Monday, June 10, 2013

http://Mediareportingthetruth.blogspot.com


Reporting the Truth
            There is no doubt that media has a major influence on society. The Declaration of Principles on the Conduct of Journalists of the International Federation of Journalists states that “respect for the truth and for the right of the public to truth is the first duty of the journalist” (Banks, 2013, p. 246).   Journalist must consider how much the public has a need to know, what the public has a right to known and how to keep the public’s interest long enough to keep up their ratings.  That is why it is imperative that reporting the truth should be seen a moral responsibility. In their efforts to report the truth, the scope, completeness and quality of the news they air are often affected by the journalist perspective and personal motivations.   In deciding what is pertinent when reporting news to the public, journalist should ensure the information is substantially complete, encourage objective understanding and that it be balanced and accurate.  
            When news is substantially complete, the viewer or reader should be able to understand what is being reported with completeness and descriptive clarity.  The media and journalists as well have the propensity to frame the story; “a central organizing idea for news content that supplies a context and suggests what the issue is through the use of selection, emphasis, exclusion, and elaboration” (Banks, 2013, p. 246).  The journalist’s adds commentary or omits important facts about the report that would alter how a reasonable viewer would receive the news.  For instance, a band robber is captured after a police chase that resulted in the injury of several innocent civilians.  To omit the fact that the bank robber is an unemployed factory worker with who was robbing the bank to feed his family or that the innocent civilians were ten construction workers armed with two-by-fours who attacked the bank robber as he was fleeing the scene, could alter the public’s reaction to the story and compassion for the bank robber.   
            To encourage objective understanding when reporting news and information to the public, it is crucial that the journalist leave their personal biases and values on the editing table and report the news from an objective point of view. They should interview experts with opposing viewpoints to “present the broader context when reporting on complex issues of legitimate public interest” (Banks, 2013, p. 246), to maintain a balance in the weight of the information reported.  The media or journalist should not use his or her access to the public’s “ear” to gain support for their personal opinion or political position; but recruit experts on both sides of the subject matter and verify material and sources that can be officially verified to avoid the appearance of bias.  The down side to that is that the official sources are prone to provide information and facts that are tainted in favor of their position.  An example of a lack of objective reporting is the Fox news channel (a blatantly conservative news channel) and their handling of the presidential election.  To be objective, the same could be criticized of Real Time with Bill Maher for his obvious bias, although very entertaining, liberal views. 
            Finding balance and accuracy in the media can be difficult when the desire to report the news is clouded by discrimination and disparity that is still present on our society.  Many times it starts with inadequate and insufficient evidence that is then promulgated in the media.  The media has often been criticized for their part in the perpetuation the images of Black criminology.  Media stereotyping of black youth as “a violent and menacing street thug” (Banks, 2013, p. 248), has given credence to the public’s fear and panic young black males.  Blacks do indeed commit more crimes; however, the statistics show a very different story.  According to Welch (2007:276) in 2002, Blacks make up about 13% of the population, 38% of the arrests for violent crimes and 27% of the arrests for property crime.  The War on drugs escalated, and Blacks were again stigmatized for the increase in crime in the media which was embedded into public opinion.  The truth is that “whites compose 75% of drug users while black represent only 13%.  This is usually omitted from media reports, and the focus has been spent in minority communities where the media, politicians and misinformed public has declared the battleground for the War on Drugs.  Blacks were twice as likely to be portrayed as criminal suspects than their white counterparts.    
            Media influences crime control policies by publicly displaying emotional victims who invoke the sympathy and compassion (brutal murders, sex crimes, school shootings etc.), prey on and incite moral panics and public fear of crime.   The “fear of crime and fear of being victimized by crime are key influences in criminal justice policy making and in the promotion of punitive policies” (Banks, 2013, p. 250).  When the media continually saturates our lives with the images of victims and “fuel public fear” that is looks like a certain race or culture, they are contributing to the unethical assumption that the black male is a criminal, and perpetuate the need for tougher laws, penalties and sentencing that add to the disparity of the criminal justice system. 
References
Banks, C. (2013). Criminal justice ethics. (3rd ed.).   Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications, INC.