Speaker for the Diodes
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Sunday, March 25th, 2012
| Time |
Event |
| 5:24a |
QotD
From the
Quotation of the day mailing list, 2010-03-20:
"The very notion that on any given story all you have to do is
report what both sides say and you've done a fine job of objective
journalism debilitates the press. There is no such thing as
objectivity, and the truth, that slippery little bugger, has the
oddest habit of being way to hell off on one side or the other: it
seldom nestles neatly halfway between any two opposing points of
view. The smug complacency of much of the press--I have heard
many an editor say, 'Well, we're being attacked by both sides so
we must be right'--stems from the curious notion that if you get a
quote from both sides, preferably in an official position, you've
done the job. In the first place, most stories aren't two-sided,
they're 17-sided at least. In the second place, it's of no help
to either the readers or the truth to quote one side saying,
'Cat,' and the other side saying 'Dog,' while the truth is there's
an elephant crashing around out there in the bushes." -- Molly
Ivins, columnist. (submitted to the mailing list by
Kathleen Magone) |
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