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cal04 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Nov-16-10 10:37 PM
Original message
Too Good to Check
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/17/opinion/17friedman.html?_r=1&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss

On Nov. 4, Anderson Cooper did the country a favor. He expertly deconstructed on his CNN show the bogus rumor that President Obama’s trip to Asia would cost $200 million a day. This was an important “story.” It underscored just how far ahead of his time Mark Twain was when he said a century before the Internet, “A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is still putting on its shoes.” But it also showed that there is an antidote to malicious journalism — and that’s good journalism.

In case you missed it, a story circulated around the Web on the eve of President Obama’s trip that it would cost U.S. taxpayers $200 million a day — about $2 billion for the entire trip. Cooper said he felt impelled to check it out because the evening before he had had Representative Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, a Republican and Tea Party favorite, on his show and had asked her where exactly Republicans will cut the budget.

Instead of giving specifics, Bachmann used her airtime to inject a phony story into the mainstream. She answered: “I think we know that just within a day or so the president of the United States will be taking a trip over to India that is expected to cost the taxpayers $200 million a day. He’s taking 2,000 people with him. He’ll be renting over 870 rooms in India, and these are five-star hotel rooms at the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel. This is the kind of over-the-top spending.”

(snip)
When widely followed public figures feel free to say anything, without any fact-checking, we have a problem. It becomes impossible for a democracy to think intelligently about big issues — deficit reduction, health care, taxes, energy/climate — let alone act on them. Facts, opinions and fabrications just blend together. But the carnival barkers that so dominate our public debate today are not going away — and neither is the Internet. All you can hope is that more people will do what Cooper did — so when the next crazy lie races around the world, people’s first instinct will be to doubt it, not repeat it.
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ixion Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Nov-16-10 10:52 PM
Response to Original message
1. It's lying, pure and simple, and it should not be tolerated
Edited on Tue Nov-16-10 10:55 PM by ixion
from any government figure, or anyone else for that matter. It's not tolerated anywhere else in society. Why the hell is it tolerated at the highest levels of leadership?

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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-17-10 08:56 AM
Response to Original message
2. "When ... public figures feel free to say anything, without any fact-checking, we have a problem."
Well we've had a problem for a long time now Bucko, because making things up is and has been SOP for ages now, and NYT and it's editorial pages have greatly facilitated the process of decay.
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