As a Nationalist, or Rationalist if you may, I find it amazing that the only newspaper worth it's salt in the North West is the Londonderry Sentinel a 'unionist / protestant' orientated paper. The Derry News and Derry Journal should just say Owned by $inn Fein on their mastheads. From this week on we'll give you a count of the articles / press releases attributed to the political parties in these rags, and no I don't buy them, I peruse them at work :o)
“…Being impartial or neutral is not a core principle of journalism.
...impartiality was never what was meant by objectivity. ...the critical
step in pursing truthfulness and informing citizens is not neutrality
but independence....
This applies even to those who work in the realm of opinion, criticism
and commentary. It is this independence of spirit and mind, rather than
neutrality, that journalists must keep in focus.... Their credibility is
rooted instead in the same dedication to accuracy, verification, the
larger public interest, and a desire to inform that all other
journalists subscribe to....
The question people should ask is not whether someone is called a
journalist. The important issue is whether or not this person is doing
journalism. Does the work proceed from a respect for an adherence to the
principles of truthfulness, an allegiance to citizens and community at
large, and informing rather than manipulating— concepts that set
journalism apart from other forms of communication? The important
implication is this: The meaning of freedom of speech and freedom of the
press is that they belong to everyone. But communication and journalism
are not interchangeable terms. Anyone can be a journalist. Not everyone
is. The decisive factor is not whether they have a press pass; rather,
it lies in the nature of the work....
People increasingly see the press as part of an establishment from which
they feel alienated, rather than as a public surrogate acting in their
behalf. The solution to this kind of isolation is not to repudiate the
concept of independence, however. The solution is to recruit more people
from a diversity of classes and backgrounds and interests in the
newsroom to combat insularity. The journalism that people from a
diversity of perspectives produce together is better than that which any
of them could produce alone....
Independence from faction suggests there is a way to be a journalist
without either denying the influence of personal experience or being
hostage to it.... Just as it should with political ideology, the
question is not neutrality, but purpose. This journalistic calling to
independence from faction should sit atop all the culture and personal
history journalists bring to their job....
In the end it is good judgment, and an abiding commitment to the
principle of first allegiance to citizens, that separates the journalist
from the partisan. Having an opinion is not only allowable, not only
natural, but it is valuable to the natural skepticism with which any
good reporter approaches a story. But a journalist must be smart enough
and honest enough to recognize that opinion must be based on something
more substantial than personal beliefs if it is to be of journalistic
use.”
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