Targeting an individual repeatedly will eventually wear down the public good will, as it has in the case of Barack Obama. And this means from both left and right, especially in the more extreme areas of the spectrum of each party but reaching into the moderate groups as well, because those who scream the loudest and the longest become the message most heard and believed.

If young people do not join the program, and others don't who believe the worst about it, then the program will fail for sure. And those who had hoped that everything Obama did would fail would have met their objectives, stated objectives as they were. That will inevitably lead to folks looking for an alternative, and where else will they look but among those who will say, “I told you so” when the program fails entirely.

Indeed a recent letter from Rush Limbaugh to his public says this, “If you believe in government, you should be furious about Obamacare’s incompetent rollout: A fiasco that could haunt progressives for years to come.” – Headline, “The New Republic,” Nov. 14, 2013

“If this goes down, if health care, the Affordable Care Act, is deemed a failure, this is the end – I really mean it – of liberal government, in the sense of any sense that government as an instrument of social justice, an engine of economic progress, which is what divides Democrats from Republicans – that’s what Democrats believe.” – Mark Shields, “PBS News Hour,” Nov. 15,

28 years in Hawaii was not a negative experience, but the lack of health care opportunities prevented me from moving on to independent work, a full-time private practice in counseling and a strong area of journalism opportunities as well. It is the choice many people must make when they can't lose their jobs for fear of losing health coverage they couldn't otherwise get. And the lack of the option will cause needless suffering and death, all arising from the false notions that Obama be defeated at all cost, thus undermining the humanitarian value of good health for everyone.

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Mainstream media-made Jindal tops favorite Governor list





[caption id="attachment_3991" align="alignleft" width="224" caption="Governor Bobby Jindal"][/caption]


Carol Forsloff - According
to recent polls, citizens across the country rank Bobby Jindal among
the top three Governors in the United States.  How people are able to
make that decision is truly what is interesting.

Jindal, according to the Public Policy Poll

ranks #2 on the list of the nation's governors but is actually #1
because Joe Manchin from West Virginia is leaving his post this year.

Here are the rankings:






























































































































































GovernorApprovalSpread
Joe Manchin (D-WV)70/2248
Bobby Jindal (R-LA)58/3424
Jodi Rell (R-CT)55/3124
Brian Schweitzer (D-MT)55/3322
Jack Markell (D-DE)50/3218
Sean Parnell (R-AK)51/3516
Steve Beshear (D-KY)48/3414
Jay Nixon (D-MO)44/3014
John Lynch (D-NH)51/3912
Charlie Crist (I-FL)50/3911
Bob McDonnell (R-VA)44/368
Linda Lingle (R-HI)46/451
Rick Perry (R-TX)45/45Even
Deval Patrick (D-MA)45/45Even
Martin O’Malley (D-MD)42/43-1
Ted Strickland (D-OH)39/44-5
Bev Perdue (D-NC)35/44-9
Tim Pawlenty (R-MN)43/53-10
Christine Gregoire (D-WA)40/53-13
Bill Ritter (D-CO)35/50-15
Ted Kulongoski (D-OR)34/52-18
Ed Rendell (D-PA)34/53-19
Jim Doyle (D-WI)36/56-20
Pat Quinn (D-IL)32/54-22
Jennifer Granholm (D-MI)34/57-23
David Paterson (D-NY)30/55-25
John Baldacci (D-ME)29/58-29
Jim Gibbons (R-NV)25/61-36
Bill Richardson (D-NM)27/64-37
Arnold Schwarzenegger (R-CA)25/63-38