Recently, I was with a group of good friends whom I have known for
20 years. They are a spirited group of unabashed liberals. I
doubt any of them have ever voted for a Republican, or ever would. Of
course, we have a secret ballot in this country so we never know for
sure. Publicly, at least, they profess unwavering fealty to the
Democratic Party.
I regard myself as a political independent, although I tend to
vote Republican. However, when I am amid this group of left-leaners,
they look to me for the ‘far right’ view on the issues of the day.
Yes, we have different views on the proper role of government and
the judiciary, but I don’t look to Ted Cruz or Sarah Palin for political
inspiration.
During our conversation, the recent Rolling Stone journalistic debacle that detailed an alleged rape at University of Virginia came up. Immediately, the prevailing liberal talking point was
offered up to the group, expecting acclamation.
“This Rolling Stone retraction is terrible. It is
a huge setback for women who are victims of sexual assault on college
campuses.”
Lots of heads were nodding in agreement, except for mine.
The issue for me is one of journalistic failure, not the
overhanging issue of sexual assault on college campuses. If an
account by an alleged rape victim has become problematic and inconsistent, then
we should acknowledge this, as Rolling Stone was forced to do, and not
automatically rehabilitate the victim to serve a larger cause. If the
press fails its readers and its profession, then that is the issue. Our
focus should be on what went wrong, not how a misdeed might negatively
influence a larger agenda.
Rolling Stone Needs Honest Weights
I’m a physician. If one of my colleagues is
convicted of Medicare fraud, should my initial response be,
“Oh, this will be very bad for doctors”? Shouldn’t I clearly
condemn the criminal act without any qualifications? Apply
this example to your own profession.
When we try too hard to downplay an individual’s action that we
think might harm our cause, it detracts from our credibility. In
my view, an organization or an individual that speaks and seeks the truth will
only strengthen the currency of its voice for its own cause.
I understand that sexual assault is a serious issue that demands
our full attention and response. Let me state boldly; I am against
sexual assault. But those who advocate for this important cause need
to acknowledge the injustice of a false allegation, such as occurred with the
Duke lacrosse case in 2006, a very public example of how lives can be unfairly
ruined. A false or questionable allegation should be identified as
such, not lamented as a setback for another agenda. Many
commentators on the Rolling Stone retraction have expressed regret, but not at
the possibility of a false charge or reckless reporting. They are
sorry that their cause may have been negatively impacted.
We don’t know for sure whether ‘Jackie’, the protagonist in the
Rolling Stone article was truly a victim. I am not denying the
possibility that she was, but I am expressing uncertainty. We do
know that important details of her narrative have not been corroborated. We
also know that inexplicably Rolling Stone acquiesced to Jackie’s request to
refrain from interviewing the alleged perpetrators, a professional lapse that
made the Rolling Stone piece one of advocacy, not journalism.
Rolling Stone has requested that the Columbia Journalism School perform a post mortem on the story, which I trust will be an independent and objective review of what appears to be journalistic malpractice.
Should our reaction to the Rolling Stone’s lapse be that “this
will be bad for the journalism profession?” Or, would a better
reaction be that “this will be bad for Rolling Stone?”
1. Liberals tend to have a pack mentality.
ReplyDelete2. Liberals often fail to "connect the dots". They seldom come to logical conclusions.
Because Rolling Stone's writer did a poor job and did not use good investigative technique or standard journalistic integrity, they believe that that endangers all women? I shudder.
Who reads such trash anyway?