How should journalists cover Obama’s last two years? Ignore Fox News.
Just before the New Year, the Washington Post ran an article reminding us that two months into President Barack Obama’s first term, conservatives were already blaming him for tanking — perhaps deliberately — the U.S. stock market. In an essay published in 2009, Michael Boskin, a guy people take seriously who worked in the Bush White House, blamed Obama’s “radicalism” for terrifying investors. “[O]ur new president’s policies are designed to radically re-engineer the market-based U.S. economy.”
This kind of context and memory is rare these days in journalism. But I’ve been thinking about this for a while, long before Obama’s economy shifted into high gear and the Dow topped 18,000. Here’s the thing: conservatives keep getting it terribly, terribly wrong. And those of us in the media biz — journalists, in particular — keep playing along. And by “it” I mean just about everything. Their dire predictions. Their theories about Obama’s motivations. Their claims about his policies and their impacts.
I know how that sounds. It sounds “biased” or “partisan” or “liberal.” But I’m not any of those things. I am, in the final equation, a reporter. My job is to point out factual things, describing the best version of reality I can. And the truth is that again and again as journalists we’ve given conservatives the benefit of the doubt on claim after claim. We’ve peddled their narratives and given them the benefit of “equal time” and “balanced coverage” even when their past performance proved shockingly off-base and often turned out to represent deliberate falsification.
Here’s the thing: If these guys were businessmen, we would never, ever invest our dollars with them. But we keep spilling pages of ink and investing our own credibility in their accusations, theories, predictions and dire warnings. Here’s a partial list of the utter nonsense we’ve wasted America’s time with over the past half-decade. We covered Benghazi as if it were a real, smoking-gun Watergate-style scandal. Not just a dangerous muddle, the kind of bad thing that happens in a tough world, but evidence of some kind of dark conspiracy.
We covered the debate over “Obamacare” as if it might really involved death panels, or at the very least as if it might serve to “socialize” a big chunk of the American economy. We talked about the Affordable Care Act’s incompetently designed website as if that kind of human, bureaucratic (and, yes, stupid) misstep was somehow far more important than the millions of new Americans gaining access to healthcare.
We jumped on the idea that Obama’s foreign policy response to Russia’s militarism — economic sanctions and diplomatic isolation — was incompetent and naive, echoing concerns that the President might be essentially adolescent, long before any of the the measures had actually been implemented. (It turns out Russia’s economy is now in free-fall, thanks in part to the White House’s efforts.)
Early in the Obama years, we talked “even-handedly” about the Federal stimulus and the bailouts of banks and auto makers as if they might plausibly be harbingers of a new communist movement in America, even though those policies had long precedent in American administrations, Republican and Democrat, and had been launched under President Bush.
We journalists echoed talking points about Obama’s open border policy and his lack of focus on immigration enforcement, even as his administration rounded up and deported far more undocumented workers than any other White House. We talked (endlessly) about President Obama’s incompetence on the economy even as the U.S. steadily and consistently outperformed Europe, Japan and every other part of the world with the exception of China. We jabbered on about the White House’s anti-energy, tree-hugger, hippy renewable energy policies even as the U.S. transformed itself into a far more self-sufficient energy producer.
It is, taken together, a remarkably and even stunningly poor performance, roughly on par with our dismal incompetence in accepting the Bush administration’s claims for why America needed to go to war in Iraq. Rather than pushing hard for facts and evidence and needed context, we grabbed our stenographer’s pens and cheerfully echoed the most far-fetched, thinly-sourced nonsense that conservatives dished up.
I actually don’t think there’s much mystery about why this is happening.
The first reality is that media organizations today are fundamentally weaker than they were a generation ago, with fewer resources, fewer experienced reporters, less institutional memory and less professional courage. Crummy journalists grab onto the latest zeitgeistian set of blather and run with it in the hope that it will garner them lots of “hits” and “eyeballs.” If they’re lucky, a punchy headline will go viral or be posted on Drudge’s popular and often fundamentally dishonest website.
The actual hard work of digging toward the truth, debunking nonsense, and calling out the liars and demagogues and phonies? That rarely gets done anymore. And there’s almost no accountability. Pundits who get things horribly wrong get called back for more air time, not because they have a record of being factually correct, or because they’re committed to informing the public, but because they’re colorful and feisty and they “give good TV.”
The second reality is that the right has a highly disciplined message machine that incorporates Fox News (where an astonishing 47% of conservatives get their information), AM talk radio, a handful of influential editorial pages, Republican and tea party politicians, as well as a constellation of well-funded think-tanks and websites. These organizations skillfully push ideas and memes, even when they are demonstrably, factually false — and they do so with such efficiency and message discipline that in many cases the rest of the media ecology eventually goes along.
There’s no easy fix for our current media dilemma. But it’s worth noting that the old formula of “fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me” applies to the journalism community. We own this. And like any reporter who’s been fooled by a source, we need to dial up our skepticism to 11. It’s long past overdue that when our “colleagues” in the right wing media spin up tales about conspiracies or Kenyan birth certificates or socialist-anti-colonialist tendencies or Benghazi-style conspiracies, we demand clear, unequivocal evidence before the rest of our news organizations jump on board.
In fact, our baseline, public reaction — to conservative bloviators ranging from Dick Cheney to Rush Limbaugh to Bill O’Reilly — should be fairly simple: These are people who’ve gotten so much wrong, so often, and often through a well-documented intention to deceive that we simply shouldn’t trust them. These are, in the parlance of our trade, not credible sources.
Granted, that’s a frightening reality. It’s frightening when high-level politicians and media institutions of such power and influence are revealed as phonies and liars. But we’ve been here before from Joseph McCarthy to Richard Nixon to the architects of the Iran-Contra scandal. In the past, journalists found the courage and the skepticism necessary to “out” these leaders and to describe them accurately for what they were. Not in the pursuit of a partisan agenda but because our job, again, is to describe reality.
None of this is to suggest that there aren’t strong grounds for critical, independent, factual reporting about this White House. Some of that reporting should, if my guess is accurate, be scathing. But in these last two years of President Obama’s term, reporters would be well-served to remember that they’ve been gamed shamefully over and over since 2009. Our recent history of chasing after dog whistles and false alarms and red herrings will serve as one of the shabbiest chapters in a history of American journalism filled with shabby episodes.
The Washington Post’s recent exercise in memory and context? That was a good start. We all need to do more of that.
Your right I guess, the Middle East is actually even more of a quagmire than Vietnam was, its even more complex more screwed up, Vietnam was only one country. I think the comparison is very valid in how WE intervened and reacted. We did not have a vision for what a military victory looked like and still don’t, we don’t know how to nation build, this was made obvious both in Iraq, Afghanistan and of course Vietnam, and like Vietnam, these countries will eventually all be much much better without our troops occupying them. There was not domino theory in Vietnam and the same holds in the middle east, if we leave things will get better not worse for those nations and people.
Knuckle, you can’t train bravery or the willingness to fight. A disciplined command structure? I don’t think so, it takes people willing to die for a cause, and you simply don’t have that in a good portion of Iraq. If ISIS is a “rag tag” army they should be easily defeated by a hardened Iraqi fighting force. Who trained ISIS? Come on this is about will not about training or guns etc. Just like in Vietnam we are dying for a people who could care less.
We need to totally remove our military and fully engage diplomatic and economic means of engagement, we need to follow the lead of the EU and Canada in this area.
I agree that Obama kind of understand those things, although I think he is still being pulled to be far to militarily engaged in the region.
“…we need to follow the lead of the EU and Canada in this area.”
How’s that working out for them lately? Try watching the news…any news…before making such comments.
Mervel, on your point about bravery and willingness to fight:
There is a big disconnect in most American’s understanding of this. We live in a very predictable place. While on the one hand we have levels of violence and criminality equal to many countries that are at war most of us on a day to day level feel quite safe. And while we have institutionalized graft and bribery in everything from K Street lobbyists to Wall Street plundering the bribery and graft happens in a way we don’t see every day.
But if you are a soldier in Iraq who hasn’t seen a paycheck in a month yet your commanders seem to be living lavish lifestyles, then when a military confrontation is imminent and all of the leadership gets in a helicopter and leaves – why on Earth would you fight? What is in it for you? If you die will your family even get a letter, never mind a medal for your bravery or your back pay.
How about this conundrum? We are told the IS insurgents are largely young people from around the world who have flown to Turkey, slipped into Syria, and weeks later are on the front lines of this seemingly unstoppable force? Is this magic? Or in Afghanistan there is a decades long process of trying to create a national army to stand up to the Taliban – the Taliban that are such a devastatingly powerful force that our American troops couldn’t seem to beat them. Yet the Taliban are just a bunch of uneducated Afghan guys just like the troops in the Afghan National Army.
The evidence clearly shows that our understanding is lacking. If we don’t understand we can’t develop useful strategic or tactical plans, and if we don’t have useful strategy or tactics we can’t win. So our biggest failure is that we very often jump into situations that we don’t understand. Maybe Americans need to educate themselves better.
Oh, and the other big thing – and this is really big – we spent a lot of money and a huge amount of effort training terrorists in highly effective tactics that they have used against us. Thank you Ronald Reagan, among others.
Reagan’s embrace of the Mujaheddin in Afghanistan is a good example. The CIA with the help of the ISI (Pakistan intelligence – not IS/ISIS/ISIL) trained fighters and leaders like Osama bin Laden, and Gulbaddin Hekmatyar and many others how to fight a super power – the Soviet Union. We equipped them and helped them build training camps and set them loose.
When people talk about Reagan winning the Cold War it always makes me shake my head because it shows how little they understand. Much of the conflict around the world today is still part of the Cold War. We are still losing the Cold War.
When you get done shaking your head, KHL, go back and read my comments. Sad that some cant acknowledge Reagan’s accomplishments. If he rose from the dead you’d be bitching about why didn’t he bring Elvis with him.
OL as far as things working out for the EU and Canada, well lets see we have 5000 dead and a trillion or so invested in two occupations that lasted between 10 and 13 years and we essentially lost, they have had some terrorist incidents. We are currently one of the most despised countries on the globe.
I would have rather invested that money in our infrastructure and economy or given tax relief. Like I said being the world police and nation building, is not a small government solution, I just don’t understand how conservatives can support it.
I support Obama for restraining and standing against all of the forces that wanted us to 1)not leave Iraq 2) not leave Afghanistan 3) Arm ISIS in Syria 4) possibly invade Syria 5) possibly invade Iran.
KL I agree we don’t understand the Middle East. Its just one screw up after another we need to remove ourselves militarily and engage economically and diplomatically.
As far as Reagan goes, he also excelled in foreign affairs. He never occupied a country, he utilized the military in measured ways and he ended the cold war. He figured out pretty quickly after Lebanon that occupying the Middle East was a waste of life and money and he didn’t go back. I think he was a great man just for those reasons alone.
OL, I hereby acknowledge that Ronald Reagan accomplished many things. Some of them were even desirable.
Let’s see, he appointed Sandra Day O’Connor to the Supreme Court. She was pretty good.
And he provided amnesty to millions of illegal immigrants. That was pretty good. I’m sure there are many other good things.
He certainly had a lot of major accomplishments that I could list, but I wont because I think most of them were not really good for the country in the long term. But there is no doubt he had a long list of achievements and many people (people I think are wrong) love him for them. I’m not going to bring up his refusal to deal with the AIDs crisis which led to thousands of Americans suffering and dying needlessly.
Oh, and he was good for jelly bean sales! I bet he even ate the red and pink ones.
Probably just as well to not bring back Elvis either. Let’s remember him like he was before his military service.
http://theboot.com/what-would-elvis-presley-look-like-if-he-was-still-alive/
Most actions and decisions that are courageous are much much more courageous in retrospect. In the heat of the moment they were hard and controversial and didn’t always look like they would work out.
I just want to point out here that in my comment of Jan. 14 I hinted at what should really have been pretty alarming for most people but seems to have gotten little attention. Apparently there have been recent ties between the Taliban, both Afghani and Pakistani, and IS. For the most part the Taliban has not been interested in affairs beyond traditional Pashtun lands. I don’t watch Fox so maybe this is blowing up all over it, but if not they should be blaming Obama, and soon.