|
Conrad
Fink is a professor at the Grady College of Journalism
at the University of Georgia and a distinguished journalist. Fink
has had an illustrious career as a reporter, foreign correspondent and
vice president of Associated Press. As one who puts my time and
tithes into the Grady College, I’m glad he is there, but I have a serious
difference of opinion with him on the government’s conduct in the war on
terrorism.
In a
recent column in the Athens Banner-Herald, Fink charged that the
government is not sharing enough information with the news media on its
plans to flush out the terrorists in Afghanistan and that it is wrong for
the American people to agree with that decision.
In
fact, Fink is wrong.
Fink
cites his experiences in the Vietnam War, which he covered extensively for
AP, as an example of how government tried to mislead the American public
through evasion, distortion and outright lies. In the intervening
years since Vietnam, we have learned not to trust our government with the
childlike faith we once did, but we don’t trust the media either,
Professor.
To
compare Vietnam to the current war against terrorism is to compare butter
to butterflies. As unfortunate and divisive and traumatic as Vietnam
was, our very existence was not at stake then. Now it is. Fink
need look only at the students at the Grady College. The morning after the
terrorist attacks, professors were ready to discuss the media coverage of
the events of September 11. The students were more interested in
knowing whether or not they were going to have a future. So much for
the ol’ Ivory Tower.
At the
same time that Fink was lamenting how the government is feeding reporters
sparse news “in the name of patriotism,” a nitwit named Loren Jenkins, who
is senior foreign editor of National Public Radio, was quoted in the
Chicago Tribune as saying he would report the whereabouts of U.S. Special
Forces on secret mission if he could because he doesn’t feel any duty to
“help out the government.” His job, he says, is to “smoke ‘em out.”
I assume that if our soldiers were killed and our national security
compromised as a result of his irresponsible reporting, that would be okay
with this modern-day Ernie Pyle. Excuse me, Professor Fink, but that
kind of arrogant, almost treasonous attitude doesn’t make me real anxious
that your colleagues know much more than that Afghanistan is somewhere
east of Mobile, Alabama. I’ll take my chances with George Bush and
Colin Powell, thank you.
As for
the media, it has a growing credibility problem with the American people
that needs to be addressed sooner rather than later. Public support
is eroding as we speak. The First Amendment Center at Vanderbilt
University in its 2001 survey reports that while 82 percent of those
polled say that the media should keep the government in check, 71 percent
also say that the government should keep the media in check. In another
study by the Center in 1999, over half of all Americans said the media has
too much freedom, a figure that is up dramatically from just two years
earlier. Those numbers are disturbing and should serve as a wake-up
to call to journalists and to those who teach them.
We are
in a fight for our survival. The United States has an enemy that
wants to eradicate us, pure and simple. We have told our government
in no uncertain terms that we
want
the terrorists found and their hides permanently fried. Use whatever
means it takes. We aren’t choosy. Just get it done. If
the media can help, fine. If not, then they need to stay the hell
out of the way. This is a whole new world, and the media needs to
understand that like the rest of us.
In the
meantime, I would feel a lot better if Conrad Fink would assure us that
our journalism colleges aren’t spawning a bunch of Loren Jenkins clones
but, rather, reporters and editors who we can trust to show good judgment
and common sense. After all, they do work for us.
Fink
thinks the American public needs more information. What the American
public needs is more confidence that the media will provide that
information responsibly. At this time, we clearly have more faith in
our government than we do in our media. For that, you can blame the
media, Professor, not us.
|