I didn't say it did. I didn't ask you what journalists do, since plausibly some are good and some are bad at it; I asked you to say what you think journalists should do, how they morally ought to conduct their craft. In other words, I asked you what are the objectives of a good journalist, one who practices his profession with journalistic integrity.tillingborn wrote: ↑Sat Dec 12, 2020 1:03 pmWhat I think journalists should do has no bearing on what journalists actually do.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Dec 12, 2020 1:23 amYou mean you think journalists should do "whatever the public happens to suppose"? So propagandizing, hiding the truth, or even telling outright lies is "good" journalism, so long as that's what the public wants to believe?
So please answer.
I hope you don't. I'm asking, not telling.Do you mean to imply that I think wildly inaccurate reporting is "good"?
It is simply the case that many news agencies have an editorial bias.
Irrelevant. My question is "OUGHT they to strive for objectivity? not "Are they all perfect at it?" As I said before, one doesn't have to be perfect in order for it to be very valuable to pursue an ideal. For instance, no doubt your spouse wishes you to pursue the ideal of fidelity, even if, as a consequence of your moral imperfections, your eyes sometimes have wandered.
No, no...I did not assert or assume or "give the impression" of anything. Notice the word "then" above. It's an "if-then," not a "therefore." In other words, I'm asking, "IF there has been misleading of the public, then what does that do to the concept 'the will of the people'?"In my view it is to your credit that you question what you heard, but intentionally or otherwise, by posing the rhetorical "Where, then, is "the will of the people"?" you will have given some people the impression that something happened that they should be angry about.
And the answer, obviously is rhetorical. And you know what it would mean. It would mean that the election was no longer "the will of the people," because their vote was premised on falsehoods and lack of honest data. They were misled as to what the real options and facts were. The journalists propagandized them by withholding important, true information that they needed in order to make an informed choice.