Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Corporate media turns the 1st Amendment on its head in Missouri

The First Amendment (Amendment I) to the United States Constitution prohibits the making of any law... infringing on the freedom of the press, interfering with the right to peaceably assemble or prohibiting the petitioning for a governmental redress of grievances.
Isn't it amazing the way giant corporate media, from TV news networks to NYT, WSJ, have been able to turn the University of Missouri black student protests upside-down in just a day?

Now the story is no longer about campus racism, threats of violence against black students, or an unresponsive school administration. No, now it's all about the new American paparazzi supposedly being denied its "1st Amendment rights" to photograph unwilling students and eavesdrop on their private conversations.

By whom? Not by the government "making any law...infringing on the freedom of the press." But supposedly by some black student protesters and a journalism professor.

How the script has been flipped.

The irony here is that this same corporate media totally blacked-out (no pun intended) any and all news coverage of the racist assaults on the students until U of M footballers stood up to be counted and the president's job was threatened. Is it any wonder that there's student distrust of the media?

This is not to say that the students and faculty member who jostled the ESPN stringer were right to do so. But either way, it's no federal case and after the initial hassle, it seemed like they worked things out. The faculty member apologized (she lost her job), and reporters were allowed entry to the gathering.

Now the Chicago Tribune, that bastion of 1st Amendment rights (remember their call for a Mussolini type to run the public schools) chimes in with an-- "How dare they!" -- editorial denouncing the students.
In a baffling display of dissonance, the protesters had pitched their tents in a public space — on a taxpayer-funded campus that is home to one of the best journalism schools in the nation — and posted a "NO MEDIA" sign.
The Tribune doesn't mention that the students had every right to this "public space" and, at least in my opinion, every right to defend themselves against violations of their own space and privacy. ESPN was the outsider here. I'm not even certain that the antagonist was a bona fide reporter. It's interesting that none of the real working journalists have made themselves the center of this story.

I can tell you from my own years as a journalist, I could never just walk onto a public school campus or any other "public space" and automatically gain entrance to meetings or take pictures of students without permission. It would have been a clear violation of school policy and -- dare I say -- journalistic ethics.

Journalistic ethics? What am I even talking about here? The Tribune Company, infamous for its Sam Zell-style buying/selling/takeover strategies and stripping its paper of working reporters and photographers, has none as far as I can tell. They're not the only ones. The Sun-Times fired each and every one of their photographers in 2013, replacing them with stringers with phone cameras. What could possibly go wrong?

The Trib's Eric Zorn, as usual, is the worst in writing about the protest. He refers to U of M President Tim Wolfe's resignation as "the fruits of extortion".

Eli Broad buys ed reporting in L.A.
The Trib's sister paper the L.A. Times is once again up for sale to the highest bidder -- most likely, the Koch Bros., Rupert Murdoch, or Eli Broad. And education reporting is now being directly underwritten by billionaire corporate reformers.

The Washington Post reports:
Three of the Times’ benefactors — the K&F Baxter Family Foundation, the Wasserman Foundation, and the Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation — have been major supporters of charter and school-privatization efforts that are strongly opposed by teachers’ unions.
Thus, you now have editorials like this one: "It's time to stop the whining about charter schools."

So much for "free press."

Yes, there are serious threats to our 1st Amendment rights and press freedom, but they're not coming from protesting black students at Missouri.

And while corporate media continues to make itself out to be the victims here, the racist threats against U of Missouri black students continue unabated. 


1 comment:

  1. At MU these offended protesters have set up “safe zones” where their sensibilities will be protected. Klonsky and other progressives defend the protesters expulsion of the corporate media from their “safe zones”, because protesters have “every right to this ‘public space’” and have the right to “defend” themselves against violations “of their own space and privacy”. As if making a public spectacle in a public place somehow suggests personal privacy to where media coverage is a continuing violation of their personhood. Because these safe zones are admittedly a public space on a public campus, what gives protesters more right to that space than anyone else for any other reason? Nothing. Their feelings are their only justification. For any set of students to proclaim that their speech is what matters while literally suppressing any other differing speech because that speech is perceived “dangerous” by them, is straight hypocrisy. Coddling these students and treating them with kid gloves regardless of actual offenses, is what is racist. It operates on the assumption that blacks cannot hold themselves together as others can of other races who are offended so they need “safe zones” to manage.

    Now students at other universities are demanding more faculty diversity (regardless of individual merit), more minority scholarships (despite the high number of scholastic subsidies, separate from academics, going to minorities) , more sensitivity trainings (on top of the awareness drum being pounded at every school gathering, freshman orientation, and in every piece of paper with words), and more cultural centers (which adds to the student cost of education). Higher Ed has been perpetuated this microaggression culture for some time now, affirming that their students can be victims if they feel like it and that because of how their victimhood relates to their race, they should be coddled and treated differently. These are seventeen to twenty one year old kids. You want to give them the power and keys to the institution? They will take it and genuinely believe they have earned it by suffering some grave offense only determined so by them. These kids will eventually have to enter the real world where actual offenses take place with no real power remedy. Teaching them that the proper response to any perceived offense is to create a safe space that eliminates uncomfortable challenges to their personal development and conflict resolution skills is highly unproductive and delusional as a practical remedy. Educators have been encouraging this for years and now the young are starting to devour the parents.

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